ANKARA: Gul Thinks Current Status Quo With Armenia Not In Best Inter

TURKISH PRESIDENT THINKS CURRENT STATUS QUO WITH ARMENIA NOT IN BEST INTERESTS

Anadolu Agency
May 27 2009
Turkey

BISHKEK (A.A) – 27.05.2009 – The Turkish president expressed on
Wednesday his belief that the current status quo with Armenia was
not for nobody’s interest.

Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul said that the status quo between
Turkey and Armenia was not for nobody’s interest.

"Neither the current status quo between Turkey and Armenia nor the one
between Armenia and Azerbaijan are in the best interests of any of the
parties," Gul told Turkish reporters in the Kyrgyz capital of Bishkek.

Gul is actually visiting Kyrgyzstan, the first stop of his tour
covering this country and Tajikistan.

President Gul said that diplomacy was being carried out to convince
Armenian President Serzh Sargsian to a national match between Turkey
and Armenia to be played in Turkey in October.

Gul defined Russia as a key country in settlement of Caucasian
problems, and said this country had good will and was exerting efforts
to solve problems.

On Iraq, Gul said the best interests of the central government of
Iraq and the regional administration in north of Iraq were stability
of the entire country.

Also speaking about the initiatives to clear landmines across
Turkish-Syrian border, Gul said that the parliament would debate
whether this was for the best interests of Turkey and then pass a law.

Gul said that he would ratify the law if he thought it was for the
best interests of Turkey. (BRC-CE)

Amnesty Announcement Could Bring Some Relaxation Of Tension In Socie

AMNESTY ANNOUNCEMENT COULD BRING SOME RELAXATION OF TENSION IN SOCIETY

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
27.05.2009 17:52 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "After May 31 we will have a real opportunity to
start implementing reforms in Armenia, to begin real reformation
instead of imitating them, as it has been heretofore," Armen
Martirosyan, chairman of the Heritage fraction of the RA National
Assembly, told news conference today.

According to him, among first real steps in that direction could be
the completion of the trial of March 1, 2008 events and announcement
of an amnesty. "I hope, that president Sargsyan will have a public
speech on amnesty, after which the issue will be discussed in the
National Assembly of Armenia, Armen Martirosyan said.

According to him, even only announcement of the Amnesty can bring
some relaxation of tension in the society.

First Ambassador Of Benin To Armenia

FIRST AMBASSADOR OF BENIN TO ARMENIA

A1+
08:57 pm | May 26, 2009

Official

Newly appointed Ambassador of Benin to Armenia Ayi Vissinto d’
Almeida handed the copies of his credentials to Armenian Foreign
Minister Edward Nalbandyan.

Welcoming the guest, Minister Nalbandyan expressed hope that the
accreditation of the first Ambassador of Benin to Armenia would
contribute to development of bilateral ties.

Ambassador d’ Almeida underlined that Benin is interested in the
establishment of multifaceted cooperation with Armenia in different
spheres and that his appointment was a sign of that desire.

During the conversation, the sides attached importance to the
strengthening of bilateral cooperation within international
organizations, especially the UN and the international organization
of Francophonie.

Armen Martirosyan Satisfied With The Work Done By The Fact-Finding G

ARMEN MARTIROSYAN SATISFIED WITH THE WORK DONE BY THE FACT-FINDING GROUP
Lena Badeyan

"Radiolur"
27.05.2009 14:58

We have received no response to the letter of the President of the
Board of the Heritage Party, Anahit Bakhshyan, head of the Heritage
faction Armen Martirosyan told a press conference today. To remind,
Anahit Bakhshyan had applied to the President of the Republic, urging
him to guarantee the normal activity of the fact-finding group after
the resignation of the group’s chairman.

Armen Martirosyan today hailed the work done by the fact-finding group,
especially with regard to revealing the circumstances of death of the
victims of the March 1 events. According to the Deputy, he is not aware
of the details of the materials collected by the fact-finding group,
because the "Heritage" keeps to the principle of the secrecy of the
group’s activity. Armen Martirosyan declared that the "Heritage"
had enough political will to participate in the activity of the
fact-finding group.

Will the representative of the "Heritage" publicize the facts acquired
during the group’s activity in case it is dissolved? In response
to the question, Armen Martirosyan stated: "Naturally, because the
decree signed by President Serzh Sargsyan clearly states that members
of the group are not eligible to publicize the data acquired as far
as the group functions. They are free to provide that information
after the group stops its activity."

Accident: Armenian AN24 In Dire Dawa On May 18th 2009, Veered Off Ru

ACCIDENT: ARMENIAN AN24 IN DIRE DAWA ON MAY 18TH 2009, VEERED OFF RUNWAY ON TAKEOFF
Simon Hradecky

The Aviation Herald

May 26 2009

An Armenian (operator unknown) Antonov AN-24 freighter, freight flight
from Dire Dawa (Ethiopia) to Bossaso (Somalia) with 4 crew, veered off
the runway while taking off from Dire Dawa in heavy fog. The airplane
received substantial damage, all occupants escaped with minor injuries.

The airplane was carrying a load of Khat on a 6-months contract to
bring 2000 tons of Khat to Bossaso.

The airframe is being repaired.

Original reports said, the airplane was Ukrainian.

http://avherald.com/h?article=41a34b64

Armenians All Over The World To Elaborate Joint Genocide Recognition

ARMENIANS ALL OVER THE WORLD TO ELABORATE JOINT GENOCIDE RECOGNITION PLAN

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
25.05.2009 14:54 GMT+04:00

Armenian Genocide issue should be viewed from scientific viewpoint,
and Armenians all over the world should elaborate a joint plan with
regard to the matter, UAR Chairman and Head of World Armenian Congress
(WAC) Ara Abrahmyan told journalists. "Unfortunately, Diaspora’s
possible approaches with regard to Armenian Genocide issue are not
clearly presented now," he noted, adding that a group of lawyers and
international law experts recently proposed that Armenian Genocide
be considered by International Court of Human Rights. "We addressed
such request to RA President. But he answered that we haven’t chosen
proper moment for that."

According to Mr. Abrahamyan, UAR and WAC welcome Yerevan-Ankara
dialogue. "We find that the process should continue. Of course, we
disapprove of any attempt aimed at linking Armenian Genocide with
Karabakh settlement process. We do realize that Armenian Genocide
issue cannot become subject of bargaining," UAR Chairman said.

Mamediarov – The Two Sights Didnt Even Made One Step To The Solution

MAMEDIAROV – THE TWO SIGHTS DIDNT EVEN MADE ONE STEP TO THE SOLUTION

armradio.am
25.05.2009 17:44

Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan will continue discussion of
those issues which remain unsolved in the Karabakh conflict regulation
agenda, Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov who is currently
in Syria stated.

In Damascus Mamedyarov is participating in the 36th session of the
member states of the Islamic Conference Organization.

The discussion between the sides will take place within the frameworks
of the already outlined agenda and will become the continuation of
the contacts in Prague, Mamedyarov said.

The coming meeting of the presidents is expected to be conducted in
Saint Petersburg in June within the frameworks of economic conference.

"During the former Administration of Armenia we have reached everything
in the peaceful process but with the current Administration we have
not reached anything. As a negotiating side, I may say that I cannot
be proud of the changes we reached in the process," he said.

In response to the Azerbaijani statements that Armenia has toughened
its position in the process, Armenian President said at a joint
press conference with Croatian President that "I do not think that the
Republic of Armenia has toughened its position in the negotiations with
Azerbaijan. The core issue of the process is the status of Nagorno
Karabakh and if we put definitely this issue expecting answers it
does not mean that we have toughened our position."

ANKARA: Aramaic Toponyms in Turkey – Demand of the Aramaean Diaspora

American Chronicle
May 23 2009

Aramaic Toponyms in Turkey ` A Demand of the Aramaean Diaspora

Dr. Muhammad Shamsaddin Megalommatis

In this article, I republish an Open Letter to Mr. BeÅ?ir
Atalay, Interior Minister of Turkey, which was made public by
J. Messo, President of the Syriac Universal Alliance a few days
ago. In forthcoming articles, I will focus on the subject extensively.

Att. Mr. BeÅ?ir Atalay

Interior Minister

T.C. İçiÅ?leri BakanlıÄ?ı,
Bakanl&#xC4 ;±klar

ankaya, 06640 Ankara

Turkey

Subject: Request to reverse Turkification of ancient Aramaic (Syriac)
place?names

Stockholm, Monday 18 May, 2009

Honorable Minister Atalay,

We appeal to you on behalf of the Syriac Universal Alliance (SUA), the
worldwide umbrella organization of all the national Federations of the
Aramean / Syriac people (Turk.: Süryaniler).

With great enthusiasm, we have welcomed your audacious statements in
the Turkish media relating to reverting the thousands of Turkish
place?names to their original languages. You were quoted as saying
that this issue is currently not on your agenda, to which you added:

"If there is a local demand, why not?" This demand, in fact, does
exist among our people.

Ancient Aramaic place and family names

Mr. Minister, you may or may not be aware of the ancient history of
our people in Turkey. Aramaic inscriptions as well as external
evidence, such as Biblical and Assyrian sources, testify to the
omnipresence of Semitic Aramean principalities (not to be confused
with Indo?European Armenians) in southeastern Anatolia from the
late second millennium BC onwards.

Modern Diyarbakır, for example, called Ämid since the
earliest stages of Aramaic, was the capital of the city?state
BÄ`th ZammÄ?ni, which included the plateau of Mardin (an
Aramaic plural form). Southeast of Ämid and currently belonging to
the Mardin province, lies the region of Tur ´Abdin, which again
is Aramaic for "the mountain of the servants [of God]."

In his book on the early history of Tur ´Abdin, Dr. Andrew
Palmer observed about this area:

"Not only are several of the village names still in use, even these
types of farming and the same skill in metalwork are characteristic of
the ancient Aramaic stock of Christians who are the hereditary
inhabitants of the plateau."

In addition to the very old tradition of Aramaic toponyms that have
been preserved to date, the way Aramaic family names/surnames are
styled by means of B(Ä`) plus a personal name, usually a prominent
ancestor, demonstrates that the familial identification of the present
day Arameans is inextricably connected with the typical Aramean
society in Antiquity.

Excluded from Lausanne Treaty and subjected to onomatocide
("name-murder")

As you know, in 1923 Turkey signed the Peace Treaty of
Lausanne. Despite the fact that Articles 37?45 guaranteed the
(inter)national protection and rights of the non?Muslim and
non?Turkish nationals, the Arameans were never granted formal
recognition by Turkey as a "minority" as formulated in this
Convention.

Consequently, they have never enjoyed their basic human rights, but
instead had to suffer in many ways from discrimination. For example,
in theory the Arameans should have been given "an equal right to
establish, manage and control at their own expense, any charitable,
religious and social institutions, any schools and other
establishments for instruction and education, with the right to use
their own language and to exercise their own religion freely therein"
(Art. 40).

In practice, however, Aramean teachers were imprisoned for teaching
Aramaic. In more recent times, state officials had even attempted to
permanently close down the Christian monasteries of Kurkmo / Zafaran
in Mardin (1978) and Mor Gabriel in Midyat (1997) for teaching
Aramaic.

In the decades following Turkey´s ratification of the Lausanne
Treaty, several state policies and methods were implemented in order
to Turkify all the ´minorities´ in Turkey, irrespective
of their ethno?religious and linguistic backgrounds. A case in
point concerns the Turkification of indigenous names, which had begun
as early as 1915. But the most notable years are in:

1. 1934, when the "Surname Law" was adopted by the Turkish
Government. This law prohibits the use of non?Turkish sounds,
letters and full names.

2. 1957, when the "Expert Commission for Name Change" was created. In
the next 21 years, the names of no less than 28,000 villages were
changed. Between 1983 and 2000, this committee continued its work and
renamed another 200 villages.

Turkey´s systematic efforts to destroy existing geographical
and personal names have been described as onomatocide
("name?murder"; Prof. Jan Sanders) and as toponymical engineering,
owing to its conceptual proximity to the more familiar and similarly
destructive phenomenon of demographic engineering (Dr. Kerem
Ã-ktem).

Request of the indigenous Aramean people

Among all the Aramaic?speaking Christians in the world, SUA is the
only NGO with a Special Consultative Status at the Economic and Social
Council of the UN.

As the recognized voice of the Aramean (Syriac) people, SUA requests
that your Government not neglect the Arameans, but treats them with
equality and dignity in a truly democratic Turkish Republic.

In 2009, we expect a modern and democratic Government that knows how
to appreciate its minorities as a cultural enrichment to the unique
mosaic that prides the Republic of Turkey.

Thus, against the backdrop of the aforementioned facts and statements,
we request you to

officially recognize the Arameans, just like the Greeks, Armenians and
Jews, as a non? Muslim and non?Turkish minority according to the
Lausanne Treaty and the existing international treaties on minority
rights that are guaranteed by the UN and the EU.

revert the Turkified ancient Aramaic toponyms and to provide new
constructions in southeast Turkey´s Aramaic plateaus with
native geographical names, by which the original and indigenous
identity of the landscape will be safeguarded.

grant the Arameans the right to change their Turkish surnames into
their old Aramaic family names, which is a basic human right in the
European democratic societies.

The restoration of the meaningless Turkified names to their meaningful
original languages, such as Greek, Armenian, Arabic and Aramaic, is
significant for multiple reasons.

Above all, it will re?establish Turkey´s disconnected
continuity with and local memories of its rich multi?religious,
?ethnic and ?linguistic past. In so doing, it will help to
preserve Turkey´s ancient cultural heritages, which can also be
regarded as world heritages, and thus improve the tourism industry in
various historical regions in its southeastern countryside.

For the Turkified names have proven to be unattractive and a major
source of confusion, whereas the indigenous names of cities, towns,
villages, mountains and rivers carry meaning, importance and
appeal. This not only applies to tourists, but also to repatriates who
already have returned or can be stimulated by the state to return to
their ancestral homeland.

Like the toponyms, the surnames are also an essential part of an
individual or group identity. In the case of the Arameans, who
struggle against assimilation in their diasporic reality, it helps to
preserve the unity among family members who are scattered in different
countries. In the Arab world, they have not experienced such enforced
name?change and thus have retained their old Aramaic family
names. In Europe, however, many Arameans who originate from Turkey
have already made use of the liberty to change their Turkified
surnames.

We believe this is the right moment for your Government to show the
world that Turkey sincerely wishes to abide by EU standards on
democracy, human rights and minority rights.

One of the first steps to achieve this, is by granting the hitherto
ill?treated and neglected Arameans official minority status,
whereby they can safeguard their endangered cultural heritage, and by
reversing the Turkified Aramaic place?names and surnames.

As stressed last week in an open letter to His Excellency, Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an, whose response we are still
awaiting, we reiterate that SUA wishes to work on a democratic basis
with your Government. We look forward to receiving your reply and note
that we would be most delighted to discuss any of these matters
personally with you.

Yours sincerely,

J. Messo
President
Syriac Universal Alliance
johny.messo@sua?ngo.org

canchronicle.com/articles/view/103515

http://www.ameri

The Youth Had No Questions

THE YOUTH HAD NO QUESTIONS

A1+
07:30 pm | May 22, 2009

Politics

Today the Orinats Yerkir Party (OYK) held a meeting with Party members
and proponents.

Before the meeting which was held at the Hall of Sittings of the
Armenian government A1+ interviewed some young participants who were
affiliated with the OYK.

"I like the Party’s style of work, policy and the path for democracy,"
says OYK member Robert Zohrabian. It is already four years Robert
Zohrabian is engaged in the party. He didn’t quit it after the 2008
presidential election as "the Party’s steps were later explained and
accepted by the youth."

Arthur Misakian, the deputy leader of the Party’s Youth Council,
expects to wake up in a different Yerevan after the May 31 election.

OYK candidate for the Elder’s Council, Grigor Vahanian, advised the
youth to read more literature including Mark Ghazar, Brusov, and his
economic analyses. In his addressing speech Grigor Vahanian cited
prominent Armenians Metsarents and Nzhdeh.

OYK candidate for Yerevan’s Mayor, Heghine Bisharian, reminded the
youth that both Armenia and the OYK are still young. She referred to
the Party’s program which foresees long-term educational loans and
latest accommodations for Armenian students.

"The youth is our artillery battalion and we intend to expand its ranks
after the election. We call for your activity during the studies and
inside the party as the Party gives you a unique opportunity to reach
your zenith," added OYK Leader Arthur Baghdasarian.

The presentees turned out to have no questions and the meeting ended
in a little while.

Jazz Producer to the Greats

Jazz Producer to the Greats

WALL STREET JOURNAL
May 19, 2009
By WILL FRIEDWALD

George Avakian probably has done more to influence the way jazz has
been heard over the past 70 years than anyone else alive. Mr. Avakian,
who celebrated his 90th birthday in March, may not have
single-handedly invented the jazz album, but in 1939 and 1940 he got
the concept off the ground. He is responsible for essential albums by
Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, Dave Brubeck and other
jazz greats — a list much too long for this column. And he ran the
first jazz reissue program.

Born in the aftermath of the Armenian Genocide, Mr. Avakian arrived
in New York in 1923. The first jazz record he distinctly remembers
hearing was of the Casa Loma Orchestra in 1933, when he was 14, and
the first jazz star he remembers seeing in person is Lucky Millinder,
at a theater in New York’s Washington Heights, the part of upper
Manhattan where Mr. Avakian grew up. He got hooked on jazz via the
radio, hearing Fats Waller, Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington and
others. By 1936, when attending the Horace Mann School in the Bronx’s
Riverdale neighborhood, he contrived to interview Benny Goodman for
the school paper; in 1962, Mr. Avakian accompanied Goodman on his
ground-breaking tour of Russia.

PHOTO CAPTION: The legendary producer remains active in the
recording industry at the age of 90, paneling a Grammy Museum
discussion in January 2009.

From Horace Mann, Mr. Avakian went to Yale, where he met the
pioneering jazz scholar Marshall Stearns. After Stearns received his
doctorate, he accepted an offer to teach at a university in Hawaii,
and in the summer of 1939 he asked Mr. Avakian to drive with him to
the West Coast. They made it a cross-country musical tour. "As we
approached Chicago," Mr. Avakian recently recalled in a phone
interview from his apartment in Riverdale, New York, "we were
listening to the radio, and we heard Fats Waller and then Muggsy
Spanier and his Ragtimers coming from the Hotel Sherman. So we just
drove straight to the hotel, left our bags at the front desk, and
spent the rest of the night with Fats and Muggsy."

When he returned from that trip, Mr. Avakian was given the
opportunity to produce what was possibly the first original jazz
concept album. "I felt that jazz should be treated the way that
classical music was treated, released in albums with three pockets and
six selections, with annotations," he remembered. "I thought that the
way to start the excitement would be to record the pioneers of the
three cities that were responsible for spreading jazz: New Orleans,
Kansas City and Chicago." He put together the Chicago album himself,
starting with a date by Eddie Condon and his Chicagoans in August
1939.

In 1940, he got a call from Ted Wallerstein of the recently
reorganized Columbia Records and was hired to come in one day a week
(while still attending Yale) to put together album packages from the
corporation’s already vast holdings. He remembers playing the
recordings of Robert Johnson, and he made sure that they were
preserved for future generations but wasn’t able to issue them at the
time "because nobody had ever heard of Robert Johnson."

Mr. Avakian’s work at Columbia was interrupted by the war (during
which time the army trained him to speak German and then promptly
shipped him out to the Pacific). His only professional experience with
music during those five years was helping his friend Charles Edward
Smith record an album of W.C.

Handy songs for Asch Records, which indirectly inspired Mr. Avakian’s
famous album "Louis Armstrong Sings W. C. Handy" a decade later.

Returning to New York in 1946, Second Lt. Avakian went back to work
at Columbia and soon was in charge of the label’s jazz, popular and
international album releases — first on 78s and then on 33 1/3 rpm
LPs. From 1946 to 1958, Mr. Avakian produced what seemed like an
endless string of classic albums for the company. Among many others,
he was responsible for pianist Erroll Garner’s masterpiece "Concert by
the Sea," which actually was a tape made almost by accident — of a
performance at an Army base in California. The success of Duke
Ellington’s 1956 Newport Jazz Festival concert also turned out to be a
happy accident: The producer and artist had planned the concert album
around a new suite by Ellington. But in actual performance, the big
event turned out to be his 20-year-old composition "Diminuendo and
Crescendo in Blue," with its epic tenor saxophone solo by Paul
Gonsalves, which drove the crowd into a near frenzy and made "Newport"
the biggest-selling album of Ellington’s career.

Mr. Avakian had particularly good luck with trumpeters, including the
celebrated series of "Buck Clayton Jam Sessions" of 1953-1956. With
Armstrong, Mr. Avakian not only produced two of Satchmo’s most
celebrated later works, his songbook tributes to Handy and to Fats
Waller, but he also steered the legendary trumpeter-vocalist to one of
his biggest hit singles, "Mack the Knife." Mr. Avakian takes special
pride in his association with Miles Davis, as he noted both to me and
in a 2005 interview on this page with John McDonough.

Mr. Avakian was doing his best to keep up with the demand, but the
1950s were the era of a major boom in the recording industry, when
every home had a long-playing turntable and everybody seemed to be
buying tons of albums.

Mr. Avakian was exhausting himself; he even bought a tape deck so he
could edit masters at home on nights and weekends. He was so
overworked that he came down with a "combination of hepatitis and
mononucleosis," and that, combined with the relatively low salary he
was receiving, convinced him to leave Columbia in 1958.

After a rest, Mr. Avakian became an executive at the new Warner Bros.

Records, where he was responsible for pop hits by TV star Edd "Kookie"
Byrnes as well as "The Button-Down Mind of Bob Newhart," the first
comedy album to hit No. 1 on the charts.

Leaving Warner Bros. in 1960, Mr. Avakian returned to jazz at RCA,
where he produced milestone albums with Sonny Rollins, Paul Desmond,
and Joe Williams. For the past 45 years or so, he’s worked mostly as a
free-lance producer; among his discoveries are saxophonist Charles
Lloyd and pianist Keith Jarrett. Messrs. Avakian and Jarrett still
share an interest in a publishing company.

Mr. Avakian, who has received lifetime achievement awards from
Downbeat magazine and the Grammies, continues to be involved in new
albums and reissues. He is writing his long-awaited memoirs and
enjoying his 60-year marriage to violinist Anahid Ajemian (and their
three children and two grandchildren).

He’s followed the trail of music from swing to bebop to postmodernism,
and of the industry from 78s to LPs to CDs to downloads. The legacy of
recorded jazz would be substantially poorer without him.

Mr. Friedwald writes about jazz for the Journal.