ANKARA: Photo Exhibition Showing Massacres Committed By Armenians

Turkish Press
April 25 2005

Photograph Exhibition Showing Massacres Committed By Armenians Opened

ANKARA – A photograph exhibition has been opened in Ankara on Monday
which shows the massacres committed by Armenians in eastern Anatolia
between the years 1915-1916.

The exhibition which used the prime ministry state archives was
opened at Vakifbank Directorate General.

Addressing the opening ceremony, Justice and Development Party (AKP)
deputy Turhan Comez said that ”this exhibition which makes everybody
sad shows a part of our history.”

Noting that 554,000 Muslims died in the Armenian revolt which took
place upon the provocation of Russia and Britain in 1915 and 1916,
Comez said that the Ottoman government decided to relocate Armenian
people due to the high number of killings during that revolt.

”The world has not been interested in the killings of Muslim
Turks,” said Comez, stressing that the world public opinion was only
interested in the Armenian genocide claims for years.

Comez stressed that the Armenian diaspora carried out 30,000
activities every year about their genocide claims, commenting that it
was sad to see that Turkey couldn’t make its voice heard in a case
which it was right.

The exhibition which will also be held in other cities, will be open
in Ankara until April 29th.

German opposition motion on Armenian massacre upsets Turkey

German opposition motion on Armenian massacre upsets Turkey

Die Welt web site, Berlin
22 Apr 05

Excerpt from report by “caf” titled “Row over Armenia: Turkish
ambassador delivers sharp attack”, by German newspaper Die Welt web
site on 22 April

The Turkish ambassador to Germany, Mehmet Ali Irtemcelik, has accused
the parliamentary group of the CDU/ CSU [Christian Democratic/Social
Union] of turning itself “into the mouthpiece of fanatical Armenian
nationalism,” and “poisoning Turkish-German relations”

This sharp attack was prompted by the CDU/ CSU’s motion to the
Bundestag commemorating the 90th anniversary of the massacre of
Armenians, which began on 24 April 1915. The motion calls on the
federal government to press Turkey “to come to terms unconditionally
with its role towards the Armenian people in history and the present
day”.

The term “genocide” was deliberately avoided by the CDU/CSU, so as not
to provoke Turkey, which to this day denies the genocide of 1.5 million
Armenians. Despite this, Ambassador Irtemcelik accused the CDU/CSU
of jeopardizing the integration of Turks in Germany with its motion.

[Passage omitted]

Weeks ago, Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul described the
CDU/CSU motion as “a slander of Turkish history”. Greens European
parliamentarian Cem Ozdemir nevertheless expects Turkey to have
recognized that the genocide took place by the time it joins the EU.
He believes there are increasing numbers of Turkish intellectuals who
view their history in more complex terms than a saga of heroic deeds,
and are also willing to face up to its dark chapters.

Re-Emergence of Discredited Ilisu Dam Project

Indymedia Ireland, Ireland
April 20 2005

Re-Emergence of Discredited Ilisu Dam Project

forwarded by the Global Women’s Strike Thursday, Apr 21 2005, 1:31am

Turkish Dams Violate EU Standards and Human Rights

From the National University of Ireland, Galway and the Kurdish
Human Rights Project, London:

Plans for large dams in southeast Turkey including the discredited
Ilisu dam project may yet go ahead in spite of adverse impacts on
cultural and environmental rights, according to a new report by the
National University of Ireland, Galway and the Kurdish Human Rights
Project.

The report provides new evidence from hydroelectric dam projects
planned for the Munzur, Tigris and Greater Zap rivers.

The study, a report of a fact-finding mission to the region carried out
by Maggie Ronayne, Lecturer in Archaeology at the National University
of Ireland, Galway, demonstrates how archaeology in particular
supports the case of thousands of villagers adversely affected by
these projects, most of whom do not appear to have been consulted at
all about the dams and many of whom want to return to reservoir areas,
having already been displaced by the recent conflict in the region….

The overwhelming response in particular from women and their
organisations is one of opposition to the negative impact on them and
those in their care; yet women have been the least consulted sector.

The reservoirs would submerge evidence for hundreds and potentially
thousands of ancient sites of international importance, including
evidence of our earliest origins as a species, the beginnings of
agriculture, and the remains of empires including those of Rome
and Assyria.

The heritage of Kurds, Armenians, Assyrians and others from the last
few hundred years and holy places from several traditions within the
Muslim and Christian faiths, many still used in religious practices
today and some dating from over 1000 years ago, will go under the
reservoir waters.

According to report author Maggie Ronayne: ‘The GAP development project
of which these dams are part is destroying a heritage which belongs
to the whole of humanity and contravenes the most basic professional
standards. Governments and companies involved with these projects are
ignoring its serious implications: the destruction of such diverse
cultural and religious heritage in a State with a history of severe
cultural repression. Turkey’s progress on cultural rights for the
Kurds and others has been an object of scrutiny in recent years; the
EU must consider cultural destruction on this scale in that context.’

One of the major findings of the report is that there is a new
consortium of companies coming together to build the discredited Ilisu
Dam which would displace up to 78,000 mostly Kurdish people, and would
also potentially cut off downstream flows of water to Syria and Iraq.

The ancient town of Hasankeyf, culturally important to many Kurdish
people and of international archaeological significance, will not
be saved by new plans to build the dam despite the promises of the
Turkish prime minister and the would-be dam builders.

In any case, the cultural impacts of Ilisu are much greater than this
one very important town.

>>From 2000 to 2002, campaigners, human rights and environmental groups
and affected communities successfully exposed fundamental flaws in
project documents and plans for Ilisu, which contributed to the
collapse of the last consortium of companies planning to build it.
But the basis for the project this time remains essentially the same.

Kerim Yildiz, Executive Director of the Kurdish Human Rights Project
commented: ‘It seems that the Turkish State has not learned the
lessons of Ilisu: the report finds that a range of international laws
and standards are not being adhered to. EU standards in particular
are met by none of the projects. The study also shows that while
there have been some improvements and legal reforms, torture remains
an administrative practice of the State. If this is the climate in
which people are to be consulted about the dams, then we can only
conclude that any fair outcome for the public appears most unlikely.
The GAP development project examined in this study raises serious
questions regarding Turkey’s process of accession to the EU.’

Contact:

Maggie Ronayne, Department of Archaeology, National University of Ireland,
Galway, Ireland. Tel: 00 353 91 512298 or 00 353 (0) 87 7838688 (mobile)
Email: [email protected]

Kerim Yildiz / Rochelle Harris, Kurdish Human Rights Project, London,
Tel: +44 (0)207 287-2772. Email: [email protected]
*** Please note our email addresses have changed ***

;type=feature

http://www.indymedia.ie/newswire.php?story_id=69292&amp
www.khrp.org

Tension seeps back into US-Russian relations

Eurasianet Organization
April 20 2005

TENSION SEEPS BACK INTO US-RUSSIAN RELATIONS
Ariel Cohen 4/20/05
A EurasiaNet commentary

The Bush administration’s desire to promote the globalization of
democratic values is fueling tension in the United States’ relationship
with Russia, a country that has experienced a dramatic erosion of
its geopolitical influence over the past 18 months.

Following a meeting in Moscow on April 20, US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice and Russian President Vladimir Putin both expressed
satisfaction about the current state of bilateral relations. Despite
their positive assessments, strains in the US-Russian relationship
are readily evident.

Prior to meeting Putin, Rice voiced criticism of Russia’s
democratization record, specifically citing the fact that the Russian
government maintains a stranglehold on television outlets in the
country. “There should be more independent media so that people can
debate and make decisions about the future of Russia, democratic
Russia, together,” Rice said during an interview broadcast by Ekho
Moskvy radio. The secretary of state also suggested that Russia’s
executive branch under Putin had accumulated excessive power at the
expense of Russia’s other branches of government.

While critical of the Russian government, Rice emphasized that
Washington and Moscow remained strategic partners, adding that the
United States sought to build a “constructive, friendly relationship”
with Moscow. The apparent US desire not to fully alienate Russia is
rooted in geopolitical pragmatism. An antagonistic Moscow could greatly
complicate a number of important international issues, including the
global threat posed by radical Islam and nuclear non-proliferation.

Rice insisted insist during the Ekho Moskvy interview that the United
States does not seek to replace Russia as the key power in the Caucasus
and Central Asia – two areas that have traditionally sat well within
Russia’s sphere of influence. However, recent actions indicate that
Russian officials are extremely wary of American intentions.

One indicator of Russia’s concern is reflected in Moscow’s changing
stance toward the Organization for Security and Cooperation
in Europe. OSCE election monitors were highly visible in recent
elections in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan, [For background see the
Eurasia Insight archive]. and the group’s reports on election flaws
played a background role in fueling revolutions in all three states.
[For background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Russia now wants
the OSCE to focus more on security, and it has adopted a cantankerous
stance on several budgetary issues.

While US and Russian officials strive to preserve the veneer of a
cooperative spirit, experts on both sides are far blunter in their
criticisms, and more willing to use confrontational rhetoric. Debates
during conferences on regional issues are now sometimes flavored with
a touch of Cold-War era hostility. Such debates occurred in February
in the Georgian capital Tbilisi during a conference called The South
Caucasus in the 21st Century: Challenges and Opportunities.

During the three-day meeting, sponsored by the Georgian Foundation
for Strategic and International Studies, Stephen Sestanovich, a former
top US diplomat during the Clinton administration who is currently a
senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, courted controversy
when he suggested that the concept of the Caucasus lying within the
“post-Soviet space” was outdated. Instead, he advocated that the
Caucasus ought to be identified simply as part of Europe, a change
that could help to subtly weaken Russia’s traditional high-profile
role in the region.

S. Frederick Starr, the chairman of the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute
at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies,
appeared to criticize Russia’s stance on the region’s so-called “frozen
conflicts,” involving Georgia’s separatist territories of Abkhazia
and South Ossetia, along with Nagorno-Karabakh. [For background see
the Eurasia Insight archive].”Conflict resolution failed not only
due to intransigence of the sides and insincere policies of regional
powers, but also because the efforts of good and tenacious people in
international organizations to settle the conflicts have failed,” Starr
said. He went on to suggest that if Russia does not respect territorial
integrity of South Caucasus states – Georgia, in particular — then
the West should “open up” issues relating to the Northern Caucasus
for discussion, including self-determination for Chechens.

Vyacheslav Nikonov, a pro-Putin political scientist and the president
of the Politika Foundation in Moscow, staunchly defended the Russian
record in the Caucasus, adding that Russia intended to remain an
influential player in the Caucasus. Russia “is on the rise and its
power will increase, whether you like it or not,” he said. The fact
that millions of ethnic Armenians, Azeris and Georgians live in Russia
grants Moscow a right to take an active interest in South Caucasus
affairs, Nikonov maintained.

Yevgeny Kozhokin, the director of the Russian Institute of Strategic
Studies, suggested that the United States and Russia should pursue
“big issues,” such as the growing geopolitical influence of China
and international terrorism, and Washington could leave “small fry”
regional issues, such as the future political status of South Ossetia,
for Moscow and Tbilisi to resolve exclusively.

Vladimir Socor, a senior fellow at the Washington, DC,-based Jamestown
Foundation, said relying on Russia to work out its differences with
Georgia on South Ossetia and Abkhazia would be a mistake. Socor
assailed Russia for its failure to fulfill security commitments
made during the OSCE’s Istanbul summit in 1999. He said political
settlements to the two conflicts would remain elusive unless new
peace-keeping and negotiating frameworks were established. “Existing
frameworks for negotiations are relics of another era before the
expansion of the EU and NATO,” Socor said “The UN mission in Abkhazia
helps put an undeserved international gloss on the Russian framework
designed to perpetuate secession and the occupation of Abkhazia.”

Editor’s Note: Ariel Cohen, Ph.D., is Senior Research Fellow in
Russian and Eurasian Studies and International Energy Security at the
Heritage Foundation, and Editor and co-author of Eurasia in Balance:
US and the Regional Power Shift (Ashgate, 2005, forthcoming).

Concert Dedicated To 90th Anniversary Of Armenian Genocide In Ottoma

CONCERT DEDICATED TO 90TH ANNIVERSARY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN OTTOMAN TURKEY HELD IN OPERA THEATRE OF BUENOS-AIRES

YEREVAN, APRIL 19. ARMINFO. A concert dedicated to the 90th anniversary
of Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey in 1915 was held in opera
theatre of Buenos Aires.

ARMINFO was informed in the State Committee for organization
of arrangements dedicated to the 90th anniversary of Armenian
Genocide. High-ranking officials of the government of Argentina,
parliamentarians, intellectuals, representatives of Armenian community
of Argentina, diplomats and journalists attended the concert.

International conference on Armenian “genocide” opens in Yerevan

International conference on Armenian “genocide” opens in Yerevan

Mediamax news agency
20 Apr 05

Yerevan, 20 April: An international conference called “Ultimate crime,
ultimate challenge: human rights and genocide” opened in Yerevan today.

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan, Catholicos of All Armenians
Garegin II and the UN secretary-general’s special adviser on genocide,
Juan Mendez, addressed the opening ceremony.

Former Polish President Leh Walensa, the head of the UN interim
administration in Kosovo, Bernard Kushner, the president of the
Nagornyy Karabakh Republic [NKR], Arkadiy Gukasyan, will address the
conference tomorrow.

Scientists and human rights experts from many countries are taking
part in the conference. Two Turkish scientists will be among the
participants. These are historian Taner Akcam, who works in the USA
and who has more than once called on Turkey to recognize the Armenian
genocide, and a professor of Istanbul Bilgi University, Murat Belge.

Robert Kocharian Departing For France Today

ROBERT KOCHARIAN DEPARTING FOR FRANCE TODAY

Pan Armenian News
20.04.2005 03:14

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today Armenian President Robert Kocharian is
departing for France on a working visit. During the visit he is
scheduled to meet with French President Jaques Chirac, the Senate
President and the Parliament Speaker. The Armenian leader will return
to Yerevan on April 23.

Opening exhibition on Armenian Genocide in Holland

PRESS RELEASE

FEDERATION OF ARMENIAN ORGANISATIONS IN THE NETHERLANDS (FAON)
24 April Committee
Weesperstraat 91
NL – 2574 VS The Hague
Contact: M. Hakhverdian
Tel. 070 4490209
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

Press Release

90th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

Exhibition on Armenian Genocide opened in Leiden, the Netherlands

An exhibition on the Armenian Genocide and entitled “Deportation,
Persecution, Annihilation” and “Reaction of Dutch media, public and politics
on Armenian Genocide” was opened in Pieterskerk Church in Leiden, The
Netherlands on the 17 April 2005. Prof. The armenologist professor Dr. Jos
Weitenberg inaugurated the exhibition with a speech on the importance of
this exhibition. The exhibition will last till 21 April 2005.

Apart from the photo material coming from the Information and Documentation
Centre Armenia (IDZA) of Berlin prepared by Dr. Tessa Hoffman and Gerayer
Koutcharian, a section of recently found Dutch documents from period
1910-1918 is added to it. The Dutch section of the exhibition is prepared by
a working group of 24 April Committee of the Federation of Armenian
Organisations of the Netherlands (FAON).

The exhibition with extended Dutch explanation is organised by 24 April
Committee of FAON with the support of Armenian Embassy in Brussels and in
co-operation with Dr. Tessa Hoffman.

–Boundary_(ID_snJDw6XB9Mr17DIjYX5lYQ)–

http://www.24april.nl

Customs Revenues Increase By 16 Per Cent in Armenia

Customs incomings increase by 16 per cent in Armenia

Mediamax news agency
15 Apr 05

YEREVAN

Customs incomings into the Armenian state budget amounted to 28.914bn
drams [64.25m dollars] in the first quarter of 2005, increasing by 16
per cent in comparison with the same period of 2004.

In this period, the volume of export amounted to 92bn drams [204.4m
dollars] and import to 139bn drams [256m dollars], the head of the
Armenian Customs Committee, Armen Avetisyan, said at a press
conference today.

The volume of petrol, sugar, wheat and meat imported into the republic
fell in the first quarter of 2005, while the amount of cars, fuel oil
and cigarettes increased.

Avetisyan today also held a working meeting with Armenian President
Robert Kocharyan during which the main attention was paid to issues of
tightening customs administration, the presidential press service told
Mediamax news agency.

Speaker: Armenia For Reform of South Caucasus Parliamentary Init.

Pan Armenian News

ARTUR BAGHDASARIAN: ARMENIA FOR REFORM OF SOUTH CAUCASIAN PARLIAMENTARY
INITIATIVE INTO ASSEMBLY

16.04.2005 05:17

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia comes for the reforming of the South Caucasian
Parliamentary Initiative into South Caucasian Parliamentary Assembly,
Armenian Parliament Chairman Artur Baghdasarian stated at a meeting with
PACE President Rene van der Linden in Saint Petersburg, the Press Service of
the Armenian National Assembly reported. In his words, Armenia is ready to
regional cooperation with all neighbors. Within the context of Turkey’s
accession to the EU Artur Baghdasarian noted the importance of
implementation of democratic reforms in all countries of the region,
recognition of the fact of the Armenian Genocide, the lifting of the
blockade of Armenia’s border. The parties also discussed the Nagorno
Karabakh issue, the solution of which Armenia sees through peaceful talks
and mutual compromise exclusively. In his turn, the PACE President noted the
importance of the cooperation of the South Caucasian countries, as well as
the importance of the meetings of the Speakers of Armenia and Turkey in
Strasbourg. The interlocutors appreciated the process of establishment of
the stability pact in the region and noted it allowed promoting cooperation
between countries of the region.