WCC Execs at Holy Etchmiadzin, Will Visit Genocide Memorial

PARTICIPANTS OF SESSION WCC EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE HELD AT MOTHER SEE OF
HOLY ETCHMIADZIN WILL VISIT MEMORIAL FOR VICTIMS OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

YEREVAN, APRIL 15. ARMINFO. The participants of April 13-17 session of
the Executive Committee of the World Council of Churches (WCC) held at
the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin with participation of Orthodox
confessions will visit the Memorial for the Victims of the Armenian
Genocide in Ottoman Turkey in 1915 “Tsitsernakaberd” today, the
press-service of the Chancellery of Mother See pf Holy Etchmiadzin
informs ARMINFO.

“Vodka Lemon” is intoxicating cinema

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Pennsylvania)
April 8, 2005 Friday REGION EDITION

‘VODKA LEMON’IS INTOXICATING CINEMA

by Barry Paris Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

On snowy winter days in Pittsburgh, when you see chairs out beside a
road, it’s because somebody is trying to save a parking space. On
snowy winter days in rural Armenia, when you see chairs outside, it’s
because people are sitting in them, talking — or more often, not
talking.

The silence is golden and important in “Vodka Lemon,” one of the most
beautiful and affecting films to come out of the new republics that
once made up the Soviet Union. Its title derives from the incongruous
name of a little liquor stand on the outskirts of a remote mountain
village.

“Why is it called ‘lemon’ when it tastes like almonds?” asks one of
the precious few customers.

“That’s Armenia,” comes the reply from middle-aging Nina (Roszanna
Mesropian).

When not behind the counter, Nina can be found faithfully visiting
her husband’s grave at the little town’s even more remote cemetery.
She takes the area’s one and only bus there every day. So does Hamo
(Roman Avinian) — daily, without fail — to wipe off his late wife’s
tombstone and keep her posted on local and family developments.

There’s not much good news to report. Most of the older people are
out of work, and most of the young ones have left. Hamo’s main source
of income comes from selling off his own furniture, piece by piece,
while breathlessly awaiting a letter with money from his son in
Paris. In fact, the whole village is awaiting. Word spreads quickly
when it finally arrives. People line up outside Hamo’s house (for
loans) before he even opens it. But it contains a photo of the son’s
French girlfriend instead of money.

“Don’t you miss the time when the Russians were here?” he asks
wistfully.

“No, we didn’t have any freedom then,” his friend replies.

“Maybe, but we had everything else.”

If socioeconomic life has sunk to an all-time low, interpersonal life
is still alive and well in its proud, quirky, never-say-die Armenian
form. “Vodka Lemon” — lyrically paced and photographed by Hiner
Saleem, superbly acted by Avinian and Mesropian — is a marvel of
bittersweet moments, many of them funny. A motorcycle breaks down,
then suddenly takes off down the road on its own. A man on horseback
keeps pace, galloping across this and that scene for no apparent
reason except that he can. The bus driver croons a theme song. Nina’s
daughter composes gorgeously sad piano music.

And love might just be blooming in a cemetery.

Post-Gazette film critic Barry Paris can be reached at
[email protected]. ‘Vodka Lemon’

****

Rating: Unrated but PG in nature.

Starring: Roman Avinian, Roszanna Mesropian.

Director: Hiner Saleem.

BAKU: Rumsfeld: USA highly estimate partnership with Azerbaijan

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
April 13 2005

DONALD RUMSFELD: `USA HIGHLY ESTIMATE PARTNERSHIP WITH AZERBAIJAN’
[April 13, 2005, 23:46:18]

As was informed from the press service of the Ministry of Defense, on
April 12, Minister of Defense of Azerbaijan, colonel-general Safar
Abiyev has met the US Minister of Defense Mr. Donald Rumsfeld.

Having conveyed to the visitor greetings of the President of
Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev, colonel-general Safar Abiyev has taken
interest in position in Iraq. Donald Rumsfeld has noted that all
there changes for the better. He has told: `I also have met
representatives of the Armed Forces of Azerbaijan. I thank you for
their good service’.

Minister of Defense of the United States was interested in the state
of affairs with settlement of the Armenia-Azerbaijan,
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. Minister of Defense Safar Abiyev has
especially noted, that in the question of resolution of the conflict
while there are no changes, that Armenia with the help of the patrons
continues to arm, does not wish to refuse aggressive claims and
ignores principles of international law. He has told: `In the near
future, the BTC Main Export Pipeline will be commissioned.
Uncertainty in the Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is a
source of big threat to realization of the said project’.

Ministers also have discussed the military-political and public
situation in region of Southern Caucasus and Caspian littoral the
states.

Having taken interest in the state of affairs with integration of
Azerbaijan into the NATO, Donald Rumsfeld has noted that the USA
would always render to Azerbaijan assistance in this question.

Minister of Defense of Azerbaijan informed that the last year
President Ilham Aliyev has presented to the Secretary General of the
NATO the Plan of activity of individual partnership. Now, the given
plan is at the stage of discussion. He has told: `We aspire to
continuation of long-term cooperation in all areas and with the USA.
However, it is limited due to 907 Section to the `Freedom Support
Act’, which is still not cancelled. Azerbaijan counts the USA the
strategic partner’.

Donald Rumsfeld has told: `The USA also highly estimate this
partnership and are going to develop it’.

Then, the sides have touched of some questions interesting them.

At the meeting, also was present the ambassador of Azerbaijan in USA
hafiz Pashayev and ambassador of USA in Baku Rino Harnish.

ANKARA: Rumsfeld Stops in Baku

Zaman, Turkey
April 13 2005

Rumsfeld Stops in Baku
By Anadolu News Agency (aa)

US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld arrived in the Azerbaijani
capital Baku last night and has met with his Azerbaijani counterpart
Sefer Abiyev today.

According to the Azertac news agency, issues regarding both countries
were discussed during the leaders’ meeting.

Reporting that Rumsfeld stopped at Baku on his way from Bagdat
(Baghdad) to Kandahar, the Turan News Agency said that the two
ministers discussed the situation of Azerbaijani soldiers in Iraq and
a possible solution for the Upper Karabagh issue. Upper Karabagh has
been under Armenian occupation for a long time and Abiyev emphasized
that delays in finding a solution for the Upper Karabagh issue pose a
threat against the security of the Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil
pipeline. Rumsfeld expressed that Washington is ready to help
Azerbaijan’s integration process in to the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization (NATO) and added that they give importance to bilateral
relations between the US and Azerbaijan, and want to develop them
further.

Rumsfeld also met Azerbaijani Prime Minister Artur Rasizade before he
left Baku.

Toward forgiveness: Rotarian chairs conference for Armenians, Turks

San Gabriel Valley Tribune, CA
April 12 2005

Strides toward forgiveness
Rotarian chairs conference for Armenians, Turks

By Shirley Hsu , Staff Writer

Garbis Der Yeghian speaks candidly about the horrors of the past
without bitterness in his voice.

Ninety years ago, 40 of his ancestors were among those killed by
Ottoman Turkish troops in a massacre the Turkish government refuses
to call a genocide, Der Yeghian said.

His great-grandfather, a Christian priest, was maimed and left to
drown.

Two soldiers chopped off both his arms and tossed him alive into the
Euphrates River, Der Yeghian said.

“It’s not humanly possible to forget this,’ said Yeghian. “But it is
humanly possible to forgive.’

Der Yeghian, 53, is trying to honor his great-grandfather by
resolving the bitterness between Turks and Armenians and by promoting
peace in the young states of the Southern Caucasus region.

The La Verne resident recently co-chaired a Rotary International
peace conference in Ankara, Turkey, inviting officials and Rotarians
from Turkey, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia.

It was the first time officials from those countries had come
together to discuss peace, Der Yeghian said.

“It was a historic moment when we got together under the same roof,’
he said. “We were very concerned that there would be obstacles’ (to
keep representatives from attending), he said.

“But they all attended,’ he said, recalling that some Armenians
traveled for three days to bypass closed borders between Turkey and
Armenia.

On April 24, millions of Armenians will mark the 90th anniversary of
the beginning of the Armenian massacres that took place during and
after World War I. Armenians say 1.5 million of their people were
slaughtered by Ottoman Turks in a state-sponsored genocide between
1915 and 1923. The Turkish government maintains that a much lower
number of Armenians died, mostly of famine and disease during forced
deportations for aiding Russian invaders.

The United States does not officially recognize the event as a
“genocide,’ although France does.

The conference called for Rotarians to form a multinational committee
to organize cooperation between Rotary clubs in the region, and to
make the peace conference an annual tradition.

Born and raised in Beirut, Lebanon, Der Yeghian began teaching
elementary school and high school mathematics at 18. By the age of
22, he was the principal of a Lebanese high school.

After moving to the United States, he earned a Ph.D. in International
Relations from Northwestern University, and a second doctorate in
educational management from the University of La Verne.

He joined the Rotary Club of La Verne about 24 years ago. In 1999, he
became the first Armenian American in Rotarian history to serve as a
district governor. He is now president of Mashdots College in
Glendale.

It was on a recent trip that he was inspired to hold a peace
conference.

On his way to visit the Genocide Museum in Yerevan, Armenia, to pay
respects to his great-grandfather, he was approached by a gentleman
who exclaimed, “I know you!’ and pointed to the Rotary pin on his
lapel, Der Yeghian recalled.

The stranger was Erhan Ciftcioglu, a fellow Rotarian and governor of
a district in Turkey. He had concealed his identity, afraid it
wouldn’t look right for a prominent Turkish community member to visit
the museum.

“He hugged me, and we were like brothers,’ he said.

The two men visited the monument and paid their respects to the
victims.

“That’s when we decided to hold a peace conference,’ Der Yeghian
recalled.

In 1990, the La Verne Rotary Club established the first Rotary Club
in the former Soviet Union, in Yerevan. Since then, about 60 clubs
have been established in the countries of the former Soviet Union.

“Rotarians can succeed where governments cannot,’ he said.

My Grandparents Failed to Live In This Land; I Will Do That For Them

AZG Armenian Daily #064, 12/04/2005

Armenian Genocide

‘MY GRANDPARENTS FAILED TO LIVE IN THIS LAND; I WILL DO THAT FOR THEM’

There are 53.000 candles in memory of The Armenian Genocide victims on
website. The number of lit candles increases by
2000 daily. This indicated to the number of people who do not forget and
demands Turkey to acknowledge before the world the crime it committed.

People put candles from everywhere: USA, Canada, Russia, Turkey, Japan,
Brazil, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Sri Lanka, Iran, Australia, Argentina,
Honk Kong, Bolivia, Slovakia. Hayk Asatrian, author of the program,
highlighted such geography: “This means that the information on the Armenian
Genocide spreads all over”. Most of the visitors of the site are from the
US, Armenia is on the second place and then the EU states come.

Hayk Asatrian classifies people lighting candles in several groups. There
are most of all letters of sympathetic character and promises never to
forget what we have lived through. Letters of demanding character and
letters of overseas Armenians to their governments to recognize the Genocide
also occupy a considerable place. “Messages of Genocide survivors are of
special interest. It’s clear that they do note type messages themselves but
dictate to their grandchildren, but it is important that others read them to
remember once again that atrocity”, Hayk says. According to survey, 37
percent of visitors simply puts candles and leaves the site, 15 percent goes
through the pages for 15 minutes reading the messages and 5 percent studies
the site for half an hour. Hayk thinks that figures speak well for the
website.

The program could not but stir our foes’ fury. They often send anti-Armenian
messages and try to damage the website. Hayk Asatrian successfully repulses
“attacks” for the time being. He foresees more attacks as April the 24th
approaches and gets ready. “I collect the whole information of the site once
during each 2 hours. So, I can renew the site any time”, he says.

At first, Hayk was wiping out all swearwords by Turks and Azeris but seeing
its inefficiency he programmed the system to change the oaths into “I am
sorry”. There are now 500 “regretful” candles on the website. Every message
from Azerbaijan comes to the program director first and it is posted on the
site if found acceptable. Hayk says that there are problems with the Turks
in Iran as well but he is unwilling to limit their access as there are many
Armenians in Iran too. He also removes all curses addressed to the Turks.
Hayk plans to write all the information of the website on a CD and send a
copy to embassies in Yerevan.

There are messages that stand out among all others. Such is Lusine
Meghrian’s: “I will take our lands home by the path of my father”, or Marine
Temirian’s: “My grandparents failed to live in this land; I will do that for
them”. “Fight Forever”, reads a precept on one of the pages by our Artsakh
freedom fighters, Bekor, Dushman, Ognevoy Hrach, Abo Alaverdian, Petros
Khevonsian, Vartan Baghshian and other heroes.

By Tamar Minasian

http://candle.direct.am/

Ankara urged to implicitly recognize the republic of Cyprus

Europe Information Service
European Report
April 8, 2005

EU/TURKEY: ANKARA URGED TO IMPLICITLY RECOGNISE THE REPUBLIC OF
CYPRUS

Speaking at a two-day conference (April 6 and 7) in Istanbul on
Turkey’s accession to the EU, Dutch Green MEP Joost Langendijk, who
co-chairs the EU/Turkey Joint Parliamentary Committee, urged Turkish
leaders to sign the additional protocol to the EU/Turkey customs
union agreement before October 3, the scheduled start-date for
accession talks between Turkey and the EU. “Prove to the European
Union and to Greek Cypriots that you are not obstinate. Surprise
them”, said the Dutch MEP, who supports Turkey’s entry into the
Union. He believes Ankara’s signing the protocol would signify its
recognition of Cyprus. Regarding the controversial issue of the
massacre of Armenians, the MEP believes the Turkish government should
itself take steps to clarify this highly sensitive issue for public
opinion.

On the issue of the extension of the EU/Turkey customs union
agreement to the ten new member states, Joost Langendijk explained to
Turkish officials that “beginning to deal with the representatives of
a country signifies beginning to recognise that country”. A clear
allusion to Cyprus, which Turkey refuses to recognise whilst being
the only country in the world to recognise the Turkish northern part
of the island. Its leaders’ position is that the government will
honour its commitments, including the signing of the additional
protocol with a view to extending the customs union to the ten new
member states. Turkey’s Foreign Minister, Abdullah Gul, has always
maintained that since the EU has signed a customs union with Turkey,
that union should be valid for all new member states, including the
Greek part of Cyprus. The minister has, however, indicated that
whilst his government will comply with international law, Turkey’s
signing of the additional protocol does not signify recognition of
the Greek part of Cyprus. He insists a durable solution to the
Cypriot question must be found under the aegis of the United Nations.

The additional protocol to the agreement of 1963 with Ankara is a
revised version of the existing customs union agreement between
Turkey and the EU taking account of the block accession of ten new
member states in May 2004, including Cyprus. EU leaders agreed at
their summit in December 2004 to open accession negotiations with
Turkey on October 3, 2005, after Turkey pledged to sign the customs
union agreement with Cyprus, a gesture interpreted as direct
recognition of the Greek-Cypriot government.

Armenian genocide.

Regarding the burning issue of the Armenian genocide and minorities,
Mr Langendijk suggested to the press on April 6 that Turkey must not
neglect Armenian and Kurdish demands. He identified the Turkish
Government’s proposal to set up a committee to look into recognition
of the Armenian genocide as a positive step. He nevertheless added
that the order by the Governor of Isparta to confiscate books by
writer Orhan Pamuk, owing to his comments on the Armenian genocide,
has “completely altered the perception of Turkey” among Europeans.
Several EU member states have singled out the Armenian question as
one of those which Turkey will have to resolve before the launch of
accession negotiations on October 3, 2005. Turkish leaders reject
this European pressure to acknowledge the genocidal nature of
massacres of Armenians during the First World War. Turkish President
Ahmet Necdet Sezer repeated as much on April 7 at a press conference
at a military academy in Istanbul. The Turkish President believes
such demands have “irritated an injured the Turkish nation”. The
issue must be debated on a scientific and not a political basis, the
Turkish President concluded.

Polls in Turkey.

According to a poll published on April 7 by Turkish daily Milliyet,
public support for Turkey’s accession to the European Union is
falling. Only 63.5% of Turks now claim to support their country’s
entry into the Union. The No camp has meanwhile seen support rise to
almost 30%. Turks feel the conditions for accession are too
draconian, notably regarding the Cypriot question, Kurds and
acknowledgement of the Armenian genocide. More than 80% of Turks feel
Turkey should withdraw its candidacy if the EU sets acknowledgement
of the Armenian genocide as a condition for entry.

ANKARA: Turks Turn to Flag, Nationalism as EU Talks Loom

Turks Turn to Flag, Nationalism as EU Talks Loom

Reuters Feature
Monday April 11, 2005

By Gareth Jones

ANKARA, Turkey (Reuters) – Anyone visiting Turkey in recent weeks
might be forgiven for thinking the country had just gone to war or at
the very least won a major soccer tournament.

Public buildings, homes, buses, taxis and private cars have been
festooned with the national flag, depicting a white Islamic crescent
moon and star against a red background.

Rallies and protests featuring the flag have been held across
Turkey. In the eastern city of Erzurum, the German ambassador was
prevented from cutting a cake decorated with the Turkish flag on the
grounds it could signify disrespect.

This outpouring of patriotic fervor was sparked by neither war nor
soccer but an incident last month in which youths tried unsuccessfully
to set fire to a Turkish flag during a pro-Kurdish demonstration in
the port city of Mersin.

An overreaction? Turkey’s military General Staff did not think so. It
issued a statement vowing to defend the nation to its “last drop of
blood.” Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan announced sternly that the flag
was a sacred symbol for Turks.

Security officers detained the 13- and 14-year-old boys accused of
setting fire to the flag, along with nine others.

The flag-waving has raised some awkward questions about Turks’ state
of mind as they prepare for the start of talks in October to join the
European Union, a club founded on the rejection of nationalism that
enjoins its members to share sovereignty and focus on common values.

“Turks are feeling cornered, besieged from outside and betrayed from
within. The explosion was waiting to happen. In Mersin, somebody
simply lit the match,” said Dogu Ergil, head of the liberal think-tank
TOSAM.

The perceived threats from outside include EU pressure on a range of
sensitive issues including Cyprus as well as U.S. troops in
neighboring Iraq. Inside Turkey, he said, people fear “betrayal” by
Kurds and other ethnic or religious minorities.

TROUBLING SIGNALS

The reaction to the Mersin incident is just one of a number of signals
troubling advocates of Turkey’s EU membership.

Adolf Hitler’s anti-Semitic tract “Mein Kampf” has shot onto the
best-seller lists. Turkey’s best-known novelist Orhan Pamuk has
received death threats for backing Armenian claims of genocide at
Turkish hands in World War One. A government minister said Christian
missionaries threaten national unity, even though only a tiny handful
of Turks have converted.

The Constitutional Court struck down a law allowing foreigners to buy
real estate, and the president threw out a bill ending restrictions on
foreign ownership of national broadcasters, saying it would harm
national interests.

The ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) has vowed to press
ahead with those two laws. But the impression from these incidents is
of a country succumbing to paranoia and conspiracy theories and trying
to retreat into its shell, diplomats say.

“The perception gap between Turkey and the EU is wider than at any
time since the AKP came to power (in November 2002),” said one
Ankara-based European diplomat.

The diplomat noted that nationalism is a founding principle of the
Turkish Republic and viewed as a very positive force, while Europeans
are far more mindful of its destructive power, which led to the
decision to set up an EU in the first place.

“Turkey did not go through the catharsis of World War II. To reject
nationalism here is to reject the republic and (its founder Kemal)
Ataturk. This difference in experience can feed a sense of
incompatibility between Turkey and Europe,” he said.

Emin Sirin, an independent member of the Turkish parliament, said the
Turks’ “pressure cooker” discontent stemmed mainly from a sense of
hurt pride over the EU’s treatment of their country.

DOUBLE STANDARDS

The EU has said Turkey will face a tougher negotiation process, with
much stricter monitoring of its reforms, reflecting widespread unease
in the wealthy bloc about admitting the relatively poor Muslim nation
of 70 million people.

“Turks see double standards … Europe has a colonial governor
attitude toward us,” Sirin told Reuters.

Even if Turkey successfully completes the lengthy entry talks, French
voters could block its membership in a referendum promised to them by
President Jacques Chirac. Germany’s Christian Democrat opposition,
which could come to power next year, actively opposes Turkish
accession.

Sirin said Turks felt more vulnerable because EU reforms threaten to
emasculate the army — the country’s most respected institution — and
could hamper efforts to crack down on Kurdish separatist guerrillas
still active in the southeast.

Hasan Unal, a nationalist-minded professor at Ankara’s Bilkent
University, said the benefits of Turkey’s strong economic growth were
failing to reach many Turks.

Many AKP deputies fear that Turkey will have to make more concessions
to the EU on the vexed issue of Cyprus, he said, adding that such
nationalist concerns helped account for a steady trickle of defections
from the party in recent weeks.

But TOSAM’s Ergil took a more optimistic view, noting Turks’ continued
strong support for EU membership in opinion polls.

“There is no going back (on reforms). A good government will have to
explain clearly to the Turkish people what is at stake.”

;u=/nm/20050411/lf_nm/turkey_nationalism_dc_1

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&amp

AGBU Toronto Sports & Youth Committee Sponsors Charity Concert

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone 212.319.6383 x.118
Fax 212.319.6507
Email [email protected]
Website

PRESS RELEASE

Monday, April 11, 2005

AGBU TORONTO SPORTS & YOUTH COMMITTEE SPONSORS CHARITY CONCERT

New York, New York — On February 19th, 2005, AGBU Toronto Sports and
Youth Committee (SYC) sponsored a charity concert at AGBU Alex
Manoogian Cultural Center in Toronto, Canada, raising CAD$2000
(USD$1600) for its sports and youth programs. Three bands, Antigen
(), The Machams (), and The
Polar Contrast, whose members are all of Armenian descent, performed
for over 175 eager fans.

“It was really great that the SYC sponsored a live concert with such
famous bands and I look forward to even more events so perfectly
geared towards Armenian Canadian youth. I was already a fan of
Antigen’s so it was really cool to actually meet the band members
after their performance and socialize with them, said Garen Hagopian,
14-year old basketball player for Toronto’s Sports and Youth Group.

All the bands generously donated a portion of the proceeds from their
CD and T-shirt sales to AGBU Toronto’s successful sports programming.

AGBU Toronto Sports and Youth Committee is committed to providing
Armenian youth with the opportunity to maintain their heritage in
Canada and establish lifetime relationships through sporting and
cultural events. For more information on AGBU and its chapters around
the world, please visit

www.agbu.org
www.antigenmusic.com
www.themachams.com
www.agbu.org.

Second Congress Of RA Chamber Of Commerce and Industry To Take Place

SECOND CONGRESS OF RA CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY TO TAKE PLACE IN MAY

YEREVAN, APRIL 8, NOYAN TAPAN. Elections of the Chairman of the Chamber
of Commerce and Industry of Armenia will be held at the second congress
of the Chamber to take place early in May. As Samvel Hovakimian,
the CCI Executive Director informed the Noyan Tapan correspondent,
elections of CCI Chairmen of marzes and delegates of the Congress
are going on in marzes at present. It was mentioned that results of
three-year activities, achievements and plans for future of the RA CCI
will be represented at the conference. According to the last one, main
policy of the program worked out for the coming 5 years will be SMB
development. The RA CCI was founded in 2002, and Martin Sargsian, the
Prefect of the Yerevan Shengavit Community is the Chairman at present.