European Diary: Upcoming Conferences: “Has Turkey Changed?”

EUROPEAN DIARY: UPCOMING CONFERENCES: “HAS TURKEY CHANGED?”

European Report
September 7, 2005

[parts omitted]

Comprehensive conference to address various points relating to
Turkish membership of the EU. To be followed on 23 September by the
Consultative Meeting of European Armenians: this will bring together
leaders of Armenian associations and organisations to discuss Turkey’s
EU membership, the new neighbourhood policy with Armenia and the role
of Armenian culture in Europe. Both events open to public.

Information:

www.eafjd.org

Armenian Opposition Party Splits Over Foreign Policy

ARMENIAN OPPOSITION PARTY SPLITS OVER FOREIGN POLICY

Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep.
Sept 7 2005

(RFE/RL)
7 September 2005 — Several top members of a leading opposition
party said yesterday that they are quitting in protest over what they
described as the party’s pro-Western stance.

Albert Bazeian, who left the Anrapetutsiun (Republic) party along
with six comrades, said its leaders’ push for Armenia’s membership
in NATO and withdrawal from the Russian-dominated alliances was wrong.

The Anrapetutsiun party leader, former Prime Minister Aram Sarkisian,
has recently called for Armenia to quit the Commonwealth of Independent
States, a loose alliance of ex-Soviet countries.

Armenia has remained a staunch Russian ally and hosts a Russian
military base.

Russia’s energy monopoly assumed financial control of Armenia’s only
nuclear plant in 2003, and earlier this year it also has acquired
the right to manage and receive profits from Armenia’s national grid
company for the next 99 years. Armenia also depends on Russia for
natural-gas supplies.

Armenia Will Assist US

ARMENIA WILL ASSIST US

Pan Armenian News
06.09.2005 06:42

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ “Armenia is ready to provide the necessary assistance
to the US Government due to the consequences of the hurricane,”
Armenian FM Vartan Oskanian stated at a joint news conference with
OSCE Chairman-in-Office, Slovenian FM Dimitrij Rupel. In his words,
today the US Embassy in Armenia will provide the list of what is
necessary for the Katrina hurricane victims. As the minister noted,
at the moment the US needs money to the most, and Armenia is ready
to provide both financial and professional assistance to the US to
the best of its abilities. In the Minister’s words, rescuer teams,
physicians and other specialists will depart from Armenia for the US
in case of need.

Karabakh “Sooner Or Later” To Be Involved In Peace Talks – ArmenianM

KARABAKH “SOONER OR LATER” TO BE INVOLVED IN PEACE TALKS – ARMENIAN MINISTER

Mediamax news agency
6 Sep 05

Yerevan, 6 September: “The Armenian side will never discuss an option
for settling the Karabakh conflict which does not secure the Nagornyy
Karabakh people’s right to self-determination,” Armenian Foreign
Minister Vardan Oskanyan said in Yerevan today.

Speaking at a briefing in Yerevan, Oskanyan expressed confidence that
the full-scale negotiation process will resume within the framework
of the OSCE Minsk Group sooner or later.

Oskanyan said that this would be possible only when the Armenian and
Azerbaijani foreign ministers reach a certain stage in the discussion
of details of the peaceful settlement.

“I think the talks will then resume within the framework of the Minsk
Group. This will mean automatically the participation of Nagornyy
Karabakh’s representatives in the talks,” Oskanyan said.

‘By reason, Russia can’t be got’!

‘By reason, Russia can’t be got’!

Deccan Herald, India
Sept 4 2005

Old memorials of the Revolution are giving way to new capitalistic
ventures. Lenin is still respected but Russians are asking for more
and more, learns deepak k upreti.

‘Russia can’t be understood by the mind alone’, these words by the
19the-century poet Fyodor Tiutcheve, printed in a Russian tourism
ministry’s brochure, invites you to get a real feel of Russia by
visiting it rather than take a distant look.

As the Aeroflot is flying above Russia in the darkness of night I ask
the airhostess about the names of the cities down there. Svetlana,
the affable ‘Babushka’ (elderly lady) goes to the pilot’s cabin and
tells me ‘we have crossed the Volga river and it is Samara and now we
are approaching Penza’. Moscow city is still few hours away.

Svetlana has two sons, one would be joining army and another planning
to be a translator. Svetlana is the name of Stalin’s daughter? “Yes,
but I don’t like it. It is very cold. I like warm names like
Katarina, Leena, Aknisha…,” she ventures to tell me.

And as one lands in Moscow and drives down the city, one can not but
feel strong nostalgia of the bygone Communist era intermingling with
the post-Gorbachev liberalized Russia where life is about racing in
swanky cars on roads sporting billboards of multinational companies.
The large foreign presence in Mercedes Benz (German), McDonald, Citi
Bank (USA), Sharp (Japanese), Renault (French) and L G, Samsung
(South Korea) is very much noticeable. As one slowly moves along the
heavy traffic congestion around the ‘Mkad’ (Moscow ring) what meets
the eye is a MTV as atop a high pillar. Posters, ads and signs are in
Russian language.

The home manufactured Russian car ‘Lada’ marks an ubiquitous presence
even as many vehicles that have broken down on the road bear the Lada
tag – this, perhaps, could be a coincidence. The fast moving cars in
the Moscow roads – 1.5 million produced each year – symbolize, in a
way, private possession and an indicator of individual drive for
‘more and more’.

‘Debushkas’ (young girls ), clad in low-waist, hip hugging jeans can
be seen sipping beer and smoking like chimneys in cars, buses, boats
or on the road sides too. What about good old Vodka ? The question is
posed to Ruben O. Prazyan, the senior specialist in Novosti, the
Russian News & Information Agency, who is guiding us through the maze
of unfamiliar surroundings. “Well, youth do not drink Vodka and
prefer beer but next year drinking will be banned on streets”, Ruben
points to the spill-over impact of the street side beer guzzling
habit in the post-glasnost-perestroika (openness and reconstruction)
period of last two and half decades. In the hotel room Russian
television is exploding with stories from world over. Berezovski, a
Russian businessman started the first TV channel, ORT of the country
which is now a government channel. He used the channel for his
business purposes and is now on the run. N-TV channel belonged to
another business man Gusinskiy but is now independent with the
original owner apparently in Isreal avoiding police arrest. But, of
course, there is more to Russian media than these early aberrations.

Churches have proliferated in Moscow in the post-Communist period
with many restored in the heart of city. “This Cathedral, the Christ
Saviour, was destroyed by Bolsheviks but now restored by the
Establishment,” says Ms Ludmila Gagzhavaeva, our first guide.

Churches and beggars

An estimated 10,000 churches were said to be destroyed by Bolshevik
communists. Amidst imposing churches and palatial buildings meant for
housing people, one can still sight a few beggars. These beggars
mostly come from CIS (Common Wealth of Independent States), once part
of erstwhile Soviet Union. “This is a city where people migrate for
job and food,” explains Gagzhavaeva.

We are reaching the Centre of the City and the past comes to mind at
the sight of Lubyanka Square where a grim yellow building is
introduced to us as KGB headquarters now renamed as Phaseburg. Then
comes Hotel Russia built by Soviet Premier Khruschev in 1962 that was
used by Communist party members. In the “new Russia” it will make way
for a five star hotel!

To show America!

Along the way, one sights the well carved and imposing building of
the Russian Ministry of foreign Affairs, constructed by Joseph
Stalin, the Communist dictator, “to show America the Russian power.”

The nerve centre of Russian power – Kremlin – has a sprawling space
which is rich in its tumultuous history. The Red Square here is
normally used for military parade but now concerts are also organized
in this open space.

At a stone’s throw is a tomb of one of the most famous name in the
world and Russian history- Vladimir Illich Lenin, the founder of
erstwhile Soviet Union. Lenin’s balmed body is still resting here
even after over 80 years of his death. There is a serpentine cue of
foreigners waiting patiently to get a glimpse of the greatest of the
Soviet icons. Short flights of steps lead you down to the dark
interiors of the tomb which houses Lenin. There is compete silence.
Militia guard the tomb.

It is a strange feeling “seeing” Lenin. “A debate is going on whether
he should be buried now. Almost half the Russian populace want it but
the other half, the old timers refuse to shift him,” says Ruben, an
Armenian by origin. The Communist party in Russia still has around 20
per cent representation in Parliament.

There is no statue of Stalin except on his tomb.

Has the current establishment gone against the literature or writings
of Communist era Gorky etc? “Establishment did not go against them. I
like them as always. The younger generation here is not aware of them
like in India youth may not be much in tune with Rabindranath
Tagore,” comments Sergey Muzalevsky, a translator. But, yes, one
finds Museum of Revolution has been closed for about three years now
though there is no reason given for its shutting down.

Larrisa Shustova, a witty tourist guide, links the pre-revolutionary
Russia to the current period. “Here is Catherine the First who was a
very simple-poor-Polish girl. She climbed many steps to be in bed
with many and went several rungs up the ladder to finally sleep with
Peter the Great! This is new Russia, where every body goes to the
Church even the Mafia who kill people go to the Church and seek
forgiveness!”

Lenin is Ok!

We are on the Muskavi river in a steamer and I am tempted to ask
Leena and Yana, two young English speaking Russians what they think
of Lenin

“I respect Lenin but now I wear pink glasses under a blue sky and
want world peace,” Leena smiles and breaks into a peel of laughter.

We have dinner at a restaurant where the band is playing the Hindi
film song Duniyan hain dil walon ki.Amidst strong smell of Russian
beer and a thick smoke of kent cigarette I wonder what it would be
like during Russian winters amid snowfall. And Tutchev whispers in my
ear “by reason, Russia can’t be got”, come again….

A Day For Darfur: Stop The Genocide, Protect The People

A DAY FOR DARFUR: STOP THE GENOCIDE, PROTECT THE PEOPLE

Sudan Tribune, Sudan
Sept 1 2005

“A Day for Darfur: Stop the Genocide, Protect the People” On One-Year
Anniversary of Bush Administration’s Finding of Genocide in Darfur,
Powerful Event will Draw Hundreds to Demand White House Action

WHAT: A special event to mark the one-year anniversary of the Bush
Administration’s recognition of genocide in Darfur, Sudan and to
demand immediate action from the White House to stop the genocide
and protect the people of Darfur.

WHO: Civil & political leaders, celebrity figures and advocacy groups
will join hundreds of activists. Invited speakers include:

Dr. Bernice Johnson Reagon Rev. Dr. Robert W. Edgar, General
Secretary, National Council of
Churches
Fatima Haroun, Darfurian Representative of Sudan Peace Advocates
Network
Ruth Messinger, President, American Jewish World Service Rev. Jim
Wallis, Founder and Editor in Chief of Sojourners Magazine

Salih Booker, Executive Director, Africa Action David Rubenstein,
Executive Director, Save Darfur Members of Congress

WHEN: Thursday, September 8, 2005, 12pm – 1pm

WHERE: Lafayette Park in front of the White House (near the
intersection of 16th Street & H Street, NW, Washington DC)

One year after the Bush Administration’s declaration that genocide
is occurring in Darfur, Sudan, the genocide continues. More than
400,000 lives have been lost, and yet the President has done little
to provide protection to the people of Darfur. “A Day for Darfur”
will bring hundreds of people together to express their outrage and
to demand that the President take every step necessary to ensure an
immediate multinational intervention to support the African Union
and provide security to the people of Darfur.

This powerful event will feature musical performances, dramatic
visuals, and remarks from leadership figures and celebrities, who
will lead a call to conscience and urge immediate action from the
Bush Administration to stop the genocide in Darfur. The event will
close with a coordinated calling campaign at 1pm, where participants
in the park will pull out their cell phones, and thousands across
the country will pick up their own phones to call President Bush and
pressure him to take immediate steps to stop the genocide.

This event accompanies a nationwide grassroots petition effort, which
has gathered tens of thousands of signatures in recent weeks, and
which also calls on the White House to support an urgent multinational
intervention to stop the genocide in Darfur.

This major event is the latest of more than 1,000 actions on Darfur
held around the U.S. in the past 6 months alone. “A Day for Darfur”
will kick off a period of renewed activism by people of conscience
across the country, who will increase their pressure on President
Bush in the coming weeks to take action to stop the genocide in Darfur.

“A Day for Darfur” is organized by a diverse coalition of advocacy
groups.

EVENT SPONSORS AND ENDORSERS: Africa Action, American Jewish World
Service, Armenian National Committee of America, Darfur Rehabilitation
Project, Evangelical Lutheran Church of America, Faithful America,
Greater Washington Jewish Task Force on Darfur, Human Rights First,
NAACP, National Council of Churches, Religious Action Center of
Reform Judaism, Save Darfur Coalition, Sojourners, STAND, Sudan Peace
Advocates Network, TransAfrica Forum, and the United Methodist Church.

http://www.sudantribune.com/article.php3?id_article=11426

Armenian NA Speaker Congratulates Teachers, Students

ARMENIAN NA SPEAKER CONGRATULATES TEACHERS, STUDENTS

ARKA News Agency
Aug 31 2005

YEREVAN, August 31. /ARKA/. Speaker of the RA National Assembly Artur
Baghdasaryan has addressed a congratulatory message to Armenia’s
teachers, students and school-children on the occasion of Knowledge
Day. In his message Baghdasaryan pointed out that every year Armenia’s
high and higher educational institutions open their doors for thousands
of pupils and students. Experienced teachers impart them knowledge,
which will open up new prospects for students depending on their
capacities and preferences. The message says that the RA Parliament
has been making amendments to Armenia’s legislation to harmonize
the country’s education system with European standards and enable
Armenian school-children and students to find their place in the
present-day world. The RA Parliament gives priority to the adoption and
ratification of laws and conventions on education and culture. Speaker
Baghdasaryan expressed the confidence that competitive education
will allow all those choosing the way of science to study. In his
message, Speaker Baghdasaryan gave assurances that the RA Government
gives appropriate attention to tasks of education and thanked all
the teachers, congratulated them and wished them success. P.T.

Govm’t Approves Amendments to Zvartnots Master Plan by its Operator

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT APPROVES AMENDMENTS TO MASTER PLAN SUBMITTED BY
ZVARTNOTS AIRPORT MANAGER

YEREVAN, AUGUST 25, NOYAN TAPAN. At the August 25 sitting, the RA
government approved the amendments to the Master Plan submitted by the
Manager of Zvartnots Airport. The amendments are related to the work
envisaged to be done during the first stage. According to the RA
Government Information and PR Department, the decision has been made
so that the envisaged amendments will be aimed at improving the
quality of services provided by Zvartnots Airport, introducing new
technologies, constructing a new passenger complex, simplifying the
procedures of passenger servicing, which will increase the volumes of
passenger transportation and help develop the economy. The work
envisaged at the second and third stages was taken into consideration,
and a decision was taken to address the approval of these activities
later when the next Master Plans will be submitted to the government
for approval – after examining the investment programs implemented by
the Manager.

Turkey’s Erdogan Faces Resistance to Promise of Kurdish Rights

Bloomberg
Aug 26 2005

Turkey’s Erdogan Faces Resistance to Promise of Kurdish Rights

Aug. 26 (Bloomberg) — Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s
pledge to give more rights to the Kurdish minority has reignited the
debate over what the government should do to end insurgent attacks
and appease the European Union.

Erdogan, 51, promised “more democracy” for minorities and became
the first Turkish leader to say the government had made mistakes in
its treatment of the Kurds during an Aug. 12 speech in Diyarbakir,
the biggest city in the largely Kurdish southeast. The Kurdistan
Workers Party, or PKK, which seeks autonomy for the southeast,
responded with a one-month cease-fire.

The gesture by Erdogan may halt the resurgence of a civil war that
has cost 35,000 lives and aid Turkey’s bid to join the EU, which has
criticized limits on Kurdish rights. Erdogan still faces the
challenge of winning support from the army and general public. His
overture may put Turkey on a “very dangerous road,” columnist Melih
Asik wrote Aug. 19 in the Istanbul daily Milliyet.

“Erdogan is probably telling the military that it’s evident the use
of force doesn’t resolve these problems,” said Kemal Kirisci, 50,
co-author of “The Kurdish Question and Turkey,” (Frank Cass
Publishers, 1997). “But while there are people in the Turkish system
who want to go further with reforms, there are also people who are
saying, `Whoa, hold it!”’

Turkey’s constitution makes the military the guardian of the
country’s unity and secular state. While the army’s powers have been
reduced since 2002, it has forced four governments from power since
1960. Officers on the National Security Council this week objected to
Erdogan’s admission that there is a “Kurdish problem,” the
Istanbul-based daily Vatan reported Aug. 24.

Kurdish Language

Kurds are asking the government to permit public schools to teach the
Kurdish language and to lower the percentage of votes political
parties must receive to gain seats in parliament. The current 10
percent threshold has kept Kurdish parties out of the legislature.
Erdogan is asking private television stations to carry Kurdish
programs, Milliyet reported Aug. 17.

Erdogan’s statements mark progress, says Yusuf Akgun, 38, the deputy
mayor of Diyarbakir. In the 1960s and ’70s Turkish governments
wouldn’t admit that the Kurds existed, telling people to refer to
them as “mountain Turks.”

“The Kurds have heard a lot of promises in the past,” Akgun said in
an Aug. 17 interview. “But the prime minister has said things that
make us hope it will be different this time.”

The conflict between the Turkish army and the PKK has threatened to
spread in recent months. The military has finalized plans for strikes
against PKK camps in northern Iraq, where they say about 3,000
fighters are based, Milliyet said Aug. 18, citing a speech by General
Sukru Sariisik.

Northern Iraq

Generals and ministers have said Turkey may launch such attacks if
the U.S., which has about 140,000 troops in Iraq, doesn’t fulfill
promises to crack down on the PKK. The U.S. says Turkey shouldn’t act
without the approval of Iraqi authorities.

In the 1990s, at the height of Turkey’s war with the PKK, the
southeast was under emergency rule and people suspected of links with
the rebels were routinely tortured, according to Turkey’s Human
Rights Association, based in the capital, Ankara.

PKK leader Abdulla Ocalan called a cease-fire in 1999 after he was
captured by Turkish agents in Kenya. He was convicted of treason
later that year and is serving a life sentence in a Turkish jail.

The PKK resumed attacks in June 2004, saying Turkey hadn’t done
enough to meet Kurdish demands. Fighting had escalated in recent
months. The PKK on Aug. 19 said it would cease hostilities for one
month to allow the government to take “practical steps.”

EU Concerns

Erdogan’s government said it wouldn’t respond to a group considered a
terrorist organization by the U.S., the EU and Turkey.

The EU said in its 2004 annual report on Turkey that there were still
“considerable restrictions on the exercise of cultural rights” for
Kurds. It called on Turkey to allow greater use of the Kurdish
language in education and broadcasting.

Turkey is also grappling with the legacy of another ethnic conflict.
Armenians say hundreds of thousands of their people were killed in
1915 in a genocide conducted by the Ottoman Empire, the predecessor
to modern Turkey. The claim is backed by parliamentary votes in
France and Germany. Turkey says the killings occurred amid civil
unrest during World War I and weren’t genocide.

Kurdish activists focus on language rights and poverty. Many Kurds
are illiterate in the language they grew up speaking.

“I can’t read this,” said Sahin Altuntur, a textile trader in
Diyarbakir’s bazaar district, pointing to a Kurdish language text
message on his mobile phone. “I’ll have to find someone more
cultured to do it. With my friends we talk Kurdish, but at school
they only taught us to read and write in Turkish.”

The country’s five poorest provinces are all in Kurdish areas,
according to government statistics for 2001. Unemployment in
Diyarbakir is around 70 percent and tens of thousands leave the city
each summer for seasonal farm work elsewhere, Akgun said.

The conflict with the PKK is the chief cause of underdevelopment,
said Shah Ismail Bedirhanoglu, head of the region’s biggest business
group.

“Money is like a bird, when it hears a bang it flies away,” said
Bedirhanoglu, 45. “Where there’s war, there’s no investment.”

ANKARA: F.M. Gul May Not Attend The Conference On Ottoman ArmeniansS

F.M. GUL MAY NOT ATTEND THE CONFERENCE ON OTTOMAN ARMENIANS SINCE HE IS SCHEDULED TO VISIT NEW YORK

Turkish Press
Aug 25 2005

ANKARA – “Although Turkish Foreign Minister & Deputy Prime Minister
Abdullah Gul made known earlier that he might attend the conference
on the Armenian issue ‘in principle if his program permits’, he may
not attend the conference since he is scheduled to be in New York for
UN General Assembly meetings,” Turkish (MFA) spokesman Namik Tan said
on Wednesday.

Speaking at the weekly press briefing, Tan said, “Gul was informed
on the conference program just a month ago. He conveyed that he might
attend such a meeting in principle if his program enabled him.”

“But we received the invitation for the conference today. Since Gul
is scheduled to attend the United Nations General Assembly meetings
in New York, he may not attend the conference. But he may attend the
last day session of the conference if he will be available,” Tan added.

Istanbul’s Bogazici University is planning to hold the conference on
“Armenians in the Late Ottoman Empire” between September 23rd and 25th.