Suisse: enquete ouverte sur homme politique turc pour negationnisme

Agence France Presse
24 juillet 2005 dimanche 12:23 PM GMT

Suisse: enquête ouverte sur un homme politique turc pour négationnisme

ZURICH

La justice suisse a ouvert une enquête pour négationnisme à
l’encontre du chef du Parti des travailleurs turcs, Dogu Perincek,
pour avoir nié le génocide arménien de 1915 lors d’une conférence de
presse vendredi à Glattbrugg, près de Zurich, a précisé dimanche la
police.

De passage en Suisse pour trois jours pour commémorer le 82e
anniversaire du Traité de Lausanne, fondateur de la République
turque, le dirigeant du petit parti turc de gauche avait présenté le
génocide comme un “mensonge des impérialistes”, a expliqué dimanche
la police cantonale zurichoise.

“Cette affirmation contrevient aux principes antiracistes et
constitue un délit au regard de la loi suisse”, a-t-on ajouté de même
source.

Le responsable turc, qui se trouvait dimanche à Lausanne, est déjà
sous le coup d’une plainte pour négationnisme déposée à la mi-juillet
par l’Association Suiss-Arménie à la suite d’un discours prononcé en
mai dans la capitale vaudoise. Dogu Perincek avait alors affirmé que
le génocide arménien n’avait pas eu lieu.

La justice vaudoise a émis un mandat de comparution à son encontre, a
indiqué dimanche la police lausannoise.

La ministre suisse des Affaires étrangères Micheline Calmy-Rey a
appelé la Turquie à entreprendre un travail historique de fond sur le
génocide des Arméniens perpétré sous le règne des Ottomans pendant la
Première Guerre mondiale.

En Suisse, le Parlement fédéral et deux parlements cantonaux ont
reconnu comme génocide le massacre de plus d’un million d’Arméniens
par la Turquie en 1915, ce qui a créé de nombreuses tensions entre la
Suisse et la Turquie.

AZTAG: On Bruises, Beauties, and Makeup: An Interview with Elif Shaf

“Aztag” Daily Newspaper
P.O. Box 80860, Bourj Hammoud,
Beirut, Lebanon
Fax: +961 1 258529
Phone: +961 1 260115, +961 1 241274
Email: [email protected]

On Bruises, Beauties, and Makeup: An Interview with Elif Shafak
By Khatchig Mouradian

Says Elif Shafak in this interview, “‘The bruises and the make-up’
is a metaphor I use in order to better depict Turkish modernists’
obsession with ‘our image in the eyes of the Western world.’ The
elite likes to prove to the Westerners how Westernized, modernized
we Turks are. Yet when it comes to critically reading the past,
the same elite is indifferent, if not ignorant.”

It is this indifference and ignorance that Shafak, whom “The Economist”
considers to be “well set to challenge Mr. (Orhan) Pamuk as Turkey’s
foremost contemporary novelist,” tries to confront. She does not
believe in deceitful “outward appearances” and suggests that Turkey
wash away the makeup “to see both the beauties and the bruises
underneath.”

Elif Shafak was born in Strasbourg, France in 1971. After spending her
teenage years in Spain, she returned to Turkey. She graduated with
a degree in International Relations from the Middle East Technical
University in Ankara. She earned her PhD in 2004 from the Department
of Political Science of the same University. She has taught at Bilgi
University, Istanbul and at the University of Michigan. Currently,
she is an Assistant Professor in the Near Eastern Studies Department
at the University of Arizona.

She has published five novels: “Pinhan” (1997), “Sehrin Aynalari”
(1999), “Mahrem” (2000), “Bit Palas” (2002), and “The Saint of
Incipient Insanities” (2004), her first novel in English.

Although some people in Turkey consider those who attempt to wash the
Turkish Republic’s makeup “backstabbers”, it is intellectuals like
Elif Shafak who will usher the country to confront its past and face
the future.

Khatchig Mouradian – Heraclitus says, “Nothing endures but change”. As
a person with “incessant itineraries” who sees life “as a perpetual
journey where there is neither a final destination, nor the desire
to find one”, and as a writer whose heroes are often prone to
metamorphosis, how do you explain your commitment to change?

Elif Shafak – At birth we are all born into a certain identity -be
it in terms of religion, nationality, gender, etc. Our name is given
to us, and so is our habitat, and sometimes even our worldview. The
question is the following: living the life we are to live, are we
going to die in the same bay, in the same identity? My answer to
this question is negative. I am intrigued by metamorphosis. I am not
a settler. If anything, I guess I am a nomad. This kind of nomadism
was not my choice at the beginning, but then it became something I
deliberately, consciously chose.

I was born in France, raised by a single mother, I saw two utterly
different grandmothers with two utterly different understandings of
Islam, traveled back and forth between different cities and countries,
each time the setting changed profoundly, the ground beneath my feet
was always subject to change and life a series of sudden ruptures… I
spent my childhood in Spain, and traveled back and forth between
Amman-Jordan, Cologne-Germany, Ankara, and then Istanbul… Then
Boston, Michigan, Arizona… I now live in two places at the same time:
Arizona on the one hand and Istanbul on the other hand. The only
continuity that existed in my life, the only luggage that came with
me everywhere I went was my writing, was fiction.

Transformation and transcendence are at the heart of my fiction.

I think fiction and Sufi thought share something deep in common. For
both of them transformation and transcendence play a pivotal
role. Fiction, for me, is not the ability to tell your own story
to others, but the ability to make others’ stories yours and your
story others’.

I have roots but I am not rooted. According to the Islamic narrative,
there lives a tree in the skies above. Its name is Tuba. This tree
is turned upside down and thus has its roots up in the air. Sometimes
I think my fiction is a continuous quest for the Tuba tree.

K.M. – Unlike the roots of the Tuba tree in heaven, our earthly
roots can be struck by shame and pain, which is why we, human beings,
might want to keep them under the soil. We might take pride in our
roots but we rarely reveal them entirely. Can fiction bear fruits of
transformation, transcendence, and, yes, tuba (beatitude)? Does it
make readers less rooted, less uprooted, and more open to their own
stories and the stories of others?

E.S. – The clash between representing a particular identity and
questioning the very essence of identity politics is one that intrigues
me deeply. I am a bit torn in between because I am a nomad but I am
a political nomad.

Then there is another dilemma: those who seek to be pastless,
memory-free, in other words the future-oriented and then those for
whom the past determines the basic parameters, in other words the
past-oriented. I do not believe this is an easy dilemma that can be
overcome by solely reasoning. Today’s international politics does
not like ambiguity. Politics does not like ambivalence.

Yet the universe of art, the world of fiction necessitates ambiguities,
flexibilities. It has to be fluid. Only then, fiction can bear the
fruits of transformation and transcendence. You need to be uprooted in
order to feel empathy, if not a rapport, with others’ stories, at least
until the book is over you need to step outside your zone of existence.

In the USA, for instance, there is a tendency to attribute a function
to fiction, as if every book has to have a function. Likewise, if you
happen to be “Middle Eastern woman writer” then you are expected to
be writing on “women in the Middle East”. Your identity walks ahead
of the quality of your fiction, which I find very troublesome. In
fact, I find this all-encompassing expectation highly detrimental for
fiction. Fiction for me is not telling my own story but the ability
not to be myself.

At the same time, I should say I am not propagating a fiction devoid
of political considerations. To the opposite, the relation between
aesthetics and politics is of deep interest to me.

“Politics and aesthetics” is not an easy marriage but as a Turkish
novelist, I do not believe I have the luxury to be apolitical in
this world. Therefore, fluidity or flexibility does not mean being
apolitical; to the opposite it entails a political choice and the
proclivity for empathy.

K.M.- In one of your opinion articles, you say: “While it might be true
that many Westerners have to take a closer look at Turkey’s remarkable
achievements and unusual history in searching for an answer to the
vital question of how compatible Islam is with Western democracy,
many Turks, in return, have to start washing the make-up on their
face and start admitting the bruises left in their history”. Can you
speak about those bruises?

E.S.-“The bruises and the make-up” is a metaphor I use in order to
better depict Turkish modernists’ obsession with “our image in the
eyes of the Western world.” The elite likes to prove the Westerners how
Westernized, modernized we Turks are. Yet when it comes to critically
reading the past, the same elite is indifferent, if not ignorant.

Turkey’s modernization went hand in hand with the transformation
from a multiethnic, multilingual, multifaith empire to a supposedly
homogeneous Turkish nation-state. This process is replete with traumas,
losses, and painful memories many of which have been somehow erased
from our collective memory.

Our family lines, if you trace it back to centuries, might be most
probably multiethnic but ethnicity is a source of suspicion if you
choose to talk about it in the public arena. You can be whoever you
are in the privacy of your house, but in the public domain, you should
just be a Turk. This distinction between private sphere and public
sphere is of great interest to me.

In the past, this society was ethnically so heterogeneous but right
after 1923 we have gotten used to acting and thinking as if we were now
a homogenous whole. The interesting thing about Turkish nationalism
is that it relies very much on words, rather than on blood or genes
or race, as some other types of nationalism do in other countries.

For Turkish nationalism, you can be a Kurd, an Armenian, a
Serbian… all the same, as long as you utter the words: How happy is
the one who calls himself a Turk! This is a very interesting feature
of Turkish national identity. What you say, what you do, in other
words always the outer appearance is essential.

It is this concern with the “outward appearance” that I find quite
troublesome. Instead, I suggest washing this make-up off to see both
the beauties and the bruises underneath, both the beauties and the
atrocities of the past. There are stains and scars left from the
transition from a multiethnic empire to a supposedly monolithic
nation-state. The loss of the cosmopolitan heritage and multiethnic
structure is a cultural, social, economic, political and a big moral
loss for Turkey and for the next generations growing up without the
knowledge of this loss.

K.M.-Is it to regain part of the knowledge of this loss that you are
“planning a project on “Women’s Oral Histories vis-a-vis Collective
Amnesia: The Narratives of Armenian & Turkish & Greek Grandmothers”?
Why do citizens of the Turkish Republic in the 21st century “need
to listen to the suppressed memories of the Turkish grandmother”
regarding “the atrocities…Turks have committed against Armenians”
a century ago in the Ottoman Empire, for example?

E.S.-The whole debate on the Turkish-Armenian past is deeply
politicized and polarized today. It is also obsessed with written
documents and archives. However, I think oral culture is just as much
valuable. As a storyteller, it is those stories that I am primarily
interested in. The stories old women in Turkey still remember. In
many families today there are old women who remember the atrocities
committed against the Armenians in the past, I think it is especially
valuable to bring out that accumulation of knowledge. This is another
source of knowledge.

It is not only the atrocities of the past but also the beauties of
the past that we can discover in this vein because many of these old
women had Armenian neighbors, friends; they have memories. The Armenian
Question is the battle of memory against amnesia and I believe we need
the memories of the grandmothers more than anything, because they are
not as politicized or polarized as historians or politicians are today.

K.M.- In reference to the cancellation of a conference in Istanbul
challenging the state’s thesis on the “Armenian issue”, you say in
an article entitled “So, Did I Stab the Nation in the Back?”, “If our
perceptive politicians had not intervened at the last minute, I would
have failed to stop myself from uttering very damaging statements.”
Your presentation was going to be on the Armenian writer Zabel Yeseyan.
Would you now give a summary of this “very damaging” and “backstabbing”
paper you were going to present?

E.S. – My presentation at the Conference in Istanbul was going to be on
Zabel Yeseyan. I am fascinated by her life and work, and I think it is
a pity that today Turkish intellectuals do not know anything about her.
Likewise, we know almost nothing about the Armenian intellectuals of
the late Ottoman era.

More significantly perhaps is the question: why was the Turkish
governmental elite so much disturbed by the writing of the Armenian
intellectuals? Why did they want to suppress their voices? Why were
poets, novelists, journalists deemed to be dangerous? How and why
was writing thought to be dangerous? These are the questions I was
planning to raise at the conference.

Today in Turkey not many people know that before the deportation
begun, a list of around 240 Armenian intellectuals was concocted
by the government; a list of dangerous minds! Dangerous pens! Among
them were many artists and writers. It was this list that the state
wanted to suppress and silence. Zabel Yeseyan seems to be the only
woman in the list.

It is an old tactic of power and dominion. If you want to control and
constrain a minority population, you first and foremost control and
constrain its brainpower, its intellectuals, its thinking minds. The
Ottoman elite seems to have taken this step.

If we can understand the list of Armenian intellectuals of 1915,
I hope, we Turkish intellectuals of 2005 can better understand,
recognize and mourn the injustice done against the Armenian minority,
and the power dynamics behind this historical process.

Yellowknife (Canada): 3 alleged robbers walk away from home invasion

3 alleged robbers walk away from home invasion charges

CBC North, Canada
July 15 2005

Last updated Jul 15 2005 09:50 AM MDT
CBC News

Three men facing the prospect of long prison sentences for a violent
home invasion in Yellowknife were set free on Friday.

The men were facing several charges in connection with a January 2004
residential robbery that was viewed by many Yellowknifers as a sign
that the small city is no longer exempt from big-city crime.

The charges against Burton Dodman, Gary Taylor and Wade Sutherland
were stayed because the Crown could not arrange for the two victims
of the home invasion to testify.

The victims, who worked as diamond cutters, have returned to their
homes in Armenia and the Ukraine.

“We looked at various options as to how we could have their testimony,”
said Crown prosecutor Shelley Tkatch. “We tried to have them back
in Canada, using transcripts or using video-link technology, and
unfortunately none of these options worked out, so we were unable to
get any testimony from these two.”

The court heard that a year and a half ago, shortly after 1 a.m.,
the two men were awoken in their apartment by four masked men
brandishing knives.

According to the testimony the victims gave at the preliminary
inquiry, the invaders stole cash and other items from the apartment,
tied the men up and used their bank cards to withdraw $1,000 from
their accounts.

Police found an automatic teller receipt with a partial fingerprint
linked to one of the suspects outside the bank where the withdrawals
were made.

At the same suspect’s home, police also found the butts of Armenian
cigarettes, the same kind stolen during the break in.

The only man who has been punished for the home invasion is the person
who reportedly had the most minor role in the crime.

Michael Payne pleaded guilty in April of 2004, telling the court that
the three older men played bigger roles.

Payne was sentenced to three years in jail for his own participation.

NKR: Karabakh As The Third Conflict Side

KARABAKH AS THE THIRD CONFLICT SIDE

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic [NKR]
12 July 05

In Goran Lennmarkers report the standpoint of the third party of the
conflict Nagorno Karabakh is introduced as well. At the end of last
week the Armenian delegation returned from Washington. The head of the
delegation, Vice Speaker of the National Assembly of Armenia Vahan
Hovhanissian and member of the delegation, Member of Parliament Samvel
Nikoyan gave a press conference the topic of which was chiefly the
report of Goran Lennmarker, the OSCE reporter on Nagorno Karabakh.

According to the head of the delegation, the report consisting of
eight points is more than balanced and positive for the Armenian
side. For example, in one of the points of the report G. Lennmarker
avoided giving a political evaluation of the Karabakh conflict
grounded on a standpoint or an argument of either the Armenian or
Azerbaijani sides, stressing that the conflict was not frozen. In
another favourable point for Armenia the reporter pointed out the ways
of transformation of the conflict, i.e. peace talks, Azerbaijan
Armenia cooperation supported by European and Euro-Atlantic
organizations, involvement of parliamentary diplomacy, the support of
the people of Armenia and Azerbaijan to the issue of peaceful
resolution of the conflict bolstered up by the parliamentarians of
both countries. Lennmarker considers unacceptable the approach of
Azerbaijan that the Armenian side must return certain areas to
Azerbaijan before cooperation can be set up between them. Cooperation
needs to be started now, especially in the framework of the project
New Neighbourhood, which is rather favourable for us, says Vahan
Hovhanissian. Another novelty was the introduction of Nagorno Karabakh
together with Armenia and Azerbaijan as the third side of the
conflict. The OSCE does not recognize NKR as an independent state, and
according to the Armenian delegation, Goran Lennmarker explains this
in the following way: Considering that the prospect of cutting the
Caucasian region into small independent countries is dangerous, he
thinks that the way out of maximum security is the unification of
Nagorno Karabakh with Armenia, which can take different forms.

However, the member of the Armenian delegation Samvel Nikoyan noticed
that besides the unification of Armenia and Karabakh Lennmarker also
allowed for leaving Karabakh within Azerbaijan as a sovereignty, which
was naturally refused by the Armenian delegation. According to
V. Hovhanissian, the tactics of the Azerbaijani delegation created
troubles for them during the session. According to the spokesman,
seeing that Lennmarkers report was not favourable for them, they
offered a revision of the PACE resolution as an alternative to
it. This is the reason why we preferred preventing the adoption of the
resolution to presenting an opposing one. We achieved this with
difficulty, with the support of the delegations of the USA, France,
Canada, Greece, and other countries, such as Russia, joined them as
well. According to the vice speaker of the National Assembly, the
balanced report by Lennmarker is the result of the team work of our
delegation, the foreign minister, the Armenian ambassadors to the OSCE
and the US, the lobby of the Armenian community of the US,
particularly the offices of Hay Dat with delegates of different
countries.

CHRISTINE MNATSAKANIAN.
13-07-2005

ANKARA: Babacan speaks at European Parliament

Turkish Press
July 13 2005

Press Review

HURRIYET

BABACAN SPEAKS AT EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

State Minister Ali Babacan yesterday spoke at the European Parliament
for the first time with the title of chief negotiator, saying that
Turkey had no alternative besides full European Union membership.
Speaking to the European Parliament’s Foreign Relations Committee,
Babacan thus had his first test before an EU body, and faced a host
of questions from MEPs on subjects such as religious freedom for
non-Muslims and the southeast, Cyprus and Armenian issues. Babacan
called the reforms which have been implemented in Turkey over the
last three years a `silent revolution.’ Babacan said that steps had
been taken on education and broadcasting in certain dialects and
languages and that criticisms of certain elements of the new Turkish
Penal Code (TCK), which came into force on June 1, could be removed
in practice. /Hurriyet/

Draft of Future Peace Treaty on Settlement of Karabakh

DRAFT OF FUTURE PEACE TREATY ON SETTLEMENT OF KARABAKH
CONFLICT WILL HARDLY PREPARED

YEREVAN, JULY 12. ARMINFO. The draft of the future peace treaty on
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict will hardly be prepared
by the meeting of the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Kazan
in August. As Baku’s mass media inform, Russian Cochairmen of OSCE
Minsk Group Yuri Merzlyakov stated during the news conference in
Baku, Tuesday.

“We are now working over formulation of principles of the settlement.
The process of formation of the treaty after their agreement will
last several months. And it would be unreal to say about the
possibility of its preparation by the meeting in Kazan”, the Russian
diplomat said. His American counterpart Steven Mann said “The peace
treaty may be prepared both within the few next months and within the
next century. In Mann’s opinion, the terms of its preparation depend
on the political will of the leadership of the countries and desire
of the people. The french cochairman mentioned that the Minsk group
is only a mediator, and reaching peace depends on just the
presidents. In the opinion of the French diplomat, the parliamentary
elections in Azerbaijan in Nov 6 may have positive influence on the
peaceful process. The mediators also informed that during the
negotiations with the leadership of Azerbaijan they had discussed the
issue of opening of communications between the main territory of
Azerbaijan and Nakhichevan via Armenia and Karabakh. The cochairmen
will leave Baku for Yerevan and Stepanakert, where they will hold
negotiations.

After the Greco visit

A1plus

| 18:00:43 | 08-07-2005 | Official |

AFTER THE GRECO VISIT

Today the usual session of the Anti Corruption Strategy Realization
Monitoring Committee took place presided over by the RA President’s Advisor
Babken Yesayan.

During the session the results of the activity of the Committee in the first
6 months of 2005 have been concluded.

The results of the visit of the GRECO (Group of States Against Corruption)
experts to Armenia have also been discussed.

Extraordinary Parliament Session to Debate Revised Const. Reforms

Armenpress

EXTRAORDINARY PARLIAMENT SESSION TO DEBATE REVISED CONSTITUTIONAL REFORMS
PACKAGE

YEREVAN, JULY 8, ARMENPRESS: Forty-four members of Armenian parliament
signed today under a petition asking parliament chairman, Arthur
Baghdasarian, to convene an extraordinary session on August 29, two weeks
before their summer recess ends, to debate a package of constitutional
amendments that will be put on a second reading.
Baghdasarian called today on lawmakers urging them to be in the capital
city on that day and attend the session. The revised text of constitutional
reforms was sent to Council of Europe experts’ examination on July 7.
Parliament leadership said it reflects all of the Council of Europe
recommendations which Armenian authorities promised to accept late last
month. The revised package calls for giving the Armenian parliament a
broader role in forming governments, limiting the president’s authority to
appoint and sack judges and making the mayor of Yerevan an elected official.
These changes were backed up by the majority of Armenian opposition
forces who said they would end their 18-month boycott of parliament, except
the Hanrapetutyun Party of former prime minister Aram Sarkisian, who said
his party would boycott a nation-wide referendum on constitutional changes
on grounds that the “illegal regime has no right to amend the basic law of
the country.”

Leg Two Of System Of A Down’s American Tour

Ultimate-Guitar.Com
July 6 2005

Leg Two Of System Of A Down’s American Tour

Date: 2005-07-06 Artist: System Of A Down Category: Upcoming Tours

“…the most wonderfully bombastic band in modern rock…” – Boston
Globe.

With many of the dates on Leg One already sold out, a Top 5 track at
radio with “B.Y.O.B.,” and a Platinum album for “Mezmerize” under
their collective belt, SOAD announces dates for the second leg of
their Summer North American headline tour. In addition, the band
confirms a Boston-area date for Leg One to be played at The Centrum
in Worcester on August 27.

System Of A Down will wrap up Leg One in Toronto on September 1, take
a couple of weeks off, then kick off Leg Two headlining the Pacific
Coliseum in Vancouver on September 17. Leg Two will extend into
mid-October (see below for confirmed dates). As with Leg One, System
Of A Down has invited The Mars Volta to be Special Guest on the
second half of the tour; a third band, to be announced, will open the
shows.

Tickets for the tour dates will be priced from $32.50 to $45.00, and
many of the dates on Leg Two will go on sale this weekend (July 8 and
9). System Of A Down’s site will host ticket presales for all of the
dates. Log onto the site for the special password and complete
details.

The tour is in support of System Of A Down’s the brand-new album,
“Mezmerize” (American Recordings/Columbia Records), which was
released May 17 and debuted in the Number One slot on the
Billboard/SoundScan charts. “Mezmerize” also experienced worldwide
first-week success having soared to the top of album charts in more
than a dozen countries – worldwide sales for “Mezmerize” in its first
week topped 800,000 copies, and is already Platinum. “Mezmerize” is
the first disc in a two-disc set, with disc two, “Hypnotize,” set for
a late fall release. “Mezmerize/Hypnotize” was produced by Rick Rubin
and System’s main songwriter/guitarist Daron Malakian.

Since its self-titled debut in 1998, System of a Down – Daron
Malakian (guitars, vocals), Serj Tankian (vocals), Shavo Odadjian
(bass), John Dolmayan (drums) – has sold more than 10-million records
world wide, and risen to the level of an arena headliner while
maintaining its musical integrity, its core fan base, and its
position as one of the most unique bands in rock. With the unexpected
commercial radio success of “Chop Suey!,” “Toxicity,” and the Number
One “Aerials,” the three Top 10 radio tracks from 2001’s
multi-platinum album “Toxicity,” System blew the definition of
mainstream rock wide open. System Of A Down’s music is impossible to
pigeonhole, as it runs the gamut from Metallica to Frank Zappa to
Gilbert and Sullivan to Armenian folk tunes. Lyrically, System is
highly opinionated about numerous topics including war, religion,
politics, Hollywood, love, genocide, drugs, sex, injustice, and just
having a good time.

With more dates to be announced on Leg Two, confirmed dates for both
leg one and leg two of System Of A Down’s headline tour are as
follows:

Leg One:

04-05/08 – Long Beach Arena, Long Beach, CA
06/08 – Sports Arena, San Diego, CA
08/08 – America West Arena, Phoenix, Arizona
11/08 – American Airlines Center, Dallas, TX
12/08 – SBC Arena, San Antonio, TX
13/08 – Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion, Houston, TX
15/08 – Civic Center, Pensacola, FL
16/08 – TD Waterhouse Arena, Orlando, FL
17/08 – Office Depot Center, Miami, FL
19/08 – Gwinnett Arena, Atlanta, GA
21/08 – Hampton Coliseum, Hampton, VA
22/08 – Baltimore Arena, Baltimore, MD
23/08 – Continental Airlines Arena, East Rutherford, NJ
26/08 – Wachovia Spectrum Center, Philadelphia, PA
27/08 – The Centrum, Worcester, MA
29/08 – Belle Centre, Montreal, QC
30/08 – Colisee Pepsi, Quebec City, QC
01/09 – Air Canada Center, Toronto, ONT

Leg Two:

17/09 – Pacific Coliseum, Vancouver, BC
19/09 – Pengrowth Arena, Calgary, AB
20/09 – Rexall Arena, Edmonton, AB
22/09 – MTS Centre, Winnipeg, MB
23/09 – Xcel Center, Minneapolis, MN
29/09 – Joe Louis Arena, Detroit, MI
30/09 – Allstate Arena, Chicago, IL
02/10 – Pepsi Center, Denver, CO
05/10 – Key Arena, Seattle, WA
06/10 – Rose Garden, Portland, OR

Armenian Constitution is 10 years old

A1plus

| 13:34:09 | 04-07-2005 | Official |

ARMENIAN CONSTITUTION IS 10 YEARS OLD

Today and tomorrow are holidays in Armenia. Although the constitutional
reforms are in full course, the RA citizens are celebrating the Constitution
day. 10 yeas ago on July 5 the first Constitution of the Republic of Armenia
was adopted by referendum.

In this connection the RA NA President Arthur Baghdasaryan has delivered an
congratulating message, «The last few years showed that our Constitution
survived hard times proving its viability. But life goes on challenging us
more and more. These challenges demand the legislative regulation on the
level of the main law of the country.

Today it is clear that in order to progress we need changes in the main law
from which all the other laws of the country proceed. We must realize
constitutional reforms which are necessary for our people and correspond to
the international criteria.

Congratulating all the citizens of the independent Armenia on the day of the
RA Constitutional I am convinced that as the document adopted 10 years ago
supported us in those difficult days, the new variant which will be put to a
referendum in autumn will make our country and constitutional state».