Eastern Prelacy: AREC Sponsors Seminar for Sunday School Teachers

PRESS RELEASE
Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
138 East 39th Street
New York, NY 10016
Tel: 212-689-7810
Fax: 212-689-7168
e-mail: [email protected]
Website:
Contact: Iris Papazian

May 4, 2005

AREC SPONSORS SEMINAR FOR SUNDAY SCHOOL TEACHERS

New York, NY – Sixteen Sunday School teachers and directors from
four New England parishes gathered at St. Stephen Armenian Church,
Watertown, MA, on Saturday, April 9, 2005, for a daylong seminar on the
Bible and the Sacraments of Christian Initiation-Baptism, Chrismation
and Eucharist. Sponsored by the Armenian Religious Education Council
(AREC), the four-hour seminar, led by Deacon Shant Kazanjian, director
of AREC, focused on the service of the Word.

Dn. Shant walked the participants through the services, highlighting
the ritual movements, prayers and the readings of the scriptures. While
the service of the sacrament of Baptism-Chrismation contains several
fixed biblical readings, the scriptural readings for Soorp Badarak
(as for every day) are prescribed by the lectionary of the Armenian
Apostolic Church. “The way the Church uses the scriptures in her
services provides an important lens through which we can see how the
Armenian Church understands a particular passage,” said Deacon Shant.

Dn. Shant expounded consecutively on the following scriptural
readings of the service of Baptism-Chrismation, underscoring their
particular function: Psalm 51, Matthew 28: 16-20, Psalm 118, Psalm
29:3-4, Ezekiel 36:25-28, Galatians 3:24-29, John 3:1-8 Romans 6:3-11,
Matthew 3:13-17. In addition, he pointed out some of the key scriptural
concepts and metaphors incorporated in our hymns and prayers.

As for his session on Badarak, Dn. Shant began with Jesus’ words at
the Last Supper – “Take, eat; this is my Body. Take, drink; this is my
blood.” These words “sum up the whole teaching ministry and mission of
Jesus Christ as presented to us in the Gospels,” said Dn. Shant. He
went on to discuss how Soorp Badarak in its structure and content is
scriptural through and through. Hence, teaching the scripture remains
absolutely indispensable to understanding Badarak.”

In addition to the teachers from, St. Stephen (Watertown, MA),
St. Gregory (Indian Orchard, MA), St. Gregory Church (N. Andover,
MA), Sts. Vartanantz (Providence, RI), also present were Der Antranig
Baljian, pastor of St. Stephen’s Church and Dn. Hagop Khatchadourian
from Rhode Island, Prelacy Executive Council liaison to AREC.

The participants enjoyed a sumptuous lunch graciously provided by
the host community.

###

http://www.armenianprelacy.org

US allied with Sudan govt despite Darfur genocide

Sudan Tribune, Sudan
May 4 2005

US allied with Sudan govt despite Darfur genocide
Wednesday May 4th, 2005 02:30.

By Democracy Now

The Los Angeles Times has revealed that the U.S. has quietly forged a
close intelligence partnership with Sudan despite the government’s
role in the mass killings in Darfur. We speak with Ken Silverstein,
the reporter who broke the story, Salih Booker, the director of
Africa Action as well as Rep. Donald Payne (D-NJ). [includes rush
transcript]

NEW YORK, May 3, 2005 — In the days after the Sept. 11 attacks,
President Bush issued an ultimatum to the world: “Either you are with
us, or you are with the terrorists.” Three and half years later, it
has been revealed that the Bush administration has allied itself with
a government listed as a state sponsor of terrorism and one that the
administration has accused of committing genocide against its own
people – Sudan. A major expose in the Los Angeles Times on Friday
revealed that the U.S. has quietly forged a close intelligence
partnership with Sudan despite the government’s role in the mass
killings in Darfur. The Sudanese government has since publicly
confirmed it is working with the Bush administration and the CIA.

Eight months ago, former Secretary of State Colin Powell accused the
Sudanese of carrying out a genocide in Darfur. Already 180,000 have
died in the region from fighting or hunger. But relations appear to
have since changed — for the better. One senior Sudanese official
the LA Times that the country had achieved “complete normalization”
of relations with the CIA.

The Times reported that the CIA sent an executive jet last week to
Khartoum to ferry the chief of Sudan’s intelligence agency to
Washington for secret meetings sealing Khartoum’s sensitive and
previously veiled partnership with the administration.

Salah Gosh (SMC)
The Sudanese intelligence chief – Major General Salah Abdallah Gosh –
has been accused by members of Congress of directing military attacks
against civilians in Darfur. He also had regular contacts with Osama
bin Laden during the 1990s.

Last month, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice sent a letter to the
Sudanese government calling for steps to end the conflict in Darfur.
But the letter, reviewed by the Times, also said the administration
hoped to establish a “fruitful relationship” with Sudan and looked
forward to continued “close cooperation” on terrorism.

Ken Silverstein, reporter for the Los Angeles Times. Read article:
Official Pariah Sudan Valuable to America’s War on Terrorism.
Salih Booker, Director of Africa Action.
Rep. Donald Payne, Democratic Congressman from New Jersey.

TRANSCRIPT

AMY GOODMAN: We’re joined in our Washington studio by Ken
Silverstein, reporter for the Los Angeles Times who broke the story.
And we welcome you, Ken, to Democracy Now!

KEN SILVERSTEIN: Thank you.

AMY GOODMAN: It’s good to have you with us. Well, why don’t you lay
out for us exactly what you’ve learned about the U.S.-Sudan
relationship.

KEN SILVERSTEIN: Well, the relationship really started even pre-9/11.
In July of 2001, former Assistant Secretary of State Walter
Kansteiner traveled to Nairobi, where he had a public meeting with
the rebel leader John Garang and then privately met with the Sudanese
Foreign Minister. Then approximately the following month there was a
secret meeting in London with Yahia Hussein Babiker, who at the time
was the Deputy Chief of Sudanese Intelligence, at which the topic of
cooperation on counter-terrorism was broached. But the relationship
really took off post-9/11, for both sides had pragmatic reasons. And
I think that’s really at the heart of this. The U.S. after 9/11
wanted to obtain information on al Qaeda and Islamic extremists from
whenever and wherever it could. And it decided that it would
cooperate with any regime that was willing to provide that
information, including Sudan. For the Sudanese there was fear that
after Afghanistan they might be next on the list of U.S. targets for
military action. And so both sides had grounds to cooperate. By
November of 2001, the collaboration was very strong. I spoke to a
former F.B.I. agent who traveled to Khartoum in November of 2001 at
the time the C.I.A had an active station, which it had been shut down
— their last station had been shut down in late 1995. By November of
2001 they had a very active station. They were tracking Islamic
extremists with the cooperation of the Mukhabarat, which is the
Sudanese equivalent of the C.I.A. The F.B.I. agent actually had gone
to Khartoum to interview long-time members of al Qaeda who have very
close ties to Osama bin Laden. The Mukhabarat made these suspects
available to the F.B.I. They arranged safehouses for the interviews
to be conducted. The F.B.I. agent went to the al Shamal Bank, where
bin Laden had multiple business accounts when he lived in Sudan
between 1991 and 1996. They turned over all the banking records. And,
you know, that really kicked off the relationship which has deepened
ever since.

AMY GOODMAN: Now, you talked to Gosh?

KEN SILVERSTEIN: I was able to interview him. And he simply confirmed
that the Mukhabarat had an ongoing close partnership with the C.I.A.
He was very open about that. I also spoke to a number of former top
officials at the Mukhabarat, who are still — two of them in
particular who were among the most powerful men in the country. They
both had offices in the Presidential Palace in Khartoum. And they
were very open about the relationship. They said — one of them said
that we have completely normalized our relationships with the C.I.A.
He said the C.I.A. was helping to try to smooth the broader political
relationship between Sudan and the Bush administration. They were
open about the relationship. I think, in fact, that they feel that
they — I think to a certain extent they cooperated with me and
allowed me access because they feel that they want recognition for
some of their efforts that they feel have not been noted. And they
want rewards. I mean, there’s no question about it. The United
States, Sudan, all governments, no one does anything for free. The
Sudanese are hoping that we will lift long-standing economic
sanctions that were imposed during the Clinton Administration. And
they want to get off the list of state sponsors of terrorism where
they’ve been since 1993. So this is a pragmatic deal for both sides.
And the Sudanese want to be rewarded for it.

AMY GOODMAN: Ken Silverstein. The Intelligence Chief, Major General
Salah Abdallah Gosh, who talks about, boasts about the relationship
he has with the C.I.A., what is his role in the killings in Darfur?

KEN SILVERSTEIN: Well, you know, I think maybe your other guests
might be able to better address that. I know that the Congressional
Research Service has put out a report that lists him as somebody
who’s directly involved in the counterinsurgency strategy that the
Sudanese government has employed in Darfur. I spoke to Sudanese
officials who deny that Gosh or any other senior Sudanese officials
are involved in such atrocities. They blame those on militias that
they say that they don’t exercise control over. So they would say he
has no role in the atrocities. I know that there are other observers
who have said he has been involved.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, Ken Silverstein, we are joined on the phone by
Salih Booker, who is the Executive Director of Africa Action. We’ll
also be joined by New Jersey Congress member Donald Payne of New
Jersey. But, Salih Booker, can you talk about the significance of the
information that Ken Silverstein has revealed in the Los Angeles
Times of the relationship between the Intelligence Chief — not only
the Intelligence Chief of Sudan but the Sudanese government and the
United States?

SALIH BOOKER: Well, I think it’s very significant that it gets a
public airing. This growing relationship of cooperation has been, you
know, somewhat of a public secret, if you will, or fairly well known
within the foreign policy community, within the Africa advocacy and
analyst community. We have to bear in mind that this is very much
like the Cold War, this so-called war on terrorism. The U.S.
government has established a hierarchy of U.S. national interests, as
defined by the administration, the U.S. establishment. And in that
hierarchy essentially African lives are at the bottom while
collecting intelligence, even dubious intelligence on possible
terrorists attacks on American targets is clearly at the top of the
hierarchy. So this administration has really wanted to normalize ties
with the government in Khartoum since shortly, almost immediately
after September 11. Because of bin Laden’s presence in Sudan, the
Sudanese government felt it always had something to sell to the
United States. And that its offers of intelligence cooperation which
go back to the Clinton years could be a tool they would use to
prevent the United States from applying pressure, whether on settling
the conflict with southern Sudanese and now more recently, of course,
as a way of sort of shunting pressure aside because of the genocide
in Darfur. And the Sudanese government has manipulated this very
well.

AMY GOODMAN: We’re talking to Salih Booker, Director of Africa
Action. And in Washington in the studio, Ken Silverstein,
investigative reporter for the Los Angeles Times. We’ll go to break
and then come back.

[break]

AMY GOODMAN: We are talking about the expose in the Los Angeles
Times, “Official Pariah Sudan Valuable to America’s War on
Terrorism.” Despite once harboring bin Laden, Khartoum regime has
supplied key intelligence, officials say. And now we’re joined by Ken
Silverstein in the studio in Washington. Congress member Donald Payne
of New Jersey on the telephone. And Salih Booker, Director of Africa
Action. It was a few months after September 11, three and a half
years ago, the C.I.A. had an active station in Khartoum, according to
multiple sources. Among other programs the agency was running
surveillance on suspected foreign extremists with the knowledge and
assistance of the Mukhabarat. Material obtained by Sudanese
intelligence was turned over to U.S. investigators. And it goes on
from there. Ken Silverstein, how did you find out this information?

KEN SILVERSTEIN: Well, there have been some allusions to the
cooperation previously. And oddly enough if one goes to the State
Department’s Patterns of Global Terrorism reports the last few years,
they have referred explicitly to Sudanese cooperation that they’ve
made — they’ve provided access to individuals. It’s been very vague,
but it’s been stated. And I had seen those references, and I started
calling sources and learned that, in fact, the cooperation is pretty
extensive and decided this is an obvious story. I mean, it’s not a
surprise if the Jordanians are cooperating with the C.I.A., or if,
you know, the British are cooperating with the C.I.A., but the fact
that Sudan, where bin Laden lived for five years and which has a
reputation for Islamic radicalism, and which is, as I mentioned, on
the list of state sponsors of terror, I mean, that to me is a man
bites dog story, as opposed to the other way around, so it seemed
like an obvious story to pursue. And I just started looking into it,
developing — working with sources here and traveled over to Khartoum
and was able to interview some fairly senior people in the government
there.

AMY GOODMAN: Can you talk about the role of U.S. officials, U.S.
emissaries for the Bush administration? Who has met with these
Sudanese officials?

KEN SILVERSTEIN: Well, the former Sssistant Secretary of State for
Africa Walter Kansteiner sort of led the opening, even as I mentioned
earlier, pre-9/11. But post-9/11, as well. There was this secret
meeting in late September at the American Embassy in London, where
Kansteiner met with Yahia Hussein Babiker, then the deputy head of
the Sudanese intelligence. And basically there was an agreement
struck. The Bush administration agreed that there would soon be a
vote. In fact, the vote took place three days later at the U.N. on
whether to lift sanctions against Sudan that had been imposed in 1995
over its role in the assassination attempt on Egyptian President
Hosni Mubarak that took place in Ethiopia in 1995. And the Bush
administration abstained on that vote. And by abstaining, the
sanctions were lifted. If they had voted no, of course, the sanctions
would have remained. And not long afterwards the Sudanese turned
over, you know, a significant amount of information, files on Islamic
extremists who had been residing in Khartoum in the 1990s and even
beyond. So that was really the basis for the — or the first step, I
think. But, you know, clearly other officials in the U.S. government
met with the Sudanese. I mean, Yahia Hussein Babiker came here to
Washington in January of 2002 and held meetings with senior officials
at the C.I.A. The Sudanese official who handles the liaison
relationship with the C.I.A. traveled here late last year and met
with C.I.A. officials to discuss Iraq. So there has been extensive
consultations between the parties. And in fact, there is now an
active C.I.A. station in Khartoum. There are regular, if not daily,
contacts between the two intelligence agencies over there. So this is
an ongoing regularized channel of communication between the
intelligence agencies.

AMY GOODMAN: One last thing, Ken Silverstein, before we go to
Congressman Donald Payne. Can you describe this secret trip most
recently taken, and how you got the details of it?

KEN SILVERSTEIN: I need to be a little bit careful about that. All I
can say is that the C.I.A. sent an executive jet to Khartoum to pick
up Major General Gosh. He was brought over to Washington for three
days of meetings here. He met with very senior officials in the
C.I.A. And, you know, I don’t have direct knowledge, of course, of
the talks that were held, but clearly he was here to discuss ongoing
intelligence collaboration. And I think the trip is especially
significant because they’ve had senior people come over before. But
to my knowledge it’s the first time that the head of Sudanese
intelligence has come to Washington to meet with top officials there.
So I think that sort of speaks for the importance the C.I.A. gives to
the relationship. And it’s symbolic of the importance for both sides
that the C.I.A. would send a plane over there to bring him here.

AMY GOODMAN: New Jersey Congress member Donald Payne, welcome to
Democracy Now!

REP. DONALD PAYNE: Good to be here.

AMY GOODMAN: Your response to these latest revelations about the
relationship, and did you know about it before?

REP. DONALD PAYNE: I had some idea that there was contact, and as
it’s been indicated, pretty high level contact. As we were pushing
through our condemnation of the government of Sudan, as you know, the
North-South Peace Accord was going on, and a lot of energy, of
course. That was the initial 10-year push get a peace accord that the
U.S. was pretty involved in. And as that was sort of coming to
fruition, there started to be some additional meetings, high-level
meetings, as it’s been indicated. I know when I introduced the
Resolution on Genocide that was passed through the House, bipartisan,
422 to zero, and then went over to the Senate to urge the Senate to
do the same thing, it was near the time that we were going on a
recess in, I think it was July, the last day of our session when the
Senate finally passed with unanimous consent. While we were doing
that and even after that, I know that there were State Department —
at least a State Department official that went over. And from what I
understand, really said, even though the Congress is doing that, and
Colin Powell came out later about two months later after our
resolution passed both Houses with the fact that genocide was
occurring, the message was, well, the Congress is annoyed, and we’ve
got some people that are making this a big issue. However, the
administration really would like to have some kind of cooperative
relationship. And so I was aware of that. Very disturbing, of course,
but almost like, you know, don’t really pay too much attention to
those people in the House and the Senate, we want to have some kind
of relationship with you.

AMY GOODMAN: So the question is, what are you calling for now? We
also tried to reach your senator from New Jersey, Jon Corzine,
senator, democratic senator. He’s in eastern Chad now with Sudanese
refugees and then headed to Iraq. He, too, quite angry about this
relationship, calling for action on Darfur. Ken Silverstein, you
wrote — talked about in your piece what Congress is not getting from
the administration in terms of information. For example, getting a
list of war criminals — giving a list of those who have committed
war crimes in Sudan but not a roster of government officials who have
committed these war crimes.

KEN SILVERSTEIN: Well, I know there are a number of steps that, you
know, Sudan’s critics want taken and that sort of have not been taken
by the administration. There is — Congress has issued a list of
senior Sudanese officials who they claim has been involved in war
crimes. The administration has not released its own list, as Congress
has requested that it do. The Congress has requested a number of
other steps, targeted sanctions on individuals so that people who are
identified as having committed war crimes would have their bank
accounts frozen and be barred from international travel. The
administration has not done that. There is, in fact, not an arms
embargo on the government of Sudan, which critics in Congress have
asked for. So there are a whole series of steps that people in
Congress want taken that the administration has not taken. I think in
terms of whether this is influencing policy, the intelligence
cooperation, you know, it’s largely a question of, are there steps
that could have been taken that haven’t been taken. It’s not that the
administration has done — taken a lot of active steps, although they
did allow the sanctions to come off that were imposed by the U.N.
over the attempt on Mubarak. But it’s mostly a question of, you know,
from talking to critics of the Sudanese government, they have said
this is what we should have done that we haven’t done, and they
suspect that the intelligence sharing is one reason why the
administration hasn’t been as aggressive as it might be.

AMY GOODMAN: And pressuring the U.N. Security Council to strengthen
the mandate of the African Union observer mission?

KEN SILVERSTEIN: That’s another thing. I mean, people have said,
look, the U.N. has been very slow to act. And that’s primarily been
because of China and Russia, because, both of those, especially the
Chinese, have extensive economic interest in Sudan. China has a very,
very big role in the Sudanese oil industry. And so, both of those
countries have sought to block action at the U.N. Now, critics here
have said we have not really challenged the Chinese or the Russians
on that issue, that we should be pressuring them more, and that
certainly, they have said, we should be pressuring the U.N. to expand
the A.U. mandate. Right now the A.U. is there as an observer force,
but it’s not really authorized to try to prevent human rights abuses
from taking place. And people want the U.N. to take — to expand the
A.U. mandate and to strengthen its mandate. You know, people have
called for a greater logistical support to the A.U. mission and
greater funding for the A.U. mission. So, as I said, it’s — a lot of
what people are calling for are steps that they say could have been
taken but thus far the administration has not moved on.

AMY GOODMAN: Salih Booker of African Action, what are you demanding
right now of Congress, of the Bush administration, of the United
Nations?

SALIH BOOKER: Well, just to pick up where Ken left off, obviously
we’re calling for the U.N. Security Council to establish a Chapter
Seven International Intervention Force. There’s a genocide occurring
in Darfur. Genocide is a unique crime against humanity. Many people
would say it’s the ultimate crime. It’s the 90th anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide, 60 years since the Holocaust, 11 years since
Rwanda. People keep saying never again, and here we have a genocide
unfolding in slow motion since February 2003 in Darfur. What the Bush
administration is doing, it’s willing to cover up genocide in favor
of an intelligence collaboration with a regime in Sudan. It is
defining bilateral relations with countries based on what their
governments can do for the U.S. in the so-called war on terrorism.
And this is a trade they’re perfectly willing to make. And to
minimize the significance of the atrocities and the crimes against
humanity going on in Darfur, even while the administration was forced
to acknowledge that, in fact, what’s happening there constitutes
genocide, it hasn’t provided the leadership at all necessary in the
U.N. and it hasn’t challenged China or Russia at all to establish an
international force. They’ve been washing their hands by saying
African solutions for African problems, knowing that the African
Union doesn’t have the capacity, the logistics, the financing, or
even the troops to mount the kind of broad, multinational
intervention necessary to provide protection, you know, to more than
two million people in a region the size of Iraq. And one thing we
haven’t mentioned is that as part of the Bush administration’s
original game plan after September 11 was intelligence cooperation
with the Sudanese, who literally called up and said, hey, Bin Laden
used to live here, come get the files. They want to normalize ties,
so they focused on the negotiations between the north and the south,
got a peace agreement which they felt then would allow the U.S. to
take Sudan off the terror list to lift sanctions, and significantly,
which would then allow American oil companies to reenter Sudan and to
begin to compete with China and the other companies that are there.
That was the game plan. The genocide in Darfur has been an
inconvenience to that game plan, and they’ve been forced largely by
public pressure here to give more attention to and address it. But
their leadership has not been — you know, it’s not been forthcoming.

AMY GOODMAN: Salih Booker, what do you want Congress to do? What are
you demanding of Congress members like Donald Payne?

SALIH BOOKER: Right, well, of course, Congressman Payne has been
providing great leadership on the House side and broadly in the
Congress for years on Sudan. And particularly at this moment, there
are bills in both the Senate and the House, the Darfur Accountability
Acts, the efforts by members of Congress to actually impose targeted
sanctions on the Sudanese government, in addition to those that are
already there, to authorize the President and the United States
government to use greater options of force in the international
force, you know, to bring about change. But it’s all that Congress
can do is to express its opinion on what the administration ought to
be doing and to try and legislate some of these sanctions. It can’t
force the kind of international cooperation that the administration
should be organizing at the U.N. Security Council. And the other
thing is the Bush administration has been opposing this very
legislation. They got the Senate to take it out of the supplemental
appropriations bill, and they haven’t been supportive at all on the
House legislation either.

AMY GOODMAN: Congress member Donald Payne, what do you plan to do now
with this newly released information, and the whole issue of
sanctions?

REP. DONALD PAYNE: Well, I will certainly raise the issue at our
Congressional Black Caucus annual — I mean, weekly meeting on
Wednesday. I will be meeting with some of our colleagues who have
been very supportive. Congressman Wolf, Congressman Tancredo,
Congressman Cummings. And we will try to come up with some strategy,
as Salih Booker said. We have come out strong. You know, it was three
months after we declared genocide in the House and the Senate that
the administration declared that genocide was going on. I listed 51,
read them from the well of the House, 51 Sudanese persons, government
officials, starting with the Vice President Taha, who allegedly is
the one who orchestrated the release of the Janjaweed, supporting
them financially, equipping them. And so he was the chief negotiator
of the North-South Accord. He is alleged by Darfurans there and here
as the one who is the mastermind. Now, how do you negotiate with him
in good faith? What the U.S. government did a decade ago, the C.I.A.
in their wisdom removed practically every single C.I.A. station in
Africa, just eliminated 10, 12 years ago, as they were cutting back.
Therefore, once again, mismanaging an agency have now to rely on
government officials where if they had kept their kind of
communications that they do allegedly — I don’t know how they
actually operate, but they have operatives on the ground. By removing
them from Africa, now they have to depend on the government of Sudan.
Also, as it’s been mentioned by Salih Booker, we put pressure
Talisman, which was a Canadian company, to withdraw its activities in
Sudan. The PetroChina and Malaysians went in in bigger force. We have
got to put some pressure on China. However, I believe, as Salih said,
that once you can get sanctions removed, then U.S. companies can go
in. There are still a lot of untapped oil resources in Sudan. And
that’s a part of this agenda of trying to normalize relations with
Sudan, so that U.S. oil companies can go in and start exploring oil.
And so we are going to have certainly a dialogue with the supporters
of Sudan when I get back to Washington this afternoon and try once
again. We had capital market sanctions in our legislation,
Congressmen Tancredo and Bachus from Alabama. and it was removed.
Greenspan came and said capital market sanctions must be removed. And
as it’s been mentioned, Senator Frist was denied a visa. Here’s a
person who perhaps may run for President of the United States. How
can you have normal relations or even have conversations with a
government that said that your president — your Senate leader does
not — is not welcome in our country? He’s not thought of enough.
Senator Corzine, I believe, also put an application. I have never
applied to the government of Khartoum, because — in Khartoum,
because it’s an illegitimate government. I don’t recognize them. What
they do is to wait you out, tell you we’ll get back to you, and then
decide if they will let you come in, then take you where they want
you to go and tell you when you should leave.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, on that note, Congress member Donald Payne, I want
to thank you very much for being with us, as well as Salih Booker of
Africa Action, and Ken Silverstein of the Los Angeles Times. We will
link to the Los Angeles Times expose at our website,
DemocracyNow.org.

ANKARA: Switzerland to Arrest Turkish Prof. for Armenian Allegations

Switzerland to Arrest Turkish Prof. for Armenian Allegations

Journal of Turkish Weekly
May 3 2005

(JTW) Turkey has strongly criticized a decision by canton Zurich’s
authorities to investigate a Turkish historian for allegedly denying
the so-called 1915 Armenian massacre. Turkey has never accepted the
Armenian genocide allegations, and Turkish Professor Yusuf Halacoglu,
the president of the Turkish History Organization, is no exception.

During the talk, given at the invitation of the Turkish community, the
prominent historian is said to have not accepted that the 1915 events
was genocide. Armenians say more than 1 million people were killed
during the Ottoman period but they cannot provide any convincing
document to prove their allegations. On the other hand, more than
523,000 Muslimswere killed by the Armenian armed groups during the
same period. Armenians in the Eastern Provinces rioted against the
Istanbul Government and many joined the Russian occupying armies in
order to establish a separate Armenian state. Armenians then started
a terror campaign against the Ottoman officials. The ASALA Armenian
terror emerged in the 1970s and killed more than 40 Turkish diplomats.

Winterthur~Rs investigating magistrate is now reported to be
investigating Halacoglu over claims that he could have broken
~Qanti-racism legislation~R.

CONDEMNATION

Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said on Monday that the decision
by the canton of Zurich and some European parliaments to “forbid the
rejection of the Armenian genocide” was a “terrible mistake”.

Gul added that Zurich~Rs enquiry was also against the European
Agreement on Human Rights and that Europe was “trampling on its own
foundations” by stopping the freedom of expression.

The Turkish Foreign Ministry said that it had summoned the Swiss
ambassador to Turkey, Walter Gyger, to explain the move. The Turkish
embassy in the Swiss capital, Bern, has also protested to the Swiss
government.

It added, however, that Bern and Ankara were “closely collaborating”
and that Switzerland had been cooperative over the matter.

But a spokesman for the Swiss Justice Ministry denied that there had
been a warrant issued for Halacoglu~Rs arrest via Interpol, as was
reported in some of the Turkish media.

Winterthur~Rs prosecuting magistrate Andrej Gnehm also said on Monday
that he had asked Interpol to provide him with some information about
the historian.

He added that he would like to interview Halacoglu, which could also
take the form of written replies, to decide whether to go further
with the investigation ~V still at its early stages.

SWITZERLAND DOES NOT LISTEN BOTH SIDES

Dr. Nilgun Gulcan from ISRO said ~Sthe Switzerland authorities are
biased and pro-Armenian~T:

~SThe anti-Turkish trend increases and the biased groups abuse the
problems between Turkey and Armenia. They accuse Prof. Hallacoglu of
being racist and denier. In fact the Swiss authorities are racist
and denier of the reality. They do not even listen to the Turkish
approach. They cannot bear to hear different ideas. They decide and
they act. They do not event permit the others to speak. Europe is a
free land, but not for the Turkish historians. I am sure that if I
go to Switzerland they will arrest me too for saying the truth they
cannot accept~T.

TENSIONS

The row comes at a time when relations between the two countries
appeared to be calming down after a period that was marked by tensions
over the Armenian question.

First the canton of Vaud~Rs parliament voted to recognize the Armenian
allegations as truth, leading to Ankara withdrawing an invitation
for Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey to visit Turkey in
September 2003.

A similar vote on the Armenian matter by the House of Representatives
three months later drew fresh condemnation from Turkey.

Calmy-Rey finally made the trip to Ankara at the end of March this
year, which resulted in the two countries agreeing to disagree over
the Armenian issue.

And last month the way was cleared for Switzerland to begin selling
arms to Turkey for the first time since 1992 when it introduced tight
restrictions on exports to the country. The Turkish government ended
it embargo on Swiss arms on April 28.

Armenian PM arrives in Belarus on visit to expand

Armenian PM arrives in Belarus on visit to expand (adds)
By Andrei Fomin

ITAR-TASS News Agency
May 2, 2005 Monday 3:13 PM Eastern Time

MINSK, May 2 — Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan arrived
in Belarus on an official visit on Monday to discuss ways to expand
bilateral trade and economic relations.

Margaryan will meet with President Alexander Lukashenko and Prime
Minister Sergei Sidorsky, and visit the Belarussian and Minsk
automobile plants.

The two sides plan to sign several documents, including an
inter-governmental protocol abolishing exclusions from the free
trade regime, as well as agreements on cooperation between the health
ministries and between major television channels.

The two countries will also sign a contract for the supply of
Belarussian mining equipment to Armenia.

A Belarussian-Armenian business forum and an exhibition of Armenian
goods will take place during the visit.

Relations between Belarus and Armenia have been steadily growing in
recent years. Their leaders meet on a regular basis. The two countries
have signed more than 40 agreements, their foreign and other ministries
have established closer relationships.

Last year, bilateral trade turnover increased by 12.4 percent to 10.8
million U.S. dollars. Trade has been growing even more rapidly this
year. In the first two months of 2005, it was 2.5 times bigger than
in the same period of last year.

Belarus supplies lorries, tyres, road equipment, chemicals, lumber,
and medicines to Armenia in exchange mainly for hard liquor.

Nagornyy Karabakh Republic [NKR] GPD grows by 8.9 per cent in Q1/05

Nagornyy Karabakh Republic [NKR] GPD grows by 8.9 per cent in first quarter
of 2005

Arminfo, Yerevan
29 Apr 05

STEPANAKERT

In January-March 2005, GDP in the Nagornyy Karabakh Republic [NKR]
totalled 3.8bn drams (about 7.1m dollars), which is 8.9 per cent
higher than the same indicator in 2004.

The National Statistics Service of the NKR has reported that the
volume of the sale of industrial products in this period totalled
3.9bn drams [7.2m dollars], which 24.3 per cent higher than in the
same period of the last year, our Arminfo special correspondent has
reported from Stepanakert.

The volume of agricultural output totalled 1.4bn drams [2.6m dollars],
dropping by 6.1 per cent in comparison with the same period of 2004.

[Passage omitted: Other details]

Turkey will try to find means to condemn Armenian Genocide

AZG Armenian Daily #078, 30/04/2005

Armenian Genocide

TURKEY WILL TRY TO FIND SOME MEANS TO CONDEMN ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Andrey Piontkovsky, head of the Russian Center for Strategic Studies,
believes that “The Turkish authorities will try to find some means for
condemning the Armenian Genocide under the pressure of Armenia and the
Council of Europe.” Mediamax informed that Piontkovsky said many EU member
countries doubt about Turkey’s membership, believing that the admission of a
non-Christian country will change the mentality of the European society.

“They will take advantage of such a fact as Ankara’s position in the issue
of the genocide to hinder Turkey’s membership. But, on the other hand, I am
surprised at the attempts of the Turkish elite to give up many prejudices of
the past. That is why, I foresee the following in this situation: Turkey
will try to find some means of condemning the Armenian Genocide under the
pressure of Armenia and the CE.”

Sergey Mikheev, expert at the Center for Political Technologies, differs in
his opinion a bit. He believes that the demand of the EU to recognize the
Armenian genocide can be a mere “veil.”

“One should realize that the real interests are the main priorities. The
rest is nothing more than a technological veiling. If the accession of
Turkey is in the EU’s interests, Turkey will be accepted to the EU
notwithstanding the fact whether they have recognized the genocide or not.
But, if the EU and the European elite is interested in continuing to exert
pressure over Turkey, the issue of the Armenian genocide’s recognition will
be used as a means pressing upon Turks,” Sergey Mikheev believed.

ANKARA: German Schroder backs joint committee on Armenian question

German Schroder backs joint committee on Armenian question

The Anatolian Times
4/29/2005

The German Chancellor said that Turkey’s membership to the EU
mighttake ten to 15 years.

In an exclusive interview with television station NTV ahead of his
visit to Ankara in May 3, Schroder said that no new conditions would
be introduced for Turkey’s membership of the European Union. He said
that the German parliament debating the so-called Armenian question
would not affect the bilateral relations.

The Chancellor also criticised the ongoing war of words duel between
Turkey and the EU recently. `On December 17 promises were made by
both partiesâ=80¦ both sides must put those promises into action,’ he
said.

Source: NTV

Armenian spokesman urges Turkey to give up “propaganda”

Armenian spokesman urges Turkey to give up “propaganda”

Mediamax news agency
29 Apr 05

YEREVAN

The press secretary of the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Gamlet
Gasparyan, said in Yerevan today that “Armenian archives have been
open to all countries and researchers of any nationality for a long
time”.

The Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman said this while commenting on
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s statement that Armenia
did not follow Turkey’s example and failed to open its archives,
Mediamax reports.

“If there is a genuine desire to normalize relations and the courage
to take such a step, then all different pretexts are unnecessary. As
far as our archives are concerned, they have been open to all
countries and researchers of any nationality for a long time. Many
scientists have already used them, but there wasn’t a single Turk
among them. If they wish, they may come and see.

“I would like to repeat that reality has been obvious for a long time,
so let’s put propaganda aside, sit down and talk frankly,” the
Armenian Foreign Ministry spokesman said.

National minorities of Georgia in focus of OSCE high Commissioner

Pan Armenian News

NATIONAL MINORITIES OF GEORGIA IN FOCUS OF OSCE HIGH COMMISSIONER

28.04.2005 06:18

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities Ambassador
Rolf Ekeus will hold a number of meetings with Georgian leaders, the Yerkir
newspaper reported. Specifically, he has to meet with Georgian President
Mikhail Saakashvili, Prime MInister Zurab Nogaideli. During his Tbilisi
meetings Rolf Ekeus will discuss issues referring to a complex project over
national minorities being implemented in Georgia by the OSCE. Ekeus will
meet with Giorgi Khaindrava, with whom development programs in the regions
of Samtskhe-Javakhetia (populated by Armenians) and Abkhazia will be
considered. Specifically, human rights issues in Gali region of Abkhazia
populated by Georgians and the opportunity of opening the UN Human Rights
Sukhumi Office in Gali will be considered. As of Javakhetia, questions of
economic rehabilitation of the region and repatriation of Turk Meskhetians,
who had been deported from there by Soviet authorities, will be discussed.

Couple Find Hope Following Armenian Genocide in Beast on the Moon

Playbill.com, NY
April 27 2005

Couple Find Hope Following Armenian Genocide in Beast on the Moon,
Getting NYC Premiere April 27
By Kenneth Jones

Beast on the Moon, Richard Kalinoski’s warm, sad and hopeful play
about Armenian immigrants emerging from the shadow of genocide, opens
Off-Broadway April 27 following previews and a wide life in theatres
around the world.

The American-penned play, set in Milwaukee, has been a hit in
theatres around the country and internationally since its early
production at the Humana Festival of New American Plays at Actors
Theatre of Louisville.

The New York premiere opens during a week that commemorates the 90th
anniversary of the Armenian genocide at the hands of the Turks of the
Ottoman Empire.

According to a program note in the Playbill, “On April 24, 1915,
under the cover of World War I, the Young Turk government of the
Ottoman Empire began a systematic genocide of its Armenian citizens,
an unarmed Christian minority population. More than a million
Armenians were exterminated through direct killings, starvation,
torture and forced death marches. Another million fled to permanent
exile. Thus an ancient civilization was expunged from its homeland of
2,500 years.”

Tony Award nominees Louis Zorich and Omar Metwally star. Larry Moss
(The Syringa Tree) directs the new production. Metwally (Sixteen
Wounded) plays a young Armenian named Aram, who comes to Milwaukee
for a better life; Lena Georgas plays his wife; Zorich (45 Minutes
>From Broadway, She Loves Me) is a Gentleman, a character important in
the couple’s life; and Matthew Borish is a young boy they take in.

The play is set between 1921-33. Audiences and critics have noted
that despite the dark-sounding title, the play is filled with humor
and hope as Aram and Seta settle into a life beyond the darkness of
the past.

Producers were aiming the play for either Off-Broadway or Broadway in
the last year, but announced Feb. 23 that its nest would be
Off-Broadway’s Century Center for the Performing Arts, off Union
Square. David Grillo and Matthew Salinger produce.

Designers are Neil Patel (scenic), Anita Yavich (costume) and David
Lander (lighting).

Over the last 12 years, Beast on the Moon has been seen around the
world with productions in 17 different countries, translated into 12
different languages, having received more than 40 significant awards.

According to production notes, Kalinoski’s interest in the subject
was spurred by his seven-year marriage to an Armenian woman. “This
play tells a story that the Turkish government has spent the last 90
years trying to erase from the world’s consciousness,” Kalinoski said
in press notes. “But this is a story that the world needs to know.
The story is universal. Healing is universal. The denial has got to
stop so that healing can begin.”

The playwright’s most recent work, A Crooked Man, was seen at Future
Fest in Dayton, OH, in July 2004. Kalinoski teaches playwriting and
theatre at the University of Wisconsin Oshkosh.

Century Center for the Performing Arts is at 111 E. 15th Street, off
Union Square. Performances are Tuesday-Saturday at 8 PM and Sunday at
7:30 PM with matinees Saturday and Sunday at 3 PM.

Tickets are $65. For ticket information, contact Telecharge.com,
(212) 239-6200.

Visit the official website at

*

Turkish officials have been criticized for many years for not
admitting responsibility for the crimes, and for downplaying the
number of dead Armenians (thought to be as high as 1.5 million).

In the April 23 New York Times, Tuluy Tanc, minister counselor for
the Turkish Embassy in Washington, said calling the deaths a part of
genocide was “unfair and untrue” ? a manipulation to gain
reparations.

“We don’t see what happened as genocide, quote-unquote,” Tanc told
the Times. “Unfortunate and tragic events took place during World War
I and bad things happened to Armenians, and Muslims and Turks
also?the number killed is much less than they say ? it’s more like
300,000 Armenians who lost their lives.” He reportedly said that
Turkish leaders recently asked Armenia to set up a commission to
study the killings.

www.beastonthemoon.com.