Settlement In Genocide Lawsuit

SETTLEMENT IN GENOCIDE LAWSUIT
Alex Dobuzinskis, Staff Writer

Los Angeles Daily News
Oct 13 2005

AXA agrees to pay Armenian claims

A French insurance company has agreed to pay $17 million to settle
a class action lawsuit filed by descendants of Armenians killed in
the early 20th century in what is now Turkey.

French insurance giant AXA also agreed to call the killings genocide,
an important term to Armenians trying to call attention to what they
say were organized murders of more than a million people between 1915
and the early 1920s.

“Anytime we’re able to bring attention to the genocide is significant,”
said Brian Kabateck, one of the plaintiff’s attorneys.

“Because the rest of the world needs to understand what happened and
the rest of the world needs to focus on an ultimate resolution of
the genocide, which is recognition by the United States government
and the Turkish government.”

Between 2,000 and 5,000 policies are believed to be covered by the
settlement, including many in Southern California’s large Armenian
community, although the final number has yet to be determined.

AXA was sued because it bought L’Union Des Assurances de Paris, the
company that sold policies to Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire.

The $17 million AXA settlement will be presented to a federal judge
in Los Angeles next month for final approval. It is similar to one
reached last year in which New York Life agreed to pay $20 million
to resolve litigation arising from its failure to pay Armenian
policyholders’ relatives.

One key difference is that in its settlement AXA would follow the
French government’s lead in describing the events of 1915 to the
early 1920s as genocide.

Armenians estimate that 1.5 million died when Armenian civilians living
in the Ottoman Empire were forced from their homes or otherwise killed
during and after World War I. The United States government and Turkey
have not officially called the event a genocide, and Turkey argues
that the number is exaggerated.

“I am not belittling their ordeal during that relocation: many
perished, many terrible things happened, that’s true,” said Engin
Ansay, the Turkish consul general in Los Angeles. “But it was not a
government decision or any decision on the part of the authorities
to annihilate one whole nation.”

The case against AXA was brought on behalf of several lead plaintiffs
living in the San Fernando Valley. One was Anik Arabian, who brought
her uncle’s life insurance policy with her to America, but who died
after the lawsuit was filed in 2002.

Arabian was born in Greece, where her parents had landed after being
driven into the desert. Many of her family died in what is now Syria,
then a part of the Ottoman Empire.

“They were burying their kids with their bare hands, my grandfather and
grandmother they buried … six of them,” said son Vagram Topadzhikyan,
60, of Glendale.

Under the AXA settlement, money from an $11 million fund will be paid
to the closest relative of a policyholder on the company’s list.

Another $3 million will go to Armenian charitable organizations in
France, and another $3 million for administrative and legal fees.

“We believe that this settlement is in the best interest of AXA Group
and all of its stakeholders, and we are pleased to put this matter
behind us,” said AXA spokeswoman Joann Tizzano.

The plaintiffs’ lawyers were Kabateck, Mark Geragos and Vartkes
Yeghiayan, who are all of Armenian descent and also brought the case
against New York Life.

The AXA settlement sets aside the same amount for claims payment and
charity as the New York Life settlement. The only difference is the
amount earmarked for legal and administrative fees was halved in the
AXA case.

The deadline to file a claim in the New York Life settlement passed on
March 16, and the claims are being analyzed. The company had agreed
to pay on 2,400 policies, but claims were filed on 1,600 of them,
which means the amount that would have been paid on the remaining
claims will be added to the charity fund.

Some policies might have gone unclaimed because their holders were
unaware of the settlement, or because all the potential claimants died.

Justice Bloc Will Decide How To Say << No>>

JUSTICE BLOC WILL DECIDE HOW TO SAY “NO”

A1+
| 16:07:56 | 12-10-2005 | Politics |

“We call everyone to actively participate in the Constitutional
referendum and to say “No” to the draft; we also understand those
citizens who boycott the referendum”, this was the text of the
announcement discussed during the session of the Justice bloc.

The representatives of all the member parties of the bloc participate
in the session. Aram Sargsyan is not in Yerevan, but member of the
Republican party political council Smbat Ayvazyan is present at the
session. By the way, Albert Bazeyan and Vagharshak Haroutyunyan are
also invited to the session.

Their party is not yet member of the bloc, but Bazeyan is member of
the Justice fraction.

Before the session the correspondent of “A1+” asked the secretary
of the People’s party Grigor Haroutyunyan about his attitude towards
the separate anti-preaching of the National Unity. “What do you mean
by separate?

Geghamyan will hold meetings and persuade people to say “No”, and we
will do the same. It is not excluded that we will say “No” together”.

Church Leader Says U.S. Crucial To Peace In The Mideast

CHURCH LEADER SAYS U.S. CRUCIAL TO PEACE IN THE MIDEAST
By Alex Dobuzinskis, Staff Writer

Los Angeles Daily News, CA
Oct 10 2005

The United States has a big role to play in establishing peace in
the Middle East, where Christians are awaiting peace as eagerly as
are Jews and Muslims, an Armenian church pontiff said Sunday during
his visit to Southern California.

His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, is based
in Antelias, Lebanon, and speaks Armenian, English, Arabic and French.

More than 500,000 Armenians live outside Armenia in the Middle East
in such countries as Iran, Lebanon, Syria and Israel, along with
other Christians.

“You can imagine that the peace process … for us (is) something of
profound importance,” Aram said. “This is the only way to bring the
region out of what I would say is its centuries-old conflict.”

Aram is on an official visit to California on the 10th anniversary of
his ascension to the head of the Lebanon-based branch of the Armenian
Apostolic Church.

This week he will visit the Armenian-American community in Fresno,
then come back to Los Angeles on Friday to meet with Mayor Antonio
Villaraigosa.

Aram said the United States has a role to play in promoting peace in
the Middle East, and he said conflicts in the Middle East are more
than just political.

“I think we should go beyond politics in the strict sense of the word,”
Aram said. “The question is how we can we live together.”

Rabbi Yosef Kanefsky, president of the Board of Rabbis of Southern
California, has a different view. A political solution to the conflict
must come before religion can play a positive role.

“It’s the folks with the weapons and the oil who are calling the shots,
not the people inside the house of worship,” he said.

Dr. Maher Hathout, spokesman for the Islamic Center of Southern
California, said Christians living in the Middle East have an important
role to play, especially in Israel.

“By virtue of their message and their long history of good relations
with Muslims and the fact that (orthodox Christians) and the Muslims
and Jews were victims of the Crusade(s), will give them that historical
role to act as mediators for peace,” he said.

Azerbaijan denies guilt in delay of New Neighborhood implementation

ARMINFO News Agency
October 7, 2005

AZERBAIJAN DENIES ITS GUILT IN THE DELAY OF “NEW NEIGHBORHOOD”
PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION

STRASBOURG, OCTOBER 7. ARMINFO. The head of the Azerbaijani
delegation, Samad Seyidov, denies that the EU-South Caucasus talks
about “New Neighborhood” program implementation were delayed because
of problems with Azerbaijan.

On the other hand, the EU Special Representative at South Caucasus,
Heikki Talvitie, on a joint press-conference with the Armenian
Minister for Foreign affairs, Vardan Oskanian, stated that the talks
with Armenia and Georgia on “New Neighborhood” program were delayed
because Azerbaijan had problems with one of the EU countries
(Cyprus).

According to Mr. Seyidov, the European Union works hard for
integrating Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan with the European
society. “All the problems, related with further integration, will be
easily resolved. The arguments against Azerbaijan are groundless and
I can’t see anything impeding the Caucasian-European integration,” he
said. -A-

One Day NK Will Become Full Participant In NK Peace Talks: Oskanyan

ONE DAY NK WILL BECOME FULL PARTICIPANT IN NK PEACE TALKS: OSKANIAN

ARMINFO News Agency
October 6, 2005

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 6. ARMINFO. The positions of the Armenian and
Azeri sides on the Karabakh issue have become closer on a number of
principled matters, says Armenia’s FM Vardan Oskanyan.

He hopes that as soon as such elements multiply the positions will
be put to paper.

Oskanyan specifies that the sides are close on the issues of status,
security and territories. There is no ready resolution for the moment
and Oskanyan does not know if the current situation will lead to one.

Commenting on the possibility of transferring the peace process from
the OSCE to another format (for example CE insisted on by Azerbaijan)
Oskanyan says that the issue can be discussed everywhere. This is even
useful but only the OSCE MG can discuss it in full format. Of course to
demand another format is the sovereign right of any state but obviously
the Karabakh conflict must be resolved in the framework of the OSCE MG
– a fact admitted by the whole international community. Of course if
tomorrow comes a decision to change the format the sides will change
it but today there is no alternative to the OSCE MG, says Oskanyan.

He says that one day Karabakh will inevitably become a full participant
in the peace talks. Even Azerbaijan realizes this.

Referring to OSCE PA Special representative on Karabakh Goran Lenmarker
Oskanyan hopes that after the parliamentary elections in Azerbaijan
the solutions will be found.

Belarusian, Armenian Prosecutors-General Sign Cooperation Protocol

BELARUSIAN, ARMENIAN PROSECUTORS-GENERAL SIGN COOPERATION PROTOCOL

Belarusian television,
Oct 6 2005

Intensive development of both business and friendly Belarusian-Armenian
ties has been extended to the activities by the two countries’
law-enforcement bodies. A protocol on cooperation and interaction
between the Belarusian Prosecutor’s Office and the Prosecutor-General’s
Office of Armenia was signed in Minsk today.

The document provides for both interaction in the area of legal
cooperation and joint efforts aimed at combating all sorts of crime.

In particular, the parties have undertaken commitments to exchange
information about planned or committed crimes and about affiliates.

The document was signed by the two countries’ prosecutor-generals,
Pyotr Miklashevich and Agvan Ovsepyan.

Kocharian, Representative Of PA Of OSCE Discuss Prospects Of NKConfl

KOCHARIAN, REPRESENTATIVE OF PA OF OSCE PROSPECTS OF NK CONFLICT SETTLEMENT

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Oct 6 2005

YEREVAN, October 6. /ARKA/. RA President Robert Kocharyan and Special
Representative of the Chairman of Parliamentary Assembly of OSCE
for Nagorno Karabakh Goran Lenmarker discussed current stage and
prospects of Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement, the RA Presidential
Press-Service reported ARKA News Agency. They exchanged opinions on
Lenmarker’s report on Nagorno Karabakh. Kocharyan presented the current
stage and prospects of Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement. Kocharyan
also discussed issues of developing cooperation with the OSCE, and
pointed to the importance of inert-parliamentary cooperation in this
context. A.A. -0–

3 charged in scheme to bribe govmt officials in former Soviet Rep.

Three charged in scheme to bribe government officials in former Soviet
Republic

Associated Press
October 6, 2005

By Larry Neumeister, Associated Press Writer

NEW YORK –Three men including an executive with American
International Group Inc. were charged Thursday with offering hundreds
of millions of dollars — as well as shopping sprees, jewelry and
medical treatment — to top officials in the former Soviet republic of
Azerbaijan to get favorable treatment in oil deals.

Investment promoter Viktor Kozeny, Frederic Bourke Jr. and AIG
executive David Pinkerton, were charged in a 27-count indictment in
U.S. District Court in Manhattan. The defendants each were charged
with violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which makes it a
crime to offer payment to foreign government officials to obtain or
retain business.

The indictment said Kozeny, 42, an Irish citizen of Czech background,
was president and chairman of Oily Rock Group Limited and Minaret
Group Limited when he and the two other men — both American citizens
— tried to buy off senior Azerbaijan officials.

Bourke, 59, of Greenwich, Conn., was an investor with
Kozeny. Pinkerton, 44, of Bernardsville, N.J., was an executive at
American International Group Inc., a U.S.-based insurance company. He,
too, was part of Kozeny’s investment group, authorities said.

Pinkerton was put on administrative leave at AIG until the charges are
resolved, the company said in a statement. He was managing director of
AIG Global Investment Corp and was in charge of AIG’s private equity
group, the indictment said.

AIG said the investment in question was brought to AIG Global
Investment Group by a New York investment fund which put together a
group investing $180 million. That group, AIG said, included an AIG
subsidiary which invested approximately $15 million in 1998.

AIG said no assets of AIG clients were invested in the transaction and
that AIG, realizing it had been defrauded by Kozeny, joined other
investors in bringing lawsuits against him in the United States, the
United Kingdom and the Bahamas.

It said it was cooperating with the probe by federal prosecutors and
noted that no charges were brought against AIG.

U.S. Attorney Michael J. Garcia said hundreds of millions of dollars
in bribes were promised and tens of millions of dollars were actually
paid in the scheme that ran from August 1997 until about 1999.

“The case that we bring today involves nothing less than the brazen
attempt to steal the wealth of a sovereign nation,” he told a news
conference.

Azerbaijan, rich in oil resources, began privatizing some of its
state-owned enterprises in the 1990s, Garcia said.

Garcia said the defendants tried to bribe key decision makers and
corrupt the privatization process.

Kozeny sent planeloads of cash from Switzerland to Azerbaijan to buy
vouchers to purchase shares in the State Oil Co., which held the
country’s oil and gas reserves and its oil and gas exploration,
production and refining facilities, Garcia said.

Garcia said Bourke and Pinkerton knowingly participated in the scheme,
bribing top Azerbaijan officials with jewelry, shopping sprees and
medical treatment to ensure the national oil company would be sold
“and that they would get their unfair share.”

Mark J. Mershon, assistant director in charge of the FBI’s New York
office, said Kozeny’s plan was to acquire millions of dollars worth of
options to buy stock in the oil company to gain a controlling interest
so the options could be resold for 10 times their value.

“Kozeny foresaw such a windfall that he could promise corrupt
Azerbaijan officials two thirds of his profits and still make a
killing,” Mershon said.

Kozeny never gained control of the oil company, he added.

Bourke and Pinkerton surrendered to the FBI in Manhattan while Kozeny
was arrested Wednesday in the Bahamas, where he was awaiting a court
appearance.

If convicted, the men face up to five years on each count of violating
the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

Bourke and Pinkerton each pleaded not guilty before Judge Richard
Casey.

Barry H. Berke, Pinkerton’s lawyer, said: “David Pinkerton has been
wrongfully accused of being a criminal based on a passive investment
that represents less than 1 percent of the investment portfolio he
managed.”

Stanley A. Twardy Jr., a lawyer for Bourke, said: “We’re looking
forward to proving his case in court.”

Benjamin Brafman, a lawyer for Kozeny, said the Foreign Corrupt
Practices Act does not apply to him and he cannot be prosecuted for
charges related to payments he allegedly made to foreign officials.

He said Kozeny has not decided whether to fight extradition.

http://www.boston.com/news/local/connecticut/articles/2005/10/06/three_arrested_in_scheme_to_bribe_government_of_azerbaijan/

Will They Split Before They Marry?

WILL THEY SPLIT BEFORE THEY MARRY?

Spiegel Online, Germany
Oct 3 2005

If Ankara enters into accession talks this week with the European
Union, it will do so bitter and disillusioned. Support for Turkey’s
move toward the West is diminishing back home. And the anger last
minute conditions set by the EU have generated pose considerable
political risks — not just for Turkey.

Perhaps it has to do with his own domestic bliss, or perhaps it’s
the number of famous people whose marriages he once consummated as
the mayor of Istanbul. But it’s clear: Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan loves to compare foreign policy to marriage.

Turkey’s entry into the European Union, Erdogan once confided
to Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, is like a “Catholic
wedding.” The Italian, a Christian, immediately understood what his
Muslim Turkish counterpart meant: a boisterous party, much fanfare
and ado, and a bond that lasts until death do us part.

That was three years ago, at a time when euphoria for Europe had
reached its pinnacle in Turkey. Back then, 85 percent of Turks
supported EU membership. Berlusconi had come to Istanbul to attend the
wedding of Erdogan’s son, Bilal. He was followed later by his Greek
colleague, Prime Minister Konstantinos Karamanlis, who attended the
wedding of Bilal’s sister Ersa.

These days, though, euphoria for European membership is shrinking
by the week and only 60 percent of Turks still say they support
EU membership. Yet again, Erdogan has found a marriage comparison
to pointedly describe the current situation: The constant new
preconditions being set by the Europeans so close to the start of
accession negotiations — including the consolation of a “privileged
partnership,” — is tantamount to “going to the altar and suddenly
saying: ‘Let’s just stay friends.'”

After serious last minute diplomatic wrangling — which included
a plea for help from United States Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice — Turkey finally got the go ahead on Monday from the European
Union to begin negotiations for eventual membership. Of course,
with Austria unwilling to budge, the outcome of Monday’s marathon
diplomacy was anything but certain until the very last minute. And
as of Monday evening, it was still uncertain whether Turkey would
accept the final agreement.

In Vienna, where memories of Turkish-led Ottoman Empire invasions
of Austria are still a regular part of history lessons, politicians
demanded last week that any accession negotiation framework for Turkey
also include a provision of a “privilege partnership” if negotiations
for full-membership were to collapse. But critics of Austria alleged
the country had ulterior motives: its desire to have accession talks
fast-tracked for longtime ally Croatia. Elements of xenophobia and
Islamophobia were also alleged.

With such complicated twists and turns just before the start of
negotiations, Ankara is looking to Brussels with bitterness and
disillusionment. Indeed, support for Turkey’s Western ambitions are
waning, and opponents of the EU within Turkey are returning to the
forefront.

A few weeks ago, the sentiment was different. The Turkish press
viewed the outcome of German parliamentary elections as the “burial
of the privileged partnership” idea championed by conservative
chancellor candidate Angela Merkel. But the mood nevertheless remained
skeptical. “Even if the negotiations begin on Oct. 3, who knows what
will happen on Oct. 4 or what crises will result in the suspension
of talks six months later,” the Turkish daily Sabah wondered.

So why this misery on a day that diplomats in Ankara have been
working towards for 50 years — one which is supposed to herald the
consummation of an historic mission that is cemented in Turkey’s state
doctrine? “We Turks only go in one direction,” the country’s founder,
Mustafa Kemal, better known as Ataturk, once told his people, “West.”

On the outside, the cause of the disagreement couldn’t be more
mundane. It’s linked to the complicated situation on the divided
Mediterranean island of Cyprus. Ankara has refused to recognize the
government of the southern Greek half of the island as representatives
of the entire island and it has refused to allow ships and planes from
the Republic of Cyprus to use Turkish sea ports and airports. Europe,
however, has made the outcome of negotiations with Turkey contingent on
Ankara’s official recognition of the EU member state. Without taking
this step and without opening up its borders for the unrestricted
transport of goods from Greek Cypriots, the European Union’s transport
minister, Jacques Barrot, has said, it would be impossible to lead
the accession talks to success.

The Turks are being too obstinate, but it’s also possible that
Brussels bureaucrats are sticking too close to the script, observed
a self-critical Western diplomat in Ankara. The Europeans have given
too little recognition to the fact that Erdogan has stripped the
leader of Cyprus’s Turks, Rauf Denktas of his power. Nor has Europe
given proper recognition to the fact that the northern Cypriot Turks
enthusiastically embraced the United Nation’s plan for the island’s
reunification. It was, after all, the Greek Cypriots who rejected the
plan in a referendum vote in April 2004, just before the EU expanded
by 10 members, including a divided Cyprus.

These days, the Cyprus conflict is being viewed in Turkey as a symbol
of the growing apprehension for the entire Europe project. Turkish
columnist Semih Idiz has described it as the “enough is enough
sentiment.” “If the government were to declare today it was going to
break off relations with the European Union, they would probably be
greeted with broad accordance.”

During recent months, EU opponents in Turkey have been awakening
from their political coma. Supported by strong signals of support
from Brussels, Erdogan quickly put pressure on them after he entered
office. They include the far-right Nationalist Movement Party (MHP),
hardliners in the Turkish General Staff and the firm Kemalists within
the state apparatus, or “bureaucratic oligarchs,” as Erdogan likes
to disparagingly call them.

Recently, the winds have changed in Europe, as well. Following the
failure of referenda on the European constitution in France and the
Netherlands, criticism of Turkish EU membership has also increased,
and many in Turkey have the feeling the country is being pushed to drop
its aspirations. A sort of bunker mentality is gaining traction here.

“If I were a European, I wouldn’t accept Turkey in the Union either,”
says Emin Colasan, derisively. The stalwart nationalist columnist
for the Turkish daily Hurriyet is considered the mouthpiece of the
conservative Turkish Officer Corps. When Erdogan came back from
Brussels one year ago, the prime minister’s colleagues cracked jokes
about Colasan and many didn’t take him seriously.

A year later, his columns are once again required reading for the
chattering classes. The EU, he recently wrote, has “put Turkey in its
lap” like an underage child. And he argues that the reform laws that
have been implemented by the government under pressure from Europe
have weakened the Turkish state. He alleges reforms would make it
impossible to efficiently fight against terrorism, that they would
encourage Kurdish separatism and increase the influence of Islamists.

“Everything that is in the interest of the Europeans,” Colasan said,
“has destroyed our national honor.”

Other critics of EU membership argue that the EU will attempt to
colonize and plunder Ankara. They say Brussels has fed Turkey a
constant stream of lies and it is attempting to impose strictly
Christian values on Turkish society. The head of the MHP party in
Istanbul, Ihsan Barutcu, even compared the EU with a horse, saying:
“You can only mount it if you can steer it.”

Another popular line is that the only friends Turks have are
themselves. This school of thought has gained currency following
the recent debate about the genocide of Armenians. Internationally
renowned Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk, the recent recipient of the
peace prize of the German Booksellers’ Association, got an unwanted
glimpse of that recently. He didn’t just get hate mail and death
threats after making his recent comment that 1 million Armenians were
murdered in the Ottoman Empire and 30,000 Kurds in modern Turkey. He
is also scheduled to stand trial on Dec. 16 as a result.

It gets worse. After Turkey’s justice minister vilified the organizers
of an academic conference on the question of Armenian genocide as
“traitors to their country,” a court banned the meeting.

Last week, a private university disregarded the court and held the
conference, but protestors showered participants, including a former
Turkish foreign minister, with eggs.

Religious minorities in Turkey are also reporting bad experiences
with the state apparatus. The Alevites, a Muslim faith derived from
Shiite, claim that they are discriminated against by a Turkish state
that exclusively supports the country’s Sunni Islam. If the situation
doesn’t change, they have threatened to take their case to the European
Court of Justice, demanding equal status with the Sunnis.

Turkey’s deputy head of government, Ali Sahin, also recently described
the recent invitation extended to Pope Benedikt XVI by Istanbul’s
Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I as “inappropriate.” That, Sahin said,
is a privilege reserved for the government. Back when he was still
known as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the pope spoke out against EU
membership for the majority Muslim Turkey (“a grave error .. against
the tide of history”), and Sahin said he would have to.

make due with an invitation from the president. The whole exchange
prompted Foreign Minister Gul to remark: “No country is as good as
Turkey at shooting itself in the foot.”

For his part, Erdogan has valiantly countered the wave of chauvinism
in his country. Last week, he condemned the court’s decision to ban
the Armenia conference, “because I want to live in a Turkey in which
freedom of expression is all-embracing.” The Kurdish problem, he said,
needs to be solved “with more democracy, greater civil liberties and
increased prosperity.” Not even an assassination attempt on Erdogan
at the hands of a misguided nationalist two weeks ago was enough to
disturb his peace of mind.

But in reality, diplomats in Ankara are reporting that the prime
minister has given up his belief in the goal of the EU process. But
they say he still hopes that the British EU presidency, which is well
disposed to Ankara, will be able to open negotiations with one or
two unproblematic issues — national statistics or the environment,
for example, two disciplines in which Turkey is already operating at
European standards today. When Turkey-critic Austria assumes the EU
presidency in January, the Turks believe the negotiations will come
to a temporary standstill.

Erdogan wants to avoid an open break with Brussels for at least two
more years, because the International Monetary Fund’s billion-dollar
Turkey Program lasts until 2007. After that he might have to resort
to something he always hints at in times of crisis, without being
very specific: Turkey has “alternatives” to Europe.

Those alternatives could alarm Europeans, says Turkey expert Bulent
Aliriza, from the Center for Strategic and International Studies
in Washington. On a foreign-policy level they could mean turning
towards Russia, Iran, and Syria, under already obvious pressure from
the military. In particular Aliriza points to Erdogan’s relationship
to Vladimir Putin: his power seems to impress the Turkish premier.

And domestic politics, overall, might regress: The reignited conflict
with the Kurds threatens to grow worse without Europe’s tempering
influence; the general staff could declare a state of emergency
in certain Kurdish provinces. “The reforms wouldn’t necessarily go
forward,” says Aliriza, “since they’ve clearly been an outgrowth of
the EU process.”

Expectations are modest, even now that accession talks have started.

“What is the EU?” asked the English-language Turkish Daily News last
week, in an Internet poll. Almost 800 readers answered unambiguously:
the EU was a “modernization project” to 2.6 percent of the respondents,
while 46.9 percent checked the box declaring that the EU was nothing
but “a Christian club.”

,1518,377789,00.html

http://service.spiegel.de/cache/international/0

FM Oskanyan’s Meetings In Abu Dhabi

FOREIGN MINISTER VARTAN OSKANIAN’S MEETINGS IN ABU DHABI

Noyan Tapan News Agency
Oct 3 2005

ABU DHABI, OCTOBER 3, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Minister Oskanian
visited Abu Dhabi, on the occasion of the groundbreaking of the
Armenian Embassy building in the United Arab Emirates. Large number of
representatives of the government, together with the diplomatic corps,
and members of the Armenian community from throughout the Emirates
were present.

In a brief ceremony, Minister spoke, followed by Ambassador Arshak
Poladian, and then the first stones were laid for what will be a
7,000 sq. meter building.

As Noyan Tapan was informed by the RA Foreign Minsitry’s Press and
Information Department, during his visit, the Minister also met with
Deputy Prime Minister and State Minister for External Relations,
Sheikh Hamdan Ben Zayed Al Nahanyan. The two discussed bilateral and
regional issues, including Armenia’s having provided suitable embassy
state for the Emirates, which will be opening an embassy in Yerevan.

On the second day of the visit, the Minister also met with Ahmad Bakr,
the Deputy Director of the Abu Dhabi Development Fund. The Minister
described Armenia’s economic development and prospects for growth. The
Minister returned to Yerevan late Monday.