ANKARA: EU-Turkey Membership Deal,Subject to De Facto Recognition of

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
Dec 22 2004

EU-Turkey Membership Deal, Subject to De Facto Recognition of Greek
Cyprus

Theme: This report examines the historic agreement taken by European
Union leaders at their 16-17 December summit in Brussels to begin
accession talks with Turkey after 41 years in Europe’s ante-room. The
process will begin on 3 October, 2005 provided Turkey has by then
tacitly recognised Cyprus, which joined the EU in May. Turkey invaded
the island in 1974 and it has been divided since then. Both the
previous Popular Party government (1996-2004) and the current
Socialist administration have been among the most active supporters
of Turkey’s membership.
Summary: EU leaders endorsed the European Commission’s momentous
recommendation on 6 October to open accession talks with Turkey (see
). But they added a
condition which threatened to end the marriage before the two sides
got to the altar. The negotiations almost broke down as a result of
the demand that Ankara formally recognise Cyprus. The situation is
surreal because Turkey is set to join a club one of whose members it
does not formally recognise. Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish Prime
Minister, rejected the EU’s first proposal and threatened to abandon
the summit, apparently backed by the chief of the Turkish armed
forces.
Erdogan’s brinkmanship paid off. A compromise was reached under which
Turkey agreed to extend its customs union (as of 1996) to include
Cyprus before October. This allowed Erdogan to save face at home,
particularly among the powerful military, by maintaining that Turkey
was not formally recognising Cyprus but making a gesture of goodwill
tantamount to recognition (see box below).
Other EU entry terms included open-ended talks, no guarantee of full
membership if conditions are not met and the possibility of some
safeguards remaining over the migration of workers from Turkey.
The protracted process for membership during which Turkey has to
harmonise its laws with EU legislation will last at least 10 years
and could be compounded by Austrian and French pledges to hold
referendums on Turkish entry at some point in the future. Every EU
country has the right to veto the accession of a new member. A 1972
poll in France saw two-thirds of voters backing the UK’s accession to
the EU.
As a large (with a population of more than 70 million), poor (with a
per capita income of 27% of the EU-25) and Muslim country, Turkey’s
membership is in a special category of its own with far-reaching
implications for the country and for the Union as a whole.

-The Cyprus Issue:Cyprus is one of the world’s longest unresolved
disputes. In July 1974 the Cypriot President Archbishop Makarios, a
Greek Cypriot, was deposed in a coup backed by Greece’s military
junta. Turkey, fearing that its traditional enemy would annexe the
island, responded by invading it and enforcing a partition between
the north and south of the island. In 1983 the Turkish-held area
declared itself the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus. It is
recognised only by Turkey.

Turkey won sympathy in March 2004 from the international community
because Turkish-Cypriots in the northern part endorsed the UN drafted
reunification plan with a 65% majority while more than three-quarters
of Greek-Cypriots in the south, already granted EU membership,
rejected it. As a result, and to the immense frustration of the UN
and the EU over the historic missed opportunity, only the southern
part joined the EU on May 1 as both sides had to approve the
reunification plan.

Turkey and Turkish-Cypriots, in a volte face, bent over backwards for
a power-sharing deal and also opened the border for the first time in
30 years.

But Greek-Cypriots stubbornly resisted any change. Tassos
Papadopoulos, the island’s president, threatened in October, ahead of
the Brussels summit, to veto Turkey’s EU entry if Turkey did not
reduce its 36,000 soldiers in the northern part, allow
Cypriot-registered vessels to dock at Turkish ports and end its veto
of the island’s bid to join international bodies such as the OECD and
the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe. The Greek
Cypriot government scuppered the European Commission’s bid in October
to end the economic isolation of northern Cyprus by allowing
Turkish-Cypriots to trade freely with the world. The Greek Cypriot
‘No’ infuriated the European Commission, which wanted to bring the
Turkish community into the economic mainstream.

Erdogan was justifiably angry at Cyprus’ tactics, but was not in a
position to turn his back on the issue as Cyprus might then have
exercised its right to veto Turkey’s EU entry which needed the
approval of all 25 EU countries. Tony Blair, Gerhard Schröder and
Jacques Chirac brokered a way out of the impasse. Diplomatic
recognition is the trump card which Ankara has yet to play in its
push to find a permanent solution to the anomalous situation. Turkey
is still pressing for the UN plan to be implemented but another
formula may have to be found.-

Analysis: By postponing the start of accession talks until October,
despite the decision taken at the December 2002 Copenhagen summit to
open them “without delay” once the European Council gave the green
light, the EU bowed to a French demand. President Jacques Chirac, a
strong supporter of Turkey despite fierce opposition within his UMP
party, had called for the talks to start after his country’s
referendum on the new European Constitution (expected before the end
of June), fearing the ‘no’ campaign could harness public opposition
to Turkish membership of the EU. ‘If there is a link between Turkey
and the constitution, we will lose the referendum’, said Michel
Barnier, French foreign minister.
The constitution has to be approved by all 25 EU countries in
referendums or parliamentary votes. Spain will be the first EU
country to hold a referendum on 20 February. The prospects for a
French ‘yes’ now look greater, particularly as 59% of Socialist Party
members who voted in an internal ballot backed the treaty, giving a
big boost to the European debate.
The EU’s decision to open the door to Turkey was taken against a
backdrop of rising hostility to Turkey’s membership in some countries
including Spain. In the latest Elcano barometer carried out with CIS,
only 44% of those surveyed were in favour of Turkey’s membership,
compared with 56% in May. According to the latest Eurobarometer
opinion poll, 53% of EU citizens are in favour of further
enlargement, but support falls to just over one third in France and
Germany. Only 39% of those polled in France and 36% in Germany said
they wanted the EU-25 to be expanded. At 28%, support was at its
lowest in Austria. The go-ahead for Turkey, however, was preceded by
a vote in the European Parliament in favour of accession talks (407
to 262 with 29 abstentions).
Erdogan laid down several red lines, particularly on not extending
diplomatic recognition to Cyprus. His political opponents have long
been accused him of being soft on the issue and criticised him after
the summit for paying too high a price for membership talks.
According to the Turkish press, Erdogan told Jan Peter Balkenende,
the Dutch prime minister and current holder of the EU’s presidency,
in an angry exchange during the summit: ‘You are choosing 600,000
Greek Cypriots over 70 million Turks. I have nothing to reproach them
for, but I cannot justify this to my people’. The other red lines
were:
– Negotiations must have Turkey’s complete membership as the final
aim.
– The decision to start talks must not be conditional on later
decisions by EU leaders.
– There should be no special conditions imposed permanently on
Turkey.
The other contentious country issue –Armenia– did not raise its head,
but will have to be dealt with at some point if only because a
country cannot join the EU if it does not have ‘normal’ relations
with all its neighbours. The border with Armenia has been closed
since 1993 due to the Karabag conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia
and other issues including historic tensions arising from the 1915-16
massacre (or ‘genocide’) by Turkey of Armenians. Michel Barnier, the
French foreign minister, spoke to his country’s gallery before the
summit when he urged Turkey to recognise the ‘genocide’. Turkey does
not recognise that it was ‘genocide’ and would like an independent
commission of historians to examine all the archives and pronounce on
the issue.
Erdogan could claim a substantial but not a complete victory, still
sufficient, however, to justify being named European of the Year at
the European Voice awards shortly before the summit. Erdogan was also
nominated as non-European Union citizen of the year. The government
pulled out the stops as much as it could before the summit in order
to impress the EU. For example, it opened up its national security
council, the secretive institution long regarded as Turkey’s main
decision-making body. The council briefed diplomats and the media on
its operations in an unprecedented display of transparency.
The idea of offering a second-class ‘privileged partnership’ for
Turkey, as opposed to the prospect of full membership, demanded by
opponents in the run-up to the summit, particularly Germany’s
opposition Christian Democrats, did not see the light of day. Erdogan
made it very clear that it was all or nothing. EU leaders agreed a
form of words which stressed that the aim of Turkey’s accession talks
would be full membership, but if that was not possible the country
‘must be anchored in European structures’. This wording is more
ambiguous than a reference to ‘privileged partnership’. However, a
key phrase about establishing ‘permanent safeguards’ on allowing
Turkish workers to settle anywhere in the EU was kept in the text.
The decision to open accession talks followed the recommendation of
the European Commission. The main points of its report justifying the
start of talks were:
– Conclusion: ‘Turkey has achieved significant legislative progress
in many areas… Important progress was made on implementation of
political reforms, but these need to be further consolidated and
broadened’.
– Political reforms: ‘Political reforms, in line with the priorities
in the Accession Partnership, have been introduced by… a series of
constitutional and legislative changes adopted over a period of three
years (2001-2004)’.
– Economic reforms: ‘Economic stability and predictability have been
substantially improved since the 2001 economic crisis. Previously
high inflation has come down to historic lows, political interference
reduced and the institutional and regulatory framework has been
brought closer to international standards’.
– Military reforms: ‘The government has increasingly asserted its
control over the military. Although the process of aligning
civil-military relations with EU practice is underway, the armed
forces in Turkey continue to exercise influence through a series of
informal channels’.
– Judicial reforms: ‘The independence and efficiency of the judiciary
were strengthened’.
– Human rights: ‘Concerning… the respect of human rights and the
exercise of fundamental freedoms, Turkey has acceded to most relevant
international and European conventions’.
– Torture: ‘The authorities have adopted a zero tolerance policy
towards torture and a number of perpetrators have been punished.
Torture is no longer systematic, but numerous cases of ill-treatment,
including torture, still continue to occur and further efforts will
be required to eradicate such practices’.
– Women’s rights: ‘The situation of women is still unsatisfactory;
discrimination and violence against women, including “honour
killings”, remain a major problem’.
– Children’s rights: ‘Children’s rights were strengthened, but child
labour remains an issue of serious concern’.
– Minority rights: ‘The OSCE [Organisation for Security and
Co-operation in Europe] High Commissioner on National Minorities
could play a valuable role in assisting Turkey to move towards full
compliance with modern international standards on the treatment of
minorities, including the Kurds’.
– Freedom of religion: ‘Although freedom of religious belief is
guaranteed by the constitution… non-Muslim religious communities
continue to experience problems’.
– Freedom of the press: ‘Notable progress has been made, (but)…
journalists, writers and publishers continue to be sentenced for
reasons that contravene the standards of the European Court of Human
Rights’.
Between this report and the summit the debate on Turkey among
opponents and supporters became very intense. The greatest
controversy was caused by Valery Giscard d’Estaing, the former French
president and president of the European Convention, who once again
took up the cudgels against Turkey. It was Giscard who said in 2002
that Turkey was ‘not a European country’ and its membership would
spell ‘the end of Europe’ and he followed this up less than a month
before the Brussels summit by saying that the proposed new European
Constitution (whose drafting he presided over) was ‘not designed to
accommodate a power the size of Turkey’.(1) ‘Accession by Turkey,
whenever it took place, would make the country the major
decision-maker in the European Union, and would change the nature of
the European project’.
Giscard’s remarks provoked many comments, including a letter
published in the Financial Times by Ana de Palacio, a former Spanish
Foreign Minister and a member of the Praesidium of the European
Convention. She criticised Giscard for failing ‘to bring much reason
to the debate over Turkey’ and suggested that he might have had in
mind the problems that the double-majority issue would cause for
Turkey when he wrote it into the new constitution.
Under a key provision of the new constitution (which has to be
approved by all countries in referendums or parliamentary votes),
known as double-majority voting, Turkey would automatically be
accorded a strong position in EU decision-making. Under the
constitution all decisions that do not need to be made unanimously
–many matters, especially foreign policy and taxation, still do– must
be backed by at least 65% of the EU’s population and 55% of member
states. Put another way, any country would need support from 35% of
the EU population and 45% of member states to block a proposal it did
not like. Turkey’s population (80 million in 2015, the earliest date
when it would join the EU assuming all goes well, roughly the same as
Germany’s) gives it considerable power, but even if it is the most
populous country it would not be able to block any decisions alone;
it would need the populations of at least two other big countries to
meet the required 35% mark.
In another letter in the FT, Stephen Wall, Tony Blair’s former EU
adviser, took Giscard to task for saying in his article that all
Turkey was offered in its 1963 associate member agreement with the
European Community was membership of the Common Market. This was
incorrect, he said, and cited the text of the agreement: ‘As soon as
the operation of the agreement has advanced far enough to justify
envisaging full acceptance by Turkey of the obligations arising out
of the treaty establishing the Community, the contracting parties
shall examine the possibility of the accession of Turkey to the
Community’. Giscard conveniently forgot this.
EU membership is of huge importance for the economy for three main
reasons. First, it will make the Customs Union (as of 1996)
irreversible because as long as Turkey remains outside the EU bloc,
it can be reversed by either party. Far from wiping out some Turkish
businesses, as they feared at the onset, the Customs Union has been
very good for Turkish exports and companies have stood their ground
in the face of increased imports. For example, exports of automotive
components have risen from US$155 million in 1995 to around US$5
billion. Secondly, the risk premium on public debt will fall (this
has already started), both easing the pressure on public finances and
improving the performance of the economy. Thirdly, inflows of foreign
direct investment will probably surge from their current very low
levels, leading to higher growth rates and lower unemployment.
Turkey’s stock of investment is lower today than it was in the 1980s;
annual inflows have rarely reached more than US$1 billion (Spain and
Ireland both attracted over US$25 billion in 2003). The Istanbul
Stock Exchange hit a record high the day the EU made its
announcement.
Some analysts ambitiously forecast that Turkey’s per capita income
could increase over the next 10 years from around €4,000 to €14,000
in purchasing power parity terms, spurred by the country’s clearer
horizon.
The Turkish economy has been something of a star in the last year
after recovering from its 2001 crisis. The economy is by far the
fastest growing in Europe and the inflation rate has fallen to single
figures for the first time since 1972. The IMF recognised Turkey’s
progress two days before the start of the Brussels EU summit when it
announced a new three-year US$10 billion stand-by agreement which,
according to Rodrigo Rato, the IMF’s managing director, ‘should allow
Turkey to exit from further IMF financial support’.
As a result of finally getting inflation under control, on 1 January
Turkey will remove six noughts from the face value of the lira: one
unit of the local currency will then be worth what one million are
now (€0.53), welcome news for tourists and foreign investors who have
to mentally wrestle with strings of zeros and carry wads of notes.
Yet the economy remains vulnerable. Turkey has massive debts
including US$23 billion owed to the IMF and billions borrowed via the
international bond markets. At around 80% of GDP, Turkey’s gross debt
is double that of the new EU member status. Turkey’s debts have
largely arisen from its efforts to push through banking reform after
a run on the banks in 2001 caused the country’s devastating
recession.
Spain, with its experience of having spent eight years negotiating
its much easier EU membership (between 1978 and 1986), worked behind
the scenes to encourage Turkish politicians to keep their cool in the
face of those countries, like Cyprus, using the summit as an open
agenda to settle old scores and stay focused on the overriding goal
of membership.
Spain could well be a useful model for Turkey when the talks start.
The same fears about impoverished workers flooding the European
labour market existed about Spain 20 years ago as are now being made
about Turkey. An often overlooked point in the debate about a
possible surge in Turkish immigrants to the EU is that, like Spain,
Turkey will itself become a magnet for immigrants when it is a full
EU member. Just as no one in Spain could have predicted 20 years ago
that today there would be an estimated more than one million North
Africans in Spain, so too it is quite likely that a richer Turkey
will attract workers from Iran, Iraq, Syria and other poorer
countries with whom it shares a border.
Conclusion: Turkey has achieved impressive reforms on all fronts
since it was declared an EU candidate in 1999. The long and uncertain
process that now opens will be more wrenching.

Notes:
(1)See his article ‘A better European bridge to Turkey’ (Financial
Times, 24 November, 2004).

–Boundary_(ID_W5hHqaZhyB3GKQeA+ZdtMw)–

www.realinstitutoelcano.org/analisis/587.asp

Deux =?UNKNOWN?Q?n=E9gations=2C?= deux politiques

Le Monde
Mardi 21 décembre 2004

Deux négations, deux politiques ;
AU COURRIER DES LECTEURS

par: Thomas Hochmann

(…) Si on est plus sensible en Europe au gĂ©nocide juif, c’est
notamment parce qu’il s’est dĂ©roulĂ© sur nos terres. Mais on ne
saurait porter sur la souffrance un regard à géographie variable.
Oui, le Parti des jeunes Turcs ittihadistes a massacré la population
armĂ©nienne, hommes, femmes et enfants, avec l’intention de la
détruire. Oui, la négation de ce génocide porte préjudice à la
mémoire des Arméniens. Oui, cette négation est défavorable à la
dĂ©mocratie en ce qu’elle est une atta- que contre une population
précise, qui se voit accusée de falsification et privée de tout moyen
juridi- que contre les individus portant atteinte à son passé.

En rĂ©servant l’incrimination de nĂ©gationnisme aux nĂ©gateurs du
génocide juif, la loi française du 13 juillet 1990 (mais aussi les
lois autrichienne, allemande, belge ou luxembourgeoise) est contraire
au principe d’Ă©galitĂ©. Elle traite diffĂ©remment deux cas similaires :
la nĂ©gation d’un gĂ©nocide. Peu importe, juridiquement et dans ce cas
précis, les différences entre ces deux crimes, le nombre de morts, le
nazisme, l’industrie au service de l’extermination, peu importe si
l’antisĂ©mitisme est plus rĂ©pandu que l’« anti-armĂ©nisme ».

Mais mĂŞme lorsque la lĂ©gislation d’un Etat punit la nĂ©gation de tout
gĂ©nocide, elle n’est pas appliquĂ©e au cas armĂ©nien. Ainsi, en Suisse,
les tribunaux ont refusé de condamner de tels actes, estimant que les
nĂ©gateurs turcs ne faisaient que dĂ©fendre l’opinion nationale dans
laquelle ils ont été éduqués. Le juge a notamment justifié sa
dĂ©cision par l’absence de reconnaissance officielle en Suisse du
génocide arménien.

Le cas helvète est donc l’inverse de la situation en France, oĂą le
génocide commis contre les Arméniens est reconnu par une loi du 29
janvier 2001. Il suffira au juge de se référer à cette loi. Or le
nĂ©gationnisme fait partie du gĂ©nocide. Les auteurs d’un tel crime
tentent toujours de le camoufler, ce qui permet Ă  certains de nier
son existence. La loi française qui prĂ©voit l’imprescribilitĂ© du
crime de gĂ©nocide et qui reconnaĂ®t l’existence du gĂ©nocide armĂ©nien
est incohĂ©rente en ce qu’elle ne punit pas la nĂ©gation de ce crime.

Pourquoi ne le fait-elle pas ? Pourquoi les tribunaux suisses, avec
une loi concernant tous les génocides, ne punissent-ils pas les
négateurs du génocide arménien ? La réponse sort ici du droit pour la
politique. (…)

L’incrimination de la nĂ©gation du gĂ©nocide armĂ©nien ne constituerait
pas une pente dangereuse menant Ă  la fin de la libertĂ© d’expression,
mais la garantie juridique de la mĂ©moire des victimes d’un affreux
crime. La négation du génocide arménien, tout comme la négation de
l’Holocauste, sort de la libertĂ© de l’historien et n’a d’autre but
que politique. Certes, la reconnaissance officielle par la Turquie
faciliterait les choses. Mais il est irresponsable de la part du
lĂ©gislateur français (et ailleurs dans l’Union EuropĂ©enne) de ne pas
avoir le courage de placer la justice au-dessus de la diplomatie.

–Boundary_(ID_lE0hnpK/vdK2+RiPUt4Hpw)–

Belmont: First Armenian Church completes renovation

Belmont Citizen-Herald, MA
Dec 16 2004

First Armenian Church completes renovation

First Armenian Church of Belmont recently completed the major
renovation of its kitchen. It was unveiled at the Thanksgiving dinner
on Nov. 21 to 120 attending parishioners and friends.

Led by project manager Jeff Dulgarian, who volunteered to
spearhead the renovation upon his return from 11 months of service in
Kuwait and Iraq in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom, the project
took nearly four months to complete. Through the coordinated effort
of general contractor Construction Coordinators Inc. of Needham,
appliance provider Eastern Bakers of Boston, and a number of
subcontractors, the kitchen was fully renovated with state-of-the-art
appliances, plumbing and electrical systems.

“The team approach is undoubtedly the reason we were able to see
this project through,” said Dulgarian. “It was a very rewarding
experience … a total team effort.”

The generosity of one congregation member made the renovation
possible, when she pledged more than half the cost. This led to a
flurry of subsequent matching donations. The church is in the process
of accepting pledges for specific appliances. Co-moderator Richard
Kazanjian said, “We are very thankful for the major donor’s
generosity, which encouraged us to begin this major project.”

The kitchen renovation is the culmination of many
accomplishments at the church over the past year. Exactly one year
ago, First Armenian Church installed its new spiritual leader, Pastor
Greg Haroutunian, who moved from Fresno, Calif. In conjunction with
his arrival, the church undertook the extensive renovation of the
parsonage next door, where he lives with his wife, Sossi, and their
two children, Mark and Ani. In the past year, church membership has
grown, the choir has expanded, Sunday School enrollment has risen,
and the Youth Group (joint with Armenian Memorial Church of
Watertown) is flourishing.

Rev. Haroutunian said, “Over the past year the First Armenian
Church has received many blessings. We are witnessing positive
growth, and God’s presence is felt in all these areas.”

Viken Manougian, chairman of the Board of Trustees, said, “The
new kitchen is just one more symbol of the bright future of our
church and its rejuvenation since the installation of our new
pastor.”

First Armenian Church offers rentals of Nahigian Hall along with
its newly renovated kitchen. For more information, please contact the
church office at 617-484-4779 or [email protected]. The church’s
Web site is

www.firstarmenianchurch.org.

Turkey ‘must admit Armenia dead’

BBC News
Last Updated: Monday, 13 December, 2004, 22:20 GMT

Turkey ‘must admit Armenia dead’

France has said Turkey must improve its human rights record
France has said it will ask Turkey to acknowledge the mass killing of
Armenians from 1915 as a “tragedy” when it begins EU accession talks.
French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier said Turkey had “a duty to remember”.

Armenians say 1.5 million of their people died or were deported from their
homelands under Turkish Ottoman rule.

Mr Barnier did not say it was genocide, although the French parliament has
done so in the past. Turkey says the victims died during civil unrest.

Mr Barnier said France did not consider Turkish acknowledgement a condition
of EU entry, but insisted his country would raise the issue once talks
opened.

France will pose this question – I think that a big country like Turkey
has a duty to remember

Michel Barnier
French Foreign Minister

Where Turkey’s bid stands
Speaking to reporters after a meeting of EU foreign ministers to discuss
plans to invite Turkey for accession talks, Mr Barnier said Turkey “must
carry out this task as a memorial”.

In addition, France believes that accession talks should not begin before
the second half of 2005, Mr Barnier said. Turkey has pushed for immediate
negotiations.

“I believe that when the time comes, Turkey should come to terms with its
past, be reconciled with its own history and recognise this tragedy,” Mr
Barnier said.

‘So-called genocide’

His comments drew no immediate official response from Turkey, which has
consistently denied orchestrating genocide.

A foreign ministry spokesman in the Turkish capital, Ankara, told Reuters
that Turkey has never and will never recognise “any so-called genocide”.

Armenia alleges that the Young Turks, in 1915 the dominant party in the
Ottoman Empire, systematically arranged the deportation and killing of 1.5
million Armenians.

Turkish relations with independent Armenia, which borders Turkey to the
north, have long been coloured by the issue.

About 300,000 Armenians live in France, more than in any other European
country, and community leaders have pledged to pressure French President
Jacques Chirac on the genocide issue during Turkish accession negotiations.

France passed a law officially recognising the Armenian genocide in 2001,
cooling relations with Turkey and scuppering a major arms deal.

Another 14 nations, including Switzerland, Russia and Argentina, also
classify the killings as genocide.

Worcester Telegram AP article

Sunday, December 12, 2004

A pipe dream come true

Boy organist enchants church congregation

By Don Stacom THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Vahe Hovhannisyan, 9, plays the organ at St. Stephen’s Armenian Apostolic
Church in New Britain, Conn. With the help of his sister, Ani, 13, right,
Vahe is now the church’s official organist, playing at funerals, weddings
and Sunday services. (THE ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Enlarge photo

————————————————————————

NEW BRITAIN, Conn. – It is a tale shared by many old, ethnic churches
entrenched in Northeast cities: The pews are getting a bit emptier, the
parishioners a bit more elderly.

As the first-wave immigrants who once clustered in tight-knit neighborhoods
die off, their children – or grandchildren – move on. And the churches that
had been vibrant centers of worship, culture and social life begin to fade,
their vitality sapped.

In the heart of downtown, the 100 or so dues-paying members of St. Stephen’s
Armenian Apostolic Church are committed to keeping the oldest Armenian
church in Connecticut alive and well.

And they believe they have in their midst someone who will strengthen their
link to the next generation. His name is Vahe Hovhannisyan, and in March he
will be 10.

`Vahe is a gift to us from God,’ said the Rev. Krikor Keshishian, priest at
St. Stephen’s. `He loves his music, and he loves his church.’

Vahe captured the congregation’s attention last summer when longtime church
organist Shirley Kevorkian announced she was tiring of her duties.

`I thought we would have to start playing recorded music on CDs; I didn’t
know what we could do,’ Keshishian recalled. `Vahe came up to me and said,
`I’ll play.’ ‘

And now the shy 9-year-old – who has never formally studied music – is St.
Stephen’s organist. For 2 1/2 hours every Sunday morning, Vahe accompanies
the choir and deacon for the liturgical service.

Vahe plays a keyboard at home, and takes music classes twice a week with his
fourth-grade class at Griswold School in Berlin.

But he has never taken professional lessons. He practices at the church
every weekday afternoon, and recently learned the music for the funeral and
wedding ceremonies.

`You’re just overwhelmed that this little boy would take over playing the
organ, and that he would want so badly to do it,’ said Lila Winters, 75, a
lifelong member of St. Stephen’s.

>From the pews, the diminutive boy can hardly be seen behind the 3
1/2 -foot-high Conn organ. First-time visitors to the church occasionally
ask who played the music, and are astonished when Keshishian points to the
boy.

`When he plays, you look at the older parishioners and they’ve all got
smiles on their faces,’ said George Rustigian, former chairman of the church
‘s trustees. `He’s probably doing as much for the elderly as for the youth.’

There is no doubt that St. Stephen’s seeks more youth. Some second- and
third-generation parishioners remain, of course, but others have drifted
off, drawn to more comfortable homes in distant suburbs, or to jobs in the
Sunbelt, or perhaps simply away from the church that bound their parents and
grandparents so closely.

St. Stephen’s parishioners have seen that cycle play out just a few blocks
away. All Saints Church served the city’s once-thriving Slovak community for
84 years, but faltered in the later decades and closed in 2002.

`We’re hanging on, sometimes by a string,’ Winters said. `Some people are so
old, they don’t come because they can’t make the stairs. We have a banquet
every year with more than 150 people. If they’d come to church every week,
we’d be fine.’

Out of perhaps 100 dues-paying members at St. Stephen’s now, more than a
third live in the city and many attend services sporadically.

`Maybe we have 50 people one week, then the next Sunday we’ll get 10,’
Rustigian said. `It’s very difficult if just the parents and grandparents
support the church. We need the younger Armenians.’

Kevorkian is one of the last members of the original community. Her parents
were founders of the church in 1925, and she still lives nearby.

`I was practically raised in the church. It’s like a second home to all of
us,’ she said. `Everything runs around it, all our functions.’

She played St. Stephen’s organ for 60 years, and this year was ready to
stop.

`You become very popular. Everyone knows me and every little thing about me.
But you get tired,’ she said.

Vahe, who has listened to classical music since he was a toddler,
volunteered to take her place. Keshishian was skeptical, but he said the boy
won him over with a relentless determination to learn the music.

`When you love something, you do it. And I know the boy loves music,’
Kevorkian said. `He’s only at the beginning stages. He’ll be very good when
he’s really into it.’

Tigran and Sophia Hovhannisyan brought their son, Vahe, and daughter, Ani,
to the United States from Armenia eight years ago.

They are precisely the sort of young family that St. Stephen’s seeks:
devoted to the church, and eager to keep up their cultural heritage.

Vahe is a Boy Scout, swims at the YMCA, and plays soccer and basketball, but
every afternoon he goes to St. Stephen’s to practice. At his home in
Kensington, he listens to Strauss, Verdi and Beethoven, and plays on a
Yamaha keyboard in the living room.

Asked about his music, he is almost bashful, and says quietly, `I think I
wanted to play the piano when I was 3.’

What is his favorite piece in the liturgy? Vahe replied by walking to the
Yamaha to play `Amen Hayr Soorp,’ or `Amen Holy Father.’

`I like the melody,’ Yahe said simply. `I just like to play it.’

Keshishian patted him on the head, and said: `We are all proud of Vahe. He’s
very awake for a 9-year-old boy. What was I doing when I was 9? I don’t
remember. But he is playing the entire divine liturgy.’

U.S. Wants Special U.N. Holocaust Session on January 24, 2005

U.S. Wants Special U.N. Holocaust Session

.c The Associated Press

UNITED NATIONS (AP) – The United States asked Friday for a special
session of the General Assembly in January to mark the 60th
anniversary of the liberation of the Nazi concentration camps in World
War II.

In a letter to Secretary-General Kofi Annan, U.S. Ambassador John
Danforth requested that the proper steps be taken to convene a
commemorative session of the 191-member assembly.

Danforth said the gathering should be convened Jan. 24, 2005, three
days before a similar event in the former Auschwitz death camp in
Poland. Between 1 million and 1.5 million prisoners – most of them
Jews – perished in gas chambers or died of starvation and disease at
Auschwitz. Advancing Soviet troops liberated the camp Jan. 27, 1945.

“We believe that it is important that the United Nations, an
organization that rose out of the ashes World War II and the
Holocaust, mark this occasion in a manner fitting its historical
significance,” Danforth wrote.

“This is a unique opportunity for us all to remember and recommit to
the founding principles and noble ideals upon which the United Nations
was founded.”

The United Nations was founded Oct. 24, 1945.

12/10/04 23:45 EST

Kocharian commemorates earthquake’s victims

KOCHARIAN COMMEMORATES EARTHQUAKE’S VICTIMS

ArmenPress
Dec 7 2004

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 7, ARMENPRESS: Armenia marked today the 16-th
anniversary of the 1988 catastrophic earthquake that claimed the
lives of 25,000 people and caused enormous material damage to its
northwestern regions. Senior government officials, headed by president
Robert Kocharian, traveled today to the town of Gyumri to take part
in commemoration of the memory of the dead.

President Robert Kocharian and other top officials laid flowers at
the monument erected in memory of the quake’s victims and attended
a mass in a local church.

2 Mosul churches bombed, three people injured

2 Mosul churches bombed, three people injured

Associated Press Worldstream
December 7, 2004 Tuesday 12:52 PM Eastern Time

MOSUL, Iraq — Militants bombed two churches in Mosul on Tuesday,
injuring three people in a coordinated attack apparently aimed at
stirring trouble between religious groups in this ethnically diverse
northern city.

Police officials and church leaders said gunmen stormed into the
churches and ordered people out of the buildings before detonating
explosives in both.

Deputy provincial governor Khasro Gouran said three people were
wounded in the first church attack, which occurred at 2:30 p.m.
(1130GMT) in eastern Mosul’s Wihda neighborhood. Police officials had
no details on casualties. The religious denomination of the church
was not immediately clear, but it was believed to be Armenian.

An hour later, gunmen stormed the Chaldean Christian church in western
Mosul’s Shefa neighborhood, forcing a handful of people out before
rigging it with explosives and detonating them, according to Father
Ragheed Aziz, of the church. No casualties were reported.

Area residents said several carloads of gunmen surrounded the Chaldean
church before 20 militants stormed the church compound.

U.S. military spokeswoman Capt. Angela Bowman confirmed that one
church had been attacked and set on fire. American soldiers were
dispatched to the investigate the bombings.

Islamic militants have regularly targeted different sectors of Iraq’s
multiethnic population, including the minority Christians, in a bid
to disrupt the U.S.-led reconstruction of the war-scarred country.

Insurgents also launched two other attacks in the city, shooting dead
policeman Jassim Mohammed and firing a rocket-propelled grenade at
the home of police Lt. Col. Nashwan Mohammed, according to police
Capt. Ahmed Khalil.

In August, four churches in Baghdad and one in Mosul were blown up in
a coordinated series of car bombings, killing at least seven people
and wounding dozens more in the first significant strike against
Iraq’s minority Christians since the U.S. invasion began last year.

One person was killed and 11 injured in the August bombing of the
church in Mosul, where a minority Christian community has for long
lived in harmony with the city’s Sunni Arab majority, and many say
they still do. Any hostility toward Christians was mostly kept in
check under the toppled dictator, Saddam Hussein, who didn’t allow
militant Islamists to gain clout.

But Iraq’s community of 750,000 Christians has grown increasingly
anxious at the rise of Islamic fundamentalism since Saddam’s ouster
and hundreds have fled to neighboring Jordan and Syria.

Some of Iraq’s most feared Islamic militant terror networks, such
as the Ansar al-Sunnah Army and al-Qaida in Iraq, have claimed
responsibility for attacks in Mosul, the scene of a recent wave of
violence targeting U.S. and Iraqi forces and Kurds. Senior Muslim
leaders have condemned the violence, trying to quell Christian fears
they were being routed from the country.

EU draft report lists conditions for starting entry talks with Turke

EU draft report lists conditions for starting entry talks with Turkey

Cyprus News Agency, Nicosia
1 Dec 04

Brussels, 30 November: The Foreign Affairs Committee of the European
Parliament approved the draft report of Dutch Member of the European
Parliament Camiel Eurlings on Turkey’s accession course, inviting the
council to open negotiations with Turkey without undue delay,
stressing that the withdrawal of the Turkish forces in Cyprus “is a
necessary step forward on the way to further ease tension” on the
island.

The draft report, which was approved by 50 votes to 18 with six
abstentions, lists all the conditions that have yet to be met. On
Cyprus, the MEPs want to see greater efforts from the Turkish
authorities on the Cyprus issue.

“Whilst respecting the democratic will of the Greek Cypriot
community,” which rejected a UN plan for a settlement in an April
referendum, the Foreign Affairs Committee is disappointed that a
solution has not been found and calls on “the Turkish authorities to
maintain their constructive attitude” in finding “an equitable
solution to be negotiated using as a basis the [UN Secretary-General
Kofi] Annan plan and the principles upon which the EU is founded.”.

The MEPs believe that “a withdrawal of Turkish forces is a necessary
step forward on the way to further ease tension”.

Since membership negotiations would take place between Turkey on one
side and the 25 member states, including Cyprus, on the other, the
MEPs consider that “the opening of negotiations naturally presumes the
recognition of Cyprus by Turkey”.

The idea of offering Turkey a “privileged partnership” rather than
membership of the EU if it does not bring itself into compliance with
the Copenhagen criteria was rejected by the Committee but it may be
put to the vote once again during the December plenary session.

The report urges Turkey to maintain good neighbourly relations and to
abstain from “threats and tension-prone activities.”

At the same time, the MEPs ask Turkey to pursue its efforts at
reconciliation with Armenia and to reopen the border with this
country.

The Committee approved amendments by MEPs Ioannis Kasoulidhis, Charlie
Tannock and Bernd Posselt encouraging Turkey to implement the legal
changes it has approved and their application as regards to education
and radio and television transmissions for non-Muslim minorities
(Greeks, Armenians, Jews and Syrians).

Chess: Harikrishna becomes youngest Indian to win World junior event

Deepika, India
Dec 1 2004

Harikrishna becomes youngest Indian to win World junior event

Kochi, Nov 30 (UNI) Grandmaster Pentyala Harikrishna today became the
World Junior Chess champion and the second Indian after Viswanathan
Anand to win the coveted title, when he drew the final round game
after a long 50-move encounter here.

Finishing with 10 points, half-point ahead of the rest in the
71-player field, Harikrishna lifted the title after settling for a
draw against top seed Ferenc Berkes of Hungary. Armenian Petrosian
Tigran bagged silver and Zhao Jun of China finished with bronze.

”It was my career-best result,” an elated Harikrishna, who would be
gaining around 15 Elo points from this event, said. It was his second
world title. Harikrishna had won the World U-10 championship at
Menorca, Spain in 1996.

The girls title was won by top seed Ekaterina Korbut of Russia with
10.5/13 while Elisabeth Paehtz of Germany, the other overnight
leader, finished with silver half a point behind the leader, after
going down to India’s Kruttika Nadig.

IWM Eesha Karavade of India beat Zhang Jilin of China for her second
13-game WGM norm and bronze medal. She too scored the same 9.5
points, but had to be satisfied with the third place on better
progressive rating.

Harikrishna, who came looking for a victory in the final round,
opened with 1.g3 and his strategy was clear. The Hyderabad player won
a pawn on the 18th move but play was clearly headed for an opposite
colour bishop ending.