May 22 Birthday Highlight in History

Today in History – May 22

.c The Associated Press

Today is Sunday, May 22, the 142nd day of 2005. There are 223 days
left in the year.

Today’s Birthdays Highlight in History:

Today’s Birthdays: Movie reviewer Judith Crist is 83. Singer Charles
Aznavour is 81. Actor Michael Constantine is 78. Conductor Peter Nero
is 71. Actor-director Richard Benjamin is 67. Actor Frank Converse is
67. Actor Michael Sarrazin is 65. Former CNN anchor Bernard Shaw is
65. Actress Barbara Parkins is 63. Songwriter Bernie Taupin is
55. Actor-producer Al Corley is 49. Singer Morrissey is 46. Country
musician Dana Williams (Diamond Rio) is 44. Rock musician Jesse
Valenzuela is 43. Rhythm-and-blues singer Johnny Gill (New Edition) is
39. Rock musician Dan Roberts (Crash Test Dummies) is 38. Model Naomi
Campbell is 35. Actress Alison Eastwood is 33. Singer Donell Jones is
32. Actress A.J. Langer is 31.

Thought for Today: “One of the greatest pains to human nature is the
pain of a new idea.” – Walter Bagehot, English editor and economist
(1826-1877).

05/21/05 20:00 EDT

Kocharian, Aznavour Attend Concert of Gary Kesayan Jazz Quartet

ROBERT KOCHARIAN, CHARLES AZNAVOUR ATTEND CONCERT OF GARY KESAYAN JAZZ
QUARTET CONCERT

YEREVAN, May 27 (Noyan Tapan). RA President Robert Kocharian and
world famous French-Armenian singer Charles Aznavour attended the May
27 concert of the American Gary Kesayan jazz quartet in Yerevan. Gary
Kesayan’s music is a new step in jazz. He uses new harmonic solutions,
novelle forms and inovative methods of improvisational phraseology.
The repertoire of the quartet consists of music written by Gary
Kesayan who is also the organ player and pianist of the quartet.

Catholicos Congratulates Armenians on Day of 1st Republic

CATHOLICOS OF ALL ARMENIANS CONGRATULATES ARMENIAN PEOPLE ON DAY OF
FIRST REPUBLIC CELEBRATED MAY 28

YEREVAN, MAY 27. ARMINFO. His Holiness Garegin II Catholicos of All
Armenians congratulated Armenian people on the Day of the First
Republic of Armenia celebrated on May 28.

As ARMINFO was informed in the press-service of the Mother See of Holy
Etchimadzin, the massage of Supreme Patriarch says that this day the
Armenian people celebrates victories gained in 1918 at Sardarapat,
Vanadzor and Aparan. In 2005, the Day of the First Republic coincides
with the Day of discharge of St. Gregory the Illuminator from the
monastery of Khor Virap, celebrated by the Armenian Apostolic
Church. It is notably that a round dance around Aragats Mountain,
timed to this holiday, will express the aspiration of people for
unity, and their spirit had always led them to victories, the message
says. -r-

BAKU: Turkey & Georgia stand for quick & peaceful settlement of NK

Azerbaijan News Service
May 24 2005

TURKEY AND GEORGIA STAND FOR QUICK AND PEACEFUL SETTLEMENT OF DAQLIQ
QARABAQ CONFLICT
2005-05-24 21:18

Turkey and Georgia want quick solution of Armenia-Azerbaijan Daqliq
Qarabaq conflict by peaceful ways, stated Ahmad Nejdet Sezer and
Mikhail Saakashivili, presidents of Turkey and Georgia in their
separate meetings with Ilham Aliyev, president of Azerbaijan. Meeting
first with Georgian president, president Ilham Aliyev called pumping
of Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan main oil export pipeline historical event for
South Caucasus region. This is a stirring example of political will
of two countries and mutual belief. Construction of BTC -one of the
biggest projects of the world implementation of which was difficult
to imagine is coming to an end, said Ilham Aliyev. Mikhail
Saakashivili in his turn stressed the importance of the pipeline said
this pipeline is a guarantee for peace in the region. Each time we
come to Azerbaijan we see cloudless sky and it make us happy. This is
a historical event in deed. This project considers broad peace
perspectives for the region, stated Georgian president. President
Ilham Aliyev gave presents to both presidents on the occasion of
pumping BTC.

Armenians march near U. Texas for recognition of genocide

Armenians march near U. Texas for recognition of genocide
By Parth Gejji, Daily Texan; SOURCE: U. Texas

Daily Texan via U-Wire
University Wire
May 3, 2005 Tuesday

AUSTIN, Texas — Some came in buses. Some came in cars. Some ventured
forth from San Antonio, others from Houston and Dallas; both young
and old alike. They all gathered in the hall of the First United
Methodist Church in downtown Austin on a Saturday afternoon, not
far from the University of Texas. They were there to be heard; to
commemorate the anniversary of a wound that still hasn’t healed,
left many dead and embittered the relations between two nations.

On April 23, nearly 400 Armenian-Americans marched to the Capitol to
commemorate 90 years since the deaths of many Armenians at the hands
of the Ottoman Empire. This event is sometimes called the Armenian
genocide. The protesters called for an official acknowledgment, by
both Turkey and the United States, that the events that took place
during the year of World War I should be labeled as a genocide.

“Our biggest impact is [that] we are able to raise the consciousness
of the people [about] what happened in the past,” said Father Vazken
Movsesian, a member of the Armenian Church Youth Ministries.

The protesters’ cause is not a new one. Yet, the march on April 23
marked another attempt by Armenian-Americans to change U.S. policy
regarding the acknowledgment of the death of Armenians in World War
I as a genocide. Generations of advocates have called for a Turkish
admission of the genocide, but the government continues to refute its
existence, which has caused years of uneasiness between the Armenian
and Turkish people.

The events of 1915-1922

Armenia, a country measuring slightly smaller than the state of
Maryland, neighbors Turkey. As a former state in the Soviet Union,
it had a troubled history during World War I when it was part of the
Ottoman Empire.

The Armenian National Institute, an organization based in Washington,
D.C., that is committed to advocating the acknowledgment of the
events as genocide, claims on its Web site that during World War I,
“The great bulk of the Armenian population was forcibly removed from
Armenia and Anatolia to Syria, where the vast majority was sent into
the desert to die of thirst and hunger. Large numbers of Armenians
were methodically massacred throughout the Ottoman Empire.”

The death toll estimate for the years of the claimed genocide is 1.2
million people, said Dr. Levon Chorbajian, professor of sociology at
the University of Massachusetts at Lowell and academic chair of the
Zoryan Institute, an organization that documents Armenian history.

Estimates aside, not everyone agrees that the Armenian deaths between
1915 and 1922 were part of a planned genocide on the part of the
Turkish government.

“We admit that the Armenians living in the Ottoman empire during
that period lost their lives,” said Emriye Ormanci, vice consul at
the Turkish Consulate in Houston. “[But] it was not a genocide.”

Narguiz Abbaszade, executive director of Assembly of Turkish American
Associations, an organization that advocates Turkish interests,
claims that for now there is simply not enough evidence to support
Armenian claims.

“This is a historical and legal debate that needs to be studied,”
she said.

Advocates of the Turkish community argue that Armenians died during
their relocation from one part of the Empire to another — not during
planned executions by the military.

“The Ottoman Empire was fighting with the Russians on the eastern
front, and also on the western front they were fighting with [the]
British and [the] French,” said Ormanci.

In 1915, Russia attempted to invade the Ottoman Empire from the east,
enlisting the help of Armenians to fight the Turks. As a result, the
Ottoman Empire decided to relocate the Armenian population to Syria,
said Ormanci. Armenians claim that this relocation was the first step
in a series of events that would become known as the Armenian genocide.

A lecture on disagreement

Ninety years later, on Friday, April 22, Dr. Chorbajian gave a lecture
entitled “The Importance of the Armenian Genocide: Then and Now,”
at the invitation of the Armenian Cultural Association, a UT student
organization.

As he prepared to talk about the Armenian people and their legacy,
a handful of listeners filtered into the Texas Union Theater.

“I just kind of saw it randomly, and I have a friend who is Armenian,”
said Thomas Hjelm, a religious studies senior. “There’s a lot of
things I don’t know about [the Armenian genocide].”

As the start of the lecture neared, a small group of Turkish students
gathered outside, handing out fliers that presented an opposing view
of the events during World War I.

“I wanted to express that the facts are different,” said Selim Erdogan,
one of the members of the executive committee of the Turkish University
Students Association, also a UT student organization. Erdogan wanted
to make sure that their voices would be heard, he said.

Professor Chorbanjian disagreed with the Turkish University Students
Association’s version of the events.

“[The] Armenian genocide is a documented historical fact,” he said.
Missionaries and diplomats from America and England who traveled to
the Ottoman Empire, documented the existence of the Armenian genocide,
said Chorbajian.

“It was much more directed and willful,” he said. “The plan of the
marches from the beginning was the intent of killing.”

Marching for awareness

One day later, protesters lined up in silence as a motorcade of
gleaming police bikes rode ahead of them. Little children carried
banners in their hands and walked cautiously in front of the adults.
Everyone walked silently as the march began. Slowly people started
singing a song in Armenian. Then came the chants: “1915 … Never
Again” and “We need justice now, we need justice now!”

Although they are not Armenian, Daniel and Allison Haynes, a couple
from Waco, participated in the march. After their Armenian friends
told them about the events of World War I the Haynes took up the
Armenian cause as well.

“I never heard of it growing up or in history books,” said Daniel,
referring to the Armenian deaths. “I think awareness is the most
important thing.”

Ed Bodont, an elderly man from Austin, felt compelled to honor the
memory of his Armenian parents by marching.

“It’s a recognition that there are a lot of people that have suffered
atrocities,” he said.

When the crowd reached the Capitol, the protesters quieted down as
they moved to the steps of the entrance. Ken Maranian, chairman of
the Texas Joint Committee for the 90th Anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide, started the event.

“I can’t tell you how moved I was to see you,” he said, addressing
the marchers. “We are hoping we can raise some awareness of genocide,”
said Maranian, in an interview. “It’s one of those things that needs
attention; 90 years later it’s [still] not recognized as genocide.”

Maranian was followed by a series of speakers, including Chorbajian
and Father Movsesian.

Advocates of the Armenian community’s cause claim that reconciliation
between the two countries will not be possible without a Turkish
effort to affirm the Armenian understanding of the events, Chorbajian
and Movsesian said.

“There does need to be an acknowledgment so Armenia and Turkey can
move forward,” said Chorbajian. “It’s a human rights issue.”

Until recently, there was little pressure on Turkey to issue such
an acknowledgment because of its influence on the United States,
which holds Turkey as a key military friend, Chorbajian said.

State of affairs

The Turkish government may soon adopt new a policy towards the
Armenian killings. Turkey, which is applying for membership to
the European Union, is feeling increased pressure from EU members
to formally acknowledge the deaths of the Armenians as genocide,
according to Maranian.

“Nine of the EU countries have recognized the genocide,” he said.

Particular attention is being paid by Greece, a prominent member of
the EU. Many Greeks in Turkey were expelled from the Ottoman Empire
around the time of the Armenian relocation, said Chorbajian.

“Thirty-eight states have properly commemorated the Armenian genocide,”
said Peter Abajian, deputy executive director of the Armenian Assembly
of America, a group that promotes public understanding and awareness
of Armenian issues.

Many lawmakers in Congress have also been lobbying to raise awareness
of Armenian interests.

In a letter to President George W. Bush, Rep. Frank Pallone Jr.,
D-N.J., and Rep. Joe Knollenberg, R-Mich., co-chairmen of the
Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues, urged him to formally use the
term genocide when he refers to the events, writing: “The United States
must never allow crimes against humanity to pass without remembrance
and condemnation.”

Many U.S. lawmakers are slowly changing their views on the issue.
Last year, only 22 senators and 169 representatives signed similar
petitions. This year 32 senators and 179 representatives were in
support of such a resolution, said Abajian.

Other lawmakers suggest that the problem does not lie on the side
of the Turkish government. Rep. Ed Whitfield, R-Ky., and Rep. Robert
Wexler, D-Fla., issued a letter to Congress commending recent steps
taken by the Turkish government.

“We are deeply encouraged that Prime Minister Erdogan and his
government are taking a historic step by reaching out to Armenia,
calling for open, structured, introspective and result-oriented
dialogue on difficult issues involving Turks and Armenians.”

They were referring to the prime minster’s recent proposal to
Armenian President Robert Kocharian to allow each country to open up
its archives to the other, an act that would allows scholars from
both countries to research the accuracy of the claims of genocide,
said Ormanci.

Hatred felt

“We really want to have good relations with the Armenian people,
because we have a common history,” said Ormanci. “[But] there are
certain issues that have to be solved.”

Progress doesn’t seem possible until there is some reconciliation of
the issue of the Armenian genocide.

As the meeting on the Capitol neared its end, Selim Erdogan felt
disappointed by the hate he felt from the protesters in the crowd,
who compared his efforts to those of Holocaust deniers.

“It’s not just that you hated us. It’s not just that you killed us.
Apparently, you still hate us,” said Maranian, referring to Turkey
insistence that no genocide occurred during the Ottoman Empire.

Villiers remplit le Palais des Sports pour dire non a la Constitutio

Agence France Presse
21 mai 2005 samedi 4:33 PM GMT

Villiers remplit le Palais des Sports pour dire non a la Constitution
(PAPIER GENERAL)

Par Alexandra TURCAT

PARIS 21 mai 2005

Le president du Mouvement pour la France (MPF) Philippe de Villiers
a rassemble quelque 5.000 personnes pour dire non a la Constitution
europeenne, remplissant la grande salle du Palais des Sports, une
reussite pour ce modeste parti souverainiste qui fait aussi bien que
Nicolas Sarkozy dix jours plus tôt.

Le president de l’UMP, actuellement le plus grand parti francais,
avait, lui aussi, rempli la salle, mais pour la campagne du oui a
la Constitution.

Philippe de Villiers s’est peniblement fraye un chemin dans la salle,
sur une musique du groupe de pop-rock “Europe”, tandis que la foule,
dopee par les derniers sondages qui donnent le non gagnant, scandait:
“on va gagner, on va gagner!” Il s’est ensuite assis au premier rang
aux côtes de sa femme et de la plus jeune de ses filles.

Arpentant la tribune de long en large, Philippe de Villiers a voulu
“parler avec ses tripes”, puisque “le oui, c’est les cerveaux”.
“Notre non, ce n’est pas le non des elites, c’est le non du peuple
francais, de ceux qui resistent”, a-t-il declare.

Reprenant l’un de ses principaux arguments, il a souligne que “c’est
aussi le non de l’honneur des Armeniens de France”, en s’adressant
a une importante delegation armenienne qui criait “justice pour le
peuple armenien”. “Nous n’accepterons jamais que la Turquie entre dans
l’Europe a cause de vous”, leur a declare M. de Villiers, tandis que de
nombreux militants brandissaient des panneaux “Non a l’Europe turque”.

“Le non sauvera l’Europe parce que c’est le non qui permettra de
faire l’Europe europeenne, independante et protectrice”, a-t-il dit.
Se felicitant des sondages, il a neanmoins incite son auditoire a
“convaincre, convaincre” les “hesitants” jusqu’au dernier jour.

“plan D”

“L’enjeu, c’est la survie de la France en tant que nation et l’identite
de l’Europe en tant que civilisation: que vive la France dans l’Europe
des peuples libres”, a-t-il proclame, en soulignant que le francais
etait “la langue du non alignement sur la mondialisation marchande”.

“Raffarin a dit (…) +si le non l’emporte ce sera la crise
economique+: Ben retourne-toi mon vieux!”, a-t-il ironiquement lance au
Premier ministre. “Si le oui gagne, ce sera le plan D: delocalisations,
derèglementations, deferlante migratoire”, a-t-il affirme.

Le meeting s’etait ouvert sur les interventions de deputes europeens
souverainistes siègeant avec le MPF dans le groupe Independance et
Democratie au Parlement europeen, encourages par une foule qui huait
les noms de l’ancien president de la Commission de l’UE Jacques
Delors ou de l’ancien president et père du traite europeen, Valery
Giscard d’Estaing.

Mais c’est le nom du president Jacques Chirac qui s’est d’abord
attire la bronca la plus importante. Un peu plus tard, ce sont au
contraire des rires et des applaudissements qui accompagnèrent un
“clip” reprenant des extraits d’interventions anciennes de M. Chirac
lorsqu’il denoncait “la bureaucratie bruxelloise”, “l’Europe mollusque”
ou affirmait: “je suis nationaliste parce que je suis patriote”.

Côte gaulliste, l’UMP Nicolas Dupont-Aignan, president de Debout
la Republique, a ete acclame tandis que le depute souverainiste
Paul-Marie Couteaux invoquait la “resistance” des partisans du non
“qui s’elèvent encore une fois contre le totalitarisme”.

Le jeune numero deux du MPF, Guillaume Peltier, a souleve la salle
en l’interpellant d’un: “Debout les moutons noirs, les imbeciles,
les paumes, les ouvriers, les paysans, debout la France!”.

–Boundary_(ID_jFaNdrywFGogtQYQEKWLVQ)–

Turkischer Regierungschef: Armenien soll seine Archive offnen

Agence France Presse — German
Dienstag, 17. Mai 2005

Turkischer Regierungschef: Armenien soll seine Archive offnen

Warschau, 17. Mai

Im Streit um das Massaker an hunderttausenden Armeniern durch das
Osmanische Reich im Ersten Weltkrieg hat der turkische
Ministerpräsident Recep Tayyip Erdogan die armenische Regierung
aufgefordert, ihre Archive zugängig zu machen. Die Frage des
“angeblichen Volkermords” musse von Historikern und anderen
Sachverständigen gepruft werden, sagte Erdogan am Dienstag beim
Europarats-Gipfel in Warschau.

Grundlage dabei mussten “Dokumente, Schriftstucke, Realitäten” sein
und nicht die Tätigkeit von Leuten, die Lobby-Arbeit bei Abgeordneten
betreiben, fugte Erdogan hinzu.

Er bekräftigte zugleich seine Absicht, in der Turkei eine
Historikerkommission mit der Frage zu befassen. Wenn deren Bericht
vorliege, werde die Turkei eine Entscheidung treffen. Der armenische
Präsident Robert Kotscharian hatte die Turkei am Vortag in seiner
Rede vor den Staats- und Regierungschefs und Außenministern der 46
Europarats-Länder abermals aufgeordert, den “Volkermord an den
Armeniern” durch das damalige Osmanische Reich anzuerkennen. Dies
lehnt die Turkei ab.

Der Deutsche Bundestag berät seit Ende April uber eine Entschließung,
in der die Turkei aufgefordert wird, sich mit Blick auf den Tod
hunderttausender Armenier ihrer Geschichte zu stellen. Der Begriff
des Volkermordes wird aber vermieden. Armenien und ein Großteil der
internationalen Offentlichkeit gehen von einem Volkermord mit mehr
als einer Million Toten aus. Die Turkei spricht dagegen von einer
“kriegsbedingten Zwangsumsiedlung” und setzt die Opferzahl wesentlich
niedriger an.

–Boundary_(ID_KR58ISeMbsE6wRJ93mESTA)–

Armenian opposition paper angry over “humiliating” Russian attitude

Armenian opposition paper angry over “humiliating” Russian attitude

Aravot, Yerevan
20 May 05

Text of Tigran Avetisyan report by Armenian newspaper Aravot on 20
May headlined “Worse than outpost”

The statement by the speaker of the Russian Federation State Duma,
Boris Gryzlov, saying that Armenia has recently turned into an
“outpost” of Russia has made many proud and all normal citizens of
Armenia angry about this humiliating attitude.

At present, Armenia may be considered to be not only an outpost but
also a recipient of Moscow’s military rubbish [obsolete equipment]. The
chief of the Russian General Staff, Army Gen Yuriy Baluyevskiy,
said on Thursday [19 May] that part of the Russian military hardware
deployed in Georgia will be stationed in Armenia. “This will allow us
to adjust the timetable for the withdrawal of the bases from Georgia
to four years,” he clarified.

As you can see, Russia is doing to Armenia, in this case to its
territory, what it likes. Nobody from the Armenian elite says anything
and there is nothing strange about this. Moscow treats Yerevan just
like the Armenian authorities treat the population. There is nothing
strange in this. Putting Armenian territory at Russia’s disposal is
the price that the Armenian authorities have to pay to the Kremlin
for being loyal to it.

All this is so humiliating against a backdrop of the latest events
in the region. Georgia, as you see, is doing everything to force
Moscow to withdraw its military bases from the country as soon as
possible. Tbilisi was not at all frightened by the strong threats by
Russian high-ranking officials made in the State Duma. [Georgian
President] Saakashvili’s administration, with US support, is
gradually implementing its plan for the withdrawal of the Russian
military bases. The result is evident: Moscow has already agreed to
a four-year term.

And the deadline will be met at the expense of Armenia’s political
reputation.

Most Russians consider Belarus best friend and ally – poll

Most Russians consider Belarus best friend and ally – poll

ITAR-TASS News Agency
May 16, 2005 Monday

MOSCOW, May 16 — Thirty-six percent of Russians view Belarus as their
best friend and ally, according to a public opinion poll conducted in
late April among 1,500 respondents by the Bashkirova and Partners Co.

Germany with 19.6 percent and Ukraine with 15.8 percent rank second
and third respectively in the group of allies, followed by France
(11.3 percent), China (9.5 percent), Great Britain (7.5 percent) and
the United States (7.3). Armenia (4.5 percent), Italy (4.3 percent)
and Kazakhstan (3.5) failed to overcome the 5-percent rating hurdle.

The United States with 33.6 percent of the votes tops the countries,
which “have unfriendly and even hostile stand towards Russia”,
followed by former Soviet republics – Latvia (19.5 percent), Georgia
(16.1 percent), and Lithuania (14.9 percent).

Social scientists believe that a negative attitude is explained by
“the anti-Russian policy conducted by the countries” as well as by
the claims of Baltic leaders to reconsider the results of World War II.

This group also include Afghanistan (9.3 percent), Estonia and Iraq
(9 percent), Ukraine (8 percent), Iran and China (8 percent).

Experts pointed out that some countries are found in both ratings.
Around 14.1 percent of the polled believe that Russia has no friends,
while 6.5 percent are certain that Russia has no enemies.

Armenia Allocates Funds For Sick With Hemophilia

ARMENIA ALLOCATES FUNDS FOR SICK WITH HEMOPHILIA

YEREVAN, MAY 19. ARMINFO. In September 2004 the Armenian Government
intends to purchase a preparation contributing to coagulation of
blood for the sick with hemophilia. Armenian Health Minister Norayr
Davtyan informed ARMINFO that the purchase of the preparation was
necessitated by the agreement signed by the Armenian Government and
the World Federation of Hemophilia in 2003.

The minister says that the budget will allocate $150,000 for purchase
of 50,000 doses of the expensive preparation “factor 8.” The World
Federation of Hemophilia (WFH) will supplied the remaining necessary
quantity of the drug.

Talking to ARMINFO, Vice President of the Armenian Society of
Hemophilia David Khanzratyan said that WFH having 106 member-states
has been supplying Armenia with the preparation for blood coagulation
since 2001. According to official data, 260 sick with hemophilia reside
in Armenia, however, their real number is 190 people, as many of them
leave the country seeking better treatment, Khanzratyan says. To
fully satisfy the need of the preparation for the sick in Armenia,
150,000 doses of “factor 8” is to be purchased ( $400 per 1 dose). He
stated that a center of hemophilia and laboratory for determination of
blood coagulation factors will open in September at Yerevan Institute
of Blood Transfusion.

To note, hemophilia is a male disease, females are just carriers of
the hemophilia gene. According to the world statistics, one of 10,000
people are sick with hemophilia.