Grigory Karasin: political will necessary to resolve the NK conflict

Grigory Karasin: political will necessary to resolve the Karabakh conflict

ArmRadio.am
23.03.2007 16:00

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin told the press that `
resolution of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict is possible only in
case of existence of necessary political will.’

Reminding that in the current stage there are contradictions between
the parties on the main principles of settlement, he said that all
mediator countries, including Russia, `are doing a serious work to
resolve it.’ `Henceforth Russia will; do everything to resolve the
conflict. In this regard official Moscow launches activity in two
directions,’ the Deputy Foreign Minister added.

`To accelerate the process of settlement of the conflict official
Moscow organizes high-level bilateral meetings between Yerevan and
Baku,’ said Grigory Karasin.

S. Res. 65 on the agenda for March 28, 2007 Hearing

0328a.html

COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN RELATIONS
UNITED STATES SENATE

ONE HUNDRED TENTH CONGRESS
FIRST SESSION

Wednesday, March 28, 2007
Time: 11:45 AM
Place: 419 Dirksen Senate Office Building
Presiding: Senator Biden

The Committee will consider and vote on the
following agenda items and nominees:

Nominees:
1. Ms. Katherine J. Almquist
To be Assistant Administrator of the U.S. Agency for
International Development for Africa
2. Mr. Paul J. Bonicelli
To be Assistant Administrator of the U.S. Agency for
International Development for Latin America and
the Caribbean
3. Mr. Curtis S. Chin
To be U.S. Director of the Asian Development Bank
with the rank of Ambassador
4. Mr. Eli Whitney Debevoise, II,
To be U.S. Executive Director of the International
Bank for Reconstruction and Development
5. Mr. Sam Fox
To be Ambassador to Belgium
6. The Honorable Zalmay Khalilzad
To be Representative to the United Nations, with the
rank and status of Ambassador, and the representative
in the Security Council of the United Nations, and to
be Representative to the Sessions of the General
Assembly of the United Nations during his tenure of
service as Representative to the United Nations
7. The Honorable Margrethe Lundsager
To be U.S. Executive Director of the International
Monetary Fund
8. The Honorable Edward Douglas Menarchik
To be Assistant Administrator of the U.S. Agency for
International Development for Europe and Eurasia
Legislation
9. S. 193, A bill to increase cooperation on energy issues
between the United States Government and foreign
governments and entities in order to secure the
strategic and economic interests of the United States,
and for other purposes.
10. S. 613, To enhance the overseas stabilization and
reconstruction capabilities of the United States
Government, and for other purposes.
11. H.R. 1003, To amend the Foreign Affairs Reform
and Restructuring Act of 1998 to reauthorize the
United States Advisory Commission on Public
Diplomacy.
12. S. Res. 30, A resolution expressing the sense of the
Senate regarding the need for the United States to
address global climate change through the negotiation
of fair and effective international commitments.
13. S. Res. 65, Condemning the murder of Turkish-
Armenian journalist and human rights advocate Hrant
Dink and urging the people of Turkey to honor his
legacy of tolerance, with an amendment in the nature
of a substitute, and with a amendment to the preamble.
14. S. Res. 76, A resolution calling on the United States
Government and the international community to
promptly develop, fund, and implement a
comprehensive regional strategy in Africa to protect
civilians, facilitate humanitarian operations, contain
and reduce violence, and contribute to conditions for
sustainable peace in eastern Chad, the Central African
Republic, and Darfur, Sudan.
+Additional Items May Be Added…

http://www.senate.gov/~foreign/hearings/2007/hrg07

ANKARA: Book recounts dramas behind the exchange of populations

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
March 24 2007

Book recounts dramas behind the exchange of populations

What does history hang around the neck of a man who sanctioned the
deportation of some one-and-a-half million people because they
believed in the wrong God? The answer in the case of the Norwegian
diplomat, Fridtjof Nansen, was a Nobel prize for peace.

Nansen was a prototype of today’s international civil servant, a
behind-the-scenes arbiter of the 1923 Lausanne Treaty. This was the
document which confirmed the failure of the Great (Megalo) Hellenic
Idea to plant a new Byzantium in the ruins of the Ottoman Empire
after a Greek invasion into Asia Minor that was ill-conceived and
badly-led. Mustafa Kemal’s ragtag Turkish nationalist army thus
defined the borders of today’s Turkish Republic. The Lausanne
Conference attended by Curzon and Poincaré and the other the great
politicians of the day became bogged down by weighty issues: control
of the oilfields in Mosul and the future of the commercial
concessions that the Ottomans had once ceded to foreign powers. The
fate of refugees and whole populations caught on the wrong side of
the fighting exercised the Great Powers rather less. The treaty’s
very first clause called for the compulsory exchange of Muslims
living in Greece with the Greek Orthodox population in Turkey.

Many of the indigenous Greeks of Asia Minor had already fled their
homes, fearing Turkish retribution for the excesses committed by the
Hellenic invaders. Under Lausanne, they could not return. For others,
such as Greek-speaking Turks of Crete and Thessalonica or
Turkish-speaking Greeks in Cappadocia and Karaman, being uprooted
from ancestral homes was an inexplicable catastrophe and resettlement
not a return from diaspora but perpetual exile. Bruce Clark’s
absorbing study examines exactly how the frock-coated politicians in
far-away Switzerland came to embrace, organize and (quite
interestingly) finance a much praised solution which in different
circumstances might have landed them before an international tribunal
on charges of ethnic cleansing.

Mustafa Kemal, who led the Turkish victory, and Eleftherios
Venizelos, who resuscitated Greece from humiliation, were both
architects of secular states. Neither man questioned that nations
could more easily be built if those citizens were cast from the same
ethnic and sectarian mould. It is that principle, what Clark calls
the "spirit of Lausanne," which has set a cynical precedent in the
dark art of conflict resolution. It defined a problem that has
resurfaced in Cyprus and Northern Ireland, as well as in Serbia,
Darfur and Iraq. Can people of different persuasions live together in
the wake of violence, or must ethnic and religious boundaries match
political frontiers for war to end?

It is a question which at the time of Lausanne seemed rhetorical.
World War I followed by invasion and civil war in Anatolia cost,
cites Clark, some 20 percent of the population — 2.5 million
Muslims, some 800,000 Armenians and 300,000 Greeks. Facing the future
meant developing collective amnesia over the traumas of the past. The
need to bury shame, or to at least embalm it in silence, has been a
key component of the nationalism afflicting the region.

The Istanbul Orthodox population, like the Muslims of Eastern
(Grecian) Thrace, were exempted from the exchange, but over a million
Anatolian Greeks were settled in Greece. They became Venizelos’
instant political constituency, a buffer against Bulgarian expansion
and a workforce in the post-war reconstruction of the country. Turkey
was affected less by the influx of newcomers than by the sudden
hemorrhage of a Greek bourgeoisie.

Filling that void became a crucial event in the shaping of modern
Turkey. If Greeks were the first of the sultan’s subjects to
successfully rebel against Ottoman rule in 1821, the Turks were the
last. Lausanne was recognition of — what the Turks call their War of
Liberation — that bid to create their own nation state from the
heterogeneity of empire.

The exchange of populations is today remembered as an historical
necessity by the descendants of both parties to the conflict. It was
not totally heartless — there were attempts to allocate to the
refugees property equivalent to that they had left behind. Greece
threw itself on the mercy of the international community, drew
attention to the desperate plight of refugees and in an early model
of development finance, raised an international bond issue on the
productive potential of the new immigrants.

The Turks, in contrast, reveled in Lausanne as an opportunity to
exclude the Western allies, who in the previous, now voided, Treaty
of Sevres had wanted to emasculate their emerging state. They dealt
with the problem of resettlement themselves.

"Twice a Stranger" is, of course, an attempt to remember. It is a
history, an analysis of history’s impact on present politics but also
an endeavor to bring center stage the anonymous figurants whose fate
was dictated by their political betters. Clark has collected the
stories of remaining representatives of the generation of ordinary
people, Greek and Turk, whose lives were uprooted. There is little
sensation in these accounts. Clark is speaking to the survivors of an
event that took place over 60 years ago and he is gently respectful
of those he interviews, careful not to cross the line between
understanding the past and using history to attribute blame.

"We were living in the mountains. We were being killed and we
killed," he quotes one Greek who fled from the Black Sea, later to
find his sister adopted by a Turkish family.

It is an approach, however, that allows him to capture in the manner
of a patient wildlife photographer, that rare moment when an
individual’s own recollection is painfully at odds with official
history. Most of those he talks to have been taught to accept the
received wisdom that their resettlement was for the best. Yet a trip
in their final years to their birthplace or a sudden knock from an
elderly stranger from across the sea who recognized the front door as
the one they shut behind them all those years ago, suddenly yields a
different set of truths. It is a world of loyalties and empathies
more complex than the signatories of Lausanne could concede.

There are so many conflicts that still burn in the Balkans, in the
Caucasus, in Africa and the Middle East. A European audience, reared
on the psychoanalytic method or the logic of the confessional, wants
to believe in the causal relation between truth and reconciliation,
historical honesty and the process of repair. It is only when nations
face up to their past that the war can end, is something one senses
Clark would like to believe. But he remains troubled by the ghost of
Lausanne, hinting that things may work the other way around and that
it is only when the war is truly over, we can begin to look back.

`Twice a Stranger: How Mass Expulsion Forged Modern Greece and
Turkey’ — By Bruce Clark, Published by Granta Books

24.03.2007

BOOK REVIEW ANDREW FINKEL

Moscow, Yerevan to sign new coop agreement

ITAR-TASS News Agency, Russia
March 24, 2007 Saturday 07:04 AM EST

Moscow, Yerevan to sign new coop agreement

Moscow and Yerevan are going to further develop long-term
cooperation. They will sign a new agreement for the coming three
years on cooperation in urban development, economy, business,
culture, public health and education. Speaking at the opening of a
new Armenian Trade Centre, built within the framework of the previous
agreement in the central part of the Russian capital, Moscow Mayor
Yuri Luzhkov said that the relations between the two cities “are
durable and of long standing.”

“The opening of the Trade Centre is not the end of our cooperation.
It will be continued with the signing of another agreement for the
coming three years. This is the right way of developing relations,
which should cover the whole of the post-Soviet territory,” he said.

Luzhkov reminded that the Moscow House had been opened in Yerevan
last Friday. In his opinion, it is popular already among Yerevan
residents. “I am sure the Trade Centre will be equally popular among
Muscovites,” he added. According to Luzhkov, the Moscow House in
Yerevan and the Yerevan Trade Centre in Moscow are the two symbols of
the pooling of efforts for the purpose of jointly tackling trade,
economic and production problems, of consolidating relations in the
sphere of business, and of achieving mutual benefit.

Luzhkov said Moscow was interested in the import of food and consumer
goods from Armenia. “Armenia produces unique cheeses and cognac,
and, of course, quality footwear,” he explained. Yerevan Mayor
Ervand Zakharyan said, in his turn, that the new agreement would be
signed in the autumn of 2007.

Vardan Ayvazian Sees Self Both in Legislative & Executive Branches

RPA COUNCIL MEMBER VARDAN AYVAZIAN SEES HIMSELF BOTH IN LEGISLATIVE
AND IN EXECUTIVE BRANCHES OF POWER

YEREVAN, MARCH 23, NOYAN TAPAN. "It is necessary that a power gifted
with resources of confidence is formed as a result of the coming
parliamentary elections," RA Minister of Nature Protection, RPA
Council member Vardan Ayvazian informed journalists about it on March
23. In his words, "the resource of confidence will give the
authorities possibility to convincingly govern during the coming 5
years." V.Ayvazian, occupying the 16th place in the RPA proportional
electoral list sees himself both in legislative and in executive
spheres. "I worked at the National Assembly for 5 years, and at the
Government for 6 years," he said.

Speaker Of Turkey’s Great National Assembly Sends Letter To Speaker

SPEAKER OF TURKEY’S GREAT NATIONAL ASSEMBLY SENDS LETTER TO SPEAKER OF HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF US CONGRESS, URGING HER NOT TO DISCUSS BILL ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Mar 21 2007

ANKARA, MARCH 21, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. "Turkey is not in
the role of an irresponsible denier in the issue of the events of
1915." This is said in the 4-page letter that Speaker of Turkey’s
Great National Assembly Bulent Arinc sent to Speaker of the House
of Representatives of the US Congress Nancy Pelosi. In the letter
B. Arinc urges Pelosi not to discuss the draft resolution on the
Armenian Genocide.

The letter, which the Turkish ambassador to the US will hand to
N. Pelosi, also has a 2-page enclosure, in which speaker of the
Turkish parliament informs Pelosi about the "events" of 1915-1919.

Arinc reminds his US colleague that Turkey proposed Armenian historians
to conduct a joint "impartial study" on the issue of the Armenian
Genocide but "there has been no response from Armenians". "Armenia
still keeps its archives closed," Arinc claims.

The speaker of the Turkish parliament called on Armenian historians
to discuss the issue – with the participation of third countries,
including American historians.

"If resolution No.106 is adopted, the Armenians will state the US
has recognized their unfounded claims regarding the 1915 events. The
Turkish socity will perceive such development as support of the claims
of Armenians," Arinc concludes.

According to Turkish Daily News, the Turkish Prime Ministere Recep
Tayyip Erdogan also intends to apply soon to President Bush by
telephone or letter regarding the same issue.

Somalia Tops Minority Threat List

SOMALIA TOPS MINORITY THREAT LIST

Story from BBC NEWS:
th/6472007.stm
Published: 2007/03/20 17:10:15 GMT

Somalia has overtaken Iraq as the world’s most dangerous country for
minority groups, a study has found.

Sudan, Afghanistan and Burma followed in the global survey by the
Minority Rights Group International (MRG).

It alleges the US ignored abuses of minorities in countries supporting
the US "war on terror" including Pakistan, Turkey and Israel.

Sri Lanka saw the highest rise in persecutions with renewed fighting
between government and rebel forces.

"A new government in Somalia has raised hopes for democracy, but it
is also a uniquely dangerous time," said MRG’s director Mark Lattimer.

"There is the spectre of a return of large-scale clan violence – and
groups that supported the old order are now under tremendous threat."

MRG said the Darood, Hawiye and Issaq clans are under threat as well
as the Bantu group.

Darfur crisis

Sudan is the third worst offender, said the State of the World’s
Minorities report, because of the violence in Darfur.

FIVE WORST COUNTRIES Somalia Iraq Sudan Afghanistan Burma Source:
Minority Rights Group International Most computers will open this
document automatically, but you may need Adobe Reader

More than two million people have been displaced since the fighting
began in 2003 and the UN says refugee camps in the region are almost
full.

At least 200,000 have been died in the ongoing violence between
pro-government Arab Janjaweed militia groups and rebel groups in
Darfur.

The MRG said farmers from the Zahgawa, Masalit and Fur groups,
amongst others, have been targeted.

Minority groups in Iraq including Christians, Yezidis and Mandaeans
face targeted killings, abductions and torture.

The group’s study links tensions in Turkey surrounding the EU
accession process to a surge in religious and nationalist extremism
behind attacks on minorities – such as the murder of Turkish-Armenian
writer Hrant Dink at the end of 2006.

"US allies have managed to barter their support for the war on
terror in return for having their human rights records ignored,"
said Mr Lattimer.

The MRG also blames the "war on terror" for a rise in anti-Muslim
attacks and intimidation within the European Union affecting millions
of ethnic Arabs, South Asians and other Muslim minorities.

In Sri Lanka, minority Tamils and Muslims are caught up in fighting
and increasingly becoming targets for abduction and disappearance
after the breakdown of peace efforts between Tamil Tiger rebels and
government forces last year.

"In three-quarters of the world’s conflicts, the killing is now
targeted at particular ethnic or religious groups," said Mr Lattimer.

"Because they are usually minorities their suffering is largely
ignored."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/in_dep

Turkish Army On Alert Amid Tensions

TURKISH ARMY ON ALERT AMID TENSIONS
By Andrew Borowiec

Washington Times
March 19 2007

NICOSIA, Cyprus — Turkey has put its army on alert to stave off
any attacks by Kurdish rebels during a spring festival beset by
unprecedented political problems this week.

The crisis includes a widening rift between the military commanders
and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, warnings of more attacks by
Kurdish extremists and a rising nationalist fervor that is worrying
Turkey’s European partners.

Complicating the task of the Erdogan government is the possibility
of strained relations with the United States over the prospect of a
separate Kurdish state in northern Iraq and the threat that the U.S.

Congress might brand the World War I killings of Armenians by Turkey’s
Ottoman rulers as genocide.

Turkish press reports have said the volume of problems is unprecedented
in Turkey’s modern history.

Military leaders have warned that regardless of Turkey’s application
for membership in the European Union, the army will remain the ultimate
guardian of the republic.

At the same time, Gen. Ilker Basbug, the commander of land forces,
reaffirmed Turkey’s right to send its troops to Iraq in pursuit of
Kurdish rebels waging a 32-year war for independence.

Against such a background, most of Turkey’s 10 million Kurds prepared
to celebrate Norooz, a spring festival that is also observed in Iran
and Afghanistan.

The guerrilla Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), the main fighting force
of the Kurdish opposition, has threatened terrorist attacks over the
holiday, particularly against the country’s thriving tourist resorts.

A number of Kurdish politicians, including members of the legally
recognized Democratic Society Party, have been rounded up for
interrogation. In the predominantly Kurdish area of Diyarbakir in
southwestern Turkey, the authorities refused to grant permission
for festivals.

In the weeks leading up to the holiday, the Turkish political scene
was marred by growing tension between the senior military cadres and
Mr. Erdogan, increasingly accused by the army of Islamic tendencies.

In 1999, the army was instrumental in removing from power Prime
Minister Necmettin Erbakan, who was known for his political commitment
to militant Islam.

Although Mr. Erdogan has never indicated any intention of abandoning
Turkey’s secular system, the military and secularist circles resent
his appointments of Islamic politicians to government posts as well
as the fact that his wife wears a head scarf in public buildings,
which is banned by law.

Mr. Erdogan has been highly critical of a planned resolution in
Congress to recognize the 1915 Armenian massacres as genocide. "I am
worried that such a resolution would cast a shadow over our strategic
partnership," he said.

The Bush administration also fears damage to its relations with
Turkey, a critical NATO partner in one of the most unstable areas of
the world. Successive Turkish governments have refused to acknowledge
any responsibility for the death of 1.5 million Armenians who were
accused of supporting Russia in its war with Turkey.

$5mil Total Amount of Approved Crediting of Renewable Power System

Total Amount of Approved Projects on Crediting of Renewable Power System of `
Cascade Credit’ UMC Exceeded $5 Mln

Arminfo
2007-03-18 01:36:00

The total amount of approved projects on crediting of the renewable
energy of the "Cascade Credit" Universal Mortgage Company (UMC) made
up $5.084,0 thsd. As the press-service of the "Cascade Capital
Holdings" told ArmInfo, as of March 16, 10 projects were submitted to
the Credit Committee of "Cascade Credit" CJSC, 9 of which have been
approved. The sum of the given credits makes up $1.314,6 thsd.

The "Cascade Credit" Mortgage Company, in cooperation with the
Renewable Energy and Energy Saving Fund and the European Bank for
Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), participates in a renewable
energy crediting program in Armenia. Since November, 2006, the Company
has been granting credits for construction and renewal of small energy
objects, of small hydropower plants, in particular. "In 2005, the
World Bank and the EBRD were searching a partner in Armenia that would
be ready to take an active part in the financing of a small energy in
Armenia. The Cafesjian Family Foundation, established by an American
of the Armenian origin Gerard Cafesjian, has become such a
partner. Earlier, he had founded a "Cascade Capital" financial group
and invested $3 mln in a small energy crediting via a "Cascade Credit"
subsidiary. The Renewable Energy and Energy Saving Fund has granted
$5 mln and the EBRD has given $7 mln", the Executive Director of the
"Cascade Credit" Garegin Gevorgian said.

In an undertime, the "Cascade Credit" has succeeded to gather a group
of specialists and develop a product that meets the demands of both
the investors and the potential borrowers. According to G. Gevorgian,
the Company succeeded to agree with the partners and the investors on
unprecedentedly low interest rates, that indicates not only the
attractiveness of the Program for potential borrowers but also the
concentration of the Company’s efforts on a long-term development of
economy and not on the fast profits.

The "Cascade Credit" renders a financing at an annual rate of
LIBOR+7.5% that presently makes up about 13%. The borrowers pay 0.3%
of annual for the approved but not used part of the credit. In case of
giving a credit, the borrowers also pay a nonrecurrent fee at the rate
of 0.6% of the credit sum. "We carry out a flexible mortgaging policy
that is based on a stage-by-stage grow of the mortgaging assurance
volume, as well as a diversity of mortgage kinds. 240,000 drams are
levied for consideration of the credit application", the Exec Director
said.

To note, the "Cascade Credit" UMC is part of the Cascade Capital
Holdings. It also includes the Cascade Bank, the Cascade Bank
Georgia, the "Cascade Equity Managers" Capital Control Company, the
"Cascade Insurance" Insurance Company and the "Cascade Investments"
Investment Company.

Projections De Films Armeniens Ce Soir Au Chapeau-Rouge

PROJECTIONS DE FILMS ARMENIENS CE SOIR AU CHAPEAU-ROUGE

Le Telegramme
15 mars 2007 jeudi

L’association Gros Plan et le centre d’art contemporain Le Quartier
consacrent une soiree au cineaste armenien Artavazd Pelechian
aujourd’hui a 18 h 30 et 20 h 30, aux Studios du Chapeau-Rouge, a
Quimper. En presence du realisateur et comedien Serge Avedikian et
en echo a l’exposition " D’Armenie " presentee au Quartier.

Quatre courts-metrages d’Artavazd Pelechian.

" Au debut/Nacalo " (1967) consacre au 50 e anniversaire de la
Revolution d’octobre ; " Nous/My " (1969), a propos du peuple
armenien, son genocide mais aussi " le caractère intolerable de
toute animosite nationale " ; " Les Habitants/Obitateli " (1970)
alerte sur le fait que " les agressions de l’homme contre la nature
menacent son equilibre naturel " ; " Les Saisons/Vremena Goda "
(1972), une vision cosmogonique de l’Armenie et du monde. A 20 h 30.

" Retourner ".

Documentaire de Serge Avedikian (2006). Serge Avedikian est ne a
Yerevan, en Armenie sovietique en 1955. Comedien au theâtre et au
cinema (" Le Pull-over rouge ", " La Diagonale du fou ", etc.),
il cree en 1988 sa societe de production pour realiser des films
documentaires ou de fiction. Il connaît Artavazd Pelechian depuis de
nombreuses annees. A 18 h 30.

Informations complementaires sur le site ou au
02.98.53.74.74.

–Boundary_(ID_DeAlLNyIMfwcmOb W1ncqgA)–

www.gros-plan.org