Amendments to RA constitution discussed in NA session

AMENDMENTS TO RA CONSTITUTION DISCUSSED IN NA SESSION
By Nana Petrosian

AZG Armenian Daily #081, 05/05/2005

Home

A session at RA National Assembly yesterday discussed the first draft
constitution put forward by coalitional parties (Republican Party,
Armenian Revolutionary Federation and Rule of Law). But soon after the
talks launched, Tigran Torosian, vice-speaker of NA, had to announce
that the discussions will be postponed for a short while on request of
the authors of the draft. Deputies spent the “short while” discussing
amendments to the law on holidays and commemorative days. There was
a suggestion to include the day of Sumgait pogroms (Feb. 28) in the
list of commemorative days, which was accepted unanimously.

Soon after, the parliament returned to the draft constitution.

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1) Davis Warns of Strict Measures in Case of Ceasefire Violation
2) ARF Youth Reacts to Absurd Letter
3) Premier Carr Meets European Armenian Community Leader
4) Switzerland Confirms Legal Case against Turkish Professor
5) Aliyev Avoids Summit in Protest against Armenian ‘Aggression’

1) Davis Warns of Strict Measures in Case of Ceasefire Violation

MOSCOW (Armenpress)–Council of Europe Secretary General Terry Davis spoke
sternly about consequences in the case of cease-fire agreement violations on
the Armenian-Azeri contact zone, reported “Prime” news agency.
Davis warned that if any of the conflicting sides resorts to military
actions, the Council of Europe would undertake strict measures without waiting
for the decision of the Parliamentary Assembly of Council of Europe (PACE). He
added that the Council of Europe is willing to help the OSCE Minsk Group in
regulating the Karabagh conflict.
“The Karabagh conflict must be solved in a way beneficial both for
Armenia and Azerbaijan,” said the Secretary General.

2) ARF Youth Reacts to Absurd Letter

YEREVAN (Yerkir)–Reacting to a letter issued by a group of students calling
themselves the Armenian Youth Party, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation’s
Youth Organization and the Nigol Aghbalian Student Union issued a statement on
May 3 stating, “Nobody has the right to violate the rights of the Armenian
people on behalf of the Armenian youth.”
According to reports in April 30 issues of the Hayastani Hanrapetutiun
and Aravot newspapers, a conference organized by the Armenian Youth Party on
April 29, passed a decision to send a letter to Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayip Erdogan. The letter, in particular, states: “Mr. Prime Minister: Yes,
the
Armenian Genocide did happen but today’s Turkey is not responsible for the
Genocide.”
“Protesting some of the views expressed in the letter, we see it as our
duty to once again underscore that today’s Turkey must not only officially
recognize and condemn the Armenian Genocide, but also compensate the Armenian
people. The issue is the restoration of our rights and the justice,” the
statement concluded.

3) Premier Carr Meets European Armenian Community Leader

SYDNEY (EAFJD)–The Premier of New South Wales (NSW) Bob Carr on Tuesday met
with Chair of the European Armenian Federation of Justice and Democracy
(EAFJD)
Hilda Tchoboian, who is visiting the city to participate in local
commemorations marking the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide.
Carr was joined by the Chair of the Community Relations Commission, Stepan
Kerkyasharian, and Chair of the Armenian Genocide Commemorative Committee, Dr.
Tro Kortian.
Discussions focused on commemoration activities for the 90th anniversary of
the Armenian genocide and issues affecting the Armenian community.
“I welcome Tchoboian’s visit to Australia and heightening awareness of the
Armenian genocide,” Carr said. “I join with the Armenian Australian community
in marking this year’s important anniversary, and the call for justice,
acknowledgement and remembrance.”
The Federation aims to act as a link and advocate between European
Institutions and the Armenian communities through the European Union;
provide a
better understanding of Armenian related political and strategic issues to the
European Union; and foster the European Union’s values of tolerance and
dialogue in Armenian related issues.
Since 2000, Tchoboian has been a consultant to the UN High Commissioner on
Human Rights. She is also the President of the Govcas Center for Law and
Conflict Resolution and publisher of the “Govcas Bulletin”.

4) Switzerland Confirms Legal Case against Turkish Professor

ANKARA (Combined Sources)–Switzerland confirmed opening a legal investigation
against Turkish Institute of History (TTK) Chairman Prof. Dr. Yusuf Halacoglu
about his statement on the Armenian genocide.
Swiss authorities placed the Turkish professor on their red list for his
claims that there was no Armenian genocide by Ottoman Turkey.
The step comes after Yusuf Halacoglu’s insistent and public rejection last
year of the Armenian genocide, when he said that Armenians, in fact, killed
Ottomans, and claimed that “many studies had been conducted in the archives of
several countries, and mostly in that of the Ottoman Empire, but have not
turned up a single document or record mentioning genocide.”
Releasing a statement on Monday, the Swiss Embassy in Ankara said, “It is
true
that a complaint against Prof. Halacoglu was deposited by a third
party–not by
an official state prosecutor–with the competent local legal authorities of
Winterthur after Prof. Halacoglu delivered there in spring of last year a
speech on the Armenian issue.”
“According to Swiss legal procedures, an investigation has to be opened after
the deposition of any complaint to clarify the facts. This investigation
against Prof. Halacoglu is still pending. In the context of this
investigation,
the local legal authorities of Winterthur have forwarded in a normal and
ordinary procedure an information request regarding the personal data of Prof.
Halacoglu via Interpol to the competent Turkish authorities,” it said.
The Swiss Embassy denied allegations that Prof. Halacoglu was condemned,
formally accused, or searched by the Swiss authorities.
Noting that local legal authorities in Winterthur had not yet decided whether
the complaint was acceptable or not, the Embassy said, “they need further
necessary information before they can take any decision in this case.”
“The Swiss government welcomes the proposal of the Turkish government that a
joint commission by Turkish and Armenian historians is looking into this
issue,” the Embassy added.
The Armenian genocide issue has overshadowed Turkey-Switzerland relations
from
time to time. The dispute comes at a time when relations between the two
countries appeared to be calming down after a period that was marked by
tensions over the Armenian genocide.
The canton of Vaud’s parliament voted to recognize the Armenian genocide,
leading to Ankara withdrawing an invitation for Swiss Foreign Minister
Micheline Calmy-Rey to visit Turkey in September 2003.
A similar vote on the Armenian matter by the House of Representatives three
months later drew fresh condemnation from Turkey.
Calmy-Rey finally made the trip to Ankara at the end of March this year,
which
resulted in the two countries agreeing to disagree over the Armenian issue.
Winterthur’s prosecuting magistrate Andrej Gnehm also said on Monday that he
had asked Interpol to provide him with information about the historian.
Insisting that that Halacoglu be interrogated to decide whether to go further
with the investigation, Gnehm added that denying the fact of the Armenian
genocide is equivalent to denying the Holocaust.
Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul told Turkey’s Hurriyet newspaper on
Monday that the decision by the canton of Zurich and some European parliaments
to “forbid the rejection of the Armenian genocide” was a “terrible mistake”.
Gul added that Zurich’s inquiry was also against the European
Agreement on Human Rights and that Europe was “trampling on its own
foundations” by stopping the freedom of expression.
The Turkish Foreign Ministry said on Monday that it had summoned the Swiss
ambassador to Turkey, Walter Gyger, to explain the move. The Turkish
embassy in
the Swiss capital, Bern, has also protested to the Swiss government.
It added, however, that Bern and Ankara were “closely collaborating” and that
Switzerland had been cooperative over the matter.

5) Aliyev Avoids Summit in Protest against Armenian ‘Aggression’

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)–Azeri president Ilham Aliyev announced his decision not to
attend an upcoming summit of former Soviet republics in protest against
“Armenian aggression” in Karabagh.
Aliyev announced on Monday that he will not take part in the May 8 summit in
Moscow of the Commonwealth of Independent States because it will coincide with
the 13th anniversary of one of the most serious Azeri setbacks in the 1991-94
Karabagh war. He said he will instead attend the May 9 ceremonies in Moscow
marking the 60th anniversary of Allied victory over Nazi Germany.
“The Azerbaijani president does not consider it appropriate to participate in
a meeting which will be attended by the president of an aggressor country,
Armenia, on the day when the [Karabagh] town of Shushi was seized by Armenian
occupying forces,” Aliyev’s press service was reported to state.
But Kocharian’s office dismissed this explanation, saying that Shushi was in
fact fully “liberated from Azerbaijani occupation” on May 9, 1992. “That
day is
officially marked every year in the republics of Armenia and
Nagorno-Karabakh,”
it said.
Once the cultural and political center of Karabagh Armenians, Shushi was
mainly populated by Azeris when the conflict broke out in 1988. Nestled on a
hilltop just 15 kilometers southwest of Stepanakert, it provided an ideal
position for Azeri troops that bombarded the Karabagh capital on an almost
daily basis during the initial stage of the war.
Shushi remained the only Azeri stronghold inside Karabagh when Armenian
forces
successfully won it back it 13 years ago. The town’s fall precipitated the
opening of a land corridor between Armenia and the disputed enclave which
proved vital for Armenian victory in the war.
The Moscow summit was seen as a possible occasion for a widely anticipated
meeting between Aliyev and Kocharian, which international mediators say could
yield a breakthrough in the Karabagh peace process. It is not clear if
Aliyev’s
decision made an Armenian-Azerbaijani summit in the Russian capital
impossible.

The two men could also meet in Warsaw on the sidelines of a Council of Europe
summit scheduled for May 16-17.
The US, Russian, and French mediators discussed preparations for the
Aliyev-Kocharian meeting during separate “proximity talks” with the Armenian
and Azerbaijani foreign ministers in London on April 17. They held a follow-up
meeting with Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov in Frankfurt on
April 27.

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BAKU: US Secretary of State C. Rice to visit Azerbaijan

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
May 3 2005

US SECRETARY OF STATE CONDOLEEZZA RICE TO VISIT AZERBAIJAN
[May 03, 2005, 11:18:26]

As it was already informed, on April 29, Minister of Foreign Affairs
of Azerbaijan Elmar Mammadyarov took part in the 3rd conference of
the Ministers of Foreign Affairs on democratic society in Chile.

Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan has addressed the Conference where 75
countries have been represented. In the report, he has noted that
transition to democracy in Azerbaijan and adherence to the common
values is a process, which not only opens opportunities for democratic
development, but also promotes serious challenges.

Mr. Mammadyarov has brought to attention of the participants of
conference that the Republic of Azerbaijan undertakes systematic and
purposeful steps for achievement of further progress in the field
of strengthening of democratic stability by means of independence
of courts, development of political culture and education, support
of civil society, increase of the responsibility and transparency in
society which serve protection of human rights.

As to regional cooperation, the Minister has expressed confidence that
expansion of cooperation among the GUUAM states, and also support of
efforts in this direction at the international level would stimulate
development of democratic processes in the mentioned countries,
and serve safety and stability in region.

Having touched the frozen conflicts existing in three states of GUUAM,
Elmar Mammadyarov has especially noted that infringement of territorial
integrity of these states threatens stability of region as a whole,
impedes realization of transport projects of global value.

The Minister also has emphasized that uncertainty in conflicts hampers
full-scale democratic establishment and have negative influence on
integration processes occurring now in Europe.

Informing participants of the Conference about the Armenia-Azerbaijan,
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Elmar Mammadyarov has noted that application
of force is not only infringement of the rules of behavior adopted
at the international level, but also ignoring of democratic norms
and principles as a whole.

Having emphasized that the respect for human rights serves as the
major criterion of democracy, the Minister has noted importance
of connection of uncontrollable territories to the states to which
they belong, restoration of the rights of refugees and internally
displaced people as a result of joint efforts of the states and the
international organizations, which have taken on intermediary mission.

Finally, as a result of statement of the representative of the
Azerbaijan concerning frozen conflicts, the final document has been
added one more item. It has been marked that with a view of overcoming
threat for democracy, the democratic society together with the regional
organizations should coordinate the common diplomatic strategy, show
special activity in the name of acceleration of the bilateral and
multilateral efforts directed on peaceful settlement of the heavy
and frozen conflicts in the world.

The same day, minister Elmar Mammadyarov within the framework of
Conference has met the state secretary the US Mrs. Condoleezza Rice and
had exchange of views on questions of the further development of the
American – Azerbaijani relations and strengthening of cooperation. Also
was discussed the question of visit of the USA high-ranking delegation
which will arrive to Azerbaijan for participation in opening ceremony
of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan MEP forthcoming on May 25, and cooperation
in power sector.

During the meeting, minister Elmar Mammadyarov has invited Mrs.
Condoleeza Rice to visit Azerbaijan. The USA Secretary of State has
accepted the invitation.

On May 1, Minister of Foreign Affairs Elmar Mammadyarov has come
back home.

Germany role is to reconcile Armenia and Turkey

GERMANY ROLE IS TO RECONCILE ARMENIA AND TURKEY

Pan Armenian News
03.05.2005 05:41

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Like other countries aspiring for accession to
the EU, Turkey should have all preconditions for that, noted Federal
Government Commissioner for Human Rights and Humanitarian Assistance
in the FRG Foreign Ministry, Co-Chair of Union/90 Green faction of
the German Bundestag Claudia Roth. In her words, the Armenian issue
is a rather important one and the investigation of one’s own history
should issue from the interests of Turkey itself. «The events of 1915
are undoubted a crime against humanity,» Claudia Roth noted. «We
Germans have a historical responsibility for the Holocaust and we know
how important it is to remember about it,» she noted. She hoped for
Turkey nevertheless to be «able to cancel the taboo and deal with
the problem of relations with Armenia.» She also reminded Germans
are concerned with the events of 1915. The military and political
leaders of the German Empire were informed of the occurrences in
Anatolia, however it did not intervene. She also said she was sure a
joint Armenian-Turkish Commission to investigate facts of the Armenian
Genocide should be formed, however in her words the Commission should
be indeed independent. «Germany’s role in the question comes to
promoting reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia,» Roth stated.

–Boundary_(ID_Zm04xLADfEKzibAHh7bzWg)–

Some PACE MPs wish to witness revolution in Armenia

SOME PACE MPs WISH TO WITNESS REVOLUTION IN ARMENIA

Pan Armenian News
03.05.2005 05:49

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Virtually everyone in Strasbourg is convinced that
processes expected within the period of the coming parliamentary
election in Azerbaijan will give cause for serious actions by the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, stated Armenian
Parliamentary Vice-Speaker Tigran Torosian. At the same time in his
words, a trend is still observed at the PACE, toward evening out the
positions of Azerbaijan and Armenia over certain items. Torosian also
noted that some PACE representatives, obviously inspired by the range
of “revolutions” do not conceal their wish to witness similar events
in Armenia, however the number of MPs convinced that such expectations
have no prospects is evidently larger, Regnum news agency reported.

Genocide Recognition – Most alarmig issue for Armenia people

Pan Armenian News

GENOCIDE RECOGNITION – MOST ALARMING ISSUE FOR ARMENIAN PEOPLE

30.04.2005 09:17

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The international recognition of the Armenian Genocide and
normalization of relations with Azerbaijan are the priority issues for the
Armenian government and people, Armenian Ambassador to Russia Armen Smbatian
stated in his online interview on OpenArmenia.com when commenting on
frequent reproaches addressed to the Armenian government on the absence of
precise program of RA development within the sphere of international
relations. Armen Smbatian noted that the Hay Dat (the Genocide recognition)
is the most alarming issue for the Armenian people. “You could witness the
great attention the world paid to the Genocide 90-th anniversary. And I
would like to point out to Russia’s attitude towards the issue”, the
Ambassador noted. As for the Nagorno Karabakh problem, Armenia’s position
underwent no changes. “Armenia will never tolerate infringement of its
national interests. It is necessary to search for a compromise admissible
both for Armenia and Azerbaijan”, he said.

Holy Land a challenge as pope reaches out to others while…

Holy Land a challenge as pope reaches out to others while supporting
beleaguered flock

AP Worldstream
May 01, 2005

STEVEN GUTKIN

Palestinian Christians have a particularly large cross to bear _ cut
off from land, restricted in movement, exposed to violence and often
unable to visit the sacred sites where Jesus once walked.

Can a new pope in Rome help ease their burden? Possibly, some faithful
say, but only if he can persuade people to begin seeing Christians in
the Middle East as a vulnerable minority.

The Holy Land _ revered as home to the ancient Jewish temples,
birthplace of Christ, site of Muhammad’s ascension to heaven _ is an
important testing ground for Benedict XVI’s stated goal of improving
ties between faiths.

Benedict’s predecessor, John Paul II, made great strides in that area,
but his focus on Christian-Jewish and Christian-Muslim relations
during an historic 2000 visit to the Holy Land left many local
Catholics feeling slighted.

Now many are wondering whether Benedict, who comes to the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict with Nazi-related baggage, can do any
better at bolstering his beleaguered Catholic flock, who comprise just
over 1 percent of the population in Israel and the Palestinian
territories and whose numbers are dwindling.

“The Christians are in a precarious situation throughout the Middle
East,” said Daniel Rossing, director of the Jerusalem Center for
Jewish-Christian relations.

“Rather than perceiving them as in a very precarious position as a
minority there’s a tendency to simply see them as a part of the vast
dominant Christian world.”

Some of the 250,000 Christians living between the Jordan River and the
Mediterranean Sea, half of whom belong to various Catholic
denominations, say they are victims of both Israeli discrimination and
Muslim antipathy, though Christians point out that they have coexisted
with other religions for centuries.

“It’s not easy being Christian here,” says George Nassar, a
44-year-old Catholic bookseller in Jerusalem. “But as the old pope and
the new pope have told us, we don’t have to be afraid.”

Most agree that the best solution to the plight of Palestinian
Christians would be an end to the conflict with Israel that causes
most of their hardships.

That’s the work of the two sides, not the pope, but the 78-year-old
Benedict, a German who belonged to the Hitler Youth as a teenager, may
find himself with even less influence in the Mideast conflict than his
predecessor had.

Some Palestinians fear German guilt over the Holocaust could keep
Benedict from taking the Jewish state to task even when he
should. They wonder whether he’ll continue John Paul ll’s opposition
to Israel’s West Bank separation barrier that cut off many Bethlehem
Christians from their farmland, for instance, or whether he’ll oppose
Israeli land policies in Nazareth that restrict non-Jewish ownership,
causing housing shortages for Christians.

They wonder if Benedict can help slow the Christian emigration from
the Holy Land, where a lack of law and order in the Palestinian
territories has left his flock especially vulnerable.

Religion is at the heart of the Arab-Israeli conflict, says Father
Shawki Baterian, Chancellor of the Catholic Church’s Latin
Patriarchate in Jerusalem, and “religious leaders have a role to play
to help political leaders find peace.”

Israelis greeted Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger’s election as pope with a
mixture of appreciation for his solid record on Catholic-Jewish
dialogue and apprehension about his past in Nazi Germany.

Membership in Hitler Youth was compulsory when Benedict was a
youngster, but that didn’t stop the mass circulation Yediot Ahronot
from running these headlines upon his election: “White smoke, black
past” and “From the Nazi youth movement to the Vatican.”

Other Israelis, however, welcomed Benedict’s papacy, noting his
intimate involvement in John Paul’s historic decisions to apologize
for the Church’s past anti-Semitism and forge diplomatic relations
between Israel and the Vatican.

“We are sure that under his papacy we will continue to see a
strengthening relationship between Israel and the Vatican and between
the Jewish people and the church,” said Foreign Ministry spokesman
Mark Regev.

Palestinians, too, congratulated the new pope but urged him to enforce
the official Vatican position that Jerusalem be a city open to all.

Four years of Israeli-Palestinian bloodshed has resulted in most
Muslims and Christians in the West Bank and Gaza Strip not being
allowed to visit the holy city.

Adnan Husseini, a top Muslim leader, denounced what he called Israeli
attempts to Judaize Jerusalem by taking over Muslim and Christian
property and making non-Jews feel unwelcome.

“What’s going on here in the city of peace and the city of religion is
something that is against all religion,” said Husseini, director of
the Islamic Trust, or Waqf. “The pope should care about this because
this is the Holy Land.”

Religious tensions in the Holy Land always simmer and often boil over.

Aside from the well-known enmity between Israeli Jews and Palestinian
Muslims, clashes periodically erupt between other groups, including
recent violence between Druse and Christians in an upper Galilee
village that left nine people injured.

A dispute has broken out between the Armenian and Greek Orthodox
churches over who will perform key rituals during this Saturday’s
“holy fire” ceremony at Jerusalem’s Church of the Holy Sepulcher,
where Christians believe Jesus was crucified and buried.

Palestinians have demanded the removal of the leader of the Greek
Orthodox church in the Holy Land after accusing him of betraying their
cause by leasing key church land in Jerusalem’s Old City to Israeli
Jews. Greek Orthodox Patriarch Irineos I has hotly denied the charges.

Christians and Muslims in Nazareth are engaged in a heated dispute
over Muslims’ attempts to build a mosque next to one of Christendom’s
holiest sites, the Church of the Annunciation.

The Vatican, which holds many assets in the Holy Land, has long taken
a keen interest here. That’s not expected to change under Benedict,
who in recent days has called the Jewish people his “brothers and
sisters” and assured Muslims he wanted to continue “building bridges
of friendship.”

Father Baterian of the Latin Patriarchate says “it will be helpful to
us” if Benedict works to promote dialogue, peace and justice, but
added that no pope can wipe out centuries-old tensions.

“We have a bigger cross in the Holy Land,” he said. “So we should not
promise our people a good life here. Our life in the Holy Land will be
like this.”

Chess legend Kasparov to ‘Post’: Double-check Putin!

Jerusalem Post, Israel
April 28 2005

Chess legend Kasparov to ‘Post’: Double-check Putin!
By SAM SER

As Russian President Vladimir Putin spent his first full day here on
Thursday, legendary chess champion Garry Kasparov had a message for
Israel: Don’t trust him!

In a telephone interview with The Jerusalem Post from Russia,
Kasparov, who has retired from chess and is now a political rival of
the president’s, complained that Putin’s regime is trampling on
democratic principles and poses a serious threat to the rest of the
world. He also said that Putin’s reliance on support from
ultranationalist forces could spell trouble for Russia’s Jews, and he
skewered Putin for strategic shortcomings that, he said, could
imperil Israel.

Russian sales of missiles to Syria and nuclear technology to Iran,
for example, were misguided steps that should worry not only Israel,
Kasparov said. Actually, he continued, they were proof that Putin and
his regime “just want a short-term profit” and that they “don’t think
strategically, they can’t think long-term.”

The Russian president had undermined democratic reforms installed by
his predecessors, Kasparov added, citing strict controls on
independent media and suggestions that Putin might force an
alteration to the constitution that would allow him to remain in
office for a third term.

Kasparov also claimed that Putin was not only doing too little to
combat the rising ant-Semitism in Russia, but charged that the former
KGB officer’s government even encouraged and instigated
ultranationalist sentiment, with the security apparatus propping up
far-right groups.

“The only way to win support from the West is to make sure that
everyone is scared of the threat of ultranationalist forces… so
Putin presents himself as the only one who can stop them,”

Kasparov said. Parties such as Nashi, a pro-Putin “version of the
brown-shirts,” he said, create provocations that give the Russian
president “a legal chance to use military forces in Russian streets.”

Attacking Putin is part of Kasparov’s first foray into politics, as a
leader of the liberal opposition group Committee 2008: Free Choice,
since giving up professional chess in March. The 42-year-old is
widely considered the game’s best player ever.

For years, though, Kasparov – originally named Gari Weinstein after
his Jewish father, he took on a Russian version of his Armenian
mother’s maiden name as a teen after his father died – has been an
outspoken supporter of Israel in the international arena. He has
visited the country several times, especially to strengthen the Tel
Aviv chess club established in his name.

Kasparov told The Post he believed that Israel’s Russian immigrant
population should speak out to draw the West’s attention to the
dangers that Putin’s regime poses.

“Western leaders don’t care at all about Putin and [his record on]
democracy as long as he can provide them with some sort of stability
in Russia,” he said, “but Putin is not providing stability at all.
The Chechen war is spreading, with Islamists joining what was once a
nationalist separatist fight, and increasing terrorism
dramatically… so Russia is actually less safe today than it was
before” Putin took office.

He also criticized the economic performance of Putin’s government,
saying that the economy was precariously dependent on high oil prices
and was growing too slowly, and that the government “has proven it is
incapable of using oil profits to solve social problems.”

“They are simply postponing all the key problems that Russia is
facing today, because they don’t know how to deal with them,”
Kasparov said.
Further, Kasparov said, the targeting of wealthy businessmen, such as
former Yukos magnate Mikhail Khodorkovsky, is an attempt by Putin and
his associates to control the country’s capital.

“The attack on Yukos is an attack against free business in Russia,”
he said. “Khodorkovsky is in jail not because he didn’t pay taxes,
but because he was ready to pay taxes… because he was paying his
money to the Treasury, and not to Kremlin bosses. Unwillingness to
cooperate with KGB rule is the key reason behind the [legal] attack.”

“Even the czarist regimes were more legitimate and more productive
for the interests of Russia” than Putin’s regime, he said.

Leveling such sharp criticism at Putin from within Russia could be
dangerous. Indeed, several Yukos partners who have fled to Israel
claim that they were targeted for prosecution by Putin because of
their vocal political opposition to the government.

Being half-Jewish, Kasparov would be eligible to make aliya should he
find himself under similar or even worse threats.

“I don’t even want to discuss a situation in which I would be forced
to leave my native country,” he said. “I doubt I would ever have to
leave… but I would consider all possibilities.”

NKR: Turkey Refuses To Recognize The Genocide

TURKEY REFUSES TO RECOGNIZE THE GENOCIDE

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic [NKR]
29 April 05

Despite the fact of recognition of the Armenian Genocide by
progressive mankind, a number of countries and numerous organization,
Turkey keeps to the refusing attitude this time using the factor of
archives. Following the recent TV programmes and analyses of the
Turkish – Armenian relationships it becomes clear that, in fact, great
attention is paid to the problem of archives. InTurkey they have been
insisting that the Turk historians and journalists do not have access
to the materials on the genocide kept in the archives of Armenia. The
director of the State Archive of Armenia, member of the state
committee setup for the 90th anniversary of the genocide, Doctor
Amatuni Virabian was invited to Artsakh by the NKR Ministry of
Education, Culture and Sport to take part in the scientific conference
at Artsakh State University devoted to the 90th anniversary of the
Genocide. He provided interesting information about the archival files
on the genocide. According to Dr. Virabian, in the Soviet years there
were secret files in all the republics of the Soviet Union. However,
these files referred to the repressions against people and the church,
the national problem, the problem of Nagorno Karabakh, the Turkish –
Armenian border. The files on the genocide have always been accessible
and were studied even in the Soviet times. A. Virabian said when he
was appointed to the position of director of the RA State Archive in
2001 he announced in his very first interviews that he was willing to
receive Turkish historians and journalists whenever they wished to
study the archives. However, so far there have been no such
initiatives on their part. This year, 90 years after the Genocide,
this question was again put forward, and what is more, even the
Turkish prime minister complained that they are refused access to the
archives of Armenia. The Armenian side again stated through the mass
media that the archives of Armenia are open to everybody. According to
A. Virabian, these are diplomatic steps on the partof Turkey aimed at
postponing the recognition of the genocide for some more time. When
they realized that there is no problem of restricted access to
archives, they announced that there is a large number of files in
Turkish archives testifying that in 1912 – 1920 in Ottoman Turkey the
Armenians killed 541 500 Muslims – Turks, Kurds and
Circassians. Several days ago such documents in different languages
were placed in the web site of the National Archive of Turkey. Thus,
Turkey carries on intensive struggle to postpone the recognition of
the genocide for several more decades and for this reason it makes use
of the factor of archives. And what do we do in this direction?
A. Virabian mentioned that the state archives of Armenia publish
archive documents conveying them to the international community
through the Internet and other possible means. Recently more attention
is paid to this. At present about 12 thousand official documents on
the genocide are kept at the state archive of Armenia. These are
diplomatic documents, documents drawn up in 1918 – 1920 on the
genocide perpetrated several years before. The personal files of 13
500 orphans who lost their parents due to the genocide are kept in the
archive. These interesting documents contain he names of the orphan
children, the names of their parents, if they remember whether their
parents are alive or not. In the beginning the government tried to
take care of them but failed to because Armenia had become a country
of immigrants. The American Benevolent Committee founded orphanages in
Alexandrapol, Gharakilisa, Dilijan, Jalaloghli. The American
missioners wrote that these were clever children of prospects who
could be taken to America for they could be the potential of the
American nation in the future. Among the archive files the memoirs of
witnesses are of special value. The memoirs were written as long ago
as in 1916 when the term `genocide’ had not been coined yet, and even
the Armenians did not know yet what had happened in Turkey in reality
and there was no question of propaganda. Owing to the resistance there
were people from three states of West Armenia Van, Bitlis, Erzrum who
were saved. Others who were prisoners of Turks and Kurds were saved by
Armenian volunteers. On the whole 250 – 260 thousand people were
saved. In the framework ofan undertaking in 1916 there were people who
went around the places where emigrants lived and put down the memoirs
of eyewitnesses. The witnesses were people aged from 12 to 70. They
told interesting facts how the massacres were perpetrated. The
witnesses were mostly illiterate peasants but there were also literate
people among them. They told that the Turkish government had made a
plan to exterminate all the males aged from 12 years to grown-ups,
take beautiful girls and young boys to them and bring them up by the
Muslim spirit. The others (women, children) would be taken to
Mesopotamia, as it happened in the states of Diarbekir, Sebastia,
Kharbert and other places in Turkey. It is also notable that in all
the villages the handwriting of Turkish actions was the same. In the
beginning they mobilized men of 25 – 30 to the army. Others who were
advanced in years were concentrated in a place as if for spring
farming and killed. Then they began to kill women and
children. A. Virabian mentioned that in the aforementioned three
vilayets there were about a thousand villages, and thearchive contains
files on seven hundred. Memoirs of witnesses about 170 of these
villages have been published. The director of the state archive of
Armenia pointed out the fact the monstrous plan instigated by the
Turkish government was implemented in the three vilayets through Kurds
and Circassians. A. Virabian also said that there are interesting
files on Artsakh. In 1918 the Turkish troops deployed in
Transcaucasia, seized Baku and perpetrated massacres which lasted for
three days. About 30 thousand Armenians were killed. Then the troops
moved to other places inhabited by Armenians – Nukhi-Aresh, Shamakhi,
Gyokcha, Artsakh and killed the Armenian population. Files on
massacres in these places, as well as the massacres in Shushi in March
1920 are also kept in the state archive. 715 documents were published
in a book headlined `Massacres of Armenians in the Regions of Baku and
Elizavetpol in 1918-1920′. In 1919 H. Tumanian set up a committee
which estimated the material damage of the Armenians in World WarI.
The files in 7 volumes were presented to the peace conference in
Paris, however the problem remained unsettled. The interesting thing
is that people had mentioned not only the material damage they had
suffered but also the number and names of their lost
relatives. According to Dr. Virabian, these are extremely important
documents because when the question of 1.5 million slaughtered
Armenians is under consideration, they often ask from where the number
1.5 million was taken and demand documents. A. Virabian also touched
upon the documents on how the 50th anniversary of the Genocide was
commemorated in 1965. In 1920 on the initiative of Vrtanes Papazian
April 24th was adopted the Day of the Armenian Genocide and until 1927
church bells tolled for the victims of the genocide. After that it was
even forbidden to sound the bells and only in 1965 was it officially
allowed to commemorate the Day of the Genocide. In reference to
acquiring new archive files A. Virabian said that after his each
address onTV 10 – 15 people give the documents and photos they possess
to the archive. Besides, the archive buys documents. In this way a
great number of documents on the genocide were acquired from
individuals and different countries. In addition, there are valuable
materials in a number of European countries, particularly in the
archives of Spain and Bulgaria containing indirect mentions and
documents on the Great Calamity, which have not been studied
yet. Several among the thirty books on the genocide published in one
year are collections of documents. Among them is the German archive
document. `However, there is still a great deal of work to be done,’
said A. Virabian. As to the Turkisharchives, there is no need to take
them seriously because the Turkish archive on the Great Calamity are
controlled by the president of Turkey and only Turkish historians have
access to them, and only those selected through a strict interview
with the authorities. The rest of the archive documents, including the
archives of the government and the army headquarters are closed to
everyone, and especially to the Armenians. `And generally, the fact of
accessibility of Turkish archives should be treated with humour,’ said
A. Virabian, `Bbecause, first of all, the Turks would not like to
show the documents on the massacres, and besides, it should be
ascertained whether they have preserved them or not.’

SVETLANA KHACHATRIAN.
29-04-2005

BAKU: Hungarian side apologizes to government of Azerbaijan

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
April 28 2005

HUNGARIAN SIDE APOLOGIES TO GOVERNMENT OF AZERBAIJAN
[April 27, 2005, 21:11:59]

As was informed to AzerTAj from embassy of Azerbaijan in Hungary, on
April 26, in one of the leading Hungarian newspapers “Nepsebadshag”,
was published the letter of the editor of publishing house
“Ulpius-khaz” Andrash Kepechi in which he has apologized to the
government of Azerbaijan for the mistakes admitted in the book issued
by them of Farah Pehlevi ?Memoirs of the spouse of last Shah of
Iran?.

About the book, the ambassador of Azerbaijan in Hungary Hasan Hasanov
knew long before the publication of the mentioned apology. With the
requirement about refutation and correction of the mistakes admitted
in it, the ambassador in writing has addressed in the publishing
house ” Ulpius-khaz ” and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Hungary.
Then, he met with Andrash Kepechi during which claims of the
Azerbaijan side concerning the admitted mistakes have been stated.

As a result of this meeting, there appeared the publication on April
26 in newspaper “Nepsebadshag”, where the director of the publishing
house addressed to ambassador H. Hasanov, with bringing apologies to
the Government of the Azerbaijan Republic for the technical mistake
admitted at drawing up of the map of Azerbaijan in the book issued by
them Farah Pehlevi ?Memoirs of the spouse of last Shah of Iran?.
Further, in the letter, it is said that the publishing house is going
to withdraw circulation of the mentioned book from sale and correct
the admitted mistake. The publishing house expresses hope that the
incident will not interfere with the further development of the
Hungary-Azerbaijan relations, strengthening of friendship and
cooperation between two friendly peoples.

The same day, the Hungarian broadcasting Company RTL Club has
addressed to ambassador H. Hasanov with the request to give interview
and comment on actions of publishing house.

In the interview, the Azerbaijan diplomat has noted that regards this
letter, as the positive fact which is raised with authority and
respect for the publishing house aspiring to true. Alongside with it,
it has been marked, that the similar phenomena, attempts to pervert
the history when the Azerbaijan territory is presented as Armenian,
frequently proceed on the part of the persons lobbying for the
Armenian interests. Our duty is to stop similar fabrications and
inform the truth on the country up to world community.

The ambassador has shown to journalists a map of Azerbaijan with the
occupied territories marked on it and has told about the Armenian
aggression against the Republic, occupation of 20 percent of the
Azerbaijan territories, ethnic cleanings on the seized areas, and
also about 1 million refugees and IDPs.