Rino Harnish: BTC to contribute to balance in region

RINO HARNISH: BTC TO CONTRIBUTE TO BALANCE IN REGION

Pan Armenian News
28.05.2005 03:58

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The putting of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) oil
pipeline into operation will contribute to the creation of balance
in the region, US Ambassador to Azerbaijan Rino Harnish stated when
commenting on the statement by Armenian Prime Minister Andranik
Margarian, who said that the project will break the balance of
forces in the region. In the opinion of the US diplomat the BTD will
contribute to the security of sovereignty and territorial integrity
of the Caucasian states (Azerbaijan and Georgia implied) and lead
to closer economic integration. “Thus, I consider that the project
will bring balance to the region”, Mr. Harnish resumed. To remind,
May 25 in Azerbaijan the loading ceremony of the first batch of oil
to the Azeri sector of the BTC took place, IA Regnum reports.

“Armenian Women in Business 2005” First National Trade Show Opens

“ARMENIAN WOMEN IN BUSINESS 2005” FIRST NATIONAL TRADE SHOW OPENS IN
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, MAY 27, NOYAN TAPAN. 49 business women from various marzes
of Armenia participated in the Armenian Women in Business first
national trade show which opened on May 27. The two-day event has been
organized by the Logos Expo Center within the framework of
USAID-sponsored program on small and medium business development in
Armenia. Production of the food and textile industries, items of
stone-working, leather goods, souvenirs, as well as restaurant and
hotel services are displayed at the show. According to Director of the
RA Labor and Employmant Center Sona Harutyunian, the purpose of the
trade show is promote the small and medium business in Armenia and
create new jobs for women. In the opinion of Director of the USAID
Program of Legislative Reforms Emmy Valentine, the trade show bears
evidence of the fact that Armenian women in business have great
potential for developing the national economy.

History Foundation of Turkey reacts delay of Symposium on Armenians

Kurdish Info, Germany
May 26 2005

The History Foundation of Turkey reacts delay of Symposium on
Armenians

ANKARA (DIHA) – The History Foundation of Turkey assessed the
prejudiced slander campaign against ‘Ottoman Armenians in the
Collapsing Period of Empire: Scientific Responsibility and Problems
of Democracy’ symposium organized by Bilgi, Bogaziçi(Bosphorus) and
Sabanci Universities as “Grisly and so negative development”.

The History Foundation of Turkey chairman Orhan Silier made a written
statement and said that Turkey failed in democracy exam. Silier
stated: “Dominant permanent staff of Turkey could not stand
discussion of intellectuals, who have different opinions about
different aspects of Armenian problem and considers the problem not
from the view of ‘national propaganda’ but from the view of several
areas of specialization in branch of social sciences, on their own in
a university”. Silier stated as:

“Turkish chauvenist-nationalism, which have been isolating Turkey and
assisting in Armenian nationalism on international scale, has blocked
democracy, peace and mutual understanding once more with a prejudiced
slander campaign started in National Grand Assembly, which is one of
the most important platforms of democracy test, even by an opposition
deputy. Scientific meetings are not formal debate platforms. How to
call 1915 emigration is not the only matter of discussion. There is
only one thesis in conference and different opinions are not
tolerated claims of people, who tried to eliminate the pluralistic
debate possibilities and therefore scientific research atmosphere
with the taboos they created, who tried to transform our universities
to provincial vocational schools of world, are far away to be
persuasive.

‘Attitude of government spokesman is grisly’

Silier stated that the attitude of government spokesman who insulted
and threaten Bogaziçi University is not acceptable and this attitude
is against government’s program, its national and international
commitments and it is grisly for intellectual life. Siler stated that
they act with solidarity with the science-people who research
subjects considered as taboo and with three universities.

It is also stated that The History Foundation of Turkey executive
committee are making preparations to organize a meeting entitled “Our
Democracy and Historiography within the Experience of Armenians in
Ottoman Empire Conference” and there is an interview with Murat Belge
about the subject in June issue of “Social History”.

ANKARA: Turkish president meets Azeri, Georgian counterparts

Turkish president meets Azeri, Georgian counterparts

Anatolia news agency, Ankara
24 May 05

BAKU

Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer met Azerbaijani President Ilham
Aliyev on Tuesday [24 May].

Sezer and Aliyev discussed bilateral relations and regional issues as
well as Azerbaijan-Armenia issue.

Sources said that Turkey and Azerbaijan have similar views about the
issue and they both want to solve the problem rapidly.

Sezer and Aliyev especially took up further development of economic
relations between Turkey and Azerbaijan.

Sezer said he hoped Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline project would
become example for other projects. He said that such projects
contribute to economic development and regional stability.

Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer met Georgian President Mikheil
Saakashvili in Baku, Azerbaijan on Tuesday.

Saakashvili said that they consider Turkey as a stability country in
the region and they are pleased with Turkey’s balanced approach to
regional problems.

Sezer said that Turkey wants southern Caucasia to be a region of
stability. He added that he hoped Abkhazia and Ossetia problems would
be solved within the territorial integrity of Georgia.

They also agreed to develop economic relations between Turkey and
Georgia.

Sezer and Saakashvili also discussed Kars (Turkey)-Akhaltsikhe
(Georgia)-Baku railway project. Sezer said that a declaration would be
signed about the issue tomorrow. He said he hoped the project would be
implemented soon.

Sezer later attended a dinner which was hosted by Azerbaijani
President Ilham Aliyev in honour of guest presidents in Baku.

Besides Sezer, Saakashvili and Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev,
who are currently in Baku, attended the dinner.

French thinker Ricoeur dies aged 92

French thinker Ricoeur dies aged 92

Irish Times
May 23, 2005

Belinda McKeon

France: The French philosopher Paul Ricoeur, whose work on language,
memory and identity influenced scholarship across the range of the
human sciences,has died aged 92.

He had been ill for a number of months and died in his sleep on Friday
at his home outside Paris, his son Marc said yesterday.

French politicians, including French prime minister Jean-Pierre
Raffarin, president Jacques Chirac, and Communist Party leader
Marie-George Buffet, joined in paying tributes to the thinker.

“The entire European humanist tradition is mourning one of its most
talented spokesmen,” said Mr Raffarin.

European recognition of Ricoeur’s work came relatively late in his
prolific career. Despite the publication from the late 1940s onwards
of significant works on psychoanalysis, hermeneutics, metaphor and
rhetoric, and of his three-volume study Time and Narrative (1983-85),
he remained relatively ignored in France and spent long periods
teaching in the US, his thought eclipsed by other French thinkers such
as Louis Althusser and Jacques Derrida.

It was not until 1988, when the Irish academic Richard Kearney
co-directed a major colloquium on Ricoeur’s work in Normandy, that he
was accorded real credibility in his own country and that the
importance of his writings on the relationship between societies and
their founding narratives was fully appreciated.

While best known for Time and Narrative and for Oneself as an Other
(1990), his exploration of personal identity in a moral context,
Ricoeur continued to write and to publish right up to his final year,
with the English translation of his Memory, History and Forgetting
published in Spring of 2004.

In this book, Ricoeur examined the possibility that history “overly
remembers” some events, such as the Holocaust, at the expense of
others, such as the Armenian genocide, the McCarthy era, and France’s
role in north Africa.

Orphaned during the first World War, drafted into the French army
after a successful university career at Rennes and the Sorbonne, and
held in a German prison camp for most of the second World War, Ricoeur
vehemently opposed war, from the 1950s French campaign in Algeria to
the Bosnian war in the 1990s.

In Memory, History and Forgetting , he argued that citizens of all
countries had a responsibility to draw on a practical wisdom in the
shaping of political decisions.

He was last year awarded the â=82¬1 million John W. Kluge Prize for
Lifetime Achievement, which honours fields not covered by the Nobel
prizes.

A widower, he is survived by five children.

Obit: George Sarkis Kurkjian, London

Obit: George Sarkis Kurkjian

The Times (London)
May 19, 2005, Thursday

George Sarkis Kurkjian, OBE, businessman, was born July 30, 1928. He
died on April 21, 2005, aged 76.

George Kurkjian was one of Britain’s most respected Armenians. A
businessman and the director of several charities, he was also the
senior layman of the Armenian Church in Great Britain, and in that
capacity he acted as adviser to several Archbishops of Canterbury.

George Sarkis Kurkjian was born in Cairo and moved to Britain when he
was 3. He was educated at Oundle and took his BA and MA at Trinity
College, Dublin. He became, with his brother John, a partner in the
family firm, S N Kurkjian, which trades in commodities.

In 1982 he inherited his father’s responsibility for managing the
external bank account of the Holy See of the Armenian Church. He
also became president of the board of trustees of St Sarkis Church,
Kensington.

He was appointed OBE in 1986 for services to the City of London. He
set up Aid Armenia, a relief organisation to help the victims of the
earthquake in Armenia in 1988. For his work in this and other charities
concerned with Armenia he received numerous awards, including the Order
of Saint Gregory the Illuminator, with diamonds (the highest order of
the Armenian Church), the Cross of Saint Augustine, bestowed by the
Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr George Carey, and an honorary doctorate
from Trinity in 1991.

BAKU: OSCE to conduct cancelled monitoring amid Armenians continuous

OSCE TO CONDUCT CANCELLED MONITORING AMID ARMENIANS CONTINUE BREACH CEASEFIRE
2005-05-20 09:20

Azerbaijan News Service
May 20 2005

In accordance with a mandate of personal envoy of the OSCE Acting
Chairman, on May 20, a monitoring will be conducted at the contact
line of troops on the Fuzuli-Horadiz motor road of Fuzuli region of
the Azerbaijan Republic. Monitoring will be conducted by the special
representative of the OSCE Acting Chairman Andjey Kaspshik, his
assistance Peter Kay and Imre Palatinus and high rank representative
of the working group on the Azerbaijan side, and the field assistants
of special representative of the OSCE Acting Chairman Misroslav
Vimetal, Oleksandr Samarsky and representative of working group –
on the opposite side. ANS Correspondent point in Qarabaq informed
sub-units of the Armenian armed forces located in the occupied village
of Bash Qarvand subjected opposite positions of the Azerbaijani armed
forces deployed in the outskirts of the villages of Chiragli village
of the same region to sub-machine and sniper rifle fire. No dead or
injured were claimed.

ANKARA: Turkish PM speaks at CoE summit, no Erdogan-Kocharian meetin

Turkish PM speaks at Council of Europe summit, no Erdogan-Kocharian meeting

The New Anatolian, Turkey
May 18 2005

The recent letter exchange between Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan and Armenian President Robert Kocharian, about the
investigations on Armenian genocide claims, has created a positive
atmosphere and expectations of formal meetings between the two
leaders. The most suitable place for this Turkish-Armenian meeting was
in Warsaw, Poland, where both leaders arrived Sunday to participate
in the two-day Council of Europe summit, which ends today.

But despite all the expectations, the long-awaited meeting between
Erdogan and Kocharian did not materialize. Instead, Erdogan met Monday
with Azeri President Ilham Aliyev, where Aliyev’s own meeting with
Kocharian was discussed.

The main issue considered at both the Aliyev-Erdogan and
Aliyev-Kocharian meetings was the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region
and the presence of Armenian troops there.

Nagorno-Karabakh is a mountainous region inside Azerbaijan that has
been under the control of ethnic Armenians since the early 1990s,
following fighting that killed an estimated 30,000 people.

“I hope that negotiations will bring results,” Aliyev was quoted as
saying by the Interfax-Azerbaijan news agency. “The positions are
well known. This issue has been discussed for years, and each side
has its own position. These positions have been discussed again.”

A ceasefire was signed in 1994, but the enclave’s final political
status has not yet been determined and shooting breaks out frequently
between the two sides, which face off across a demilitarized buffer
zone.

Speaking at the summit, Kocharian said his country was looking
“to find ways of including the de facto established Republic of
Nagorno-Karabakh into the European process of integration.”

French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier and Russian Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov also took part in the first part of the talks between
Aliyev and Kocharian, officials said. France, Russia and the U.S.

lead the Minsk Group under the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), which is seeking to foster a diplomatic
solution.

Kocharian speaks about so-called genocide

Kocharian touched the so-called Armenian genocide issue during his
address at the summit.

Claiming that 2005 marks the 90th anniversary of the so-called
genocide, Kocharian gave thanks to the states that had recognized
the incidents in World War I as genocide.

“We aim to encourage the recognition of the Armenian genocide in the
international arena,” he said. He also described the Armenians as the
“most damaged party” in World War I.

No words between Erdogan and Kocharian

The Turkish prime minister had an opportunity to chat with other
leaders during the meeting. But Erdogan and Kocharian did not meet
each other during the first day of the Council of Europe summit on
Sunday, according to Turkish sources.

Erdogan did though hold bilateral meetings with Georgian President
Mikheil Saakashvili and Latvian President Vaira Vike-Freiberga.

Erdogan points to anti-Islamism

Unlike the Armenian president, Erdogan did not mention the dispute
between Turkey and Armenia about the so-called genocide during his
speech on the first day of the summit. The rise of anti-Islamism in
the wake of the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks was the main subject
discussed by the prime minister.

Noting that anti-Semitism, xenophobia and racism still persist,
Erdogan said, “Anti-Islamism has been added to these illnesses. It’s
difficult not to be concerned about these developments.”

Erdogan said that terrorism had begun to globalize and had killed
innocent people without regard to race, religion or culture. “The
struggle against terrorism needs a strong international solidarity,”
he said.

Remarking about the attitude that developed following the Sept. 11
attacks that came to define terrorism based on cultural and religious
values, Erdogan said, ~STerrorism has no religion, race or nation.”

“Any religion can engender terrorism and the killing of human beings,”
he said. “Some fanatical approaches began following Sept.

11. But today I see with pleasure that common sense is prevailing
and the expansion of these prejudices has been minimal.”

Erdogan also discussed the concept of the “other” as a cause of
disputes and clashes. “Throughout history we see attempts to exclude
the ‘other,’ and that dominating the ‘other’ only creates enmity and
disputes,” he said.

Erdogan continued his speech by asking the philosophical questions:
“Who is the ‘other’?” and “Is there really an ‘other’?”

“Or is this other concept the result of intolerance and a lack of
mutual understanding?” he continued. “We believe that the Council
of Europe, which brings people together under the common democratic
values of European countries, is the best platform to work to end
prejudice based on intolerance.”

Describing democracy as multi-dimensional mode of thinking, Erdogan
said: “Democracy is first related to the freedom of expression. It’s
also related to respecting the majority’s right to administrate,
as well as respect for the rights of minorities. It’s related to
the ability to come together under common interests, and support
for the roles of women within society and politics. It’s related to
transparency. We uphold these values in Turkey.”

Erdogan on resolutions honouring victims of Armenian massacre

Erdogan on resolutions honouring victims of Armenian massacre

Polish Press Agency
PAP News Wire
May 17, 2005 Tuesday

Warsaw, May 17

Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan has criticized resolutions which
have been passed by “parliaments of various countries” to honour the
victims of the 1915-17 massacre of Armenians in Turkey.

Erdogan, addressing the second day of debates of the 3rd Council
of Europe Summit said that the passing of such resolutions is
“unjust.” The Turkish PM termed the recurring around the world voices
on, as he termed, “the so called Armenian genocide” as “lobbying
which Turkey does not support.”

He added that the road to agreement on the developments which took
place 90 years ago leads through cooperation of historians from Turkey
and Armenia as well as from other countries.

“We have opened our archives and we ask Armenia to do the
same…” “Each political decision should be based on solid
documents. This is our precondition,” stressed the Prime Minister.

Russian State Academic Bolshoi Theater in Armenia

RUSSIAN STATE ACADEMIC BOLSHOI THEATER IN ARMENIA

A1plus

| 15:53:57 | 20-05-2005 | Culture |

“We are professionals and we can dance in any stage”, said Maria
Alexandrovna, solo-dancer of the Russian State Academic Bolshoi
Theater during the press conference today in hotel Yerevan.

She meant the stage of the Opera and Ballet building after Spendiaryan
where 20 years later the Russian Bolshoi Theater will perform “The
Swan Lake” and “Romeo and Juliet”.

On May 21-24 in the “Armenian” stage such stars of Ballet as Maria
Alexandrovna, Vladimir Neporojnin, Anna Antonicheva, Jan Gadovski,
Anastasia Meskova, Denis Savin and Alexander Volckov will dance. The
band conductor will be Pavel Klinichev. The tickets cost 3000-25000
drams.

Asked a question by a journalist if the audience may have forgotten
them during this long interval, solo dancer Vladimir Neporojin said,
“This art is difficult to forget. They will remember it for the first 5
minutes. This is a silent art; no words are needed. It is love, hatred
and jealousy. They will understand everything from the movements”.

By the way, the guests of Armenia are glad that there is a cultural
connection between the two countries. They are also going to get
acquainted with the Armenian culture and history.