Vision Expands Into Armenia

VISION EXPANDS INTO ARMENIA

Financial Mirror, Cyprus
March 27 2006

Vision International People Group Public Ltd. announced the expansion
of its operations to Armenia through the establishment of Armenia
Vision LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary. The aforementioned company
operates the downstream selling and distribution activities of the
Company and commenced trading on March 25, 2006 from its new centre
in Yerevan.

In a separate announcement, Vision International People Group Public
Ltd announced the resignation of Stuart J.Ord from the position
of Investor Liaison Executive of the Company. The Company will be
appointing a new Investor Liaison Executive shortly.

Creation of New Parties Is Not Sensible

CREATION OF NEW PARTIES IS NOT SENSIBLE

YEREVAN, MARCH 24. ARMINFO. There are too many parties on the
political scene of Armenia and creation of new parties in senseless,
stated on a briefing at the National Assembly Hrayr Karapetian,
secretary of ‘Dashnaktsutiun’ party’s parliamentary group, commenting
on the establishment of the ‘New Times’ party by Artashes Tumanian and
his further departure from the party.

The secretary of the ‘Justice’ opposition bloc Victor Dallakian tried
to explain the dismissal of Mr. Tumanian from the office of the head
of the Presidents’ Board and the withdrawal from the party by the
pressure of certain political powers.Artashes Geghamian, leader of
‘National Movement’ party expressed a hope that the ‘oppressors’ of
Artashes Tumanian will soon find themselves in the same situation.

The matter is that Artashes Tumanian, being the head of the
Presidents’ Board, founded a new party, called ‘New Times’. After the
dismissal of Mr. Tuamanian the newly established party faced
difficulties. In the early March 2006 Mr. Tumanian left his own
party. Armenian mass media alleges that Artashes Tumanian has appealed
to the Embassy of the USA for visa.

V. Hovhannisyan Sad because of Bitter Reality

Panorama.am

15:52 22/03/06

V. HOVHANNISYAN SAD BECAUSE OF BITTER REALITY

`At the moment there are a great number of unfinished buildings in
Yerevan which spoil the view of the city.

Will this law have a recourse power as a result of which the
institutions will be punished? ‘ NA vice Speaker V. Hovhannisyan asked
member of NA Permanent Committee of state-legislative affairs Vostanik
Maroukhyan during the discussion of the draft law about making changes
in the law about `Responsibility for violations in city building
field’ in the NA today.

`It cannot be used,’ V. Maroukhyan answered. And according to the
draft law a due technical control is to be set in building field.

`Everyone builds whatever he wants, everyone adds as many balconies as
he wants,’ NA Speaker mentioned in his speech. Moreover, he suggested
fixing a fine of three hundredfold of the average salary. `I think our
Constitution is too gentle in this case,’ concluded his speech
A. Baghdasaryan. The voting of the draft law will probably be held
tomorrow. /Panorama.am/

NKR President Signs Law On Employment And Social Protection OfUnempl

NKR PRESIDENT SIGNS LAW ON EMPLOYMENT AND SOCIAL PROTECTION OF UNEMPLOYED

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
March 21 2006

STEPANAKERT, March 21. /ARKA/. President of the Nagorno-Karabakh
Republic (NKR) Arkady Ghukasyan has signed the Law “On employment and
social protection of unemployed.” The NKR presidential information
department reports that the Law was adopted by the NKR Parliament on
February 15, 2006.

Russian Tanks To Come To Armenia

RUSSIAN TANKS TO COME TO ARMENIA

Lragir/am
18/03/06

By the end of the current year the 62nd Russian military base will
have been completely withdrawn from Akhalkalaki, said the deputy
minister of defense of Georgia Mamuka Kudava. According to him,
the Russian party has already extended to Tbilisi the schedule of
withdrawal. In accordance with the schedule, 358 units of military
equipment and weapons, including 113 tanks and armored machines,
will be transported from Georgia to Russia by sea. Besides, 369
units of heavy arsenal, including 35 tanks and armored machines,
will be brought to the 102nd Russian military base in Armenia.

Democratic Party Of Armenia Mourns For Milosevic

DEMOCRATIC PARTY OF ARMENIA MOURNS FOR MILOSEVIC

YEREVAN, MARCH 18. ARMINFO. “We had serious cooperation with Yugoslavia
and President Milosevic and it could bring fruits were it not for
the bloody final of the Yugoslavian state,” says the leader of the
opposition Democratic Party Aram Sargsyan.

In 1986 “representatives of one Armenian organization” attempted the
last vengeance against Turkish diplomats that ended in their arrest.

In 1989 when Milosevic was elected Yugoslavian President, he met with
an Armenian delegation who told him about the conflict and demanded
that the Armenians be set free. Milosevic showed them the door saying
that one can’t tell a president what he should do. But a week later
he ordered to set the prisoners free.

Sargsyan learned this story from Milosevic himself during a Belgrade
meeting of the Eurasian Socialist Congress, an organization set up
by the Socialist Party of Russia and uniting the Socialist parties
of Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Yugoslavia and the Democratic
party of Armenia and later Socialist parties from a number of Eastern
European countries and Spain. In 1997 Milosevic was elected to lead
the congress.

The very fact that he understood the problem shows what a person,
what a patriot he was, says Sargsyan. He witnessed a lot of injustice
against his people. The NATO operation against Yugoslavia claimed more
lives than all the previous conflicts in the Yugoslavian territory
did. Hundreds of thousands of Serbs from Bosnia and Kosovo became
refugees.

We were opponents of Levon Ter-Petrossyan, now we are in opposition
to Robert Kocharyan, but we must never act like Zoran Djindjic and
Vaislav Kostunica who handed over Milosevic to a foreign court,
says Sargsyan. Only people can decide if their leader is hero or tyrant

Turkish Historian Wants Joint Research With Armenia Into Massacres

TURKISH HISTORIAN WANTS JOINT RESEARCH WITH ARMENIA INTO MASSACRES

Agence France Presse — English
March 16, 2006 Thursday 2:53 PM GMT

Istanbul

The leading Turkish historian who contests the definition of
controversial World War I massacres of Armenians as genocide, on
Thursday proposed to carry out joint research with an Armenian on
the issue.

“Let’s carry out a project together, dig up common graves if there
are some, to put an end to numerous demagogical arguments,” said Yusuf
Halacoglu, president of the Turkish History Society, to Ara Sarafian,
a British historian of Armenian origin.

Sarafian, a researcher at the Gomidas Institute in London, England,
told AFP that he was interested in accepting the offer.

“I will definitely consider this offer. I don’t want to show skepticism
about this proposal,” he said.

Some 70 Turkish and foreign academics are in Turkey until Friday for
a three-day conference to discuss whether controversial massacres of
Armenians during World War I amounted to genocide or not.

The Turkish gathering, in a rare move, offered the floor to academics
of all convictions, although it was largely dominated by historians
and officials who defend Turkey’s official position on the 1915-1917
killings.

Turkey categorically denies that Armenian subjects under its
predecessor, the Ottoman Empire, were victims of a genocide, but
acknowledges that at least 300,000 Armenians and as many Turks died
in civil strife during the last years of the empire.

Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin were slaughtered in
orchestrated killings.

EU Special Representative To Work Closely With OSCE MG

EU SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE TO WORK CLOSELY WITH OSCE MG

PanARMENIAN.Net
16.03.2006 22:27 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ “I first visited Armenia in 1988, when there was
the Spitak earthquake. It was one of most decisive episodes of my
life. I spent a week in Leninakan right after the earthquake. I
worked at the Swedish Embassy in the USSR at the time. Along with
Swedish rescuers we were looking for survivors in shambles,” new EU
Special Representative for the South Caucasus Peter Semneby stated,
reports Mediamax. In his words, “it was a bloodcurdling experience,
however I respected the dignity and will power of people, affected by
the earthquake. I look forward for the day, when arriving in Armenia,
I will be able to visit those places again.”

Peter Semneby remarked, he will work closely with the co-chairs of the
OSCE Minsk Group over settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict to be
sure that any initiative is clearly coordinated. In his words, there is
hope for settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict in 2006. “Taking
into account the fact that expectations of the meeting of the Azeri
and Armenian presidents were not realized, I find it hard to judge
how realistic these hopes are. To get a comprehensive notion of the
situation, I should visit Armenia and Azerbaijan and speak with the
OSCE MG co-chairs. In any case, if the extent of my hope was not high,
I would have not agreed to this work,” Semneby remarked.

He also noted relations between Armenia, Turkey, Georgia and Russia
as a priority.

Paradoxical Armeno-Turkish Relations

PARADOXICAL ARMENO-TURKISH RELATIONS

Londra Toplum Postasý, UK
British Turkish website
March 16 2006

Ekleniþ Tarihi: 16 Mart 2006
Yazar: Alkan Chaglar
Yazarýn tum yazýlarýný goruntule

Armenians have lived in Cyprus for centuries, but the present
community on the island is mainly the result of immigration during
and after the Armenian deportations of 1915-23 in Turkey. Currently,
some 6000 Armenians live in Cyprus, mainly in Nicosia, Larnaca and
Limassol. Many of the Armenians who fled to Cyprus were Turkahayer,
or Turkish Armenians, despite the fact that some Gibrahayer (Cypriot
Armenians) had lived in Cyprus for centuries.

Fleeing from war, they huddled together in open boats, unfurled their
sails and left Silifke to Cyprus. Armenians arrived bedraggled,
dispirited and sick from war, but with heavy hearts and with an
entrepreneurial spirit they made the island their new home. Cyprus
for them was a sanctuary from the misery of war and domestic strife
in Anatolia.

However, hardened by many fatigues and inured to rough living,
they were unable to forget their homes and the Turkish neighbours
and friends they left behind, so they clung onto their traditions
and memories of Anatolia life in their new home. Poor and destitute,
many sought cheap rented lodgings in the Turkish quarter of Nicosia.

Originally, Armenian refugees from Anatolia spoke Turkish, with a
small number able to converse in Armenian, which they often mixed with
Turkish. It was also common to meet Armenians who could not speak their
own language. Some Armenians in an effort to retain some kind of an
Armenian identity even attempted to write Turkish using the Armenian
script rather than go to the trouble of learning the old language.

This had already happened to the Armenian community of the Crimea
who lost their language adopted Kipchak Turkic which they wrote
using the Armenian script. Today the children of Cypriot Armenians
are multi-lingual.

The most paradoxical relations that the Armenians had in Cyprus
were with the Turkish Cypriots, while at school and church they
were routinely indoctrinated about past struggles with Turks,
Cypriot Armenians and Cypriot Turks lived side by side in the same
neighbourhood of Nicosia. The significance of this is that they left
one Turk to settle with another.

Although the Armeno-Turkish conflict in Anatolia left many bitter
memories, Cypriot Armenians enjoyed closer ties with the Turkish
Cypriots than with other Cypriots. Whatever transpired in Anatolia
had no bearing on their relations with Turkish Cypriots. Both were
Turkish speaking; Armenians had arrived in Cyprus from Southern and
Eastern Anatolia and their culture and traditions were Turkish. From
their names one can clearly see the centuries long experience of
living with Turks, Bichakjian (Bicakcioglu), Ouzunian (Uzunoglu),
and even Shishmanian (Sismanoglu) -ian denotes ‘son of’ in Armenian.

Often these names have a geographical origin, so a family from Antep
would be Antepian, or it would suggest noble ancestry or a profession
or physical trait, such as Karagozian (blackeyed) or Boyatzian
(painter). They may also have Muslim and Turkic names, Azizian,
Turfanian and even Osmanian.

In Cyprus, they not only established their businesses among the Turkish
Cypriots but built friendships with them and exchanged visits to each
other’s homes. Even though the Greeks formed the majority of Cyprus’
population, the Armenians had more contact with Turkish Cypriots, as
few of them spoke Greek. They already knew Turkish as a mother tongue
and most of them continued to converse in Turkish on the island,
in order to communicate among themselves and with their Turkish
Cypriot neighbours. Often it was necessary to tell certain stories,
anecdotes or jokes within the family in Turkish, as they sounded
better in that language.

Like Turkish Cypriots, Armenians have a similar passion for Bastirma (a
traditional dried spicy sausage) and Soujouk, which the newly arrived
Armenians would sell. Unaware of prejudice they made good business
from transporting their Anatolian delights to Cypriot kitchens. While
the elders worked, their children would happily play games in the
streets, and by evening they would sleep in each other’s arms. Even
the odd Armenian -Turkish Cypriot love story was not uncommon.

While in other parts of the region domestic strife and bickering
soured coexistence, in Cyprus there was still mutual tolerance,
so that Armenians and later Jews from World War Two saw it as a
sanctuary of peace.

Many Turkish Cypriots like my grandparents have fond memories of
coexistence with Armenians, but also with Greeks and Maronites. At
their annual village Panayia, in Ayios Theodoros, similar to the Feria,
a village festival in Southern France, many of the confectioners who
made the tastiest sweet and sticky treats, and many of the regular
tradesmen and shopkeepers in the old city with whom the Turkish
Cypriots dealt with on a day to day basis were Armenians.

By the 1950s the Armenians founds themselves caught in the middle of
inter-communal conflict in Cyprus. Sue Pattie, recounts a story in
her book ” Faith in history”, when during the peak of Greco-Turkish
conflict, an Armenian risked their lives to help their Turkish
neighbours by sheltering them in their home after a rumour of an
imminent attack by militiamen. “One Turkish family that lived just
on the river’s edge came to us and asked if we would protect them
for the night. We were Armenians and we wouldn’t be attacked (by
the Greeks). They were very good neighbours. The mother had stayed
with me when my father was dying. The boys used to play together,
how could we say no?”

Many Armenians reacted to the troubles by emigrating abroad. Many
went to Australia and Britain.

Engaged in the invidious task of discussing Armeno-Turkish relations,
an issue seldom brought to people’s attention, it seems the two
peoples have enjoyed a special relationship on the island. This could
be used to Cyprus’ advantage if we are to seek a lasting peace. Even
if one considers the historical; dimensions of the Armenian Question,
it would incongruent with the truth to suggest that Armeno-Turkish
relations in Cyprus were poor, amid the political problems this would
be an easy assumption to make. But memories like this remind us that
they were often amicable and at times even brotherly.

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