Parliament Speaker resigns after his party quit governing coalition

Pravda, Russia
May 29 2006

Armenian parliament speaker resigns after his party quit governing
coalition

Orinats Yerkir had been part of the three-party governing coalition
since 2003, when it teamed up with the Republican Party and
Dashnak-Tsutyun. It had 20 seats in the 131-seat parliament, but
Bagdasarian said when he announced plans to resign earlier this month
that nine of the lawmakers had quit the party in the previous weeks.

Bagdasarian triggered a political scandal in the Caucasus Mountain
nation last month when he reportedly told a German newspaper that
Armenia’s future lies with the European Union and NATO, and that
Russia should not block its Westward path, the AP reports.

President Robert Kocharian quickly disavowed the speaker’s statement,
saying that Armenia’s close military ties with Russia and other
regional countries provide sufficient security and that it has no
pans to join NATO.

Critics of Kocharian say he has violently cracked down on dissent,
allowed corruption to flourish and done little to improve the lot of
impoverished Armenia’s 3.3 million people.

Chess: Indian men, women suffer defeat – Armenia leads

Outlook , India
May 29 2006

Indian men, women suffer defeat

>From Our Chess Correspondent Turin (Italy), May 29 (PTI) Indian men
suffered their second defeat in the Chess Olympiad going down to
defending champion Ukraine in the seventh round while their women
counterparts were outdone by United States in quick time here.
After Viswanathan Anand drew with former World championship
challenger Vassily Ivanchuk on the top board, Grandmaster Krishnan
Sasikiran also signed peace pact besides GM Sandipan Chanda.

But a shocking loss on the third board by former world junior
champion P Harikrishna cost dearly to the Indians as they lost by a
narrow 1.5-2.5 margin in the end.

Overnight sole leader Armenia had it easy with a 3-1 victory over
giant killer Netherlands with a 3-1 margin in this round, the Russian
men were sitting pretty with a 3-0 score and one game in hand against
Belarus.

The Indian women had a bad day for the first time in the women’s
Olympiad, being played simultaneously, as they were thrashed by the
US by a huge 0.5-2.5 margin.

The loss for the Indian eves – worried by health problem of Koneru
Humpy — was really shocking as they had been doing quite well so far
in the event. Humpy was rested for the first time in the Olympiad
while Swati Ghate and Mary Ann Gomes also cited health problems.

Economist: Secular worries; Turkey’s troubles

The Economist
May 27, 2006
U.S. Edition

Secular worries; Turkey’s troubles

Clashes over Islam in Turkey

A spat with a general proves upsetting

“THERE is a price for each word uttered by people in responsible
positions,” said Recep Tayyip Erdogan. The Turkish prime minister was
talking about an unprecedented outburst by the chief of the general
staff, General Hilmi Ozkok, after last week’s shooting in a courtroom
in Ankara that killed one pro-secular judge and wounded four others.
The general had called the anti-government demonstrations that
followed “admirable”.

Alparslan Arslan, a 29-year-old lawyer who was the gunman, said he
had picked on the judges because they supported the ban on the
Islamic headscarf in public offices, schools and universities.
Members of the cabinet, including the foreign minister, Abdullah Gül,
and the justice minister, Cemil Cicek, were called “murderers” by
thousands of pro-secular Turks, who flocked to the city’s main mosque
for the judge’s funeral on May 18th. Mr Erdogan was pilloried for not
being there.

A day later President Ahmet Necdet Sezer marched with generals,
university rectors and some 20,000 protesters to Ataturk’s mausoleum.
It was the biggest pro-secular rally since the 1993 murder of a
columnist on a secular daily, Cumhuriyet. “Turkey is secular and will
remain secular,” shouted the marchers. But will it? That has been the
worry of millions of Westernised Turks ever since the mild Islamists
led by Mr Erdogan, came to power in 2002 with a big majority.

The secularists’ fears have been exploited by the army, whose powers
are being steadily eroded by a string of reforms made necessary for
Turkey to win its prized start of membership talks with the European
Union last October. Mr Erdogan’s supporters blamed agents of “the
deep state” of rogue security officials and bureaucrats for last
week’s attack. Their aim is said to be to torpedo the EU process,
weaken the government and bully Mr Erdogan into ditching his
ambitions to succeed Mr Sezer when he retires next year.

Mr Arslan’s bizarre web of connections suggest that he did not act
alone. His alleged accomplices include a former army captain, who was
dumped at an Istanbul hospital with self-inflicted knife wounds after
the killing, and sundry ultra-nationalists involved in extra-judicial
killings, extortion rackets and attacks against Christians and Kurds.
But even if the affair proves to be a conspiracy, Mr Erdogan still
needs to ask himself why so many Turks blamed the government.

One reason may be that, just like his pro-secular critics, Mr Erdogan
has been decidedly selective in his sense of democracy and justice.
He has loudly denounced court rulings against the headscarf. Yet,
when an Istanbul prosecutor pressed charges against the country’s
best-known author, Orhan Pamuk, for speaking about the mass killings
of Armenians by the Ottomans in 1915, Mr Erdogan did not utter a
squeak of reproach. His claims to defend the interests of all Turks,
not just religious ones, are beginning to ring hollow.

Yet those who are baying for the government’s blood should think
twice as well. For all his shortcomings, Mr Erdogan has brought
Turkey greater freedom and stability than any of his pro-secular
predecessors. His attempts to increase Islam’s visibility in public
life have remained just that. Although a recent poll suggests that Mr
Erdogan’s popularity rating has slipped from 35% to 28%, his party
still has twice as much support as the pro-secular Republican
People’s party. Indeed, the lack of a credible opposition remains one
of Turkey’s biggest weaknesses.

Should the judge’s murder prove to be an individual act of
retribution, “the implications are far more worrying than those of a
conspiracy,” says Murat Erdogan, at Ankara’s Hacettepe University.
“That could mean there will be further such incidents, whereas
conspiracies can be unveiled and brought under control.”

37th World Olympic Games will continue in Turin

37th World Olympic Games will continue in Turin

ArmRadio.am
27.05.2006 12:00

After a one-day break the 37th World Olympic Games will continue in
Turin. In the 5th round the Armenian chess players played a draw with
Russians. The teas of Armenia and Russia are leading the list with
15.5 points. The wemen’s team shares 4th to 11th places.

Mesrobian one day Armenian School of Qatar completes 2nd Acad. year

Azad-Hye
Doha – May 27, 2006

The Mesrobian One Day Armenian School of Qatar completed its second
academic year. On the occasion of the annual Easter visit of the
Prelate Archbishop Gorun Babyan to Qatar, who was accompanied by the
perish priest of UAE Father Aram Dekermendjian, a gathering was
organized to complete the activities of the school under the patronage
of Serpazan Hayr, and Der Hayr, with the presence of students,
parents, teachers, administration, the chairman and representatives of
Armenian national council of Qatar.

In his welcoming speech, the school administrator of the current academic
year Sarkis Kerkezian, thanked the parents and the teachers for their
support and cooperation which helped the school to overcome all the
difficulties and the challenges during the passed academic year. He
emphasized the importance of the learning the Armenian language, religion
and History that will evolve the Armenian spirit among the new generation.

The students prayed collectively the Holy prayer, sang songs and recited
poems learned during the past two academic years. Through their performance
they were able to give a sense of fulfillment and satisfaction to their
parents and the audience.

Archbishop Gorun Babyan was invited to deliver his message to the students
and the parents. He emphasized the importance of the continuity and
persistence to overcome all the challenges of the school. He gave several
examples from the Armenian communities of neighboring gulf countries and how
they started with the same humble beginnings and now have grown into a full
fledge organized schools. He said that some of the students who had
graduated from the One day Armenian schools have pursued careers and
doctorate degrees in Armenian Literature and History. Serpazan Hayr stressed
on the importance of commitment and dedication to the objectives of the
school which will enhance the presence of the Armenian character in this
rapidly developing community. He thanked the Lebanese Ambassador and the
director of the Lebanese school for providing the school facilities.

Father Aram Dekermendjian, who visits Qatar every Christmas and Easter to
perform the Holy Mass and the blessing of the Armenian homes, gave a word of
encouragement to the school administration and the council with whom he has
been interacting in the last few years. He described the current status of
the two Armenian one day schools in Sharjah and Abu Dhabi and the zealous
effort that the community members are putting in their preservation and
growth.

The event ended with a souvenir photo session, which was followed by a
community lunch.

Tghtagits

About Mesrobian Armenian one day school of Qatar
Mesrobian Armenian one day School was established by the Armenian National
Council of Qatar in 2004. The School was named after St. Mesrob since its
establishment date coincided with the 1600 centenary celebrations of the
Armenian alphabet invention.

Currently, the school has 13 registered students divided into 4 classes by
there corresponding age groups (from 4 – 12 years old). The 2 hour/week one
day school is held over the weekend according to the convenience and the
agreement of all the parents.

The curriculum of the school mainly focuses on teaching Armenian Language,
grammar, Armenian history and Religion. The classes are conducted in the
premises of the Lebanese School of Doha.

In addition to the books, workbooks, and software, the school provides a
pick up bus facility to the students.

See photos at: 34ajj67

http://www.azad-hye.net/news/viewnews.asp?newsId=7

ANKARA: Greeks, Turks: All in the language

New Anatolian, Turkey
May 26 2006

Greeks, Turks: All in the language
Yavuz Baydar

[email protected] May 2006

Bad news is that incident over the Aegean brought death and sorrow.
It brought massive material loss. But still, the fact that the crisis
has been toned down very wisely by the leaderships in Ankara and
Athens, is giving hope for the future.
Another good news is that we, some 100 Turkish and Greek journalists,
will meet in Istanbul, June 9-11, to continue to discuss ways to
create a common ground to disperse hatred, fear and misunderstanding
amongst our peoples, with the participation of the new Greek Foreign
Minister, Dora Bakoyannis.
Whenever crisis occur – or reemerge – between these two neighbours,
(and there were many of them) old emotions flare up. History itches
in the memory. A lot of people can not help feel pessimistic. Will
this friction never end? they ask.
They might be right. There are many problems that remain unsolved. On
the official level, that is. But, once you start looking into the
civilian layers of the perceptions, you see a more hopeful picture.
Greeks, belonging to a smaller country – in terms of population and
size – feel fear, in general.
Turks, mostly indifferent to issues like Cyprus, Aegean, air space
etc because they have much higher priorities as unemployment,
poverty, violence in the agenda – feel in the end of the day,
perhaps, mistrust.
Greeks can not understand why Turks have not Greco-Turkish relations
so high up in the agenda, and most Turks can not comprehend why
Greeks blow things up `out of proportion’ and make a fuss every time
something happens.
Simply put, it is like that. Thie type of frame of mind is common in
conflicted regions and they are actually not impossible to overcome.
But, we have a serious problem, commonly shared by two countries:
How the media covers developments, matters and issues, that have to
do with the relations between Greece and Turkey. Media has been THE
problem for some time now, and, as the latest incident proved, it
still is.
As a keen observer of the media landscape, I will suggest that,
although Turkish media has been jointly responsible in escalations of
tension in some earlier cases, this time it was the Greek media’s
turn the heat up, with some papers venting fury to the point of
provocation. Meanwhile, as I noted in an interview with the Greek TV
channel Alpha, Turkish press toned it down, treating the story very
calmly, with very few, careful comments in the mainstream.
We know that in conflicts between neighbours, dose of nationalism
plays a crucial role, squeezing the governments into a corner. Both
Greece and Turkey have been known for their staunch nationalism, and
the media plays a key part either for moderation or confrontation.
Nationalism is particularly present in some Greek media outlets, and,
I will claim, it is more apparent than in Turkish press, which shows
these tendencies almost only when violence related to Kurdish
separatism escalates.
It is not only that the Greek media almost always chooses to act
hawkishly when incidents as dogfights take place.
Take the minority coverage. Greek media has very little minority
coverage, if any, of the Turkish-Muslim minority in Western Thrace,
or others. When a female candidate for the elections as governor for
Xanthi – a historic settlement of the Turkish Muslim Minority in
Northeastern Greece – gave an interview for a Turkish daily recently,
it occupied the Greek press for days whether she had uttered the word
`turkish’ (as part of her identity) or not!
While the Turkish press once upon a time was criticised and ridiculed
for not using `Kurdish’ as a word to identify a person who speaks
Kurdish and calls himself/herself `Kurd’, Greek press, unfortunately,
still seems to defy EU standards of respecting individual and group
rights! In Turkey, if a person identifes herself as Armenian or
Alawite he/she is allowed and mentioned in the press as such; but in
Greece, large segments of press refrains systematically from using
`Turkish’ when referring to its minority. Sadly, although some
130.000 people in Greece speak Turkish and feel `Turkish’, this is a
taboo in Greek press. From the EU point of view, this is utterly
remarkable.
I do make many exceptions amongst the papers and colleagues, of
course. My point is, as a journalist sincerely eager for a better and
bright future for our children in Greece and in Turkey, to give some
food for thought to my colleagues. There are professional ways to be
much less high-strung, more `easy’ on these matters. Press should not
follow the `official discourse’, it must lead in its `civilian’ way,
with a bold, lucid, courageous language.
Yes, the language.
Many of our common problems are there, waiting to be solved.
You may have read one Greek reader’s letter to Ilnur Cevik. In that
letter I was perplexed by the `official’ tone that came from a
civilian.
When I was interviewed by Alpha TV – I do not know how much of it was
aired – I said the following: `When you play a deadly game
delibarately, you know the probabilities of death. Most unfortunate
is that a human being died, his family suffering for a stupidity.
Milliaosn of dollars went down tghe drain for nothing. For what? For
two male cats trying to mark their territory! Why do we not think
about our children, their children? Why can we not imagine, that
maybe year 2020 the entire Aegean will be without borders? Why do we
not think that the EU process will solve, whether the parts want it
or not, all the problems?’
Now, let me take an article by Stavros Lygeros, in Kathimerini, to
reach a conclusion. There, again, I am struck by the
confrontatioanlistic rhetoric, `you are the bad one, not us’ type of
argumentation.
I will try to respond to him, below each paragraph.
Lygeros writes:
`Ten years after Prime Minister Costas Simitis declared his intention
to improve ties with Turkey, it is unclear what progress has been
made and what prospects exist. Turkey never loses an opportunity to
stress – in words and deeds – that its expansionist goals remain
unchanged. Even when Ankara needed Greek and Cypriot approval in
order to embark on accession talks with the European Union, it not
only failed to show any good will but intensified its provocations.
The Turks have never hidden their intentions. After the EU approved
the launch of talks, Ankara said it would not change its stances on
Cyprus and the Aegean..’
My note:
There is a remarkable progress that has been made, for those who want
to see. Latest project on the pipeline through Thrace is one;
purchase of a large Turkish bank by a Greek bank is another. Exchange
of students are very successful and contacts between the
municipalities increase. These sort of developments are helping a
gradual but continous change. More will follow.
`Expansionist’ is an old fashioned rhetoric. In the EU context –
Greece is a member, Turkey is a negotiating partner – this definition
has no meaning. You can not `expand’ violently, as you negotiate an
EU membership. Therefore, `Turks’ can have, logically, no such
`hidden’ intentions. NATO and Athens also confirmed that the incident
in the Aegean was not a `provocation’.
As for Cyprus, I believe we have more questions to Papadopoulos,
President of Cyprus, and to the Greekcypriot voters, than to Erdogan.
No to Annan plan, yes to `No solution’ and massive `no’ amongst the
Greekcypriot youth to living together with Turkcypriots (around 70 %)
do not help much to encourage Turks to `change their stance’, do
they?
Lygeros writes:
`Tuesday’s collision in the Aegean was statistically predictable. But
it also brings back to the fore the hostility of Turkey’s
expansionism in the Aegean. Athens has been pursuing an approach of
`detente’ with Ankara but this cannot be a substitute for policy. If
relations are to be improved, there must be good will on both sides.
But all evidence shows that Ankara’s provocations and coercive
diplomacy will not disappear. Good relations would benefit both
countries, not just ours. This should be self-evident, but
unfortunately is not.’
My note: Again, we meet terms like `expansionism’, and
`provocations’. The author claims that `all evidence shows that
Ankara’s provocations and coercive diplomacy will not disappear..’
What evidence? We do not know. He is right that good-will is required
from both sides. But good-will has a lot to do with the way one
analyses the developments.
Lygeros writes:
`Certain commentators maintain that Greece could achieve a detente by
indirectly yielding to Turkish demands and making some apparently
painless concessions. But this stance assumes the existence of
unequal terms in Greek-Turkish relations and will only serve to
intensify Turkish hostility.’
My note: The end paragraph of the opinion article in Kathimerini is
actually highlighting the point I am trying to make: that without a
basic knowledge of conflict resolution, the confrontation will
continue even in press. Naturally, this sort of argumentation has its
twin in Turkish press, reflected from time to time, whenever tension
is visible.
But, this is not the way. The more we, as journalists both in Greece
and Turkey, realize, in sincerity, that the EU process, however
painful and bumpy it may be, is possibly the most effective tool to
neutralize all sorts of ill intentions and vicious plans.
The sooner we see it, the better.

TBILISI: First Train Withdraws Russian Military Base From Batumi

FIRST TRAIN WITHDRAWS RUSSIAN MILITARY BASE FROM BATUMI

Prime News Agency, Georgia
May 25 2006

Tbilisi. May 25 (Prime-News) – The first train loaded with materiel
withdrawn from the Russian military base in Batumi started to Armenia
on Thursday.

Earlier equipment used be withdrawn from the Military base by ships
– twenty T-72, three anti-aircraft systems, five armoured vehicles
and twelve defensive anti-aircraft systems were withdrawn in 2005 by
Russian military ships.

As Prime-News was told by Vladimir Kuparadze, Deputy Commander of
the Group of Russian Armed Forces in South Caucasus, the train has
already left Georgia for the Russian military base in Gyumr, Armenia.

The train is loaded with 54 pieces of military materiel.

Vladimir Kuparadze added that more equipment is to be sent from the
Batumi military base to Armenia by six trains in the forthcoming
months.

Andranik Margarian: New Culture Minister’s Appointment Provided Only

ANDRANIK MARGARIAN: NEW CULTURE MINISTER’S APPOINTMENT PROVIDED ONLY BY RE-ARRANGEMENTS IN POLITICAL FIELD OF COUNTRY

Noyan Tapan
May 23 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 23, NOYAN TAPAN. Prime Minister Andranik Margarian
introduced on May 23 Hasmik Poghosian, the Minister of Culture and
Youth Issues, newly appointed by RA President Robert Kocharian’s
decree, to the ministry’s staff.

Andranik Margarian mentioned that Gevorg Gevorgian, appointed the
Minister of Culture and Youth Issues three months ago has done
a rather great work at the Ministry during this period, and a new
person’s appointment on this post is provided only by re-arrangements
taken place in the political field. “During those three months Gevorg
Gevorgian created at the Ministry a working atmosphere and showed a
strict orientation in the affair of development of the cultural policy
of the country. Gevorg Gevorgian was my co-thinker in this sense.

It is a pity that the issue of changing the Minister arose
in consequence of the political situation,” the Prime Minister
emphasized. Andranik Margarian expressed a hope that newly appointed
Minister Hasmik Poghosian who was nominated by the United Labour
Party, will keep the already created working atmosphere at the
Ministry and will continue working in the same way. H.Poghosian is
non-partizan. The newly appointed Minister is not a new person in
the sphere of culture. She has worked for long years at the Armenian
Society for Cultural Relations with Foreign Countries, and has been
the Chairwoman of that structure during the recent time. Hasmik
Poghosian mentioned that being appointed on the post of the Culture
Minister was unexpected for her. According to her, she knows the sphere
rather well, and in this sense, frames and issues of her activity will
just enlarge. Responding the Noyan Tapan correspondent’s question by
what changing one non-partizan minister with another was provided,
especially in the sphere of culture, where problems connected with
ministers have always been, the Prime Minister mentioned that this is
only a result of political changes. According to Andranik Margarian,
he is not at all of the opinion that the Ministry of Culture is more
national than others: “One must not separate ministries: as mush
the culture is national as the education and nature protection are
national.” The Prime Minister expressed a hope that till May, 2007,
no change of minister will be in this sphere any more. He informed
that Gevorg Gevorgian will be proposed a new job as “those abilities
and possibilities that the former minister has may not be left in
the street.”

ASBAREZ Online [05-23-2006]

ASBAREZ ONLINE
TOP STORIES
05/23/2006
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1) Armenia Forging Closer Links with Europe And NATO
2) United Labor Party Joins Armenian Coalition
3) Turkish And Greek Fighter Jets Collide in Mid-air

1) Armenia Forging Closer Links with Europe And NATO

YEREVAN (Combined Sources)–Armenia is stepping up its efforts to forge closer
links with European and Euro-Atlantic structures, President Robert Kocharian
told the North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s (NATO) special representative to
the South Caucasus and Central Asia, Robert Simmons.
In a meeting with Simmons, Kocharian said he has set up an inter-agency
commission charged with coordinating his administration’s efforts at European
integration.
“Our objective is to not only keep the planned work on track but to move
forward at a bit higher tempo and implement joint programs in full,” he said.
Kocharian referred to Armenia’s involvement in the European Union’s European
Neighborhood Policy (ENP) program, which entitles it to a privileged
relationship with the club, and the implementation of its Individual
Partnership Action Plan (IPAP) with NATO.
Prime Minister Andranik Markarian said during a separate meeting with Simmons
on Monday that closer ties with NATO are “one of the important components of
Armenia’s multi-layered security system.” Yerevan therefore stands for an
“expansion of the political dialogue” with the US-led alliance, he added.
Simmons praised this policy as he wrapped up his two-day visit to the
Armenian
capital. “Armenia wants to build a stronger partnership with NATO,” he told a
news conference. “We are happy with the level of our relationship.”
The IPAP, which was launched last December, aims to bring Armenia closer to
NATO by envisaging, among other things, a reform of its military that would
boost its interoperability with the armed forces of NATO member states.
Simmons approved of the pace at which Armenia is implementing the IPAP
program
and noted that significant progress has been made, particularly in the defense
sphere and consolidation of democracy in Armenia.
Yerevan undertook a project to develop and publicize a “defense doctrine” and
a broader “national security strategy” in the coming years. A separate
inter-ministerial commission headed by Defense Minister Serge Sarkisian is
already working on both documents.
Another stated aim of the IPAP is a democratization of Armenia’s political
system, the strengthening of its judiciary system, and a fight against
corruption. Statements released by Kocharian’s and Markarian’s offices, quoted
Simmons as stressing the need for “strengthening democracy.”
Kocharian and other Armenian leaders have repeatedly stated that the IPAP is
not a prelude to an Armenian bid to join the alliance.
“NATO is not forcing Armenia to join the alliance or cut ties with other
organizations or states,” Simmons said.
He said that NATO appreciates Armenia’s involvement in peacekeeping missions
and hopes to boost the cooperation in this sphere in future.
During his meetings, Simmons also discussed Armenian-Turkish relations with
the Armenian officials.
Simmons said that being a NATO member country, Turkey has approved of
Armenia’s IPAP with NATO. He said he hoped that cooperation within the
frameworks of the IPAP will promote improved relations between the two
countries.
Simmons also commented on the Karabagh conflict, saying that NATO is not
directly involved in the process of the conflict regulation, but hopes that
the
negotiating sides will reach mutually acceptable agreement.

2) United Labor Party Joins Armenian Coalition

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)The United Labor Party (MAK) joined Armenia’s governing
coalition on Monday, replacing the Orinats Yerkir party whose leader,
parliament speaker Artur Baghdasarian, formally tendered his resignation to
fellow legislators.
The United Labor Party (MAK) was given the post of culture minister and three
other senior government positions in return for lending support to the cabinet
of Prime Minister Andranik Markarian. Under the power-sharing deal, MAK will
also name the new chairman of the Armenian parliament committee on defense and
security.
The party was offered to join the coalition despite having the smallest
faction in Parliament, which holds only six of out its 131 seats.
Though not formally affiliated with the MAK, Armenia’s new culture minister,
Hasmik Poghosian, is known to have close links with its leader Gurgen
Arsenian.
Poghosian led a non-governmental organization promoting cultural ties with the
outside world before her appointment, which was endorsed by Kocharian.
Three other MAK nominees were appointed to the posts of deputy minister of
labor and social affairs and deputy governor of the northern Shirak and Lori
regions. All three jobs were previously held by Orinats Yerkir members.

3) Turkish And Greek Fighter Jets Collide in Mid-air

ANKARA (AFP)–Greek and Turkish F-16 fighter jets collided in mid-air over the
eastern Aegean Sea, an area where the two NATO allies often engage in mock dog
fights amid disputes over their airspace control, both sides said.
Turkey announced that the Greek pilot died while the Turkish pilot ejected
and
was rescued by a Panama-registered cargo ship before being repatriated by a
Turkish army helicopter.
The two sides gave different accounts of the accident which occurred some 35
miles (55 kilometers) south of the Greek island of Rhodes, with the Turkish
army saying that the collision took place in international airspace and the
Greek army charging that the planes were in airspace overseen by Athens.
But officials from the two countries rushed to underline that they would not
let the incident affect bilateral ties which have improved significantly in
recent year.
The Turkish army said the two jets had collided when Greek warplanes
attempted
to intercept Turkish jets on “routine training flights” in international air
space.
The Greek armed forces, however, said the collision took place in the Athens
Flight Information Region (FIR)–the flight zone overseen by the Athens
airport
control tower.
They said in a statement that a Turkish RF-4 and two F-16s entered the Athens
FIR “without laying down flight plans” and heading towards the island of
Crete,
“violating the rules of aerial navigation.”
A formation of two Greek F-16s then took off to “investigate the planes and
assure the security of international traffic,” it said.
During a “reconnaissance maneuver” a Greek F-16 and a Turkish F-16
collided at
an altitude of 27,000 feet (8,230 meters) and the planes crashed, the
statement
said.
But Turkish Defense Minister Vecdi Gonul denied the Greek charges.
“The incident took place in international airspace. Furthermore our flight
was
a scheduled flight. It had been conveyed in advance to NATO,” he told
reporters
in Ankara, the Anatolia news agency reported.
Turkey says its planes flying over the Aegean hand over flight plans to NATO
prior to take-off and have posted their electronic in-flight identification
since October 2001.
It says Greece does not reciprocate such measures.
Greek Foreign Minister Dora Bakoyannis and her Turkish counterpart Abdullah
Gul spoke by telephone and expressed regret over the incident, saying it
should
not affect relations, the two foreign ministries said.
“In their talks, the two ministers were unanimous on shedding light on the
incident and not allowing it to affect bilateral ties,” the Turkish statement
said.
Despite a significant thaw in ties in recent years, Turkey and Greece remain
at odds over territorial rights in the Aegean, accusing each other of
violations.
Athens has long complained of frequent violations of its air space by Turkish
aircraft. Turkey, however, says its planes fly in international air space.
Greece claims a 10-mile air space limit around its coastline but Turkey only
recognizes six miles, arguing that under international rules Greece’s airspace
should be the same as its territorial waters.
Turkey is under European Union pressure to resolve territorial disputes with
Greece, a bloc member.
In 1996, the two neighbors nearly went to war over an uninhabited rocky islet
in the Aegean, but the United States stepped in and defused the tension.
After decades of animosity, ties notably improved after 1999 when deadly
earthquakes in the two countries triggered an unprecedented outpouring of
solidarity between their people.
Diplomats from both countries have engaged in closed-door talks since January
2002 to try to resolve their disputes but no concrete result has been publicly
announced so far.
But the two neighbors disagree even about the extent of the dispute.
While Greece claims the only issue to be dealt with is that of continental
shelf rights, Turkey says there is a plethora of problems ranging from the
boundaries of territorial waters to the status of islands whose sovereignty
remains unclear.

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Discussion Of The “Law And Theory Of Judicial Precedence” Manual To

DISCUSSION OF THE “LAW AND THEORY OF JUDICIAL PRECEDENCE” MANUAL TO BE HELD AT RA COURT OF APPEAL

ArmRadio.am
23.05.2006 12:35

On may 24 the presentation and discussion of the “Law and Theory of
Judicial Precedence” manual will be held at RA Court of Appeal.

The manual aims at introducing Armenian Judges to the major legal
principles, which lie in the basis of the legal systems in the United
States, United Kingdom and Continental Europe.

International experts from the US, Great Britain and representatives
of court system will participate in the discussion.