California Courier Online, May 26, 2005

California Courier Online, May 26, 2005

1 – Commentary
Turkey’s Prime Minister is Top
Publicist for Armenian Genocide

By Harut Sassounian
California Courier Publisher
2 – Armenia Will Receive Tithe
From Jimmy Carter Work Project
3 – Jivan Gasparian, Sting
To Record CD in Spain
4 – New Website on 1915 Armenian
Genocide Features Interactive Site
5 – Charlie Keyan Donates $50,000 to the
UCLA Armenian Oral History Program
6 – Dr. Armen Ayvazyan to Discuss Challenges
Facing the Armenian Nation on May 27
7 – Prof. George Chilingarian Receives
Distinguished Educator Award
8 – JAA’s Jack Berberian Wins
Top International Award
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1 – Commentary

Turkey’s Prime Minister is Top
Publicist for Armenian Genocide

By Harut Sassounian
Publisher, The California Courier

Two years ago, when Recep Tayyip Erdogan became the Prime Minister of
Turkey, he brought a fresh perspective to the country’s many long-standing
domestic and foreign problems, including the Armenian Genocide. Rather than
parroting the worn-out denials uttered by his predecessors, he approached
the demands for the recognition of the genocide issue with caution. He did
not dismiss them off-hand and did not claim that the genocide was “a
baseless allegation.”
Since then, there has been a gradual, unwelcome shift in the attitude of
the Turkish Prime Minister on this issue. Ironically, as the international
pressure on Turkey kept mounting for the recognition of the Armenian
Genocide, and as more and more Turkish scholars and journalists started
calling on their government to face the truth about the extermination of
the Armenians, Mr. Erdogan began to abandon his guarded approach, adopting
the denialist position of his predecessors. He has gone from expressing
uncertainty as what really happened in 1915 to stating that he is confident
that no genocide was committed against the Armenians. Incredibly, Mr.
Erdogan is calling for a commission of historians ostensibly to find out
what actually took place in 1915, while being so sure that absolutely
nothing had happened to the Armenians.
How could one explain such a serious shift in Mr. Erdogan’s position on the
Armenian Genocide? One plausible explanation is that he is caught between
conflicting pressures by the European Union demanding a total overhaul of
the country’s laws and domestic hard-liners who accuse him of making “too
many concessions” to meet the EU requirements. Mr. Erdogan may have wrongly
calculated that he could shore up his domestic support by taking a tough
stand on a number of issues, including the Armenian Genocide, without
alienating the Europeans.
Regardless of Mr. Erdogan’s intentions or actual reasons for his erratic
behavior, one thing is certain: In recent months, he has done more (albeit
inadvertently) to attract the attention of the world to the issue of the
Armenian Genocide than all Armenians in the homeland and the Diaspora put
together. Here is a short list of some of the Prime Minister’s recent
efforts in this regard:
— He sent a much-publicized letter to Pres. Kocharian last month,
suggesting the formation of a joint Turkish-Armenian commission of
historians to investigate the facts of the Armenian Genocide. Mr. Erdogan
was trying to give the EU the impression that Turkey was making serious
efforts to resolve this issue. To create such a false impression, Mr.
Erdogan eagerly disseminated copies of his letter to many foreign capitals,
including Washington, thereby publicizing worldwide the Armenian Genocide
issue.
— Mr. Erdogan’s next self-defeating act was the critical comments he made
to the Russian and Polish presidents during a reception in Moscow last
month after their countries’ parliaments had recognized the Armenian
Genocide. Mr. Erdogan’s harsh words probably left a bad impression on both
presidents and
reinforced in their minds the significance of the Armenian Genocide issue.
— In retaliation for Pres. Kocharian’s speech, thanking the countries that
had recognized the Armenian Genocide, Mr. Erdogan reacted by making harsh
remarks on the issue of the Armenian Genocide, during the Council of Europe
Summit held in Warsaw earlier this month. He thus impressed upon the
leaders
of 46 European countries, once again, the importance of this issue.
— Mr. Erdogan then announced that he would launch a major counter-attack
against “the 15 countries” (should be 19) that have recognized the Armenian
Genocide. He announced that the Turkish Parliament would expose the
genocides committed by these countries. He also threatened to sue these
countries in some undetermined court. This would be a momentous development
for the Armenian Cause. For the first time, the Turkish government would be
confronting the entire world, thus truly internationalizing the demands for
the recognition of the Armenian Genocide. Should the Turkish Parliament
condemn these 19 countries, they could in turn pass more anti-Turkish
resolutions, after which Turkey could forget about ever joining the
European Union.
To make matters worse for Turkey, Prime Minister Erdogan proudly told the
leadership of his political party last week that his top aides had advised
him not to respond to Pres. Kocharian’s remarks on the Armenian Genocide
during the Warsaw Summit. Mr. Erdogan boastfully said that he ignored the
advice of his foreign policy experts and did the exact opposite!
Armenians hope that Mr. Erdogan would continue not to follow the advice of
his top aides and remain in power for a very long time. Should Mr. Erdogan
carry out his threatened lawsuits against these 19 countries, he would be
doing more to globalize the issue of the Armenian Genocide than anything
Armenians have managed to do by themselves in the last 90 years!

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2 – Armenia Will Receive Tithe
From Jimmy Carter Work Project
YEREVAN, Armenia (May 16) – Forty percent of Armenia’s population lives in
substandard housing.
For the 22nd annual Jimmy Carter Work Project (JCWP), held in Benton
Harbor, and Detroit, Mich., June 19-24, Armenia has been selected as a
partner country, and will receive a portion of the tithe.
“We are delighted and grateful to have been selected to partner with the
JCWP this year,” says Ashot Yeghizaryan, Executive Director of Habitat for
Humanity Armenia. “There is a significant poverty housing issue in
Armenia, and we hope to forge new partnerships in America to help us in our
continuing efforts to fight this problem.”
President Carter, his wife Rosalynn will join 1000s of international
volunteers to build homes alongside families in need in Michigan. This
year, an Armenian delegation will join them – including the head of the
Armenian church: Catholicos Karekin II of Etchmiadzin.
“This expression of good will by the Armenian Patriarch will become an
excellent demonstration of the volunteer values within people from all
walks of life, backgrounds and beliefs,” says Yeghizaryan.
Armenia suffers rates at a 45% poverty level, according to the Council of
Europe. Over the past decade, the country has suffered the aftermath of
the devastating 1988 earthquake which left 500,000 homeless; the
Azerbaijani war, which hampered the country’s ability to rebuild; the
collapse of the Soviet regime, and a newfound independence. All have led
to economic crisis.
Thousands of Armenians still live in metal “domiks”, iron containers
erected for temporary earthquake relief. In Armenia’s harsh elements,
these homes act like refrigerators in the winter; and like boilers in the
summer.
To share the story of the critical housing need, the Armenian delegation
from Habitat for Humanity, Executive Director Yeghizaryan and Resource
Development Coordinator Zaruhi Tonapetyan, will tour several states in the
U.S. in June-July: Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, California, and Florida,
and will be available for meetings and interviews. After the JCWP week,
the delegation will visit Armenian communities and churches in the U.S.
Concurrently with the events in Michigan, prominent Armenian officials will
be building a home with a family in need in Detroit City.
Habitat for Humanity Armenia has been working with families in need since
2000, and provided homes for 600 people.
*****************************************************************
3 – Jivan Gasparian, Sting
To Record CD in Spain
YEREVAN (Arminfo) – Legend of world music, duduk master Jivan Gasparyan
will issue a joint CD with legendary British rock-group Queen, he told
media sources in Armenia last week.
He also said that on June 11, a joint benefit concert by Gasparyan, Queen
guitarist Bryan May and British singer Sting will be given in Spain. The
concert will be recorded for a CD, “All Sounds of the World.”
Concert proceeds will be provided for AIDS patients and to orphanages.
Gasparyan will also give a concert in Geneva later.
The dudukist’s dream is the opening of a duduk school in Yerevan. He said
the school will open in the near future, after current construction is
completed. The school will provide free lessons for 100 students, mainly
orphans.
Thanks to Gasparyan, the Armenian duduk, known since the 3rd century has
become famous in the world. Gasparyan has toured the world, and more
important, he current teaches over 100 students, some oft hem professional
musicians from various countries.
**************************************************************
4 – New Website on 1915 Armenian
Genocide Features Interactive Site
MONTREAL, Quebec (May 2005) – With the launch of its newest website Twenty
Voices, INFIVIA allows visitors to experience an unforgettable interactive
journey through Ottoman Turkey.
Launched on April 24, on the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,
Twenty Voices gives visitors access to first-hand accounts from twenty
survivors of the 1915 atrocities.
Twenty Voices recounts the events that led to the Armenian Genocide with
exceptionally sober aesthetics and an artful blend of video, sound and
images. The site allows visitors to create their own interactive journey
through the twenty regions or provinces of Ottoman Turkey. In each region
or province, a survivor lends his voice to tell the story of the Armenian
Genocide, which will leave no visitor unmoved.
“Twenty Voices required many months of interactive research and development
at Infivia’s Montreal offices. This docu-site presents the Armenian
Genocide in a unique atmosphere, a first on the web for the events of
1915,” explains Alexandre Gravel, Art Director.
The interactive media team at Infivia coordinated their efforts with those
of Araz Artinian, who acted as Director and Researcher on this project.
Artinian is currently putting the final touches on her documentary The
Genocide in Me, produced by InformAction Films and Twenty Voices.
Listen, watch and experience an extraordinary interactive journey at

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5 – Charlie Keyan Donates $50,000 to the
UCLA Armenian Oral History Program
UCLA – Charlie Keyan of Indio, California, has contributed $50,000 to UCLA
to assist in the transcription and translation of the large collection of
oral history testimonies of survivors of the Armenian Genocide.
The UCLA Armenian Oral History collection was begun in the 1960s, when
Professor Richard Hovannisian introduced a regular university course in
oral history to train students and have them conduct interviews in the
field with survivors of the Armenian Genocide..
To date some 800 interviews, almost all of them in the Armenian language,
make up the UCLA collection. The interviewees belong to the last generation
of Armenians to have been born in the Ottoman Empire. They have related in
considerable detail the horrors of the deportations and massacres. The
interviews also provide much sociological information about family and
household, holidays and traditions, church and school, crafts, agriculture,
and business, inter-ethnic and inter-religious attitudes, and other aspects
of the entire cycle of life.
To make these interviews available for research, it is necessary first to
transcribe them in the Armenian original and then to translate them into
English. The transcription phase started in 2002, with a third of the
interviews now computerized in Armenian writing.
In contributing to this important project, Charlie Keyan stated: “I wish to
commend Professor Hovannisian for this invaluable work. I only regret that
my mother Jouhar Giragosian of Hiusenig was not among those interviewed.
During the death marches, she lost her parents and siblings. Every word of
our now departed parents and grandparents is precious. They went through so
much, yet they never gave up hope or the drive to rebuild. I am very
pleased to be able to support this program, especially as this year, 2005,
marks the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.”
The son of survivors from the Kharpert region, Charlie Keyan was born in
the San Joaquin Valley of California, attended, Fresno public schools, and
graduated from Fresno State College. In later years, he moved to the
Coachella Valley where he became a rancher and a successful real estate
developer. He has contributed to numerous Armenian and non-Armenian causes
and religious and educational institutions.
In acknowledging receipt of the check for $50,000, Professor Hovannisian
stated: “Charlie’s generosity and commitment will allow us to accelerate
the work of making the eye-witness testimony of the Armenian survivors
available for teaching about the Armenian Genocide and for scholarly
research. Mr. Keyan has set an admirable example, for which we express our
profound gratitude.”
**************************************************************************
6 – Dr. Armen Ayvazyan to Discuss Challenges
Facing the Armenian Nation on May 27
WINNETKA, Calif. – The community is invited to a public lecture/discussion
by Armen Ayvazyan, PhD in political science and history, titled “The
Enhancement of Armenia-Diaspora Relations as a Way of Addressing the
Challenges Facing the Armenian Nation” on May 27, at 8 pm, at Organization
of Istanbul Armenians’ Hall, located at 19726 Sherman Way, Winnetka, Calif.
The speaker will view qualitative improvement of Armenia-Diaspora relations
as a major way to addressing the current challenges of the Armenian nation,
including the perspectives for the settlement of Nagorno-Karabagh conflict,
the Armenian-Turkish and Armenian-Azerbaijani relations, the problem of
Javakhk, and the demographic and social-economic situation of Armenia. The
lecture is open to the public.
Dr. Armen Ayvazyan is a Senior Researcher in the Matenadaran, the Yerevan
Institute of Medieval Manuscripts and an Assistant Professor of Political
Science at the American University of Armenia. He is also the Team Leader
of the European Commission’s sponsored Campaign Against
“Corruption-Friendly” Legal and Social Settings in Armenia program. He
holds doctoral degrees in History (1992) and Political Science (2004).
>From 1992 to 1994 he worked as Assistant to the President of Armenia,
Adviser to the Foreign Minister of Armenia, and Acting Head of the Armenian
Delegation to the Conference (now Organization) on Security and Cooperation
in Europe at Vienna. He was a recipient of an International Security
Studies grant provided by the Carnegie Corporation of New York, working in
affiliation with the Program on the Analysis and Resolution of Conflicts,
Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University
(1995). During the 1997-1998 academic year, he was a Visiting Senior
Fulbright Scholar, affiliated with the Center for Russian and East European
Studies, Stanford University, USA. He was a Visiting Alexander S. Onassis
Foundation Fellow at ELIAMEP, Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign
Policy (2000-2001). Dr. Ayvazyan was also a Fellow at the American
University of Armenia’s Center for Policy Analysis and a Guest Lecturer at
the Yerevan State University. Dr. Ayvazyan is the author of several books,
book chapters, and many articles in Armenian and international journals.
While visiting the United States, Dr. Ayvazyan has been scheduled to appear
on numerous media programs and series of lectures. For further information,
regarding the May 27 event, contact the organizing committee: Organization
of Istanbul Armenians at (818) 624-5048 or (818) 342-6378.
***************************************************************************
7- Prof. George Chilingarian Receives
Distinguished Educator Award
LOS ANGELES – The Orange County Engineering Council honored Dr. George
Chilingarian, USC Professor of Civil and Petroleum Engineering, at their
annual award banquet with a Distinguished Engineering Educator Award.
In more than a half-century of academic achievement, Prof. Chilingarian
published 58 books and more than 500 articles in the fields of geology,
petroleum engineering and environmental engineering.
He is also the first American petroleum geologist elected to the Russian
Academy of Sciences in the last 275 years. He is also a member of the
Armenian Academy of Sciences.
Dr. Chilingarian was born in Tiblisi, and had his high school education in
Tehran, Iran, before immigrating to the US and attended USC, earning a BE
degree in petroleum engineering, followed by an NS degree the following
year, in the same field. In 1954, he received a Ph.D. in geology, with a
minor in petroleum engineering.
After service in the US Air Force, Chilingarian returned to USC as an
Assistant Professor in Petroleum Engineering.
Honoring his father, he also established the Varos Chilingarian Endowed
Fellowship in Environmental Engineering at USC for Honduran students who
obtain an MS degree. They are obligated to return to Honduras to help their
country. Prof. Chilingarian is an Honorary Consul of Honduras in Los
Angeles for the past 20 years.
He also donated $150,000 to the Viterbi School of Engineering at USC to
create endowed scholarships for Armenian students.
Over the years, Prof. Chilingarian has received more than 100 awards and
medals from various countries, including Iran, Thailand, Honduras, Armenia
and Russia.
Prof. Chilingarian and his wife Yelba have a daughter, Eleanor, and two
sons, Modesto and Mark.
**************************************************************************
8 – JAA’s Jack Berberian Wins
Top International Award
GLENDALE, CA – Junior Achievement of Armenia (JAA) announced that Jack
Berberian, the longtime President of the organization’s Board of Directors,
has been chosen from more than 178,000 volunteers around the globe to win
the Gold Leadership Award, the highest award for volunteerism awarded by
Junior Achievement Worldwide (JAW). Since 1975, JAW has honored exemplary
men and women for their level of participation and leadership and for the
outstanding contributions they have made to free enterprise and society.
Berberian was honored on April 21 at JAW’s Global Business Hall of Fame in
St. Louis, Missouri, where he and 15 other distinguished volunteers
received their awards in the presence of 1,500 attendees from across the US
and dozens of countries around the world.
“This award is a tremendous personal honor and it gave me great pride to
represent the tiny nation of Armenia in this very grandiose international
setting,” said Berberian. “More importantly, from my perspective, it
represents the unparalleled dedication and commitment that our Board of
Directors and Honorary and Advisory Board members have devoted to JAA since
its inception more than ten years ago.”
In a congratulatory message to Berberian, JAA Executive Director Armine
Hovannisian commented, “Jack’s involvement in our organization has brought
the vision, innovation, inspiration and high standards that make the Gold
Leadership Award an honor that is well deserved. In a very real way, he
directly contributes to the future successes of the young people enrolled
in our educational programs.”
Berberian has been actively involved with JAA since 1995, serving first on
its Advisory Board and two years later joining the Board of Directors.
During his tenure as JAA’s President, the program has grown from 6,000
students to an impressive 170,000 students per year, with JAA classes in
all 1,359 high schools in Armenia. Today, JAA’s teaching force exceeds
4,000 educators at both the high school and college levels and, by the end
of 2005, nearly 20% of the Armenian population will have taken a course
taught by a JAA-trained teacher.
Berberian is the Executive Vice President of Jons Marketplace, a
family-owned supermarket chain that boasts more than 25 locations serving
the richly diverse communities of Southern California. In all his work, he
recognizes that a commitment to the highest standards of ethics and
integrity is essential to success.
Established in 1992, Junior Achievement of Armenia is dedicated to
promoting free market economics, democratic governance, social
responsibility and ethical business practices in the Republic of Armenia
through economic and civic education. With courses in every high school in
the country, JAA-trained educators now reach 170,000 students each year.
Executive Director Armine Hovannisian oversees JAA’s operations through its
Yerevan headquarters and network of eight regional centers. For additional
information on programs and activities, call (818) 753-4997 or visit

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http://www.twentyvoices.com
www.jaarmenia.org.

Transfert – Armenie: Wisman succede a Casoni

Transfert – Armenie: Wisman succede a Casoni a la tete de la selection

Agence France Presse
21 mai 2005 samedi 3:39 PM GMT

EREVAN 21 mai — Le Neerlandais Henk Wisman a ete nomme samedi
selectionneur de l’equipe nationale d’Armenie, poste où il succède
au Francais Bernard Casoni limoge en avril, a annonce la Federation
armenienne de football.

Wisman, 46 ans, a entraîne entre autres les clubs neerlandais de SC
Heerenveen, de VC Volendam et de FC Den Bosch.

Il succède a Bernard Casoni, limoge le mois dernier par la Federation
armenienne de football pour insuffisance de resultats lors de la
campagne de qualifications pour la Coupe du monde 2006.

Sous la direction de l’ancien Marseillais âge de 42 ans, l’Armenie a
dispute sept rencontres internationales avec un bilan de cinq defaites,
un nul et une seule victoire contre Andorre.

–Boundary_(ID_+y2QNAALfKzHUd+jyMJzNA)–

Council of Europe Summit closes urging democracy in Belarus

Council of Europe Summit closes urging democracy in Belarus

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
May 17, 2005, Tuesday
13:32:59 Central European Time

WARSAW — Calls for democracy in Belarus and agreement on the Warsaw
Declaration charting the course for the Council of Europe over the
coming years closed debate at the council’s summit in Warsaw Tuesday.

Poland’s President Aleksander Kwasniewski slammed human rights
violations in Belarus and called for the democratisation of Poland’s
eastern neighbour, dubbed by other leaders at the summit Europe’s
last dictatorship.

Kwasniewski was echoing calls made Monday by senior leaders from
France, Georgia, Latvia and Lithuania among other states that
Belarussian President Alexander Lukashenko introduce sweeping
democratic reforms which would allow Belarus to join the Council
of Europe.

German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, one of the few Western European
government heads attending the summit, on Tuesday underscored the
indispensability of the council in safeguarding democratic rights
across the continent, including freedom of speech in the media.

Also speaking at the summit’s closing debates, Turkish Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan criticised parliamentary resolutions by European
states honouring up to 1.5 million Christian Armenians who died or were
killed in massacres and deportations by Ottoman Turks during 1915-23.

Erdogan termed the killings the “so-called Armenian genocide” and
said current discussions amounted to “lobbying” which Turkey would
not support. But he also declared his country was prepared to open
its archives and called on Armenia and other states to do the same
to review the events of 90 years ago.

Armenian President Robert Kocharian, who also attended the summit,
called Monday for the 1915-23 killings to be recognised as genocide.

While Armenia and most historians say between 1.2 and 1.5 million
ethnic Armenians died or were killed by Moslem Turks in a bloody wave
of deportations and massacres, Turkey says there were no more than
300,000 dead and that they were not deliberately planned or desired.

The Council’s 46-member states on Tuesday also signed a formal
declaration of cooperation with the Organisation for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) aimed at co-ordinating their work for
human rights and democratic freedoms.

The OSCE is the world’s largest regional security organization with 55
member states. It shares the fundamental objectives of the 46-member
council, but includes members from outside Europe.

Tuesday’s agreement is intended to avoid overlap in the work carried
out by both bodies. Attention was also focussed on cooperation with
the European Union, which although distinct from the Council, includes
25 of it’s member states.

The Council of Europe Warsaw Summit brought together 37 European
heads of state and government for two days of debates focussed on
human rights, the rule of law and security issues.

The summit was the council’s third since its establishment in 1949.

At the close of debates Tuesday, Poland handed over the Chairmanship
of the Committee of Ministers to Portugal, which will hold the rotating
office for the next six months.

Three treaties were endorsed by several but not all member states
during the summit, according to the Council of Europe press service.
Some 14 states signed a convention on action against trafficking in
human beings, 18 states signed a convention on money-laundering and
11 states inked an agreement on the prevention of terrorism.

All members were expected to sign the documents in the near future,
a senior Polish official said.

About 1,000 left-wing and anti-globalisation activists as well as
Buddhist monks led a largely peaceful protest march through Warsaw
on Monday urging Council of Europe member states to withdraw troops
from Iraq and to oppose gross human rights violations in Chechnya.

Established in the wake of World War II, the Council of Europe is
the continent’s oldest political organization. It currently groups
46 European countries and is primarily focussed on safeguarding human
rights and fundamental democratic freedoms across the continent. dpa
sib ch sc sr

European leaders call for democracy in Belarus

European leaders call for democracy in Belarus

Expatica, Netherlands
May 17 2005

17 May 2005

WARSAW – Calls for democracy in Belarus and agreement on the Warsaw
Declaration charting the course for the Council of Europe over
the coming years closed debate at the council’s summit in Warsaw
on Tuesday.

Poland’s president Aleksander Kwasniewski slammed human rights
violations in Belarus and called for the democratisation of Poland’s
eastern neighbour, dubbed by other leaders at the summit Europe’s
last dictatorship.

Kwasniewski was echoing calls made on Monday by senior leaders
from France, Georgia, Latvia and Lithuania, among other states,
that Belarussian president Alexander Lukashenko introduce sweeping
democratic reforms which would allow Belarus to join the Council of

Europe.

German chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, one of the few western European
government heads attending the summit, on Tuesday underscored the
indispensability of the council in safeguarding democratic rights
across the continent, including freedom of speech in the media.

Also speaking at the summit’s closing debates, Turkish prime minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan criticised parliamentary resolutions by European
states honouring up to 1.5 million Christian Armenians who died or were
killed in massacres and deportations by Ottoman Turks during 1915-23.

Erdogan termed the killings the “so-called Armenian genocide” and
said current discussions amounted to “lobbying” which Turkey would
not support. But he also declared his country was prepared to open
its archives and called on Armenia and other states to do the same
to review the events of 90 years ago.

Armenian president Robert Kocharian, who also attended the summit,
called on Monday for the 1915-23 killings to be recognised as genocide.

While Armenia and most historians say between 1.2 and 1.5 million
ethnic Armenians died or were killed by Muslim Turks in a bloody wave
of deportations and massacres, Turkey says there were no more than
300,000 dead and that they were not deliberately planned or desired.

The Council’s 46-member states on Tuesday also signed a formal
declaration of cooperation with the Organisation for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) aimed at co-ordinating their work for
human rights and democratic freedoms.

The OSCE is the world’s largest regional security organisation with 55
member states. It shares the fundamental objectives of the 46-member
council, but includes members from outside Europe.

Tuesday’s agreement is intended to avoid overlap in the work carried
out by both bodies. Attention was also focussed on cooperation with
the European Union, which although distinct from the Council, includes
25 of its member states.

The Council of Europe Warsaw Summit brought together 37 European
heads of state and government for two days of debates focussed on
human rights, the rule of law and security issues.

The summit was the council’s third since its establishment in 1949.

At the close of debates on Tuesday, Poland handed over the chairmanship
of the Committee of Ministers to Portugal, which will hold the rotating
office for the next six months.

Three treaties were endorsed by several but not all member states
during the summit, according to the Council of Europe press service.

Some 14 states signed a convention on action against trafficking in
human beings, 18 states signed a convention on money-laundering and
11 states inked an agreement on the prevention of terrorism.

All members were expected to sign the documents in the near future,
a senior Polish official said.

About 1,000 left-wing and anti-globalisation activists as well as
Buddhist monks led a largely peaceful protest march through Warsaw
on Monday urging Council of Europe member states to withdraw troops
from Iraq and to oppose gross human rights violations in Chechnya.

Established in the wake of World War Two, the Council of Europe is
the continent’s oldest political organisation. It currently groups
46 European countries and is primarily focussed on safeguarding human
rights and fundamental democratic freedoms across the continent.

NKR: One Family, One Fatherland

ONE FAMILY, ONE FATHERLAND

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic [NKR]
16 May 05

On May 13 the minister of social security Lenston Ghulian met with
the president of the Fund for Orphanages of Armenia Jenya Aydinian
and the executive director of the fund Greta Grigorian who arrived
in NKR from Los Angeles. Since 1992 the fund has cooperated with
the Ministry of Employment and Social Security and the NKR Ministry
of Social Security. The fund implements the programme “One Family,
One Fatherland”. In the framework of the programme seven families
of killed azatamartiks living in NKR, a family from the village of
Lusadzor, Askeran region having many children and an indigent family
from Stepanakert receive a sum of 50 dollars twice a year. Besides,
they receive aid on New Year and Easter every year. During the meeting
the president of the fund said they were willing to expand the charity
programme in NKR. The NKR minister of social security thanked the
guests pointing out the importance of their mission in a developing
country Artsakh is, after having gone through war.

K. ARUSTAMIAN.
16-05-2005

High-Voltage Networks CJSC,German Areva Energietechnik GMBH Sign Con

HIGH-VOLTAGE NETWORKS CJSC, GERMAN AREVA ENERGIETECHNIK GMBH SIGN
CONTRACT ON ALAVERDI-2 HIGH-VOLTAGE SUBSTATION RECONSTRUCTION

YEREVAN, May 18. /ARKA/. High-voltage Networks CJSC signed a contract
with German Areva Energietechnik GmbH on Alaverdi-2 high-voltage
substation reconstruction, the CJSC Director General Saak Abramyan
said in his interview with ARKA News Agency.

He reminded that Areva Energietechnik GmbH had won international tender
worth 7,350mln euros in the frames of a Germany-financed program of
the substation reconstruction.

In his words, Armenian side has already fulfilled its commitments on
the project. “We are waiting now KfW German bank to transfer advance
payment making 20% of mentioned amount of the contract and after that
Alaverdi-2 reconstruction work will start”, Abramyan said.

Under intergovernmental agreement on financial cooperation in the
frame of Caucasus initiative, German Government will give High-voltage
Networks CJSC credit of 47 mln euros for Alaverdi-2 (Northern Armenia)
substation re-equipment. The credit is given for 12-year-long term
with two-year preferential period and a 5-percent interest rate. As
a result of reconstruction, the substation power will grow twice and
electricity will convey to Georgia through it.

Thanks to the substation reconstruction, high-quality and non-stop
power supply will be ensured in the economically important to Armenia
region. M.V. -0–

BAKU: Turkish PM calls on Armenia to ‘refrain from ventures’

Turkish PM calls on Armenia to ‘refrain from ventures’

Baku, May 17, AssA-Irada

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyib Erdogan has urged Armenia to
refrain from ‘getting involved in ventures’.

Addressing the 3rd Council of Europe (CE) summit in Warsaw on Tuesday,
Erdogan called on Armenia to ‘look forward instead of researching
the past’. Today, over one million archive materials are available
in Turkey, said the Turkish official, calling on Armenia to disclose
its archives as well and allow historians and experts to research them.

“If it is necessary to pass any decision, let’s do it. But there is
no need to be engaged in ventures and put pressure on other countries’
parliaments.”

The Turkish prime minister noted that he did not plan to touch on
the false genocide of Armenians during in his speech at the summit,
but the statements by the Armenian leadership on the issue made him
change his mind.

Erdogan added that the decisions on false genocide passed by foreign
countries’ parliaments contradict European principles from the
viewpoint of human rights.*

Strike – You Dare To Speak Out, You Are Out

Iravunk semi – weekly
May 17, 2005 issue

STRIKE

YOU DARE TO SPEAK OUT, YOU ARE OUT

The strike of some 500 employees at Sotk gold mine, initiated back in
April and continued up until today with some interruptions, has reached
it’s “logical” conclusion: a decision was made to fire all 500 striking
employees.

It is not new that the government of our country first welcomes with joy
the investors, sells state properties with applauds to them, and later
distances itself, with “hands washed”, from any further responsibility.
As always happens in such situations, the victim is the ordinary
citizen. Sotk gold mine employees always complained about the owner’s
attitude towards them, which attitude eventually lead to the strike. The
reality is that Ararat Gold Recovery Company, taking an advantage of the
socio – economic situation in Vardenis, always enters into 3 months
employment agreements with its employees the longest. Entering into such
short – term employment agreements, indeed, is not against the law, but
that means no trust in their future by the employees. The employees also
complain that the company refuses to pay the rise in salaries available
to employees working in high altitude areas, whereas the salaries are
rather small, which, in addition, are paid in US dollars equivalent
amounts. Fall in USD – AMD rates added to the problems, which, according
to Vardenis residents “may not continue any longer, we suffer losses.”
According to the employees, the company explains the low salary rates by
saying “no gold in the mines, no money to you”, which is unacceptable
for the employees, who are saying “they are mining the gold out, what
else they want, fire from God?” Thus, Vardenis resident employees
initiated the strike at the end of the last month demanding a rise in
salaries, stabile USD – AMD rates, “humane employment agreements in
Armenian drams”, meeting with the Prime Minister. “The Indians (the
owner of the mine is an Indian company) asked us to return to work
promising satisfaction of our demands,” say one of the employees, “we
returned and worked, but they lied, so we had to continue the strike
again. We will not return to work unless our demands are satisfied, and
we shall live and see how their trying to replace us.”

Gold mine employees turned to the Mayor of Vardenis, Volodya Khloyan.
Mr. Khloyan said in his interview to Iravunk that he talked with the
Prime Minister, who ordered to form a commission. As for the management
of the company, the Mayor says they don’t care and refuse to talk with
him either. Meanwhile, our own government caused such an attitude from
the company through signing an inept agreement with them. As the
director of Ararat Gold Recovery Company, Mr. Vardan Vardanian said in
his interview with Iravunk, there is no provision in their agreement
with the government, which could settle this situation. “The strike is
illegal” label Vardanian in hurry, alleging that the situation is the
work of some individuals trying to mislead the employees for self –
serving purposes, but he did not say who those individuals were.

“We fired all 500 employees and announced a new contest” said a member
of the company’s board of directors; “Of course, we are going to have
difficulty finding specialists, but I am sure that 90% of the strikers
will return to work. Let them come, sign new agreements, and work.”

The director promised no rise in salaries, ano rise for employees
working in high altitude areas either, claiming no obligation on behalf
of the company. As for the USD – AMD rates, the agreement was reached
with the strikers at the beginning of the strike: rate applicable for
salaries shall be 500 AMD for $1 USD. Despite the employees claiming the
opposite, Vardan Vardanian said that salaries will be paid with no
delays. “We delay our salaries more often than those of the employees”
he said, and added “Even tax payments are being delayed sometimes,
causing penalties, but the employees receive their salaries on time.”
Meanwhile, the same employees are certain that “the Indians will
withhold” their salaries for the whole period of the strike. As for the
terms of employment agreements, they say “the company has no clue about
what’s coming up for the business, let alone them signing long term
employment agreements with us.” Even after all this noise the company
officials confirm that. At the same time, Vardenis residents refuse to
sign short term employment agreements, with the rest of the conditions
imposed, and claim they ready to extreme measures, including road
blocking. “Let’s see how our comrade Indians pass around us and access
the mine (when the road is blocked). This is our mine, we are going to
work there, and if the government is not able to help us, we will solve
the issue our way” they swagger.

In the meantime, the master of the country, in this case the RA
government, said through a spokesperson, that under orders of the Prime
Minister, the Ministry of Trade and Economic Development has looked into
the issues of the matter. “It was revealed that the matter is of
relations between the employer and employees. After satisfying salary
related demands additional demands were raised, which were not accepted
by the employer. Those absent from work were fired, while a new contest
for employment was announced. All issues concerning those fired and the
employers are of the matter of law and are not within the authority of
the government.”

In other words, the RA government “cheered” the foreign company, playing
into their hands. Indeed, the strikers do not demand salary rises from
the government, while it was the obligation of the government to include
provisions in the agreement of sales of the mines which would exclude
even a possibility of such situations as a whole. This story once again
proved that our citizens are unprotected in their own country, while the
officials are sometimes helpless against “nonentity” companies. It is
not surprising when people turn to extreme measures in such situation,
including strikes and other mass actions.

by Taguhi Tovmasian

Minsk Group co-chairs hope for progress between Armenia and Azerbaij

MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIRS HOPE FOR PROGRESS BETWEEN ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN

Pan Armenian News
16.05.2005 05:37

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs hope for some “progress
in the direct dialogue between Armenia and Azerbaijan”, Russian
MFA’s Special Representative Alexander Yakovenko stated, ITAR-TASS
reports. He reminded that yesterday the mediators met with the
Armenian and Azerbaijani leaders Robert Kocharian and Ilham Aliyev in
Warsaw. Russian and French FMs Sergey Lavrov and Michel Barnier as well
as representatives of the US and OSCE were present at the meeting that
was later continued by Robert Kocharian and Ilham Aliyev in private.

From tree to timbre

the Toronto Star

May 14, 2005. 08:25 AM

>From tree to timbre
Canadian among select few who make their living through aural alchemy,
turning wood into song

Armenian maple helps make violins sing but magic behind the shine is
top secret, writes Oakland Ross

OAKLAND ROSS
FEATURE WRITER

This is the story of one man, one tree, and nearly 400 violins.

The man’s name is Hratch Armenious Tchalkouchian, and his birth
certificate will tell you that he was born on May 1, 1944, but this
detail of fate is merely a footnote to the true chronology of his
life.

Reckoned by the measure of time that matters to him most – in other
words, violin time – the Armenian native effectively entered this
world late on the first day of winter in the year 1967.

On a moonless December night, Tchalkouchian and five helpers climbed
up into the Caucasus Mountains above the Black Sea, somewhere north of
the Armenian capital of Yerevan.

At the time, Tchalkouchian was in search of a tree, and not just any
tree, but a perfectly configured maple.

At a height of 1,300 metres above sea level, the young man found what
he was seeking and pulled out an axe. He and his comrades spent the
next four days lugging the timber down the mountainside, piece by
piece – and Tchalkouchian’s life, in violin time, had begun.

“Some people talk about the discovery of the wheel,” he says. “I
prefer to talk about the discovery of the violin.”

Almost four decades have elapsed since that winter night, and
Tchalkouchian lives in a different country now.

He is a resident of Willowdale in the north end of Toronto, where he
dwells along with his wife, Goar, on a wide street of stolid bungalows
near a huge brace of hydroelectric towers. He is the father of two,
the grandfather of three.

“I am Canadian now,” he says. “Canada is my country.”

But violins are his life.

Sixty years old, with just a few stubborn flecks of black in his
pewter-grey hair, Tchalkouchian continues to ply an age-old craft.

He is a violin-maker – a luthier – one of only a handful of people in
Canada who make their living by a kind of aural alchemy, turning wood
into song.

In Tchalkouchian’s case, he owes nearly a lifetime’s worth of fine
musical instruments to the fibre of just one tree, the same majestic
European maple that he cut down on that moonless night above the Black
Sea some 400 violins ago. “Until this day,” he says in his energetic
if somewhat laboured English, “I am using only that wood.”

Tchalkouchian arrived in Canada in 1995, along with his wife, a son,
and a daughter – and that wasn’t all.

In addition to his family and his precious supply of European maple,
he also brought with him certain other materials that figure in the
painstaking and somewhat arcane craft of fashioning beautiful handmade
violins – crushed carmine beetles, dark tree roots, dried apricots,
and other commodities the luthier won’t even name.

But it is the wood that matters most – and, oh, how Hratch Armenious
Tchalkouchian cherishes his timber.

To ensure that an accident or a fire won’t destroy his entire stock,
he keeps his store of maple in five caches scattered around Toronto,
all stacked in neat piles of small, blond planks.

You might suppose, in this country of all countries, that
Tchalkouchian would deign to avail himself of the local lumber supply,
especially the portion of it known as Acer saccharum, or sugar
maple. But no.

“When I think of Canada, I think of maple,” he says. “It is our
emblem. But I haven’t found good maple here. It’s a little bit heavy.”

And so Tchalkouchian conjures his finely tempered violins from the
flesh of a single European tree.

“I never tire of violins,” he says. “When I go to bed, I am thinking
about the violin I will be working on tomorrow. Every violin-maker is
like that.”

Nowadays, Tchalkouchian uses his middle name to identify his
handiwork, and an Armenious violin compares favourably with some of
the best instruments being fashioned anywhere in the world.

If you were thinking of purchasing a new Armenious, you had better be
prepared to absorb an additional dent of between $12,000 and $15,000
on your next bank statement.

This may seem like a lot of money – and it is – but handmade violins
built by masters of the craft are not pennywhistles.

The most coveted violins can be stunningly expensive, particularly
antique instruments fashioned in France, Germany or Italy by
illustrious luthiers of centuries past.

The most revered of the species undoubtedly are Stradivarius violins,
made by Antonio Stradivari of Cremona, Italy, who lived from 1644 to
1737.

When a Strad finds its way to auction these days, it might well fetch
a price of hundreds of thousands, even millions, of dollars. But
Stradivarius violins are rarely offered for sale.

A more modest yet worthy instrument – say, a good French violin from
the late 19th century – might change hands for $50,000 or more. This
is the sort of investment a hard-working professional violinist pretty
much takes for granted, generally accompanied by a second mortgage on
the family home.

Still, as newly constructed instruments go, Armenious violins are well
respected and command impressive prices.

“My violins now are all over the world,” Tchalkouchian says. “Every
continent has my violins. A lot of Canadians are playing my violins.”

Other musicians are playing instruments fashioned by Tchalkouchian’s
son, Artak, who is 29 and plans on making a living as a luthier, too,
even if he does have a university degree in computer science. “I think
about it every day,” says Artak. “It is waiting to blossom.”

Already, Artak has sold many of his own violins, albeit at more
restrained prices than those paid for the violins crafted by his
mentor and parent.

The older man says he became a luthier by degrees.

In his late teens, Hratch Tchalkouchian was playing violin in a
student chamber orchestra in Yerevan. One day, the bridge broke – that
is, the slender wooden device that raises the strings above the
fingerboard.

“I made a new bridge,” he says. “I thought, okay. Next, I read a
little about violin making. I thought, okay.”

Later, he had to fashion a new chin rest for his violin, and his life
has unfolded from there.

Initially, Tchalkouchian served as his own teacher and copied
techniques used in the French school of violin making, one of three
broad tendencies in the luthier’s art. The others are the German
school and the Italian or Cremonese school.

“When I learned the Italian technique,” says Tchalkouchian, “I never,
ever turned back.”

He continues to adhere to the Cremonese style now and eagerly explains
some of its principle features. They are mostly technical and complex,
but it’s apparent that Tchalkouchian has few compunctions about
sharing his secrets. In fact, he insists that there aren’t any.

“It’s just, you have to have the skill, the knowledge, and the heart,”
he says. “It’s just, you have to make a good violin.”

Tchalkouchian says it takes him about a month of labour to fashion a
single instrument.

Each step in the process poses its own challenges and imparts its
particular pleasures, but there is something especially mysterious
about the final stages, when the luthier treats a newly created
instrument with varnish and pigment.

In his case, Tchalkouchian applies some 60 coats of varnish to each
violin, as well as numerous treatments of a special liquid formulation
of his own devising that has a deep burgundy colour and gives his
instruments their dark mellow hue.

Stored in old gin or vodka bottles, the pigment is composed primarily
of the aforementioned carmine beetles, tree roots and dried
apricots. Tchalkouchian identifies the ingredients without hesitation.

Inquire about his varnish, however, and he suddenly turns coy. “I can
tell you about everything except the varnish,” he says. “Every
violin-maker has his own varnish. I never tell.”

Never mind. It’s the music that matters, and just now there is music
to be heard.

Although Tchalkouchian insists that he himself is an indifferent
violinist, the same cannot be said of his daughter-in-law.

She is Gayane Bareghamyan, a musician to be reckoned with. She teaches
the instrument and also plays first violin in the North York Symphony.

A striking, dark-haired woman, dressed now in a blouse and blue jeans,
she takes up a position in her father-in-law’s office and showroom,
the walls decked with Armenious violins.

She settles one of these fine instruments between her chin and the
blade of her left shoulder. She raises her bow.

“Bach Sonata Number 1,” she says. “First movement. Adagio.”

The ensuing minutes stream past in pure violin time, and they are
heaven.

It is fair to say that no European maple, thrumming in an autumn wind
high in the Caucasus Mountains above the Black Sea, ever dreamed of
someday sounding like this.

“There is no limit to a violin’s beauty,” says Tchalkouchian, who
sways in his chair, a violin balanced in his lap, his eyes closed, a
blissful expression on his face. He may not play his violins much, but
he surely knows how to build them. “I am going to die,” he vows, “with
a chisel and a gouge in my hands.”

www.thestar.com