Azerbaijan committed to peaceful talks over Karabakh problem -pres

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
May 7, 2004 Friday

Azerbaijan committed to peaceful talks over Karabakh problem -pres

By Sevinzh Abdullayeva and Viktor Shulman

BAKU

Azerbaijani President Ilkham Aliyev said his country remained
committed to peaceful negotiations over the settlement of the Nagorny
Karabakh conflict.

“We believe that the problem may be resolved as a result of these
talks,” Aliyev told reporters on Friday.

He noted that Baku’s position remain unchanged: the occupied
territory of the country should be freed, while refugees should
return home. Next, it would be possible to decide on the status of
Nagorny Karabakh.

The president denied the reports by some Armenian sources alleging
the existence of accords between Baku and Yerevan.

“Azerbaijan and Armenia never had any agreements,” Aliyev stated. In
his view, mediators’ efforts are necessary to bring the parties’
positions closer.

The OSCE Minsk group on Nagorny Karabakh should do a mission of
mediation, without acting like observers on the sidelines, he said.

According to the Azerbaijani president, if the two parties are unable
to come to terms, mediators should bring forward their proposals. At
the same time, he believes that along with the Minsk group which has
a mandate for mediation, influential international organizations,
such as the United Nations, the European Union and the Council of
Europe should also show an active position.

ANKARA: Azerbaijan, Turkey not to sour ties over KKTC seat rejection

Turkish Daily News
May 7 2004

Azerbaijan, Turkey not to sour ties over KKTC seat rejection

Azeri Foreign Ministry says attitude of Azeri deputies at the Council
of Europe Parliamentary Assembly does not reflect their country’s
stance on Cyprus while Foreign Minister Gul calls on people not to
rake up the issue

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry said the attitude and statements of
Azeri deputies at the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly did
not reflect their country’s policy on Cyprus, following rejection of
a resolution to grant seats for Turkish Cypriot deputies after Azeri
parliamentarians didn’t attend the voting.
The statement released by the Azeri Foreign Ministry on Wednesday
emphasized the friendly and historical ties between the two
countries, adding, “It is not true that the bilateral relations have
been damaged due to the fact that some Azeri deputies did not attend
the voting.”

The Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly rejected a draft
resolution on April 29 designed to allow deputies from Turkish
Republic of Northern Cyprus (KKTC), which lacks international
recognition, to attend and participate in the assembly’s meetings.

The reversal came after eight deputies from Azerbaijan, which
previously pledged strong support for efforts to end isolation of
Turkish Cypriots, did not attend the voting.

Instead, the assembly voted on an amendment proposal which called for
closer relations with Turkish Cypriot parliamentarians in the body
and which envisaged placing Turkish Cypriot parliamentarians among
the Greek Cypriot delegation within the Council.

Head of the Azeri delegation in the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe said earlier this week that the Azeri deputies had
consciously avoided to attend, explaining that the success of the
draft resolution would have set a dangerous precedence that could
later allow Armenian deputies from Nagorno-Karabakh to attend Council
of Europe meetings.

Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan, has been under
Armenian invasion since the beginning of the last decade.

The Azeri position sparked huge disappointment and reaction
especially among the Turkish media.

“The attitude of the Azeri deputies should not be interpreted as a
sign of a shift in political relations between the brother countries
of Turkey and Azerbaijan,” read the statement.

It was also noted that Azerbaijan has always been in favor of a
solution on the divided island of Cyprus.

A U.N. plan to reunify the island was defeated in twin referenda at
the end of last month due to a strong Greek Cypriot rejection
although Turkish Cypriots voted overwhelmingly in favor of a united
Cyprus.

Azeri President Ilham Aliyev said the no-show of the Azeri deputies
was to be blamed on poor coordination between Turkish and Azeri
delegations and added that the Azeri delegation should have been
better informed on the vote.

Gul advises calm
Meanwhile, Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul advised calm on the matter.
Replying to questions prior to leaving for Dublin for a
EU-Mediterranean meeting on Wednesday, he said Turkey had some
expectations from “friend and brother countries,” referring to
Azerbaijan.

Recalling the rejection of the resolution, Gul went on to say, “The
only point I feel sorry about is that this resolution has been the
best one in favor of Turkish Cypriots to date. It seemed as if there
happened something against the Turkish Cypriots. However, there is
nothing like that.”

Gul called on people not to rake up the Azeri’s not attending the
voting, saying, “There is no need to further sadden people from both
countries by meddling with the issue too much. Everyone should derive
lessons from this.”

“I hope the Azeri deputies’ move was not done on purpose. Now, we
expect more support in the coming meetings. What happened has
happened,” Gul added.

ATP Finalizes the Results of `Trees for Life’ Sister Art Contests

Armenia Tree Project
Yerevan 375025, Aygestan 9th Str., #6
Tel./Fax (374 1) 569910
Internet:
E-mail: [email protected]

Press Release

06.05.2004

Armenia Tree Project Finalizes the Results of `Trees for Life’ Sister Art
Contests in Armenia and America

April 29, Yerevan – In celebration of its 10th Anniversary, the Armenia Tree
Project (ATP) announced the winners of an art contest , entitled `Trees for
Life’, held at 6 schools in Yerevan and Gumri. The art contest was conducted
at the same time in 6 American schools in Boston, Massachusetts. Eighteen
winning posters (3 from each Armenian school) will travel to Boston from
Armenia to be exhibited with the winning American posters during the
celebrations of ATP’s 10th Anniversary in June.

The aim of the Contest is to raise the level of awareness on environmental
issues among younger schoolchildren – the upcoming generation that will play
a crucial role in preserving forests in Armenia. All participants are in
grades 5-7. To inaugurate the contest the ATP staff provided environmental
education materials to the teachers and conducted environmental awareness
classes with the Armenian children. The schoolchildren grasped the problem
of deforestation surprisingly well, and the quality of posters through which
they expressed their ideas and suggestions was high. In addition to having
their posters exhibited in America, the winners will be presented with
special certificates and prizes.

For further information, please contact Karen Sarkavagyan at the Armenia
Tree Project, phone numbers 569910 and 553069, E-mail [email protected]

The Armenia Tree Project was founded in 1994 during Armenia’s darkest and
coldest years with the vision of securing Armenia’s future by protecting
Armenia’s environment. Funded by contributions from Diasporan Armenians, ATP
has planted and rejuvenated over 500,000 trees at more than 450 sites
ranging from Gumri to Goris.

www.armeniatree.org

Vladimir Spivakov to visit Armenia

ArmenPress
April 28 2004

VLADIMIR SPIVAKOV TO VISIT ARMENIA

YEREVAN, APRIL 28, ARMENPRESS: The conductor of Moscow Virtuosi
ensemble, Vlidimir Spivakov, will visit Armenia next month. Spivakov
will perform a solo concert at Aram Khachatrian concert hall on May
5, Armenian association on cultural ties with foreign countries
reported. He will perform Brahms, Shnitke and Straus.
Spivakov is the winner of the International Tchaikovsky
Competition, Paganini International Violin Competition and Montreal
Competition, Vladimir Spivakov enjoys an international career as one
of Russia’s preeminent violinists. He also is a respected conductor
who founded the renowned Moscow Virtuosi, and since 1999 he has been
Music Director and Principal Conductor of the Russian National
Orchestra.
Vladimir Spivakov has been decorated with Russia’s highest prize,
the National Cultural Heritage Award, and is Ambassador of the Arts
at the World Forum in Davos, Switzerland. He established the
International Charity Foundation in 1994 to offer creative and
financial support to talented young people and needy children from
his homeland. He is married to Armenian.

Armenia: Assembly calls for peaceful dialogue without preconditions

Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly (PACE)

Spring Session

Armenia: Assembly calls for peaceful dialogue without preconditions

[28/04/04] The Armenian authorities should allow peaceful demonstrations to
take place, release those detained during recent demonstrations, immediately
investigate any reported human rights abuses that took place and create fair
conditions for the media, the Assembly said today following an urgent debate
on the situation in the country. If no progress is made on these demands by
the opening of the September session, the parliamentarians resolved to
reconsider the credentials of the Armenian delegation. However, they also
called on the opposition to achieve its goals within the constitutional
framework. Both sides should engage in a peaceful dialogue without
preconditions, they stressed.

http://assembly.coe.int/

CR: Commemorating the Armenian Genocide – Rep. Tierney

COMMEMORATING THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

______

HON. JOHN F. TIERNEY

of massachusetts

in the house of representatives

Wednesday, April 28, 2004

Mr. TIERNEY. Mr. Speaker, I join my fellow members of the
Congressional Caucus on Armenian issues, and a large number of my
colleagues, as we rightfully recognize, remember, and renounce the
Armenian genocide.
I rise today to speak on one of the most unspeakable acts that ever
came to pass. Beginning in 1915, innocent and unsuspecting Armenians of
all ages were led by Ottoman Empire officials from their villages to
their brutal death. Such atrocities endured for eight years. By 1923,
an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were massacred.
While this tragedy of incomprehensible proportions was being
perpetrated, the world stood idle. Prominent nations remained silent in
the face of skyrocketing death tolls in this corner of Europe. Today
and throughout this month, as we reflect and remember the victims of
the Armenian genocide, we must also repudiate our unresponsiveness to
this horrible mass murder.
Lastly, on behalf of the Sixth District of Massachusetts, I would
like to praise the commitment and perseverance of Armenian-Americans,
who have tirelessly labored to ensure that all know the tragic story
and great sorrow of their people. Their efforts in this regard are
laudable and serve as the best legacy they can leave to succeeding
generations.

Clinton’s Memoirs to Be Released in June

Associated Press
April 26 2004

Clinton’s Memoirs to Be Released in June

HILLEL ITALIE
Associated Press

NEW YORK – The suspense is over, almost. Former President Clinton’s
memoirs will be published in late June, and promotion will begin a
few weeks earlier with a speech at BookExpo America, the industry’s
annual convention.

“It is the fullest and most nuanced account of a presidency ever
written, and one of the most revealing and remarkable memoirs I have
ever had the honor of publishing,” Sonny Mehta, president and
editor-in-chief of Alfred A. Knopf, said in a statement Monday.

“He talks with candor about his successes, as well as his setbacks,
looking at both his career in public service and his life.”

The book, for which Clinton received a reported $10 million to $12
million, will be called “My Life.” Knopf is planning a first printing
of 1.5 million, a realistic number given the success of “Living
History,” the memoirs of Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Nearly 1.7 million copies of the hardcover of “Living History” are in
print and a 525,000 first printing was announced for the paperback,
which just came out.

If the former president should fail to sell more books than the first
lady, he won’t be alone. Memoirs by Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan
both proved less popular than those written by their wives.

No precise date has been set for the book, which Clinton is still
completing. Details on the book’s length, cover and promotional tour
are also being worked out. One event has been scheduled: Clinton will
speak at BookExpo America, which takes place in Chicago from June
3-6. Then-first lady Hillary Rodham Clinton spoke at BookExpo in
1995.

Like Bob Woodward’s “Plan of Attack” and Richard Clarke’s “Against
All Enemies,” Clinton’s book will likely make its way into the
presidential campaign, especially if the former president defends his
record on fighting terrorism.

The book was edited by Robert Gottlieb, who has worked with such
Pulitzer Prize winners as Robert Caro, Toni Morrison and Katharine
Graham.

But it will be an admittedly hurried production, with Knopf having
just two months to convert the manuscript into a finished book, a
process that often takes several months.

If Bill Clinton turns out a first-rate memoir, especially about his
presidential years, he will be a true path breaker. The only highly
regarded presidential memoir is by Ulysses Grant, who devoted the
vast majority of the book to his triumphant Civil War military
leadership and wrote virtually nothing about his often disastrous
presidency.

Most presidential works have the dull, self-serving tone of a
prepared speech. They suffer from the impersonal hand of a ghost
writer or from the impersonal tastes of the president. The memoirs of
Herbert Hoover, for example, include balance sheets on food
assistance to Armenia and Lithuania and estimated totals of dried
fruit exports.

Timing and luck have kept some of the more eloquent leaders from
telling their stories. Four early, literary presidents – Thomas
Jefferson, James Madison and John and John Quincy Adams – never
published full-length memoirs largely because it was considered in
poor taste to dwell on one’s accomplishments.

Abraham Lincoln and John Kennedy were assassinated; Franklin
Roosevelt also died in office and Woodrow Wilson finished his
presidency in such poor health he never got past the preface of an
intended book.

Samantha Power, Rwandan Genocide Survivors Address NCC Event

Samantha Power, Rwandan Genocide Survivors Address NCC Event

>From “Carol Fouke” <[email protected]>
Date Mon, 26 Apr 2004 18:24:27 -0400

For Immediate Release

Samantha Power, Rwandan Genocide Survivors Address NCC”s April 23
Commemoration

By James N. Birkitt, Jr., for the NCC

April 23, 2004, LOS ANGELES – A commemoration of the 10th anniversary
of the Rwandan Genocide, held here today and sponsored by the National
Council of Churches USA, recalled the horror of the genocide and
offered a word of counsel and hope – genocide can be prevented.

Keynote speaker was Samantha Power, recipient of the 2003 Pulitzer
Prize for her book “‘A Problem from Hell’: America and the Age of
Genocide,” which focuses on the failure of America, other Western
governments and the United Nations to respond effectively to genocide.

Power called on United States to redefine its “Evital interests” to
include genocide. Currently, long-standing American policy permits
military intervention only when America’s security or economic
well-being is threatened.

Another positive step, she said, “would be for the U.S. to replace its
“all or nothing” diplomatic approach with a continuum of responses and
options that may stop genocide before it occurs. The failure of the
U.S. government to act is always an implicit signal to other
governments as well as a green light to the perpetrators of genocide.”

Power noted that such actions would be necessary to prevent a
repetition of this horror in Sudan. She pointed out that even the
slightest condemnation by the U.S. Government of policies of the
government in Khartoum results in the easing up of hostilities.

An eclectic gathering of religious leaders, educators, public policy
experts, students and activists attended the event, titled
“Remembering Rwanda: Ten Years After The Genocide.” Held at the
Fowler Museum in Los Angeles, the April 23 event featured
presentations by genocide experts, testimonies by survivors, and the
premiere showing of a documentary film on the Rwandan Genocide.

The 1994 Rwandan Genocide, the result of escalating violence between
Hutu and Tutsi peoples, began in April 1994 and led to the murder of
more than 800,000 Hutu and moderate Tutsi, and the rape of 250,000
Hutu women, during 100 days of terror.

Power’s research on the world’s failure to intervene in Rwanda notes
that the response of the United States and other Western countries is
shaped by decisions made prior to the start of genocide, rather than
in response to it. She also noted that a series of missteps and mixed
signals by the United States and the United Nations emboldened the
perpetrators of the Rwandan Genocide.

In her remarks, Power highlighted ways future genocides might be
prevented. In addition to calling on the U.S. government to expand
its definition of “vital interests” to include prevention and
intervention in genocide, Power called on journalists to focus world
attention on genocide, encouraged faith communities to raise their
voices, and suggested governments note “the early warning signals that
are always part of the cycle of genocide, including smaller massacres
that serve as trial balloons to test international response and the
demonizing of specific groups by the government or the media.”

Power also called on governments to find new ways to conduct
diplomacy. “Diplomats are so conditioned to be diplomats that they
consistently offer conventional responses in the face of
unconventional horrors. Governments must replace the pantomime of
response with robust, effective responses.”

The NCC event included the premiere of “God Sleeps In Rwanda,” a
documentary by filmmakers Kimberlee Acquaro and Stacy Sherman. The
film highlights ways genocide decimated Rwandan families, destabilized
the culture, and contributed to the dramatic increase of HIV and AIDS
among Rwandan women and children.

During his remarks, Rev. Bob Edgar, General Secretary of the National
Council of Churches, noted, “It is important that we remember what we
failed to do, and that includes churches and church people. We must
ask forgiveness for our silence. Those of us in faith communities must
honor God’s call to love and care for the least of our brothers and
sisters.”

Dr. Richard Hrair Dekmejian, an expert on the Armenian Genocide and
professor of political science at the University of Southern
California, noted that despite the current international focus on
terrorism, “Terrorists have killed relatively few people when compared
with genocide.”

Dekmejian, noting the NCC program was being held on the eve of the
89th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, called for a three-point
commitment by faith communities and people of conscience to “bring the
perpetrators of genocide to justice, work for compensation for its
victims, and influence governments to prevent and intervene in future
genocides.”

Gerry Caplan, founder of the international coalition Remembering
Rwanda, suggested four groups who must be remembered one decade after
the Rwandan Genocide: “those who died; the victims who survived; the
perpetrators, most of whom were never brought to justice; and the
international community, or more accurately, international bystanders,
who actively chose not to get involved.”

Caplan laid broad blame for the failure to intervene in the Rwandan
Genocide on parties including churches within Rwanda, the governments
of the United States and Europe and the United Nations.

Also participating in the program was Rabbi Allen I. Freehling,
Executive Director of the Los Angeles Human Relations Commission.
Rabbi Freehling closed the program with words from the Hebrew prophets
exhorting all people to love their fellow human beings.

Two Rwandan Genocide survivors vividly described the destruction of
entire villages and towns, the use of rape as a tool of genocide, the
mass psychosis of genocide, and the lasting impact on survivors. In a
powerful and moving moment, one survivor said, “I recently looked
through my photo albums of my friends and family from Rwanda – and
realized that everyone in those photos is dead. Except for me. I am
called to bear witness.”

The “Remembering Rwanda: Ten Years After The Genocide” commemorative
event was held as part of the World Council of Churches’ Decade To
Overcome Violence.

Reflecting after the event, Dr. Antonios Kireopoulos, the NCC’s
Associate General Secretary for International Affairs and Peace,
commented that “What was quite compelling was Samantha Power’s
assessment that the lessons of Rwanda could be applied today to
prevent another tragedy in Sudan. If we have learned anything as an
international community from our various commemorations of the Rwandan
Genocide, it is that we must apply these lessons to situations that
come before us. Otherwise, we will be resigned to saying yet another
time, ‘Never again!'”

-end-

NCC Media Liaison: Carol Fouke, 212-870-2252; [email protected];
James N. Birkitt, Jr., Director of Communication of
the Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches, Los
Angeles, filed this report.

www.ncccusa.org

Russian police say skinheads not involved in Kostroma incident

Russian police say skinheads not involved in Kostroma incident

Ekho Moskvy radio, Moscow
24 Apr 04

[Presenter] Skinheads have nothing to do with the incident involving
an Armenian boy in Kostroma. Let us recall that several media reports
earlier this week [22 April] said that the boy had been allegedly
attacked by skinheads. An investigation carried out by the Kostroma
police has shown that this was not the case. So the police say. Yuliya
Kosilova has the details.

[Correspondent] The boy sustained injury over a routine prank and
street roughs have nothing to do with that, the Kostroma police said
following the investigation. In reality this is what has
happened. Several teenagers, the Armenian boy among them, decided to
make a bonfire right in the street. Having done so, one of them poured
gasoline onto the fire. Burning splashes hit the Armenian boy’s
clothes and, as a result, he was slightly burnt.

The teenagers obviously got frightened and decided not to tell
grownups about this. That is why they invented the story about the
attack. The deceit was uncovered few days later, after the parents of
the victim went to doctors. Doctors, in their turn, reported the
accident to police. The police started the investigation. The victim
became nervous and came clean.

[Presenter] Earlier, the boy explained his burns by skinheads
splashing some petrol over him and setting him on fire.

Armenia marks genocide remembrance day

Agence France Presse
April 24, 2004 Saturday

Armenia marks genocide remembrance day

YEREVAN

Armenians laid flowers on a hill in their capital Yerevan on Saturday
to mark the World War I genocide in which they say up to 1.5 million
of their forebears were massacred by the Ottoman Empire.

Thousands of people, some representing the large Armenian diaspora
outside this nation of three million, climbed to the memorial to the
genocide victims on top of Yerevan’s Tsitsernakaberd hill throughout
the day.

Radio and television played somber music and played documentaries of
the genocide.

Seventy-year-old Pogos, whose father survived the attacks, planned to
climb to the memorial in the evening with his grandsons.

“My father… told us thousands of times how in the morning armed
Turks came into the village and began to burn houses, kill men, women
and children and, not allowing people to take food or water, began to
herd them toward the desert,” he said.

Pogos’s father spent the rest of his life searching in vain for his
mother, whom he lost during the forced resettlements.

“He was saved by some Kurds who bought him for a few gold coins and
sent him off to Syria,” Pogos said.

Some 20,000 survivors of the genocide remain worldwide, 900 of them
in Armenia, Lavrenti Barsegyan, director of a genocide museum in
Yerevan.

“Each year there are less and less eye witnesses… and less and less
people can tell of the evil deeds of the Turks,” he said.

The massacres of Armenians during World War I is one of the most
painful episodes in Turkish history.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen were massacred in
orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917.

Turkey categorically rejects claims of genocide and says that some
300,000 Armenians and thousands of Turks were killed in civil strife
during World War I when the Armenians rose up against their Ottoman
rulers.