Torchlight Procession Timed to 90th Anniversary Held at Govm’t Level

TORCHLIGHT PROCESSION TIMED TO 90TH ANNIVERSARY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
TO BE AT GOVERNMENT LEVEL

YEREVAN, APRIL 23, ARMINFO. ARF Dashnaktsutyun press-service informs
ARMINFO that today at 8 p.m. a torchlight procession will be organized
from the Republic Square to the Memorial complex for the Victims of
the Armenian Genocide “Tsitsernakaberd.” The Youth Wing of ARFD
initiated the procession in 1998, which has become a tradition. In
the current year, the event is held at the government level for the
first time. Students council of all the higher educational
establishments, the youth wing of the RPA and “Orinats Yerkir” party
and other political forces will participate in it.

Germany plans Armenian massacre resolution

Germany plans Armenian massacre resolution

International Relations & Security Network, Switzerland
April 22 2005

ISN SECURITY WATCH (22/04/05) – The German parliament has agreed to a
resolution asking Ankara to accept the Turkish role in the expulsion
and massacre of as many as 1.5 million Armenians during and after
World War I.

The resolution, which is set to win final approval by lawmakers in the
next few months, avoids the word “genocide” in its call for Turkey to
“take historic responsibility” for the massacres of Armenians by the
Ottoman Turkish government and to ask forgiveness from the victims’
descendants.

The resolution comes in the run-up to Turkey’s EU membership
negotiations, which are set to begin in October. The sensitive issue
is likely to play a key role in Ankara’s bid to join the European club.

“I have no doubt the question of genocide will be on the agenda for
the talks between the EU and Turkey,” Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan
Oskanyan told reporters.

The German resolution is not without its critics, who have
accused Germany’s conservative Christian Democratic Union (CDU) of
instrumentalizing the Armenian issue in an attempt to block Turkey’s
EU membership bid. The conservative alliance, which has been skeptical
of Ankara’s EU aspirations in the past, denied the accusations.

The resolution comes only two days before the commemoration of the
expulsions, which began on 24 April 90 years ago in Armenia.

Turkish officials responded harshly to the German parliamentary
decision, and Turkey’s ambassador to Germany, Mehmet Ali Irtemcelik,
condemned the resolution as containing “countless factual errors”. He
accused German officials of writing it “in agreement with propaganda
efforts of fanatic Armenians”.

According to official Armenian accounts of the massacre, between
1.2 and 1.5 million Christian Armenians were killed or died from
disease and starvation as a result of the Ottoman Turkish authorities’
measures.

Ankara rejects those figures, saying that Armenia lacks concrete
evidence to back up the claim. Many Turkish historians say that
some 600’000 Armenians died in a war in which nationalist Armenians
sided with Russian troops when they invaded eastern Turkey. Turkish
historians deny that any murders were premeditated.

Turkey and Armenia have no diplomatic relations, and in 1993, Turkish
closed its border with Armenia in a show of loyalty to neighboring
Azerbaijan at the height of a bloody conflict over the disputed
territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Last month, Turkey offered to conduct a joint study with Armenia on
the disputed events of World War I, but Armenian authorities rejected
the offer.

The German resolution also recognized Germany’s role in the Armenian
killings, as Germany was the Ottoman Empire’s main ally in the war.

Hysteria, Blackmail and Threats To Break Any Contacts – Policy OfTur

HYSTERIA, BLACKMAIL AND THREATS TO BREAK ANY CONTACTS – POLICY OF
TURKEY WITH RESPECT TO STATES THAT HAVE RECOGNIZED ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
IN OTTOMAN TURKEY

YEREVAN, APRIL 21. ARMINFO. Hysteria, blackmail and threats to
break any contacts – such is the policy of Turkey with respect to the
states that have recognized the Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey in
1915. NKR President Arkady Ghoukassyan said at a two-day conference
devoted to the 90th anniversary of Armenian Genocide completing its
work in Yerevan today.

He says that Armenians wherever they live have a common tragic
date, the Day of commemoration of the victims of the Armenian
Genocide. Those who are familiar with the Armenian history will
never ask why do Armenians living outside their Motherland make up
such a great number. The history answered this question long ago, 90
and more years ago. However, the country that committed the vicious
genocide in the 2-th century and states in public that it adheres
European and all human values, unfortunately, has not confessed so
far. Moreover, it takes cynic attempts to persuade the international
community to withdraw the issue of international recognition of the
Armenian Genocide from the agenda, the president says.

He points out that the countries that have made their duty to humanity
have inevitably faced the response of official Ankara. So they had
an opportunity to made sure in practice what values prevail in the
Turkish society. Unfortunately, Ankara’s efforts often bring desirable
results. One can consider the top of cynicism the position of the
political figures, including in a number of Western states, who, to
avoid aggravation of relations of their states with modern Turkey,
state that the COnvention on prevention of genocide and its punishment
adopted by the UN in 1948 allegedly has no retroactive force and cannot
be applied to the events of 90-year remoteness. Such a position is not
only a typical example of political Pharisaism, but also creates ground
for new crimes, and often by the country that has already committed
Genocide once, Ghoukassyan says. The blockade of Armenia’s transport
communications by Turkey is nothing but a result of impunity. However,
the most striking is that this country keeps ignoring the call of the
civilized world for immediate lifting of the blockade of Armenia and
establishing diplomatic relations with it, at the same time claiming
the role of a mediator in the KArabakh conflict’s settlement, openly
supporting the position of Azerbaijan. Such a peculiar understanding
of the mediatory mission by Turkey proceeds from its attitude to the
issue of Genocide recognition, the NKR president thinks.

INTERVIEW – Turkey’s Armenians pray for reconciliation

INTERVIEW-Turkey’s Armenians pray for reconciliation
By Ayla Jean Yackley

ISTANBUL, April 21 (Reuters) – Turkey’s Armenians will quietly mark
the 90th anniversary of massacres in eastern Turkey with prayers for
reconciliation between their two estranged homelands, their spiritual
leader said on Thursday.

While more than a million people in Armenia are expected to commemorate
the start of what they say was a genocide against their people at the
hands of Ottoman Turks, April 24 will pass without official ceremony
in Turkey.

Turkey denies a systematic campaign to wipe out Armenians and says
intercommunal strife during World War One claimed hundreds of thousands
of Turkish as well as Armenian lives.

“We pray for peace and reconciliation between Turkish and Armenian
people. We pray for the wisdom of those in positions of power so they
can find ways of reconciliation,” said Armenian Patriarch Mesrob II
in a written response to questions.

Armenia and Turkey share a border but no diplomatic ties. That
stalemate has squeezed Turkey’s tiny community of 65,000 Armenians,
who are often perceived as a kind of fifth column.

European officials have called on Turkey, which aspires to join the EU,
to open the border. Such an overture “would be a sign of determination
to engage in dialogue,” Mesrob said.

Turkey has instead devoted most of its efforts to fighting the
influential Armenian diaspora’s campaign to convince foreign
governments to acknowledge the massacres as genocide.

Several national parliaments, including Poland’s this week, have
passed laws recognising the genocide. Some European politicians have
gone further and said Turkey must admit wrongdoing before beginning
EU entry talks later this year.

There are signs Turkey may take a new approach towards an issue that
has been strictly taboo until now. Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan last
month called for an international probe, saying he was confident it
would support Turkey’s stance.

Mesrob cautiously welcomed the recent discussion.

“Debate of any issue means a process of education has begun .. The
Armenian citizens of Turkey are between two fires, since whatever
they . say is misinterpreted by both sides,” he said.

The EU has said interference in running Armenian schools and churches
threaten the community’s distinct identity. The state appoints Muslim
bureaucrats to oversee cash-strapped Armenian schools and has seized
hundreds of millions of dollars worth of church property, which Mesrob
said remains “a major issue”.

While Armenians may link their survival in Turkey to the EU bid,
fears persist the historical issues dividing Armenians and Turks may
be too big a gulf to bridge.

“The upgrading of laws and regulations (to meet EU criteria) will
naturally benefit all citizens,” Mesrob said. “We hope the government
will be at an equal distance to all citizens and communities regardless
of their religions or ethnic background.”

04/21/05 22:59 ET

Azerbaijan’s action plan

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
April 18, 2005, Monday

AZERBAIJAN’S ACTION PLAN

SOURCE: Voyenno-Promyshlenny Kurier, No. 13, April 13-19, 2005, p. 3

by Dzhasur Mamedov

The Azerbaijan-NATO plan of individual partnership is expected to be
discussed and approved in late April. In his interview to our reporter
Araz Azimov, deputy foreign minister of Azerbaijan, noted that the plan
was elaborated together with NATO international headquarters. Once a
consensus is reached, this document will be submitted to consideration
of all NATO member nations, i.e. 26 countries. Only after this
procedure ends, the individual partnership will be endorsed and passed.

In case it is implemented, the Individual Partnership Action Plan
(IPAP) becomes a milestone for cooperation in NATO plus Azerbaijan
format, Robert Simmons, NATO secretary general’s special envoy for
the South Caucasus and Central Asia, stated in early February. This
project envisages quite clear targets in planning the defense policy
of Azerbaijan. Specific deadlines are envisaged there as well.

IPAP’s benefits for Azerbaijan

Leila Yunus, director of the Azerbaijani Institute for peace and
Democracy, who has regular contacts with NATO leaders, tried to explain
to our reporter what the plan actually implies. In her words, the
document proposes reforms in armies of countries, which are seeking
NATO membership and have individual cooperation with NATO. Besides,
the document envisages adjustment of the optimal budgetary forms,
which are to play the role of the financial basis in preparing a
specific country for integration into NATO.

“The draft plan of 35 pages envisages (as a priority) standardization
of the Azerbaijani Armed Forces to comply with NATO standards. In this
context the document presents framework agreements for Azerbaijan. For
instance, one of them envisages visits of NATO officers into our
country. Similar agreements open great opportunities for experience
exchange, conduction of war games and improving military education,”
Yunus said.

Interestingly enough, officials give no comments with regard to this
issue. For instance, above mentioned Araz Azimov denied announcing
the specific date when the action plan would be declared. Defense
Ministry officials left this question unanswered either due to the
fact that “the work is underway yet.” Colonel Ramiz Melikov, the
Defense Ministry’s press secretary added that both NATO specialists
and experts of the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry are working over the
plan and “when time comes, the plan will be presented to the public.”
At the same time, Melikov assured that Azerbaijan would fulfill all
of its commitments on implementation of the IPAP.

Unlike defense officials, Yunus said referring to Despina Afentouli
(a member of NATO public information office) that the full text
of the IPAP would soon be posted to the official NATO website. She
had received an official letter from NATO on this problem the day
before and is puzzled why this document is kept a secret. According
to Yunus, the Alliance has hitherto given the right for publication to
our authorities, which generated the negative response of Azerbaijani
national-patriotic organizations. “Only after this NATO promised that
the relevant information would be posted onto official NATO website,”
Yunus underscored.

How to integrate in NATO

Despite the silent conspiracy, the Doktrina center of journalist
military investigation (ZhTsVRA), managed to unveil some details
of the IPAP. With references to diplomatic and military sources the
center’s representatives noted that if the project is discussed and
approved this April, changes must occur in the military sphere of
Azerbaijan by 2007, which would make standards of the national army
closer to NATO standards. Seven out of fourteen sections of the IPAP
are solely dedicated to issues of Azerbaijan’s defense and security.

The first section has been entitled the nature and point of reforms
conducted in the Armed Forces and the security system. It gives a
list of significant reforms, which will enable to draw closer to NATO
standards and envisages amendments for the laws.

The second section indicates the names of the states, which would
aid Azerbaijan in this heavy cause, as well as directions of their
activities. In addition, this section talks about significance of
involving the Azerbaijani servicemen in war games conducted under
NATO standards.

The third section underscores significance of improving the security
system, which includes raising the level of material (uniforms,
nutrition, pay for servicemen) and technical (weapons and military
equipment) provisions, as well as a necessity for staff reforms.

Mentioned among the donor-states are the Baltic States (in the
sphere of improving military legislation), Germany and the UK
(military personnel training), the USA and Turkey (financing,
military equipment).

The fourth section entitled Planning is considered to be most
important. It specifies the timing for the reforms. Extra six months
could be added if Azerbaijan fails to fully comply with NATO standards
by 2007 (if this lateness is linked to contingencies).

Along with that, this section mentions the necessity for personnel
cutbacks, raising the number of civilians in military service. It is
planned to abolish some directorates and departments of the Defense
Ministry, which perform similar functions, and set up a consolidated
department on their basis.

The fifth section is dedicated to the optimal budget, which becomes a
financial source for the reforms. According to the plan, by the end
of 2007 Azerbaijan’s defense expenditures are to exceed the current
defense spending by several times, i.e. total some $350-400 million,
as specified in the IPAP. At the same time, a raise in wages for
servicemen must be installed in the budget.

The sixth section stresses significance of forming democratic
institutions in the defense sphere, i.e. creation of civil, public
control. The parliament is assigned the main “controlling” burden;
he must be more concerned for social benefits for the military than
other structures.

The seventh section is similar to the sixth one; demand for
transparency in the army and openness of maintenance spending is its
main distinction; i.e., the Main Inspectorate won’t be subordinate
to the Defense Ministry anymore and becomes an independent civil
structure.

Replacement of the military establishment

Nevertheless, according to experts, the issue of staff reforms, which
are inevitable in the military establishment (similar to what happened
in neighboring Georgia), is among priority details in the IPAP.

It should be mentioned that officers, who are graduates of military
schools complying with NATO standards, were involved in leading
the Georgian army as far back as in mid-2004. Georgian President
Saakashvili underlined that from this moment on only the officers who
have military education according to NATO standards would be admitted
into leadship in the national Armed Forces. The Georgian analog
of the IPAP was passed as far back as December 2004. NATO military
experts have lately arrived in Georgia to familiarize themselves to
implementation of this project.

According to experts, there will be formal reforms in Azerbaijan if
NATO personnel are not involved in leading the national army.

As should be expected, Defense Ministry spokesperson Melikov disagrees
with this point. In his opinion, officers representing the incumbent
Defense Ministry leadership, comply with all modern standards. “We
have Western career officers in our army now” he said but refused to
answer the following question, “Are any of them among heads of the
Defense Ministry?”

According to Melikov, the place where an officer gets his education is
not important. Most importantly, is that they have regular contacts
with their Western colleagues. “Moreover, Azerbaijani officers pass
training courses in many NATO member nations and the officers have
been trained in Azerbaijan according to NATO standards since 1997,”
Melikov emphasized.

In his turn, Sulheddin Akper, president of the Azerbaijan-NATO
Cooperation Association, former national security minister of the
Azerbaijani Republic, disagrees with Melikov. He noted in his interview
that if graduates of Russian military schools make the establishment
of the Azerbaijani army and officers prefer to speak Russian inside
the Defense Ministry, it would at least be inapt to maintain that
our army complies with NATO military standards.

“NATO leaders don’t conceal their demands that the military
establishment be replaced. Another phase begins after the IPAP is
approved – the Membership Action Plan. This requires our country to
lodge an official appeal to NATO. Both the plans require reformation
of the military sphere, as well as politics and the economy,”
Akper stated.

Leila Yunus doesn’t believe either that any drastic changes occur in
the Azerbaijani military establishment (which is unable to make the
reforms true) in the near future. According to Yunus, in issues of
integration in the European structures (including the army reforms)
Azerbaijan is not behind Georgia, which has real prerequisites for
becoming a NATO member, but Armenia either. “If we’ve decided to
integrate in NATO, we mustn’t hope for the off-chance; moreover,
a visit of Romualdus Razhuks, NATO’s liaison officer for the South
Caucasus, to Baku is scheduled for early April,” the expert reminded.

BAKU: Pressure group proposes to mark May 8 as occupied lands’ day

Pressure group proposes to mark May 8 as occupied lands’ day

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
posted April 18 2005

Baku, April 15, AssA-Irada — The Garabagh Liberation Organization
(GLO) has proposed to mark May 8, the day of Shusha occupation by
Armenia, as “the Day of Occupied Lands of Azerbaijan”. The GLO has
appealed to the Milli Majlis (parliament) for the purpose, its chairman
Akif Naghi said.

The GLO terms Upper Garabagh, 7 adjacent regions, as well as Goychay,
Zangazur districts and other territories occupied by Armenia in 1920s
and 1950s, as occupied territories.

Naghi added that the GLO Council is getting to ready to appeal to
the Mayor’s Office of Baku to sanction actions dedicated to the
anniversary of Shusha occupation.*

International Telephone Codes to Change in Armenia

Pan Armenian News

INTERNATIONAL TELEPHONE CODES TO CHANGE IN ARMENIA

14.04.2005 02:25

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Beginning on May 1, 2005 international telephone codes
will change in Armenia due to the mobile communication second operator
entering the Armenian market. The mobile international codes of ArmenTel
subscribers will change from +3749 to 37491. According to the statement of
ArmenTel Press Service, the codes of the subscribers of K-Telecom new
operators will respectively be +37493 and +37494. The international
telephone code for subscribers of the fixed telephone network of Yerevan
will be changed from +3741 to +37410. The figure 2 will be added to the
present codes of other Armenian towns after +374.

Drastic Changes Are Possible

A1Plus

| 14:54:33 | 13-04-2005 | Politics |

DRASTIC CHANGES ARE POSSIBLE

Answering the questions of the journalists today Foreign Minister Vardan
Oskanyan did not exclude the possibility of drastic changes in the
settlement of the Karabakh conflict. But Oskanyan considers the
announcements of the co-head that the packet of offers is ready a little
exaggerated. `The elements of the packet are being cleared out’, said
Oskanyan.

We also learnt that on April 15 in London there will not be a meeting
Mamedyarov-Oskanyan. `The OSCR Minsk group co-heads will meet me and
Mamedyarov separately, as there are issues they want to clear out, but there
will be no separate meeting Oskanyan-Mamedyarov’, said the RA Foreign
Minister. By the way, he is surprised by the recent attention to the meeting
of the foreign ministers, `This is not the first time I have met Mamedyarov;
there have been many meetings’.

Let us note that that Vardan Oskanyan does not share the optimism of the
OSCE Chairman-in Office Dimitrij Rupel. Let us remind that the matter is
about the announcement of Rupel after the meeting with Arkadi Ghoukasyan
that till summer a new window will open in the settlement of the Karabakh
conflict.

Oskanyan did not want to comment on the question when there has been a
higher pressure from the international community, in 1997 or today. He
announced diplomatically that in 1997 he was the Deputy Foreign Minister and
he did not feel any pressure, neither does he now.

Speaking about Serge Sargsyan’s announcement that the security zone can be
returned in return for guarantees for security, Vardan Oskanyan announced
that the security zone carries out the role of security, and reminded about
his report in the Parliament where he had mentioned that `if the lands must
provide the security for Artsakh, they must be kept, and if they must be
returned for guarantees of security, they must be returned’. According to
the Foreign Minister, this was what the Defense Minister meant.

Sacramento: Plays recall Armenian genocide

Sacramento Bee
April 8, 2005, Friday METRO FINAL EDITION

Plays recall Armenian genocide

by Marcus Crowder Bee Theater Critic

Playwright and director Aram Kouyoumdjian returns to his roots, so to
speak, in two ways tonight. Two one-act plays by Kouyoumdjian, “The
Delicate Lines” and “Protest,” dramas inspired by the Armenian
genocide, are opening at California Stage for a short run.

“The plays are being presented this month because April marks the
90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide. I wanted to write a
commemoration piece,” Kouyoumdjian said from Los Angeles, where he
now lives.

Kouyoumdjian is an Elly award-winning writer (best original script
for “The Farewells” last year) and director (“Three Hotels”) who
produced theater here with his acclaimed Vista Players ensemble. He
left Sacramento last year to return to Los Angeles, where much of his
family lives.

His relatives are survivors of the 1915 genocide in which the Turkish
army forcibly removed the Armenian populace from Armenia and
Anatolia, then marched them to Syria. An estimated 1.5 million
Armenians died.

“Many Armenian families whose ancestors survived the death march
ended up in those countries of the Middle East,” Kouyoumdjian said.
“They were mostly sent on these death marches along the desert, which
reached into Syria. The men were killed, and others simply died of
exhaustion and starvation from the conditions. Countries like Syria
and Lebanon took in the survivors.”

Kouyoumdjian’s relatives settled in Lebanon, where he was born and
lived for 10 years before the family immigrated to Los Angeles.

“It’s a major issue in the Armenian community,” Kouyoumdjian said of
the events, “a historical and psychological issue that people of
later generations have had to deal with. This piece is simply an
artistic response to it.”

Kouyoumdjian came to Sacramento to attend law school and then stayed
here and practiced law with the firm of Poswall, White and Cutler.

“The Delicate Lines,” which will receives its world premiere tonight,
will be performed by Kouyoumdjian’s longtime associate, Jan Ahders,
who worked with the Vista Players from their inception.

“The piece for Jan is historical, with the speaker speaking in 1950,
tracing her life story as a survivor of the genocide, along with her
brother and his best friend,” Kouyoumdjian said.

“I wanted to tell the story of three people through the perspective
of one person. It’s a story of how these people affected and changed
her life, her opinions and reactions to historical events.”

Kouyoumdjian wrote the piece with Ahders in mind, and he’s been
flying up from Los Angeles to work on it with her at her Carmichael
home.

“It’s an honor when someone writes something for you or has you in
mind when they compose something,” Adhers said.

Their long artistic collaboration allowed her the confidence to make
a few suggestions to Kouyoumdjian about certain parts of the script.

“I think in terms of rhythm, and once he had what he considered his
final draft, I suggested some things based on how it felt speaking
the words,” Ahders said.

Although learning the 15 pages of single-spaced dialogue was fairly
difficult for Ahders, learning the traditional song that her
character sings at the end was particularly tricky.

“Learning the song was hard because everyone sings it a little
differently,” Ahders said, “but once I was able to write it out on
notepaper, it was OK.”

The second one-act, “Protest,” which Kouyoumdjian first performed
himself at the Sacramento Solo Festival in 2001, is based on his
experience being arrested while protesting Turkish denials of the
genocide. JD Rudometkin, who also worked with Kouyoumdjian here but
now lives in Los Angeles, will perform “Protest.”

The plays also will be performed in San Francisco at the C.A.F.E./Off
Broadway on April 21-22 and then on April 23 in Los Angeles at the El
Portal Forum Theatre.

By 2010 Armenia’s Securities Commission to Join Information

BY 2010 ARMENIA’S SECURITIES COMMISSION TO JOIN INFORMATION
EXCHANGE MEMORANDUM OF IOSCO

YEREVAN, APRIL 13. ARMINFO. By 2010 Armenia’s Securities Commission
will join the information exchange memorandum of the International
Organization of Securities Commissions, says the chairman of the
commission Eduard Muradyan.

This means that Armenia will be able to get information on the
legislation of any other members country. At the same time the
country will have to provide similar information on request. In 2010
this system will be much more handy for Armenia than it could be now.

Muradyan says that IOSCO membership will raise the commission’s
authority and will give its unlimited access to global information
and experience.

The decision to admit Armenia into IOSCO was made in Sri-lanka Apr 5.
The country applied for the membership as early as 2003. A law on
securities market regulation was adopted in 2004 to meet IOSCO
requirements.