Human rights protection attaches to recognition of Genocide

Aysor, Armenia
April 24 2010

Human rights protection attaches to recognition of Genocide

The 1915 Genocide of Armenians is a crime, committed against the
international community; its recognition attaches to the protection of
human rights, according to Human Rights Defender Armen Harutyunian,
who spoke to journalists at the Tsitsenakaberd Complex in Yerevan,
where the Memorial to the 1915 Genocide Victims is installed.

`The protection of human rights is directly attached to the
recognition of the Genocide of Armenians,’ he said.

`If the protection of human rights in Armenia is kept at a high level
and if this is marked down by the international community, then these
all will influence the process of the international recognition of the
1915 Genocide,’ he added.

Armenia’s Population Increased By 0.4%

ARMENIA’S POPULATION INCREASED BY 0.4%

news.am
April 23 2010
Armenia

RA National Statistical Service issued civil data as of January
1, 2010.

By the end of 2009 permanent population of Armenia was 3.249.500,
increasing by 0.4% or 11.500 people as compared with the same period
in 2008.

Urban population makes almost two thirds of Armenian population (64%).

There are more townsmen than villagers in 4 regions – Lori, Kotayk,
Shirak and Syunik. Rural population prevails in six provinces –
Aragatsotn, Ararat, Armavir, Gegharkunik, Vayots Dzor and Tavush.

Over third country’s population (1.1 million) resides in Yerevan
against 30.000 people in 1920.

Obama’s Tough Choice

OBAMA’S TOUGH CHOICE

Huffington Post
yan/obamas-tough-choice_b_548180.html
April 22 2010

On April 24 every year the U.S. President addresses the American
people and the world to express solidarity with those who pay tribute
to the 1915 genocide victims when 1.5 million Armenians were destroyed
in the Ottoman Empire.

Every presidential candidate promises to the U.S. Armenian community
that when he comes to office he will recognize the fact of the genocide
but neither President Clinton, nor Bush, nor President Obama have
fulfilled their election pledges yet. The last President to keep his
word on this was President Reagan who explicitly recognized Armenian
Genocide in 1981.

Last year, when on a trip to Ankara in April, President Obama,
answering the question on Armenian-Turkish relations, did not use the
word ‘genocide’ but said that his views on the issue had not changed
since his election campaign. Then, he said "America deserves a leader
who speaks truthfully about the Armenian Genocide," and more. To
avoid using the word genocide in the U.S.

President’s address on April 24, 2009 the U.S. administration had asked
the President of Armenia to publicly announce on the eve of that date
that some progress had been made in the negotiations with Turkey,
and two protocols had been initialed that were aimed at normalizing
the Armenian-Turkish relations.

The Armenian leadership agreed to do that despite the anticipation
of serious criticism on the part of the Diaspora and especially the
Armenian community in the United States who thought that this played
into the hands of the Turks and helped Obama to save face and not to
use the word ‘genocide’ in his speech on April 24, the reason being
that he did not want to impede the normalization process in the
relations between Armenia and Turkey. Instead, he used an Armenian
language term for the genocide. After announcing the news regarding
the protocols right before the genocide memorial date, the Armenian
leadership received a statement from the U.S. Department of State
to the effect that the parties should sign the protocols without any
preconditions and within a reasonable time frame. By virtue of this
action Washington, to a large extent, assumed the responsibility of
being the guarantor of signing and ratification of these protocols.

This was followed by the signing of the protocols in Zurich by the
foreign ministers of Turkey and Armenia, with the active mediation
of U.S. State Secretary Hillary Clinton.

The Turkish side, however, kept putting forward new conditions
for the ratification, thus protracting the process and using the
negotiations with Armenia to block the passing of the resolution by
U.S. Congress denouncing the genocide of Armenians in the Ottoman
Empire and recognition of the genocide by other states.

Such conduct on the part of the Turkish side left Armenia no choice
under the circumstances but suspend further proceedings of the
protocols placing the full responsibility for frustrating the talks
on Turkey. Armenia formally did so today. It is now up to Turkey to
settle things with the United States, France, European Union and
Russia regarding the issue since the foreign ministers of France,
the U.S. and Russia, as well as the representative of the EU took
part in the protocol signing process in Zurich.

In order to maintain the negotiations process, the President of
Armenia was invited to participate in the Nuclear Security Summit
in Washington, DC on April 12-13, and within the framework of the
Summit he had meetings with the Prime Minister of Turkey, President
Obama and Secretary of State Clinton.

The Turkish side made the ratification of the protocols contingent
on the progress in the relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan and
on the upcoming parliamentary elections in Turkey, which is not due
until 2011. Such conduct on the part of Turkey runs contrary to the
very essence of the protocols and the statement of the U.S. Department
of State on normalization of Armenian-Turkish relations without any
preconditions and within a reasonable time frame.

Washington was not able to convince Ankara to comply with its
obligations to ratify the protocols. It is just as unlikely to be
able to keep Armenia in this negotiations process so as to have a
chance for President Obama to save face this year again, in case on
April 24 he does not use the word ‘genocide’ in his address.

The Armenian side could stay in the negotiations for a while longer
even without the ratification of the protocols by the Turkish
Parliament if the President of the United States used the word
‘genocide’ in his address on April 24. In that case neither the
Diaspora nor the Armenian political circles in the opposition would be
able to accuse the President of Armenia of his staying in the process,
in fact, assisting the Turkish diplomacy and blocking the process of
recognizing the genocide by the U.S. administration and Congress.

The Armenian side could stay in the negotiations process given the
certainty that this year the Congress would pass a resolution on the
genocide of Armenians which has already gone through the Foreign
Affairs Committee of the House of Representatives. It might stay
in this process if there is any progress in the position of the
mediators on the Nagorny Karabakh settlement issue and clarification
of the issue of its status. Without some positive results on a wide
range of issues in the Armenian-Turkish and Armenian-Azeri relations,
it will be difficult for the Armenian leadership to remain in this
process without causing itself political damage.

In my view, as a result of the Armenian withdrawal from the process
it is Turkey who will be the biggest loser, because yet again the
Turkish side will show the world that it is not ready to recognize
the genocide and apologize to the Armenian people; furthermore,
it is not even ready to agree to a normalization of relations, thus
presenting itself as a dangerous neighbor for Armenia and unreliable
partner for all the countries that participated in the drafting and
signing of the protocols.

Obviously, not only Obama but also the United States will sustain
serious blows to their reputation since Washington acted as an
unbiased mediator and, even more, gave the world reasons to believe
that he had sufficient resources to convince Turkey to sign as well
as ratify the protocols.

On April 24 the U.S. President is to deliver another address with
regard to the 95th anniversary of the genocide of Armenians. He would
do well if he came up with some language not to alienate the U.S.

Armenian community and the Armenian people either from him personally
or from his party on the eve of midterm elections to Congress, and
here he should take into account certain capabilities of the Armenian
lobby and the Armenian constituency.

Thus, the U.S. President is facing a difficult choice. If he
recognized the genocide he would avoid challenges to his credibility,
and gain the support of the Armenian-American community; he would also
perform a moral duty as President Reagan did and which, incidentally,
has already been done by such states as France, Germany, Russia and
others. At the same time, that would create tensions in the relations
with Turkey which is a NATO ally and a strategic partner. Indeed,
Turkey is still viewed as such mechanically by many in Washington.

However, only those totally divorced from politics cannot see that
Turkey’s recent policy on all major internal and external issues has
been shifting. Turkey has been moving from a secular state toward an
Islamic state. Moreover, it is pursuing the ambitions to re-instate
its role as a leader of a neo-Ottoman world and as the leader of all
Islamic states. Internally, the Army and the Joint Chiefs of Staff are
rapidly losing their influence as the main guarantors of Turkey as a
secular state. In the external policy, Erdogan has repeatedly subjected
Israel to verbal accusations and made statements on protecting Iran
from tougher U.S. sanctions in the UN Security Council. If this rapid
slide of the Turkish policy continues in the future, then we may not
find too unrealistic the strategic forecast of George Friedman, founder
of STRATFOR, in his book "The Next 100 Years", on the inevitability
of a full-scale war between the neo-Ottoman Turkey and the United
States as early as the middle of this century.

In view of all these circumstances, the U.S. President will be
presented with a tough choice that is really not too difficult.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/andranik-migran

Heritage Party Welcomes Ruling Coalition’s Initiative

HERITAGE PARTY WELCOMES RULING COALITION’S INITIATIVE

news.am
April 22 2010
Armenia

The Armenian ruling coalition’s initiative to remove the
Armenian-Turkish protocols from the Parliament’s agenda is an
advisable, but a belated and half-hearted step, Armen Martirosyan,
Board Chairman, Heritage Party, told NEWS.am.

He stressed that Armenia must withdraw its signature from the protocols
to prove its integral position. "If a new process is initiated in the
future, it must only concern the establishment of diplomat relations
and reopening of borders – all the other issues must be discussed
afterwards. But the Armenian-Turkish protocols contained at least two
preconditions, namely, the recognition of the modern Turkiosh-Armenian
border and consideration of the issue of the Armenian Genocide from
the scientific, rather than political aspect.

Ankara only failed to implement its third precondition, the one
related to Nagorno-Karabakh," Martirosyan said.

According to him, the international community is unlikely to accuse
Armenia of "destructivism." "The international community is well
aware of the great tolerance shown by Armenia in the Armenian-Turkish
process," he said. Martirosyan pointed out that that Armenia must
first of all give priority to its national interests. He stressed
that Turkey is unlikely to manipulate this statement, as it clearly
says that the process will be resumed as soon as Ankara is ready.

First Theater-On-Wheels Appears In Armenia

FIRST THEATER-ON-WHEELS APPEARS IN ARMENIA

ArmInfo
2010-04-22 14:21:00

ArmInfo. The first Theater-on-Wheels has appeared in Armenia.

The art director of the theater, Karapet Balyan, said at today’s
press-conference that the troupe consists of 6 actors, all of them
being students of the Theater Institute. "On Fridays, Saturdays
and Sundays we’ll give 3- 4 performances a day. They will mostly be
15-minute sketches with pantomime elements",- he said.

Balyan pointed out that the theater will renew its repertory once
every two weeks. Thus, the Theater-on- Wheels will give 20-25
performances a year. The theater has already chosen some key places
for its performances: the Northern Avenue, Park of Lovers, "Poplavok",
Cascade and Kirov’s Park. In addition, performances will also be given
at orphanages, kindergartens, and adult residential homes. "We hope
that in the future we will be able to give performances not only in
Yerevan, but also in the regions of Armenia", Balyan said and added
that the Theater-on-Wheels has no sponsor, and the actors stage all
the performances at their own expense. "Our goal is not earning money.

We just want to gift joy and smiles to people",- he stressed.

To note, the first performance of the Theater-on-Wheels will be held
at the Northern Avenue on 23 April, at 4:15 pm.

Glendale: Candidate Drops Out Of Race

CANDIDATE DROPS OUT OF RACE
Zain Shauk

Glendale News Press
April 21 2010
CA

Glendale school board member Nayiri Nahabedian has ended her campaign
for state Assembly a week after losing by a 10% margin in a special
primary election last week, her consultant said Tuesday.

Although her loss April 13 knocked her out of a special June 8 runoff
contest, Nahabedian could have competed in another primary for the same
seat — also to be held June 8 — ahead of the Nov. 2 general election.

But after conversations with Assembly Speaker John Perez and Democrat
Mike Gatto, who won the primary last week, Nahabedian decided to end
her election bid, said Paul Mitchell, a Sacramento-based consultant
for her campaign.

"It was in the speaker’s best interest that there be some clarity here,
and we were willing to do the right thing and step out," Mitchell said.

Nahabedian will still appear on June 8 ballots as a candidate for
the primary contest, even though voters will also be making a choice
between Gatto and Republican Sunder Ramani for who should fill the
remainder of the unexpired term ending Nov. 30.

With two contests happening on the same day, Perez was concerned that
voters would be confused, especially because Nahabedian would have to
campaign against Gatto for the primary nomination while Gatto would be
simultaneously seeking support for the runoff election, Mitchell said.

"Even if we had abundant confidence that we could win in the June
primary, the fact is that we would only be doing it out of selfishness,
and in doing so we would probably be jeopardizing the Democrats’
ability to hold on to this seat that we’ve held on to for the last
16 years," he said.

Gatto, an attorney, declined to comment on Nahabedian’s decision to
drop out of the race, saying he was concentrating on state problems.

"I’m focused on working as hard as possible to solve the issues of
the state up in Sacramento, and that remains my focus," he said.

Nahabedian, who finished third in the April 13 special election primary
with 22% of the vote, did not respond to requests for comment Tuesday.

She posted a letter on her website over the weekend thanking supporters
and expressing disappointment at the April results, although the
letter did not clearly state whether she would continue campaigning
for the seat.

"The numbers on Tuesday did not go our way," she said in the letter.

"However, the issues we care about transcend any one election result.

We will stay engaged and active on the issues that matter to California
— getting the economy moving, attracting good jobs, and preparing
all children to have a path to a college or a path to a career."

The seat representing the 43rd Assembly District, which includes most
of Glendale, Burbank and parts of Los Angeles, has been vacant since
January, when Paul Krekorian left the office to join the Los Angeles
City Council.

Gatto, however, will not be uncontested in his primary bid.

Democrat Chahe Keuroghelian announced Tuesday that he would run in
the June 8 partisan contest.

Keuroghelian, who political experts say weakened Nahabedian’s showing
in the polls April 13 by splitting the Armenian American vote,
pledged to reinvigorate his campaign.

The Armenian-language television host admitted that he was unable
to gain widespread support in the district for the special election,
having caught on mostly with Armenian American voters. He pledged to
broaden his campaign efforts as he pushed on toward the election.

"We’re up and running already," Keuroghelian said in a statement
Tuesday. "We have enough people and contributions to get organized
and prepare a strong campaign."

BAKU: Turkey And European Union Pretend To Participation In Settleme

TURKEY AND EUROPEAN UNION PRETEND TO PARTICIPATION IN SETTLEMENT OF ARMENIAN-AZERBAIJANI CONFLICT

Azerbaijan Business Center
April 21 2010

Baku, Fineko/abc.az. A number of persons, wishing to handle in the OSCE
Minsk Group for settlement of Armenian-Azerbaijani Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict, have grown dramatically.

According to Presidential Administration socio-political department
head Ali Hasanov, Azerbaijan is not authorized to review activity or
determine the composition of the Minsk Group..

"This is the OSCE institution. The organization itself determines the
number of states in its structure. If there is any dissatisfaction on
this issue at the OSCE next summit, Azerbaijan, of course, can voice
its opinion. There is increasing concern over the lack of significant
results of the Institute of co-chairmen in recent years not only in
Europe but all over the world.

Presently, the question is the opportunity of participation of the
European Union (EU) there in some kind of form, that is, so that
France will represent in this structure not itself but and whole EU.

There are other proposals. The agenda also includes the issue of
participation of Turkey as an interesting country of this region
in the full sense of this word. There are other offers – as many
countries as proposals.

But evaluation of proposals is prerogative of OSCE," Hasanov said.

Azerbaijan, for his part, is dissatisfied with ineffectiveness of
the Minsk Group.

Georgian Authorities Continue Destroying Historical-Cultural Heritag

GEORGIAN AUTHORITIES CONTINUE DESTROYING HISTORICAL-CULTURAL HERITAGE OF ARMENIAN JAVAKHK

ArmInfo
2010-04-22 12:34:00

ArmInfo. The Armenian church of Surb Yerevman (The Epiphany) in
Georgia’s mostly Armenian region, Javakheti, may soon disappear:
the Georgian authorities have permitted using the stones of this
ancient church (7th century AD) for construction purposes.

The statement by the community of Javakheti Armenians of Russia says
that the altar and one of the chapels have already been destroyed.

"We can still save the cross-stones in Armenian," the authors of the
statement say.

The coordinator of the Yerevan Office of the Research on Armenian
Architecture NGO Samvel Karapetyan qualifies this as attempt of the
Georgian authorities to wipe out this Armenian monument from the
historical map of the region. This facility belongs to the Armenian
Apostolic Church. In 1828, during the Russian-Turkish war, the dome
of the Church was ruined by a gun. Today, its cross-stones are being
steadily destroyed. Karapetyan says that the Georgian authorities
are consistently destroying the Armenian monuments located in gorges
near the Armenian-Georgian border – a territory that once was part of
Gugark province of historical Armenia. The Georgian authorities are
keeping local Armenians away from the church. Karapetyan believes
that the goal of this vandalic act is to change the genesis of the
Armenian cultural-historical monuments of the region.

Turkey sees progress over Iran; US rules out military strike for now

Turkey sees progress over Iran; US rules out military strike for now

By AGENCIES

Updated: Apr 22, 2010

ANKARA: Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has reported progress in
efforts to resolve tension between Iran and Western powers over the Islamic
republic’s nuclear program, in remarks published on Wednesday.

Asked whether "certain progress has been made" in his talks with Iranian
officials in Tehran on Tuesday, Davutoglu answered "yes," speaking to Turkey’s
English-language Today’s Zaman newspaper.

"What is most important is the fact that the Iranian side is very receptive.
There are also steps that I will take from now on. I’m very hopeful," he was
quoted as saying.

Turkey, a UN Security Council member opposed to fresh sanctions against
Iran, insists the dispute should be resolved through diplomatic means and
has offered to act as a mediator.

Turkey "is ready to act as an intermediary in the issue of uranium exchange
as a third country and hopes to have a fruitful role in this," Davutoglu
said in Tehran Tuesday.

The United States welcomed Turkey’s mediation efforts, but expressed renewed
skepticism about Iran’s willingness to engage in talks.

"I’ll only say in order to play a mediation role, you have to have a country
like Iran that is actually willing to engage seriously, and that’s what’s
been lacking over the past several months," State Department spokesman
Philip Crowley said Tuesday.

The US has ruled out a military strike against Iran’s nuclear program any
time soon.

"Military force is an option of last resort," Undersecretary of Defense for
Policy Michele Flournoy said during a press briefing in Singapore. "It’s off
the table in the near term."

"Right now the focus is a combination of engagement and pressure in the form
of sanctions," Flournoy said.

Meanwhile, Iran’s Revolutionary Guards will begin three days of maneuvers in
the Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday to show their naval strength,
the semi-official Fars News Agency reported on Wednesday.

"Maintaining security in the Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, as the world’s
key economic and energy routes, is the main goal of the war games," Fars
quoted Brigadier General Hossein Salami as saying. "This war game is not a
threat for any friendly countries," he said.

Naval, air and ground forces from the Guards will take part.

Iran armed forces often hold maneuvers in an apparent bid to show their
readiness to deter any military action by Israel or the United States.

© 2010 Arab News

Declaration On Armenian Genocide 95 Signed In Los Angeles

DECLARATION ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE 95 SIGNED IN LOS ANGELES

Panorama.am
21/04/2010

Declaration on Armenian genocide 95 has been submitted to Michael
Antonovich, member of Los Angeles County.

The declaration stands mutual understanding, respect, restoration
for those Armenians in Los Angeles who survived Genocide and those
350.000 American Armenians on April 24, 2010, the day of Armenian
Genocide 1915-1923.

"In his observations, Antonovich who has initiated the declaration
refers to mourning of Genocide victims," Social democrat hnchakian
party reported.