Turkey Should Not Defend Azerbaijan’s Interests While Establishing..

Pan Armenian Network

TURKEY SHOULD NOT DEFEND AZERBAIJAN’S INTERESTS WHILE ESTABLISHING RELATIONS
WITH ARMENIA, TURKISH BUSINESSMAN CONSIDERS

14.02.2005 15:53

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkey should not defend Azerbaijan’s interests and
demand Armenia’s abandoning the seized territories as a precondition
for the establishment of the Armenian-Turkish relations, Co-Chairman of
the Armenian-Turkish Relations Development Council Kaan Soyak stated
in Yerevan today. According to him, the organization headed by him
advocates activation of Turkish-Armenian relations and raising the
blockade of the Armenian border. “Europe has not had borders for
long time and I think Armenia and Turkey should not be separated
by borders. These two countries should follow the example of the
European states”, he said. However the issue of the opening of the
Armenian-Turkish border will remain unsettled for many years if the
parties are fundamental on their stands. “For the soonest resolution
of the problem I exert pressure on the Turkish governmental circles
within the limits of the possible. I call my Armenian colleagues to
follow my example and put pressure upon the Armenian government”,
the Turkish businessman noted.

Zurab Zhvania Was Helped To Die: New Times Leader

ZURAB ZHVANIA WAS HELPED TO DIE: NEW TIMES LEADER

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 10. ARMINFO. Georgia’s Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania
was not going to die – somebody helped him to, says the leader of
the New Times party Aram Karapetyan.

He rules out the Russian version of Zhvania’s death. Russia was
interested ion Zhvania as PM as this was opening up wide prospects
for Georgian-russian cooperation first of all in economy. As
for Pres.Saakashvili – he is a young and promising politicians
and Karapetyan wishes him success in settling Georgia’s numerous
problems. “I would not like him to follow the footsteps of Pres.
Zviad Gamsakhurdia – though this cannot be excluded,” says Karapetyan.

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Les parlementaires français face à l’amertume des Turcs

La Nouvelle République du Centre Ouest
07 février 2005

Le président de l’Assemblée nationale Jean-Louis Debré et les
présidents de groupe ont été confrontés en Turquie à
l’incompréhension et à l’amertume des Turcs vis-à-vis des réticences
françaises sur l’adhésion d’Ankara à l’Union européenne.

Venus « sans a priori, ni préjugé », M. Debré et les présidents de
groupe, Bernard Accoyer (UMP), Jean-Marc Ayrault (PS), Alain Bocquet
(PCF) et Hervé Morin (UDF) ont pu mesurer, pendant trois jours,
d’Ankara à Istanbul, le fossé créé entre les deux pays par le débat
en France.

Tous leurs interlocuteurs, du Premier ministre Recep Tayyip Erdogan
aux parlementaires, en passant par les chefs d’entreprise, les
associations et les universitaires, ont exprimé leur « déception » ou
se sont dit « choqués ».

L’éventualité d’un référendum sur cette adhésion a soulevé le plus de
critiques, dont celle de M. Erdogan, qui, selon un membre de la
délégation, a lancé jeudi : « Je ne savais pas que 400.000 Arméniens
pouvaient faire échouer un référendum. »

Même incompréhension samedi à Istanbul, où les responsables de
l’université francophone de Galatasaray ont vilipendé le traitement
particulier réservé à leur pays, alors qu’aucun référendum n’est
prévu pour la Croatie.

M. Ayrault a souligné que les socialistes français étaient opposés à
cette disposition, de même que M. Bocquet, tandis que M. Debré l’a
défendue. Ce dernier a expliqué qu’une telle consultation était «
normale » s’agissant d’un « grand pays de 71 millions d’habitants »,
en rappelant qu’il en avait été ainsi pour la Grande-Bretagne.

Le patronat turc (Tusiad) a manifesté son amertume en s’étonnant «
des peurs et des inquiétudes » des Français qui leur font oublier «
l’essentiel », à savoir que « la Turquie et l’Union européenne
peuvent créer de la valeur ajoutée ».

Tous les membres de la délégation française se sont employés à «
écouter et comprendre ». Mais M. Accoyer, partisan d’un partenariat
privilégié avec la Turquie, a eu la tâche un peu plus dure, face aux
Turcs critiquant la phrase du président de l’UMP Nicolas Sarkozy « si
la Turquie était en Europe, ça se saurait ».

–Boundary_(ID_0XntxdKkiGVeF4f6pau3LQ)–

Manama: Shura council chairman meets Armenian Parliament speaker

Shura council chairman meets Armenian Parliament speaker

Bahrain News Agency
February 8, 2005 Tuesday

Manama, Feb.8 ( BNA ) Chairman of the Shura Council Dr. Faissal Al
Moussawi met Tuesday Chairman of the Armenian Parliament, Mr. Artur
Paghdasarian and the accompanying delegation.

The Armenian official lauded the representative, legislative and
monitoring role of the Shura Council, expressing hope for further
cooperation and coordination between the two councils.

Armenia`s FM felicitates Iranian counterpart on victory

Armenia`s FM felicitates Iranian counterpart on victory

IRNA, Iran
February 7, 2005 Monday 11:16 AM EST

Tehran, February 07 — Armenia`s Minister of Foreign Affairs Vartan
Oskanyan sent a message to his Iranian counterpart, Kamal Kharrazi,
felicitating him on the 26th victory anniversary of the Islamic
Revolution.

He said that continued cooperation between the two states` foreign
ministries based on mutual respect can serve to enhance Armenia-Iran
relations in various fields as well as promote their common interests.

Armenian President Robert Kocharian, Prime Minister Andranik Markaryan
had earlier congratulated the Iranian government, Majlis and nation
on the auspicious event.

“In Defence of NKR” Prepares Sound Reply to PACE Resolution

ORGANIZING COMMITTEE “IN DEFENCE OF NKR” PREPARES SOUND REPLY TO PACE
RESOLUTION

YEREVAN, February 4 (Noyan Tapan). At the February 4 regular session,
the Organazing Committee “In Defence of NKR” approved the draft joint
statement to the NA groups and factions. The draft statement considers
full independence of Nagorno Karabakh from Azerbaijan to be legal.

According to the Organizing Committee, a decision was made to prepare
a sound reply to the resolution passed by PACE. It was also decided to
start activities aimed at convening a forum on the Nagorno Karabakh
problem solution.

Iraqi oil brought these girls food-and the UN its biggest scandal

The Times (London)
February 4, 2005, Friday

Iraqi oil brought these girls food-and the UN its biggest scandal

by James Bone

The head of the $ 64 billion aid scheme is accused of conniving with
Saddam, James Bone reports from New York.

AN EXPLOSIVE report by the UN’s own inquiry into the Oil-for-Food
scandal charged yesterday that the head of the programme secretly
received oil allocations from Saddam Hussein. The report also raised
questions about the role of relatives of the former UN
Secretary-General Boutros Boutros Ghali.

The revelations threw the UN into crisis by adding credence to
allegations of widespread corruption in the largest humanitarian
effort in the organisation’s history.

The three-member commission of inquiry, led by Paul Volcker, the
former Chairman of the US Federal Reserve, accused Benon Sevan, the
head of the programme, of “a grave and continuing conflict of
interest” and said that it was “basically improper” for him to have
solicited oil allocations from Iraq.

“He was positioned to affect matters of substantial interest to the
Government of Iraq, and the Government of Iraq hoped that he would
act favourably in return for the allocations that he was granted,”
the report said.The panel also provided previously unknown details
about the part played by the brother-in-law and a cousin of Dr
Boutros Ghali.

The commission did not, however, answer questions about alleged
pay-offs to political leaders in Russia, France and other countries,
or offer a verdict about the role of Kofi Annan’s son, Kojo.

The investigation found that Mr Sevan had requested and received
allocations of millions of barrels of oil on behalf of a
Panama-registered trading company called African Middle East
Petroleum Co (AMEP), owned by Dr Boutros Ghali’s cousin Fakhry
Abdelnour.

The report stopped short of accusing Mr Sevan of having taken a
bribe, but it did report unexplained cash transfers of $ 160,000 that
he said came from an elderly aunt, who was a retired Cyprus
government photographer living on a modest pension until her death in
Nicosia last year. Mr Volcker’s team said that Mr Sevan was “not
forthcoming” when he denied approaching Iraqi officials to request
oil allocations. Although Mr Sevan originally claimed that he had met
Dr Boutros Ghali’s cousin only once, investigators found phone logs
of numerous conversations and even discovered two of Mr Abdelnour’s
business cards in a search of his UN office.

Mr Sevan and Mr Adbelnour acknowledged having a friendship with Fred
Nadler, Dr Boutros Ghali’s brother-in-law.

Mr Sevan said that he met Mr Nadler at UN receptions or meetings
where Dr Boutros Ghali spoke. Records show that Mr Sevan was in
“close contact on an almost weekly basis” with Mr Nadler from at
least 1998 until last year.

Mr Abdelnour described himself as a “good friend” of Mr Nadler and
said one of his uncles was the Nadler family lawyer.

“On multiple occasions, at key periods in the programme and in AMEP’s
dealings with SOMO (Iraq’s state oil marketing organisation), the
phone records show calls between the numbers for Mr Sevan and Mr
Nadler within a few minutes of calls between the numbers for Mr
Nadler and Mr Adbelnour,” the report said.

The commission said it was continuing to investigate “the full scope
and nature of the involvement of Mr Sevan, Mr Abdelnour and other
individuals”.

At a press conference, Mr Volcker said that Dr Boutros Ghali, who was
UN Secretary-General from 1991 to 1996, had been interviewed by
investigators on several occasions.

Responding to the report, Mr Sevan issued a statement yesterday
denying wrongdoing and asserting that he “never took a penny”.

Mr Annan, the UN Secretary-General, reacted to what he called
“extremely troubling evidence of wrongdoing” by initiating
disciplinary proceedings against Mr Sevan, a retiree who continues to
serve the UN on a dollar-a-year contract.

Mr Annan also plans to discipline a UN official called Joseph
Stephanides, who is accused by the Volcker panel of shortcutting a
competitive bidding process to award a 1996 UN border inspection
contract to the British firm Lloyd’s Register.

The UN chief reiterated his pledge to lift diplomatic immunity in the
event of any criminal charges against UN staff. “No one found to have
broken any laws will be shielded from prosecution,” he said.

Mr Annan has himself been interviewed three times as part of the
commission’s investigation of his son, Kojo, who was employed by a
Swiss company, Cotecna Inspection SA, that won a UN contract in Iraq.

Mr Volcker said that the investigation of Kojo Annan was well
advanced. Kofi Annan said that he awaited its outcome “with a clear
conscience”.

The Volcker commission plans to issue an update on Kojo Annan soon
and to ready its final report by mid-summer.

Lacking subpoena power, Mr Volcker’s team has been struggling to keep
up with rival congressional and criminal inquiries in the United
States.

Federal prosecutors in Manhattan recently made a breakthrough in the
case when they secured a guilty plea and a promise of co-operation
from Samir Vincent, an Iraqi-American businessman who acted as a
go-between for Saddam and had been paid off by Iraq for a role in
drafting the original Oil-For-Food scheme so that it favoured Saddam.

THE KEY MEN

BENON SEVAN

A Cypriot of Armenian descent, Mr Sevan recently retired after a
four-decade career at the UN. He ran the Oil-For-Food programme
throughout its six-year existence, but stands accused of receiving
millions of barrels of “oil allocations” on behalf of a trading
company run by a cousin of the former UN Secretary-General Boutros
Boutros Ghali.

BOUTROS BOUTROS GHALI

A former Egyptian Foreign Office minister who served as UN
Secretary-General from 1991-96. Often outspoken, he fell out with the
United States and was vetoed for a second term. During his tenure,
the UN negotiated the terms of what was to become the Oil-For-Food
programme, including allowing Saddam Hussein to choose which
companies he did business with.

FAKHRY ABDELNOUR

An Egyptian cousin of Boutros Boutros Ghali, Mr Abdelnour is an
oil-trader based in Switzerland. He owns a Panama-based trading
company called African Middle East Petroleum (AMEP). According to the
report, Mr Abdelnour went to Iraq to handle “oil allocations” for Mr
Sevan. It accuses AMEP of lifting about 7.3 million barrels of oil at
a profit of more than $ 1.5 million.

FRED NADLER

The brother-in-law of Boutros Boutros Ghali and a friend of Mr Sevan
and Mr Abdelnour. Mr Nadler was related to Mr Boutros Ghali, a Copt,
through the former UN chief’s Jewish wife, Leah, whose father owned
the Nadler sweets factory Alexandria. Mr Sevan said that he met Mr
Nadler at UN receptions at which Mr Boutros Ghali spoke. Mr Abdelnour
describes him as a “good friend”.

One of Mr Abdelnour’s uncles is the lawyer for the Nadler family. The
report describes Mr Nadler as “the likely intermediary between Mr
Sevan and Mr Abdelnour.”

GEORGIA’S PM GETS POISONED BY GAS WHILE PLAYING BACKGAMMON

GEORGIA’S PM GETS POISONED BY GAS WHILE PLAYING BACKGAMMON

TBILISI, FEBRUARY 3. ARMINFO. Georgia’s Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania
got poisoned by gas while playing backgammon in his friend Raul
Yusupov’s house.

Georgia’s Interior Minister Vano Merabishvili says that it was an
accident caused by gas escape from an Iranian gas heater.

Zhvania’s bodyguards found him in the drawing room while Yusupov was
in the kitchen. “They must have been playing backgammon,” says
Merabishvili.

The bodyguards immediately reported of the accident to their chief,
vice PM Georgy Baramidze, President Mikhail Saakashvili and the
prosecutor general. Investigation is underway.

ITAR-TASS reports that gas heater failure is a usual thing for Tbilisi
– dozens of people died of them there in the last months.

Interfax reports that Pres.Saakashvili has called an extraordinary
government meeting.

President of Abkhazia Sergey Bagapsh says that Zhvania’s death will
not aggravate the situation in the Georgian-Abkhazian conflict
zone. “This is Georgia’s internal affair and it is the task of their
police to investigate into the accident,” he says to Interfax.

NOTE: Zurab Zhvania was 42. He was biologist. In 1989 he led a party
of greens and co-chaired the party of greens of Europe. In 1993 he led
the Union of Georgian Citizens party supporting President Eduard
Shevardnadze. In 1992-1995 and 1995-1999 he got into the parliament
and was elected speaker. In 1999 he was reelected speaker but left the
post in 2001.

Before the Rose Revolution Zhvania was believed to be the key official
successor of Shevardnadze as president of Georgia. He was known for
his pro-western views and for regarding Georgian-Russian relations as
“close to cold war.” In 2002 he led the United Democrats party. In Nov
2003 he was appointed Georgia’s Prime Minister.

Philharmonic performance marks Black History Month

Boston Globe, MA
Feb 3 2005

Philharmonic performance marks Black History Month
By Robert Knox, Globe Correspondent | February 3, 2005

In tune with Black History Month, the Plymouth Philharmonic Orchestra
will celebrate the diverse strands of American orchestral music
during an 8 p.m. concert Saturday that will feature William Grant
Still’s ”Afro-American Symphony.”

Originally performed in the 1930s by the New York Philharmonic, it
was the first orchestral work by an African-American composer to be
played by a major American orchestra.

The Plymouth Philharmonic’s music director, Steven Karidoyanes, said
Still’s symphony might remind listeners of a Gershwin classic,
”Rhapsody in Blue,” because it draws on ”that whole Tin Pan Alley,
pop song, jazz influence.” A superb orchestrator, Still was able to
use ”a bluesy English horn,” the baritone clarinet and other reeds
to conjure up the sounds of instruments missing from the symphony
orchestra, Karidoyanes said. ”You really hear a dance band, but
there’s no sax,” he said.

In addition to Still’s symphony, the PPO’s ”American Reflections”
concert, scheduled for 8 p.m. in Plymouth’s Memorial Hall, will
include a tone poem by a Hungarian exile, a work that draws on an
American composer’s Armenian roots, and a work by New Englander
Charles Ives that incorporates church bells, camp songs, and
Protestant hymns.

Ernö Dohnányi’s ”American Rhapsody” was written in the 1950s in
Florida, where the Hungarian composer spent the last 10 years of his
life after fleeing Communist Hungary.

”You’ll never feel the same way about ‘On Top of Old Smoky’ again,”
Karidoyanes said of the composer’s use of the classic folk tune.
Dohnányi added versions of a moving American spiritual and sprightly
fiddle tunes in creating his work’s mixture of themes and moods.

A composition by Somerville native Alan Hovhaness, ”Prayer of St.
Gregory,” is a lush five-minute work with an Eastern European sound.
The piece relies on the orchestra’s strings and a solo by the
philharmonic’s principal trumpet player, Philip Hague. The trumpet
gives voice to the saint who is credited with bringing Christianity
to Armenia.

Ives mixed formal innovation and small town ”Currier and Ives”
Americana in his music, Karidoyanes said, and in ”Camp Meeting
Symphony” employed a free association of popular old time melodies to
create a ”very approachable” orchestral work.

Russia actively settling post-Soviet conflicts – Lavrov

Interfax
Feb 2 2005

Russia actively settling post-Soviet conflicts – Lavrov

BAKU. Feb 2 (Interfax) – Russia is playing an active role in settling
conflicts in the post-Soviet space, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
said on Wednesday.

“Although Russia is generating a large number of initiatives on ways
to settle conflicts in the post-Soviet space, the conflicting parties
are still experiencing a shortage of such initiatives,” Lavrov told a
news conference following talks with his Azeri counterpart Elmar
Mamedyarov.

Russia is taking part in the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict as a co-chairman of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe’s Minsk Group, alongside France and the U.S.,
he said.