ANKARA: Total’s Sell Decreases 30 Percent After The Armenian Bill

TOTAL’S SELL DECREASES 30 PERCENT AFTER THE ARMENIAN BILL
Ummuhan Sumbul, JTW

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
Oct 17 2006

Ummuhan SUMBUL (JTW), ANKARA – The passing of the controversial
Armenian claims denial bill in the French parliament has prompted
strong reactions in Turkish business circles. The French company
Total Oil has been the target of the boycott. The Company informed
the journalists that the sell has decreased about 30 percent in a week.

Several businessmen and companies announced they would suspend business
partnerships with French companies. The number of Turkish markets
which do not sell French products has radically increased yesterday.

Associations Continue to Call for Greater Boycott

Some French companies operating in Turkey include Total, Elf,
Carrefour, Danone, Tefal, Michelin, Renault, Peugeot, Citroen, Lacoste,
L’Oreal, Lancome, Christian Dior, Onduline, Lafarge, Chryso, Air
France, BIC, Cartier, Sheaffer, Le coq sportif, Alcatel, AXA, Gunes
Insurance, Basak Insurance, Basak Emeklilik Societe General Bank,
Turkish Economy Bank, Sanofi and Servier.

Consumer Union yesterday called all Turkish consumers inside and
abroad not to buy French products. However the Union also warned the
Turkish consumers not to boycott the French-Turkish companies which
have great investment in Turkey. The CarrefourSa Market Company
therefore was removed from the boycott list. "CarrefourSa invest
great in Turkey and create emploment here. If we boycott CarrefourSa,
it means we would boycott Turkish businesmen and workers" one of the
Union representative said.

Armenians claim that the communal clashes in 1915 was genocide, while
Turkish Government has never accepted these claims. Turkey says the
Armenians died due to the communal clashes, bad weather conditions,
war curcumstances, famine and epidemic diseases. Turkish historains
also say that more than 520,000 Muslim Ottoman citizens were massacred
by the armed Armenian groups. Armenia now does not recognise Turkey’s
and Azerbaijan’s national borders and occupies almost 20 percent of
Azeri territories.

17 October 2006

TUSIAD: Let us Reply with Reforms

TUSIAD called the French bill "a big mistake."

"A proper reply to be given to France would be to accelerate
political reforms to include freedom of expression particularly and
proceed toward our goal of full [EU] membership as a country holding
memberships talks with the European Union," the association stated.

TOBB: They won’t be Invited for Bids

Rifat Hisarciklioglu, chairman for the Turkish Union of Chambers and
Commodity Exchanges (TOBB), said public administrations in Turkey would
not invite French companies to bids after the passing of the bill.

"The French National Parliament made a mistake. Responsibility for
this process falls on it," Hisarciklioglu said. The TOBB chairman
thinks France failed in the test of law and conscience and described
the developments as a black page in its history.

ANKARA: Finnish FM Toumioja: French Decision Was "Stupid"

FINNISH FM TOUMIOJA: FRENCH DECISION WAS "STUPID"

Hurriyet, Turkey
Oct 17 2006

Finnish Foreign Minister Erkki Tuomioja, speaking about last week’s
approval in France of the bill calling for jail time and monetary
fines for people denying the so-called Armenian genocide, has called
the French Parliament’s decision "stupid."

Finland is currently the term president of the EU. Tuomioja’s
comments were published on a Finnish web site; the Finnish FM also
noted in his comments that the French decision would serve to inflame
nationalistic circles within Turkey. Said Toumioja "My calling this
French decision ‘stupid,’ and my hope that the bill is immediately
withdrawn has nothing to do with actually happened to the Armenians
in Turkey. Personally, I do think that ‘genocide’ is the correct term
to describe what happened to Armenians in the past, and I wish that
Turkey would be ready to accept this."

BAKU: Azerbaijani And Turkish Diaspora Members Placed Protest Action

AZERBAIJANI AND TURKISH DIASPORA MEMBERS PLACED PROTEST ACTION OUTSIDE FRANCE EMBASSY IN PRAGUE

Azeri Press Agency
Oct 16 2006

Azerbaijani and Turkish Diaspora members in Czechia placed a protest
action outside France embassy in Prague, Azerbaijan-Czechia Society
told the APA.

The participants, who tied their mouth with ribbon symbolically,
hit hands together for 15 minutes. The action participants protested
against the arrest and monetary penalty considered for the deniers
false Armenian genocide by France Parliament and handed the resolution
written in Czech language to embassy officer. The chief of the society
also gave "Armenian Genocide" book written in French, Armenian and
Turkish languages and the CD to the embassy. The society is also
reported to hold series of ceremonies on Khojali tragedy will be held
in February next year in Czech. Exhibitions and seminars will be held
within the ceremony which will last for three months.

Where’s Voltaire When You Need Him?

WHERE’S VOLTAIRE WHEN YOU NEED HIM?
Denis MacShane

The Guardian, UK
Oct 12 2006

Legislating to make denying the Armenians suffered genocide at the
hands of the Turks illegal deserves the scorn of France’s greatest
exponent of French speech.

Where is Voltaire when you need him? The decision of the French
politicians in the national assembly in Paris to legislate on the
writing of the history of the Armenian massacres of 1915-1916 deserves
the wit, the scorn, the satire and the derision of France’s greatest
exponent of free speech. I cannot believe that the nation of Voltaire,
Hugo, Zola and Sartre has decided to try and control what is written
about history.

But alas, Voltaire is dead and his spirit is slowly being extinguished
as freedom of speech is being replaced by freedom from being insulted
or hurt. The Turkish politicians who also want to dictate how the
Armenian massacres are reported must be opening champagne that they
now have fellow politicians who think they can control history.

Let us be clear. What happened to a million or more Armenians in the
dying days of the Ottoman empire as seismic changes took place in the
political landscape of the region was an atrocious crime. It joins the
other atrocious crimes of the 20th century from Stalin’s extermination
of the Ukrainian Kulaks, Mao’s murder through calculated starvation
of millions of Chinese in the 1950s, or, whisper it quietly in France,
the killing of scores of thousands of people in Madagascar or Algeria
by French soldiers. And more and more can be added.

Was it genocide? The word has become devalued as almost every event in
which innocent people are killed now seems automatically to get the tag
"genocide". Milosevic’s brutalities in the Balkans, the Palestinians
killed by Israelis, the horrific ethnic-tribal-religious wars in
Africa all get given the description "genocide" as if by using this
awesome term the deaths of the innocent are elevated.

What neither the Armenian tragedy nor any of the other mass
killings constitute is the equivalent of the Shoah – the 4-year long,
industrially organised, professionally executed transportation of Jews
from many countries in Europe to face a scientific, hi-tech, engineered
process of extermination. To deny the Holocaust is a deliberate ploy
by today’s Jew-haters to begin the process of returning Europe to a
past that begins with anti-semitic jokes and ends in gas chambers.

It little matters whether the disaster that befell the Armenians is
called genocide or not. It is not for states or parliament to award
descriptions to what happened in the past. That is for historians
and for a sense of deep cultural understanding.

The Turks are as foolish as the French in pretending that politicians
of today can define the events of yesterday. Last year I was attacked
by ultra-nationalists in Turkey when I attended the trial of Orhan
Pamuk, the new Nobel Laureate, who said that the Armenian massacres
should be discussed openly. Turkish law allows private and public
prosecutions against writers and journalists who want to examine
Turkey’s past without any limits on what can or might be said.

Now the French parliament have passed their own version of this
kind of legislation. I appear regularly on French radio and TV. If
I now say I do not believe that the deaths in 1915 merit the term
"genocide", will a gendarme arrive to arrest me? When the British
writer and Labour MP, Michael Foot, was in Paris in 1958 he wrote an
article criticising the behaviour of the then president, Rene Coty.

He was expelled from France for the crime of being rude about a
French president.

Five decades later France is now declaring that any European citizen
who decides to state that "genocide" is not the right term to use for
the Armenian massacres will face punishment under French law. How
has Europe come to behave like its own worst enemy? The Muslim
intellectual, Tariq Ramadam, first came to fame in his native Geneva
when he tried to stop the staging of a play by Voltaire in 1992, the
bicentenary of Voltaire’s death. Like the fatwa on Salman Rushdie this
was the beginning of the long assault against intellectual and artistic
freedom that Europe has had to defend itself against in recent years.

It is not a tragedy that the French parliament has now joined the
enemies of freedom with this attempt to control history. It is a farce,
which need to be laughed away with scorn. At a time when Europe should
defend freedom of expression it is hard to believe that European
politicians should be seeking to make thought a crime. We live in
strange times.

NYT; Turkish Writer Wins Nobel in Literature

Turkish Writer Wins Nobel in Literature

By SARAH LYALL
Published: October 12, 2006

LONDON, Oct. 12 – The Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk, whose exquisitely
constructed, wistful prose explores the agonized dance between Muslims
and the west and between past and present, won the 2006 Nobel Prize in
Literature today.

Announcing the award from Stockholm, the Swedish Academy said in a
statement that Mr. Pamuk’s `quest for the melancholic soul of his
native city’ had led him to discover `new symbols for the clash and
interlacing of cultures.’

Mr. Pamuk, 54, is Turkey’s best-known and best-selling novelist but
also an increasingly divisive figure in a nation pulled in many
directions at once. A champion of freedom of speech at a time when
insulting `Turkishness’ is a criminal offense, he has run afoul of
Islamists who resent his Western secularism, and Turkish nationalists
who object to his unflinching, sometimes unflattering portrayal of
their country.

The Swedish Academy never offers nonliterary reasons for its choices
and presents itself as being uninfluenced by politics. But last year’s
winner, the British playwright Harold Pinter, is a prominent critic of
the British and American governments, and there were political
implications once again in the choice of Mr. Pamuk.

`You’re beginning to notice a certain sensitivity to trends – they are
giving the prize as a symbolic statement for one thing or another,’
Arne Ruth, former editor-in-chief of the Swedish daily Dagens Nyheter,
said in an interview. Of Mr. Pamuk, he said: `he is a symbol of the
relationship between Europe and Turkey, and they couldn’t have
overlooked this when they made their choice.’

Mr. Pamuk, who said in 2004 that he has begun `to get involved in a
sort of political war against the Turkish state and the
establishment,’ is currently spending a semester teaching at Columbia
University in New York.

Nationalist Turks have not forgiven Mr. Pamuk for an interview with a
Swiss magazine in 2005 in which he denounced the mass killings of
Armenians by the Ottoman Empire in World War I and the killing of
Kurds by Turkey in the 1980’s. He narrowly escaped trial when the
remarks were deemed anti-Turkish and a group of nationalists initiated
a criminal case against him; the charges were dropped on a
technicality last January. Accepting a literary award in Germany in
2005, he said: "The fueling of anti-Turkish sentiment in Europe is
resulting in an anti-European, indiscriminate nationalism in Turkey."

Because of the deeply mixed feelings Mr. Pamuk inspires back home,
some prominent Turks had to walk a fine line today, expressing pride
while trying to play down the significance of his political views.

`I want to believe that the Nobel Prize was given to him purely on his
literary talents, but not political declarations,’ Egemen Bagis, a
member of Parliament from the ruling Justice and Development party,
said. At the same time, Mr. Bagis said that the prize `shows how far
Turkey has come in its contribution to the world’s arts and
literature.’

In a brief interview with the Swedish newspaper Svenska Daglabet,
Mr. Pamuk said today that he was `very happy and honored’ and trying
`to recover from the shock.’

Born to a wealthy, secular family of industrialists in Istanbul in
195, Mr. Pamuk originally meant to be an architect. But he defied
family pressures, quit architecture school and became instead a
full-time writer, publishing his first novel, `Cevdet Bey and Sons,’
about three generations of a family, in 1982.

Among his best known works is `My Name is Red.’ The novel, first
published in Turkey in 1998 and subsequently translated into 24
languages, introduced Mr. Pamuk to a wider audience and cemented his
international reputation. Set over nine winter days in 16th-century
Istanbul, it is at once a mystery, an intellectual puzzle and a
romance with a range of narrators, including a murder victim who opens
the novel by saying, `I am nothing but a corpse now, a body at the
bottom of a well.’ In 2003, it won the $127,000 IMPAC Dublin literary
prize.

`Nothing changed in my life since I work all the time,’ Mr. Pamuk said
at the time. `I’ve spent 30 years writing fiction. For the first 10
years, I worried about money and no one asked me how much money I
made. The second decade I spent money and no one was asking me about
that. And I’ve spent the last 10 years with everyone expecting to hear
how I spend the money, which I will not do.’

`Snow,’ published in the United States in 2004, expands further on
themes – alienation, religion, modernization, the hidden corners of
Turkey – that Mr. Pamuk has explored over and over in his
work. Writing in the New York Times Book Review, Margaret Atwood
called the novel `not only an engrossing feat of tale-spinning, but
essential reading for our times.’ The Turkish public reads
Mr. Pamuk’s work, she said, `as if taking its own pulse.’

Ms. Atwood continued: `The twists of fate, the plots that double back
on themselves, the trickiness, the mysteries that recede as they’re
approached, the bleak cities, the night prowling, the sense of
identity lost, the protagonist in exile – these are vintage Pamuk, but
they’re also part of the modern literary landscape.’

Mr. Pamuk was quick to denounce the fatwa against Salman Rushdie over
Mr. Rushdie’s work `The Satanic Verses.’ In 1998, he turned down the
title of state artist in Turkey, saying, `I don’t know why they tried
to give me the prize.’

Mr. Pamuk’s Nobel comes at a particularly tricky moment for Turkey,
whose efforts to join the European Union are viewed with suspicion by
its own nationalists, by Europeans who worry about the country’s high
proportion of Islamists, and by European governments, who are
insisting that it first adhere to Western standards in human rights
and justice.

Coincidentally today, a bill that would make it a crime to deny that
the Turkish killing of Armenians from 1915 to 1917 constituted
genocide was passed in the lower house of the French Parliament. And
from Armenia, the foreign minister, Vartan Oskanian, praised what he
said were Mr. Pamuk’s courageous words about the past, in a statement
that is bound to irritate Turkey.

`Orhan Pamuk ventured into issues of memory and identity, and with
intellectual courage and honesty, explored his own history, and
therefore ours,’ Mr. Oskanian said in an e-mail message to The New
York Times. `We welcome this decision and only wish that this kind of
intellectual sincerity and candor will lead the way to acknowledging
and transcending this painful, difficult period of our peoples’ and
our countries’ history.’

Reporting was contributed by Ivar Ekman from Stockholm, C.J. Chivers
from Moscow, Nina Bernstein from New York and Sebnem Arsu from
Istanbul.

ACNIS Focuses on Regional Developments and Armenian Security

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Center for National and International Studies
75 Yerznkian Street
Yerevan 0033, Armenia
Tel: (+374 – 10) 52.87.80 or 27.48.18
Fax: (+374 – 10) 52.48.46
Email: [email protected] or [email protected]
Website:

October 12, 2006

ACNIS Focuses on Regional Developments and Armenian Security

Yerevan–Does the future of the Caucasus augur any changes in terms of
politico-military and geostrategic interests? What is the current balance of
interests held by world powers and the countries in the region, and what are
the prospects of this balance? What can we anticipate from the GUAM
pact–signed among Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan, and Moldova–which is now
becoming more active? What impact will the events unraveling in the northern
Caucasus as well as the strained Russian-Georgian relations have on Armenia
and, more specifically, on the resolution of the Karabagh conflict? In light
of the on-ground victory in Artsakh’s quest for liberty and self-defense,
what are the reasons behind subsequent Armenian setbacks in the political
arena? In order comprehensively to explore and offer an expert outlook on
these and other pertinent contemporary issues, the Armenian Center for
National and International Studies (ACNIS) today convened a foreign policy
roundtable entitled "Political Developments in the Caucasus and Armenia’s
Security."

ACNIS director of research Stiopa Safarian greeted the audience with opening
remarks. Next to welcome the participants and deliver comments was ACNIS
director of administration Karapet Kalenchian. "In this policy seminar, we
will try to delineate the realm of those matters which have a direct
correlation with our security, and to expose the shortcomings of our foreign
and domestic agenda with respect to the defense of national interests," he
said.

In her address, security specialist Naira Hambarian deliberated on the
imperatives of Armenia’s security doctrine. In Hambarian’s assessment,
ethnic conflicts and civil wars are an outcome of the intrastate and
military changes taken place during the post-Cold War era. And these
changes, in their turn, bring about corruption, poverty, environmental
pollution, drug trafficking, terrorism, and other challenges to domestic,
non-military security. According to the analyst, the most perilous of these,
one which breaks the backbone of the country’s potential and destroys the
body politic, is corruption–and especially the crimes committed by the
ruling powers. "The union between criminal forces and the political elite is
beneficial for both. Hence, such criminal partnership provides votes and
financial dividends to the authorities, while the criminal factions not only
receive protection against law enforcement but, enjoying the backing of the
administration, are also free to engage in the shadow economy," Hambarian
noted.

In his turn, Yerevan State University lecturer Aram Harutiunian concentrated
on the policy, pursued by some, of Armenia’s regional isolation and its
probable consequences. He expressed confidence that the currently tense
situation in the Caucasus has brought forth real threats against Armenia’s
security, and these threats, in Harutiunian’s view, could become more
complex. "’Thanks to’ the persistent policy conducted by a couple of
aggressive neighbors, the transnational corporations, and large financial
circles, Armenia–lacking in natural resources and coping with a
cleverly-orchestrated blockade–has become largely isolated. In actual fact,
Armenia has been deprived of the opportunity to play any meaningful role in
the region. That is to say, this situation creates an evident vacuum which,
as is known, could result in unpredictable consequences," he said. The
political scientist concluded by offering his prescriptions for the
challenges ahead. The bypassing of Armenia in regional projects, according
to Harutiunian, is a dangerous process that could disturb the strategic
equilibrium in the region, and this would significantly jeopardize Armenia’s
future security.

The next speaker, political analyst Davit Petrosian, reflected on the
current instability in the northern Caucasus, and presented a breakdown of
the threats which Armenia might confront from that direction. "Should the
Karabagh conflict be settled, one of the points in the relevant agreement
will stipulate the deblockage of every single one of Armenia’s land
communications, including the transportation links that pass through
Azerbaijan and the northern Caucasus," Petrosian asserted. He did not rule
out, however, that in case of instability in the southern portion of the
North Caucasus–in Daghestan, for instance–the aforementioned routes could
be shut down once more, but this time by Russia. The transportation links
across Abhkazia and North Ossetia, on the other hand, will remain closed for
a long time in order to serve as reciprocal levers in the campaign against
neighboring adversaries, he said.

In his talk, Armenia’s former deputy minister of defense Vahan Shirkhanian
examined the military balance in the Caucasus. He demonstrated with facts
and figures that the South Caucasus is the world’s most militarized region.
In line with these statistics, in the last five years alone the military
budgets of Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Georgia have increased approximately
five, three, and two times, respectively. And what’s interesting is that
these indicators surpass the economic growth index of these countries by
thirty to forty times. Apart from this, the three Caucasus countries have
found themselves in different geopolitical and politico-military
extremities. Georgia’s bearing is in the direction of NATO, Azerbaijan looks
toward Turkey, while Armenia sets its sights on Russia. "It seems the region
will soon turn into a stage for military actions," Shirkhanian said. He also
maintained against this backdrop that Armenia needs to resign from its
policy of complementarity, which practically has become unjustifiable, and
to choose a precise and coherent system of security. The best course of
action for Armenia, according to the former deputy minister, is to associate
with the Eurasian Economic Commonwealth and with the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization comprising Russia, China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and
Tajikistan.

The participants in the ensuing discussion included director Gagik
Ter-Harutiunian of the "Noravank" Foundation; Gegham Harutiunian from the
Republic Party; analyst Marine Karapetian from the Concord Center for Legal
and Political Studies; Heritage Party board member Gevorg Kalenchian;
chairman Alexander Butayev of "The People are Masters of the Country" civic
union; and several others.

Founded in 1994 by Armenia’s first Minister of Foreign Affairs Raffi K.
Hovannisian and supported by a global network of contributors, ACNIS serves
as a link between innovative scholarship and the public policy challenges
facing Armenia and the Armenian people in the post-Soviet world. It also
aspires to be a catalyst for creative, strategic thinking and a wider
understanding of the new global environment. In 2006, the Center focuses
primarily on civic education, conflict resolution, and applied research on
critical domestic and foreign policy issues for the state and the nation.

For further information on the Center call (37410) 52-87-80 or 27-48-18; fax
(37410) 52-48-46; email [email protected] or [email protected]; or visit

www.acnis.am
www.acnis.am

Turk Deputy Of Labor Party Of Holland Does Not Orient In Issue Of Ge

TURK DEPUTY OF LABOUR PARTY OF HOLLAND DOES NOT ORIENT IN ISSUE OF GENOCIDE RECOGNITION

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Oct 10 2006

AMSTERDAM, OCTOBER 10, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Labour Party
of Holland did not get free of the Armenian Genocide issue yet, the
Armenian Organizations’ Federation of Netherlands states. Member of
that party, famous deputy Turk Nebahat Albayrak’s position relating
to the Armenian Genocide issue was again called into question by
different mass media during the recent days.

That party broke off its ties with deputy Erdinc Sacan the last week.

He will not participate in the parliamentary elections to take place on
November 22 as he refuses to recognize the Armenian Genocide conducted
by Turkey in 1915-1917. Albayrak, who is the second in the party list
after Wouter Bos, still refused to give clear interpretations on her
orientation in the genocide issue.

According to the "Elsevier" newspaper, Albayrak did not give
explanations starting from the next week when she "brought the debate
to a problem," saying in the interview to the "Trow" newspaper that
it is impossoble to have a clear position as the historic sources
"were made dirty."

"Elsevier" writes that Albayrak puts forward the Turkish government’s
position as the Ambassador of Turkey wrote in the letter addressed
to Handelsbad. The diplomate said that "historians are of different
opinion in the issue of qualifying these events."

While Turk members of the Labour Party have evasive position concerning
the issue, its causes mess in another, the Christian Democratic Party
(CDP). 30 Turk members of the CDP protested at the last week congress
of the party on the occasion of taking out of the lists of candidates
names of 2 candiadtes refused to recognize the Genocide.

In the opinion of the Turkish Ambassador to Holland, the names of
Ayhan Tonca and Osman Elmaci were taken out of the list by a mistake.

On Monday the Turkish Parliament confered title of "honourary
parliamentarian" to Sacan, Tonca and Elmaci.

To recap, according to Marmara, Nebahat Albayrak recognized the fact of
the Armenian Genocide, however, adding that she stands for discussing
in what way that genocide was conducted. Opposing those explanations
of Albayrak, her co-partisans insisted that she "plays on two strings"
and expresses evasive opinion.

Armenia Got Most Number Of Prizes At New Cinema, 21st Century Festiv

ARMENIA GOT MOST NUMBER OF PRIZES AT NEW CINEMA, 21ST CENTURY FESTIVAL

PanARMENIAN.Net
10.10.2006 17:22 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ New Cinema, 21st Century International Festival
was held in Smolensk Russian town. Its primary task is to recreate
the joint cinema screening space in the CIS and Baltic states. 16
countries took part in the event.

The prize for best script in the full-length fiction films was awarded
to Mariam by Edgar Baghdasaryan.

Armenian documentary Faith, Hope, Love by Armen Khachatryan shared
the documentary grand prix with a Russian film. Two Armenian pictures
were awarded diplomas: documentary Hello, Fellini by Arman Yeritsyan
and Recollections of Sayat-Nova by Levon Grigoryan. No country,
even Russia, got that number of prizes.

Cargo Transit From Armenia To Russia Via Georgia To Continue

CARGO TRANSIT FROM ARMENIA TO RUSSIA VIA GEORGIA TO CONTINUE

ITAR-TASS, Russia
Oct 10 2006

MOSCOW, October 9 (Itar-Tass) — Cargo transit from Armenia to Russia
through Georgia and back will not be stopped, Armenian Defence Minister
Serzh Sarkisyan said.

Russian Transport Minister Igor Levitin said cargoes would go to and
from Armenia through the ports of Novorossiisk and Kavkaz.

The parties said cargo turnover between Russia and Armenia would double
this year to 363.9 million U.S. dollars. Russia supplies machinery,
equipment, nuclear fuel, and surface transport to Armenia in exchange
for food and agricultural products, alcohol, previous and semi-precious
metals and stones.

Two railway ferries will run between Novorossiisk and Kavkaz by the
end of the year. Currently there is only one ferry for 20 railway
carriages.

According to Levitin, the ferry is not efficient and it will be
replaced with two ferries, each capable of carrying 52 railway
carriages.

Armenia’s National Statistics Service said Russia was the third largest
investor in Armenia in 2005 after Germany and Turkey, having invested
67.5 million U.S. dollars.

The ministers said 589 joint ventures with Russian capital were
registered in Armenia. About 300 of them are doing well, including
Armenal at the Kanaker Aluminium Plant that makes foil. It plans to
make up to 2.5 percent of foil in the world by 2008.

Turkish Candidate to Dutch Parliament Forced to Recognize Armenian G

AZG Armenian Daily #191, 07/10/2006

Turkey

TURKISH CANDIDATE TO DUTCH PARLIAMENT FORCED TO
RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Nebahat Albayrak, in second position on the list of
the main opposition Labor Party (PvdA) candidates, has
recognized the Armenian Genocide, Zaman daily reports.

After the main Dutch parties removed three Turkish
candidates from their electoral lists, Albayrak said
she backed the parliamentary motion describing the
deaths as genocide, in an interview with the analysis
magazine HP/De Tijd, adding that the form of its
occurrence needs to be investigated.

Albayrak, who has served in the parliament since 1998,
in her previous statements said the jurists would
determine the use of "genocide" in response to the
Armenian Diaspora’s claims, and avoided using the
definition in her interviews.

Meanwhile, Turkish candidates Ayhan Tonca, Osman
Elmaci (CDA) and Erdinc Sacan (PvdA) were removed from
the election list for the general elections.