Latvia Shares Armenia’s Hopes For Peaceful Solution To Karabakh Conf

LATVIA SHARES ARMENIA’S HOPES FOR PEACEFUL SOLUTION TO KARABAKH CONFLICT

PanARMENIAN.Net
20.04.2007 13:33 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The meeting with Azeri Foreign Minister Elmar
Mamedyarov passed in normal and calm atmosphere, Armenian Foreign
Minister Vartan Oskanian stated to a joint press conference with his
Latvian counterpart in Yerevan. He said, it is necessary to wait for
the both presidents to express their opinion on Co-Chairs’ offers and
then to move forward. "We have not agreed on a new meeting yet. Most
likely the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs will visit the region till May 12
in order to prepare a meeting between Armenian and Azeri Presidents,"
the RA FM noted.

V. Oskanian also said, there are some issues that are not agreed yet,
but the foreign ministers had serious negotiations over those issues
in Belgrade, during which the OSCE MG mediators presented their offers.

"There exist moot points, and this means that they were discussed
during the talks. Sometimes there are cases, when the Azeri Foreign
Minister and I are not authorized to make decisions. And this time
we will pass the Co-Chairs’ offers to the Presidents of Armenia and
Azerbaijan," the RA FM underscored.

In his part Latvian Foreign Minister Artis Pabriks underlined,
the Nagorno Karabakh conflict can be settled only via peaceful
talks. "Latvia shares hopes of the Armenian side on peaceful solution
to the Nagorno Karabakh conflict in the framework of OSCE MG and thinks
the conflict can be settled only by the consent of all parties. There
exist a lot of problems between countries, but they all must be solved
through peaceful talks, negotiations. All other ways do not lead to
wishful results," he noticed.

BAKU: Oskanian: The Document On The Settlement Of The Conflict Is Ve

VARDAN OSKANIAN: THE DOCUMENT ON THE SETTLEMENT OF THE CONFLICT IS VERY BALANCED

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
April 20 2007

"Great majority of the principles for the settlement of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict have been agreed," Armenian Foreign Minister
Vardan Oskanian stated in a press conference.

He stated that his latest statement "the parties have never been
so close to the solution of the conflict" should be assessed in the
context of comparison.

"I compare this document to all the previous ones that have ever been
presented by the co-chairs in the past 10-12 years, and this document
content-wise is very balanced and very reasonable," he said. "And
that is why I think this document should provide a promise for making
further progress in our talks."

Oskanian made his comments after meeting his Azerbaijani counterpart,
Elmar Mammadyarov, and the Minsk Group co-chairs in Belgrade.

Oskanian said the meeting focused on suggestions the co-chairs had to
resolve outstanding differences between the Armenian and Azerbaijani
side.

Oskanian described the meeting as "constructive" and "businesslike."

He added it was "much more relaxed and well-intended" than a similar
meeting in Geneva.

"Sometimes, me or Elmar Mammadyarov state that we cannot present the
suggestions to the heads of state. But now the suggestions can be
presented to the presidents," Oskanian said.

The Armenian minister added the next meeting between the foreign
ministers has not been scheduled.

"The co-chairs are much likely to meet with the foreign ministers
by the parliamentary elections. They most probably visit the region
after the elections to discuss the proposals in detail," he said.

Armenians Race Against Time For Stories Of Their Devastation

ARMENIANS RACE AGAINST TIME FOR STORIES OF THEIR DEVASTATION
By Russell Ben-Ali
Star-Ledger Staff

Newark Star Ledger, NJ
April 20 2007

Hagop Bahtiarian recalls the frantic grab he made for his father’s
coat: a terrified 5-year-old clutching his dad during an arrest by
police of the Ottoman Empire 92 years ago.

The elder Bahtiarian was jailed in 1915 and later killed, in the early
days of a period that would prove devastating for Bahtiarian’s family
and other Armenians. As a people, they were rousted from their homes
and expelled from Ottoman territory now part of Turkey.

Between 1915 and 1923, an estimated 1.5million Armenians were killed
or died of starvation and illness while in detention or in forced
marches into the Syrian desert during a campaign many historians call
the Armenian Genocide.

"These are things that are so hard for a kid to take," said Bahtiarian,
97, a retired watchmaker who settled in Bergen County and now lives
in the Armenian Nursing and Rehabilitation Center in Emerson. "But
it hurts so much that it’s impossible to forget it. My father never
came back. How can you not remember?"

Historians are counting on vivid memories of survivors like Bahtiarian
as they try to document the oral histories of the Armenian calamity
while there is still time.

"If they’re going to remember anything, they’ve got to be close to 100
years old," said Samuel Azadian of Hamburg, New Jersey, who founded
the Armenian Genocide Commemoration in 1985.

BELATED REGRETS

The Armenian community has struggled for decades to promote broader
recognition of its losses, with the Turkish government strongly
resistant to the notion that ethnic cleansing was at work. This Sunday
in Times Square, thousands of Armenians are expected to rally at 2 p.m.

"Unfortunately, our community did not do the things that the Jewish
community has done in chronicling the Holocaust," said Azadian, a
former deputy commissioner for New York City highways. "Remember,
there was not the technological methods available that there are
today. Who even had tape recorders back in 1920?"

The killings were well chronicled by publications including the New
York Times. In the years since, some relatives have attempted to
record and videotape personal histories of survivors.

Azadian, 80, said he wishes he had done more to document his own
family history through his mother, who during the genocide lost four
children before he was born.

"I regret to this day that I didn’t sit down with a tape recorder and
interview my mother," Azadian said. "Her memories just kept haunting
her and haunting her."

The memories are troubling for Anahid Boghosian, 98, who also lives
in the Armenian nursing home. "Annie" was a child forced into exile;
her travels took her to Syria, Cuba, Revere, Mass., and then Cliffside
Park in Bergen County.

"My father had gone to Istanbul to look for work," said Boghosian,
hands trembling as she tried to recall the events during an interview
at the nursing home. "He was never heard from again."

‘WHAT’S THE USE?’

The stories she once told her daughters, Thelma Sarajian and Helen
Kenajian of Cliffside Park, are difficult to recall these days,
even with their aid and encouragement.

Sitting in a wheelchair in a nursing home conference room with her
daughters and the reporter interviewing her, she struggled with her
emotions. "Why do you people wait so late?" she asked. "It’s all in
the ashes. What’s the use? What’s the use?"

Around the world, Armenians generally remember the start of the
killings with a commemoration on April 24, the date in 1915 when
Armenian political, intellectual and other leaders were rounded up
and eliminated.

On Sunday, advocates will call on the U.S. government to recognize
the Armenian genocide, as some Western countries have. They also will
remember Hrant Dink, the prominent Turkish-Armenian newspaper editor
who was gunned down outside his Istanbul office in January. Dink
often chronicled the Turkish government’s treatment of the Armenian
minority in his weekly.

They also will push for the passage of House Resolution 160, introduced
in January by Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) to recognize the Armenian
Genocide.

Although the resolution is largely symbolic, it is strongly opposed by
the Turkish government. It is also opposed by the Bush administration,
which recognizes the Armenian deaths as a historic tragedy but declines
to call it genocide or accuse Turkey, its NATO ally, of participating.

POSTWAR BEDLAM

The Republic of Turkey, founded in 1923, has long denied initiating
a campaign to eliminate or expel from the Ottoman Empire the
Armenian people, who represent one of the world’s oldest Christian
communities. In the past, Turkey has attributed the Armenian deaths
to the bedlam surrounding World War I, as the old Ottoman Empire
unraveled and collapsed.

The government contends many Turks were casualties of this period,
too, killed by Armenians who aligned themselves with Russian troops
and might have had plans to take over land in the eastern part of
the Ottoman Empire.

Those contentions have inspired Armenian-Americans to work harder to
interview survivors.

"Their stories touch our hearts," said Dennis R. Papazian of Woodcliff
Lake in Bergen County, who is the founding director of the Armenian
Research Center at the University of Michigan at Dearborn.

Beginning in the 1970s, some 55 years after the genocide began,
Papazian began amassing hundreds of oral, and, later, video recordings
of survivor stories.

Such work is vital, Azadian said, to thwarting future acts of genocide.

"It’s a horrible blot on mankind — Darfur, Rwanda, Cambodia," he
said of genocide. "That’s why we do what we do."

Report Of Yerevan Press Club

REPORT OF YEREVAN PRESS CLUB

A1+
[08:39 pm] 20 April, 2007

On April 20 Yerevan Press Club released the intermediate report on
the monitoring of the coverage of the May 12 election, which includes
the first week of the election campaign, from April 8 to 15. 13 TV
channels, one radio channel and four newspapers were monitored.

The chair of Yerevan Press Club Boris Navasardyan said unlike the
year 2006 when only the government and pro-government forces figured
on TV and the opposition did not, as the election is drawing nearer,
the Armenian TV channels start to cover the activity of the opposition
forces. However, it is not thanks to upgrading their professional
maturity but because the international organizations are increasingly
interested in the Armenian parliamentary election.

Boris Navasardyan thinks after the election we will return to the year
2006 when the opposition will not appear on TV, and such forces as the
Nor Zhamanakner Party, the Republic Party and the Heritage Party will
be completely ignored. The reason, according to Boris Navasardyan,
is the painful reality that limitation of the freedom of speech and
the media has become deeper.

He added in a joke that if the interest of the international
organization lasted longer, things which are typical of civilized
countries might become rooted in Armenia, such as a balanced coverage
of all the parties, the administrative resource would not be used in
the election, etc.

According to Yerevan Press Club, on April 8 to 15 on 10 Armenian
channels (4 national channels, 6 Yerevan channels and 3 regional
channels of Shirak) the Republican Party appeared most frequently, 588
times for 62 668 seconds, then the ARF Dashnaktsutyun 248 times for 40
778 seconds. The Prosperous Armenia was the third, 236 times for 27
294 seconds. The fourth was the Orinats Yerkir Party. The Prosperous
Armenia is the leader on Kentron Channel, the ARF Dashnaktsutyun is
the leader on Yerkir Media. The Republican Party is the leader on
the rest of the channels. Even on ALM channel the Republican Party
is the first with 12 018 seconds. Tigran Karapetyan’s People’s Party
is the second with 10 974 seconds. The reason, according to YMA,
is that Tigran Karapetyan, who is a parliamentary candidate, does
not have the right to host TV shows during the campaign.

Nevertheless, ALM channel provides 85 percent of coverage of the
political activity of Tigran Karapetyan.

Besides, Yerevan Press Club reported some problems. In a report
on ALM the reporter gave an obviously negative evaluation of the
activity of the People’s Party of Armenia. The texts of hosts contain
ironic elements, which is not illegal but influences the voters, in
TV commercials images of political figures flash, which also affects
the voters. Yerkir Media often broadcasts a song devoted to the ARF
Dashnaktsutyun, which is perceived as campaign, etc.

58 Percent Of Armenia’s Population Distrust U.S.

58 PERCENT OF ARMENIA’S POPULATION DISTRUST U.S.

PanARMENIAN.Net
18.04.2007 15:59 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ According to a survey conducted by the Chicago
Council on Global Affairs and WorldPublicOpinion.org, most of world’s
population think the U.S. fails to perform the role of the world
leader. The survey includes 17 countries-China, India, the United
States, Indonesia, Russia, Thailand, Ukraine, Poland, Iran, Mexico,
South Korea, the Philippines, Australia, Argentina, Peru, Israel,
Armenia-and the Palestinian territories. These represent more than
55 percent of the world population. Majority turns down the idea
that the United States, as the only super power, should dominate in
resolution of world problems and offer the U.S. cooperation with the
other countries for the purpose.

38 percent of Russians and 34 percent of Ukrainians think that the
U.S. should abandon the idea of solving the problems alone. This
index shows a high degree of aversion to U.S. foreign policy that
was earlier so vividly demonstrated by Argentineans and Palestinians
only. In the U.S. 10 percent stand for total leadership of their
country, 75 percent offer to share the burden of responsibility with
other states, 12 percent propose to focus on domestic problems.

58 percent of the Armenian population do not trust the U.S. Extremely
high index of distrust was fixed in Russia (73 percent) and France
(72 percent).

Majority of population of 13 out of 15 states think that the
U.S. abuses the role of a "world policeman", Washington ProFile
reports.

Memorandum On Holding Democratic Elections In Electoral District No

MEMORANDUM ON HOLDING DEMOCRATIC ELECTIONS IN ELECTORAL DISTRICT NO 4 IS VIOLATED

Noyan Tapan
Apr 19 2007

YEREVAN, APRIL 19, NOYAN TAPAN. Contrary to the memorandum on holding
free and fair elections, which was signed by the candidates proposed by
the majoritarian electoral system at electoral district No 4, a number
of violations have already been registered in this district. This was
announced at the April 19 press conference, in which 5 out of the 7
candidates registered in this electoral districts took part.

Representative of the Orinats Yerkir party Suren Mamikonian said that
some candidates give electoral bribes, while representatives of some
electoral headquarters collect citizens’ passport data, as well as
misinform local residents, telling them that only one candidate will
be voted on in their electoral district.

In the words of the RA National Assembly ARF faction’s head Hrayr
Karapetian, the terms of the memorandum are partly violated. He said
that he is going to make public facts about it on May 5.

Representative of the "Prosperous Armenia" party Hayrapet Hayrapetian
expressed an opinion that the instruction to tear advertising posters
could not come from the headquarters of any of the candidates because
posters of all candidates are being destroyed. He also indicated many
inaccuracies in electoral rolls.

Candidate of the Republican Party of Armenia Zohrab Zohrabian called
on to refrain from making anonymous accusations and to make public
the names of those guilty in case of revealing electoral violations.

According to member of the Armenian National Movement’s board Aram
Manukian, passports of citizens are being collected in order to prevent
then from participating in the elections. He noted that electoral
bribes are given not to some voters but to persons responsible for
buildings – in return for the obligation to ensure a certain number
of votes.

The candidates for deputacy participating in the press conference
agreed to hold joint meetings with voters.

EU Close To Agreement On Hate Crime Law

EU CLOSE TO AGREEMENT ON HATE CRIME LAW
By Renata Goldirova

EUobserver.com, Belgium
April 18 2007

After six years of heated political debate, EU member states are set
to agree on a common anti-racism law, under which offenders will face
up to three years in jail for stirring-up racial hatred or denying
acts of genocide, such as the Holocaust.

One diplomat in Brussels confirmed to EUobserver that the controversial
piece of law is in its final-tuning phase and is likely to gain EU
blessing at a justice and interior ministers meeting in Luxembourg
on Thursday (19 April).

The latest draft – cited by the Reuters news agency – foresees an
EU-wide jail sentence of at least one to three years for "publicly
inciting to violence or hatred, directed against a group of persons
or a member of such a group defined by reference to race, colour,
religion, descent or national or ethnic origin."

The same rules would also apply to people "publicly condoning, denying,
or grossly trivialising crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity
and war crimes" as defined by international crime courts.

According to the Financial Times, such wording has been carefully
chosen to only include denial of the Holocaust during the second
world war, as well as the genocide in Rwanda in 1994, but would not
criminalise denying mass killings of Armenians during the Ottoman
empire in 1915, something that Turkey strongly opposes labelling
as genocide.

The draft of the legislation is "the lowest common denominator,"
an EU diplomat told EUobserver, as the differences in national legal
systems relating to freedom of expression also had to be respected.

For example, denial of the Holocaust is already illegal in Germany
and Austria, while for example in the UK it is allowed under freedom
of speech rules, unless it specifically incites racial hatred.

Stalinism – a final stumbling block However, an ultimate breakthrough
is highly dependent on a demand voiced by four new member states.

Poland and the Baltic countries – all carrying the burden of a
repressive communist past – continue to hold on to their demand that
"crimes under the Stalin regime in the former Soviet Union" become
part of the bill’s scope.

"We believe Stalinist acts of genocide should be condemned in this
document. It would put them on an equal footing with Nazi crimes in
an international forum," an Estonian diplomat was cited as saying by
the Polish daily Rzeczpospolita.

On top of this, Warsaw would like to attach a unilateral declaration
condemning "distortions" of the past, namely the use of the phrase
"Polish death camps" to talk about Nazi death camps on Polish
territory.

However, "very, very many people are against this [to put Stalinism
into the main body of the hate crimes text]," a German diplomat said,
according to Rzeczpospolita.

According to an EU diplomat speaking to EUobserver, it is more likely
that the law would see "a reference to the crimes of totalitarian
regimes," with a final proposal to be tabled today.

If a deal is struck on Thursday (19 April), it would be a major success
for Germany, currently sitting at the EU helm, which sees an EU-wide
law combating racism and xenophobia as a moral obligation due to its
historical background.

The proposal has been stuck in the legislative pipelines since 2003.

Public Organizations Propose Parties Participating In Elections To A

PUBLIC ORGANIZATIONS PROPOSE PARTIES PARTICIPATING IN ELECTIONS TO ASSIST DEVELOPMENT OF NGOS

Noyan Tapan
Apr 17 2007

YEREVAN, APRIL 17, NOYAN TAPAN. A joint discussion of representatives
of public organizations and political forces participating in the
National Assembly elections was organized at the Yerevan hotel
on April 17, on the initiative of the "Professionals in the Name
of Civil Society" NGO. The goal of the event was to draw parties’
attention to problems of NGOs.

The package of legislative amendments worked out by organizers was
presented for the discussion. It was particularly proposed by it
to raise the level of financial independence of NGOs, allowing to
involve in the latters’ property sources the resources appeared as
a result of commercial activity of companies founded by them or with
their participation.

As Artak Zeynalian, a member of the heading body of the "Hanrapetutiun"
(Republic) party mentioned, problems arisen by NGOs are indirectly
involved in the pre-electoral list of the party. The party,
particularly, proposes to re-instruct some functions of the state
to NGOs. The same principle is also fixed in the program of the
Liberating-Progressive Party of Armenia which refused nomination at the
parliamentary elections by the proportional electoral systems. "Nor
Zhamanakner" (New Times), in the words of party board member Hrachia
Sargsian, attaches importance to future working out and adoption of
the law on security of functional role of NGOs in the civil society.

Participants of the discussion, attaching importance to the role of
NGOs in formation of the civil society, mentioned at the same time
that a small part of about 5 thousand of NGOs registered in Armenia
promotes active activity.

To recap, only 7 of the parties participating in the coming NA
elections responded the invitation to participate in the discussion.

Effective Ways Of Resolving Tavush Region’s Problems Must Be Found,

EFFECTIVE WAYS OF RESOLVING TAVUSH REGION’S PROBLEMS MUST BE FOUND, ARMENIAN PREMIER STATES

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
April 16 2007

YEREVAN, April 16. /ARKA/. RA Premier Serge Sargsyan ordered the
relevant officials to find effective ways of resolving the problems
of the Tavush region of Armenia.

The Press and Public Relations Department, RA Government, reports
that the instructions were issued at a meeting held as a result of
the Premier’s visit to the region.

Sargsyan informed the meeting participants of his approaches to and
impressions of the issues discussed during his public meetings in
the region. After listening to the officials, the Premier ordered
them to find effective ways of resolving them as soon as possible.

Premier Sargsyan informed the meeting participants that this approach
will be constantly applied, and officials must be ready to present
reports on real solutions to the population’s problems.

Participating in the meeting were representatives of Ministries and
government institutions, local government bodies.

"Unibank" Presented The First Cash-In NCR Cash-Machine In Armenia

"UNIBANK" PRESENTED THE FIRST CASH-IN NCR CASH-MACHINE IN ARMENIA

MediaMax Agency, Armenia
April 13 2007

Yerevan, April 13 /Mediamax/. "Unibank" presented today the first
cash-in NCR cash-machine in Armenia, which has the function of
inserting cash U.S. dollars, euro, Russian rubles, and in the nearest
future – Armenian drams.

Mediamax reports that the Director of the Plastic Cards Department
of "Unibank" Mesrop Hakopian stated during the presentation today
that the new cash machine provides the customer the opportunity to
replenish his/her account, realize operations on currency exchange
both with the help of the card, and without it. The new cash machine
also gives the opportunity to pay the communal services bills.

In the cash-in cash machine, 18-degree security level is implemented,
which excludes the possibility of inserting counterfeit currency.

In the nearest future the cash-in machines will join the system
of E-card-banking, which will allow repaying the received credits,
pay the interests.

Gradually, the functions of the cash-in machine will be implemented
in all the cash machines of "Unibank".

Today, the bank has 31 cash machines, by the end of the year the
number of the cash machines is planned to reach 60.

As of march 31 of 2007, the number of cards, issued by "Unibank"
makes 17 532, 14 944 of which Visa, 2 588 – ArCa.