Genocide Issue Threatens to Complicate Turkey Entry Talks w/Europe

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ISSUE THREATENS TO COMPLICATE TURKEY’S ENTRY TALKS
WITH EUROPEAN UNION

YEREVAN, JANUARY 13. ARMINFO. The Armenian Genocide issue threatens to
complicate Turkey’s entry talks with the European Union, says
President of Turkish History Institute Yusuf Halacoglu.

Halacoglu, who endorses the mainstream Turkish view of the events and
rejects the genocide claims, says that setting scholars to work
together is all the more important for his country, He says that the
commission would ideally work under the auspices of the United Nations
or another international body to help ensure impartiality and to
encourage all states concerned to open up their archives to the
panel. Halacoglu met with Turkish Minister Abdullah Gul Wednesday and
said he hoped for official Turkish backing for the commission.

BAKU: Dutch film on Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict contain distortions

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Jan 12 2005

Dutch film on Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict contain distortions

A short film, Hope dies last, by Dutch director Susanna Kroger has
sparked serious concerns by Azerbaijani Diaspora organizations
operating in the Netherlands, the State Committee on Work with
Azerbaijanis Abroad told AssA-Irada.
sThe film tells about 3 Armenian and 2 Azerbaijani soldiers, who
became missing during the battles waged in Upper Garabagh.
The Netherlands-Azerbaijan Society and more than 100 members of the
Azerbaijani Diaspora organizations held discussions with the Dutch
All-nation Council of Churches and the Dutch Red Cross Society on the
film following its presentation held in Amsterdam. Members of the
Armenia Diaspora organizations participated in the discussions as
well.
During the discussions Azerbaijanis expressed their dissatisfaction
with the film, stressing that it doesn’t contain the truth and has
been distorted in favor of Armenians. Dutch specialists also
expressed their discontent with the film.*

Will Referendum Decide Karabakh’s Fate?

WILL REFERENDUM DECIDE KARABAKH’S FATE?

Azg/arm
12 Jan 05

Oskanian And Mammediarov Resume Bilateral Meetings

The regular meeting of RA and Azeri foreign ministers will be held
with the participation of f the OSCE Minsk group mediators in Prague,
on January 10. Vartan Oskanian said in the interview to Interfax
agency before departing to Prague that “the negotiations of this year
will qualitatively differ from the first stage of the Prague process.”

“At present we will touch upon certain issues and details, while in
the course of the first stage of the Prague process we discussed
general principles. The more we deepen in details the more the
negotiations get complicated. When we begin work with details we
should be ready to make mutual concessions,” Oskanian said, expressing
hope that in 2005 “we will be able to fix a progress in the Nagorno
Karabakh issue.”

The Associated Press informed that few days ago Azeri President said
in the sitting of the security council that the settlement of Nagorno
Karabakh conflict enters “a new, positive stage”. “Certainly, I don’t
mean that the conflict is settled. The negotiations are still on and
we spare no efforts to make them go in the way beneficial for us,”
Ilham Aliyev said, adding that the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh has
entered “a new stage.”

On his turn, Yuri Merzliakov, Russian co-chair of the OSCE Minsk group
told the Azeri press that Armenia agreed to make some concessions in
the course of the Prague negotiations. “Now, it is Azerbaijan’s turn,”
Merzliakovsaid.

During the December 22 press conference, 2004, Oskanian advised the
journalists to pay attention to the article published in the French Le
Figaro. According to him, the article reflects “today’s general
trends in the Nagorno Karabakh issue.” Pierre Lelouche, head of the
NATO parliamentary Assembly, and Anna Palacio, former Spanish foreign
minister, the authors of the article, visited Nagorno Karabakh in
autumn and expressed the opinion that “Armenia should have the
temporal control of Nagorno Karabakh who’s further fate will bedecided
though a referendum in 5 or 10 years.”

According to daily Azg’s information, it is not excluded that Armenia
and Azerbaijan will agree an agreement on Nagorno Karabakh conflict
settlement, according to which, the Karabakh forces should quit
several Azeri territories under their control, while Baku will agree
to hand the control of Nagorno Karabakh to Armenia under the condition
that in 5 or 10 years the status of NKR will be decided through a
referendum.

By the way, in the course of the December 22 press conference,
Oskanian said that Yerevan will be able to ratify the right of
Karabakh people for self-determination and achieve its international
recognition, on the other hand, he added that the realization of the
right of Karabakh’s self-determination can be indirect from the aspect
of the time.

Last year, in the course of one of his public speeches, RA President
Robert Kocharian drew the attention to the trends of the settlement of
the current conflicts in the other corners of the world, particularly,
he pointed out the crisis in the South Sudan, where interesting
developments take place.

A historical event took place in Kenya on January 9, with the
participation of Kofi Annan, the UN Secretary General, and Colin
Powell, the US State Secretary, as well as the leaders of some African
countries. The South and North authorities of Sudan have signed an
agreement, according to which the status of the unrecognized Blue Nile
and Nuba Mountain’s Country will be decided in six years through a
nation-wide referendum.

It’s worth mentioning that the international community led by the US
has chosen the referendum as a settlement of the conflicts. The same
happened in 2004, when two simultaneous referendums were held in
Cyprus among the Greek and the Turkish communities of the island. It
is not excluded that the fate of Kosovo will also be decided though a
referendum.

As for Sudan, it is worth mentioning that the sides in conflict came
to agreement in the following issue. The Southern part of the country
will be announced an autonomy and be governed according to the
principles of autonomy from the July of 2005.While in six years the
country will decide through referendum whether it stays in the
structure of Sudan or it becomes an independent state. John Garange,
leader of the separatists for many years, will become the first rime
minister of Sudan. The oil profits of Sudan that amount to $ 4 billion
annually will be equally divided between the Northern central
government and the Southern autonomy in the course of the coming six
years.

BBC states that if the referendum is held tomorrow, the South will
vote for its independence. John Garange, who signed a cease-fire with
the authorities of Sudan two years ago, is for a united state of Sudan
that has two centers.

By the way, Sudan and Azerbaijan a number of things in common. The
most important is that both Baku and Khartoum have turned for help to
Osama bin Laden, World’s terrorist N1, to settle the Nagorno Karabakh
and South Sudan conflicts, relevantly. The US exerted punishment
measures on Sudan for giving shelter to bin Laden years ago. But
Heydar Aliyev felt the danger in time and agreed to cooperate with the
US in its anti-terrorist combat.

The conflict burst out in Sudan in 1983, when Khartoum authorities
tried to impose the rules of Islamic law on the population of the
Southern part of the country that don’t speak Arabic. About 2 million
people died in thearmed conflict that lasted for 20 years.

It’s worth mentioning, that the humanitarian crisis that is still on
in Darfur, the Western part of Sudan, should not be confused with the
conflictbetween the South and the North of the country. Darfur
conflict began in 2003, when the rebels of this region began attacking
the authorities, condemning them in racism. About 70 thousand blacks
died in Darfur in two years and 2 million quitted their homes. The US
characterizes Darfur crisis as a genocide.

By Tatoul Hakobian

Shevardnadze: Yeltsin Looked Right at Me and Lied

Kommersant, Russia
Jan 11 2005

Yeltsin Looked Right at Me and Lied

Last year saw the first anniversary of Georgia’s velvet revolution.
Former president Eduard Shevardnadze did not want to talk about it
with Vlast correspondent Valery Kadzhaya, but he did tell him about
it happened in the early 1990s.

Eduard Shevardnadze still lives in Krtsanisi, the dacha community
that Lavrenty Beria had built in the 1930s for himself and top
Georgian officials. Shevardnadze has moved out of Beria’s dacha,
however, into a more modest one. The last time I met him, three years
ago last October, he looked much worse than he does now. But the
reason for that is clear: there was a serious political crisis then
and the youth of the country were marching on Rustaveli Prospekt
demanding his resignation. He held on then, but dismissed the
government. He wasn’t able to repeat that feat. On November 24, 2003,
at the height of the rose revolution, Shevardnadze resigned his
office. Now he is writing a book. He recounted several incidents from
his life, which will probably appear in that book, to Vlast.

I Knew that Yeltsin, Kravchuk and Shushkevich Were Planning to
Resolve Something

People are talking about the danger of dictatorship in Russia now.
But so far not one minister has dared to do what you did on December
20, 1990, when you resigned at the Congress of the People’s Deputies
of the USSR, saying that it was your protest against the emergence of
dictatorship.

Yes. That’s what I said and, to my amazement, almost everybody in the
hall, except the military, stood up and applauded. The Academic
Likhachev spoke. A great man. I knew him well and respected him. And
he respected me. We understood each other. He asked me in the name of
all the deputies to remain. Stay. And that will make us relax our
foreign policy… That was the sort of thing he said. But I had already
made up my mind. I finished speaking, stood up and went home. The
time following amazed me most of all, because Gorbachev, who knew
that a minister of foreign affairs could not make such a decision
without the necessary grounds, did not show any reaction at all.

Did you try to discuss the issue with him?

No. I did not discuss it with him because I knew for sure that he
would refuse.

He didn’t ask you to come to see him?

No. He appeared at the same congress and cursed me. He said that he
had always thought well of me. It true, he really did think well of
me. The problem was that he denied everything, and said that he had
no data. I had the data. You know what he said then? He said that he
never gave me any reason to make such an announcement. That he didn’t
know anything about any dictatorship, he had no data, and how did I
have any data?

I really did have them though. Two months later, if I am not
mistaken, he was at a Party function in Belarus and said himself,
Yes, dictatorship really is coming. That was him talking, not me! So
everything that happened later, in August, seemed doubtful to me.
Even the fact that almost all the members of the Politburo flew to
him made me doubt the propriety of the matter. But he announced
himself that dictatorship was in the offing, that vigilance was
needed, and so on and so forth, and then went on vacation. I didn’t
see the logic in that.

In November 1991, after the putsch had failed, you agreed to be
minister a second time. Why?

Yeltsin had gathered everything in his own hands. Not just Yeltsin.
Kravchuk and Shushkevich had united too. They were acting in concord.
Who can forget that, if Ukraine goes, Belarus goes, and what would be
left then? The rest would go too. Then there remained what remained.

Then Gorbachev started calling me. Can you come over? he asked. Why?
I asked. There’s something. A serious matter. Please, I ask you to
come over. If I am not mistaken, Yakovlev, Aleksandr Yakovlev, a
good, decent person, was with him. Gorbachev was still president
then, but not really in charge. He said, I want to set up a
presidential council. I am offering you the post of minister of the
combined ministry of foreign affairs and economic relations. Two
ministries combined, and I will be a minister and member of the
presidential council. I asked him, What is this for? Do you see
what’s happening? It’s not going to end just like that. It’s not that
I’m afraid, but…

We had a long discussion. Then what concerned me? I saw that Yeltsin
was gathering my foreign affairs guys around him, the talented ones.
When I entered it, after Gromyko, I left everyone alone. Gromyko was
a professional. He had different views on international relations,
but he was a diplomat of the highest class. There were 5000 people in
the central apparatus alone. Smart, competent people! I saw that they
were beginning to move them around into other agencies. My friends
came and told me that I had to return, even if temporarily, they
would give anything so that I could save the team. We didn’t betray
you ever in all those years. Now you have to think about us. If there
is no strong hand, no boss, they will tear us apart, literally. That
was one of the arguments for my return. But I was sure that it would
be temporary, because I saw that things were going badly for
Gorbachev. I knew that Yeltsin, [Ukrainian leader] Kravchuk and
[Belarusian leader] Shushkevich were planning on resolving something.
I got all the information. Incidentally, I got a lot of the
information from the ministries of foreign affairs of those
republics. I had good relations with the ministers.

I told Gorbachev, All right, let’s say I return. But we are not the
Union any more. Yeltsin is leading Russia. Ukraine is separate,
Belarus is separate, Kazakhstan is separate. He said he had talked it
over with everyone. You can call and confirm that I talked to
everyone about it, if you want, he said. You can go to Yeltsin. Call
him if you want. He’ll tell you that we have agreed on it.

I went to Yeltsin. We had good relations. You know what it was like
at the time of the putsch. I was with Yeltsin at the White House
twice. The first time I went into Yeltsin’s office, they said that he
had a very important paper, and they told me what was written on it.
It was an order transferring [control of] all the armed forces of
Russia to the president, that is, to Yeltsin. But he couldn’t decide
what to do. I told him, I know you have a document. That’s why the
tanks are rolling. You are not commander-in-chief right now. You have
to sign that paper so that all the armed forces come under your
control. He answered, Yes, I have that text ready. It’s a good thing
you agree with it. It’s a good thing you are insisting too. I’ll sign
it. He signed it and that saved the country.

No One outside of Georgia Wanted Anything to Do with Them. That’s
When They Remembered Me

In 1992, Tengiz Sigua, Dzhaba Ioseliani and Tengiz Kitovani, who were
said to have criminal ties, called you to Tbilisi. How did you decide
to accept their offer?

On March 31, 1991, there was a referendum in Georgia and the
Georgians decided to become independent. The first presidential
elections were on May 26. Zviad Gamsakhurdia won. Do you know how
many votes he got? It was 87 percent! And it wasn’t falsified than.
The people really voted that way.

Five or six months later, people were beginning to turn against
Gamsakhurdia. He managed not just to spoil relations with Russia, but
with America and all the countries of Europe as well. Complete chaos
reigned inside Georgia. I was working in my association [The
International Relations Association, founded by Shevardnadze after he
resigned as minister of foreign affairs of the USSR] and people were
flocking to me from Georgia. Not just those three, but the leading
members of the intelligentsia, business leaders and so on. They said
outright, Georgia is dying. It doesn’t even exist as a state now. No
one can pull Georgia out of the crisis, no one can bring order, but
you.

I remember something else. After Zviad was overthrown, a so-called
Military Council was ruling in Georgia. It was headed by Kitovani,
who had been convicted murdering and had never had anything to do
with the government or the army before, but he founded the National
Guard units that were really in control of the situation, and Dzhaba
Ioseliani, a good man in and of himself, but he was a former thief.
He had been sentenced to 25 years in Leningrad in 1956 for the group
murder and robbery. Now he had founded the Mkhedrioni armed unit.
Sigua didn’t have enough experience. That was their milieu. No one
outside of Georgia wanted to have anything to do with them. That was
when they remembered me. Kitovani came twice. He asked me to come
there. For what kind of work? He didn’t offer anything. You should
just be in Georgia, he said.

Then Sigua came. And Ioseliani called every day. If anyone really
sincerely wanted me to come back, it was Dzhaba. A thief is a thief,
you can’t erase that from your life, but he was a fairly educated,
thoughtful person. He told me, Our homeland is just dying. I’ll call
you when it is time to come back. Don’t rush. Kitovani insisted that
it had to be today. I wouldn’t do it. Dzhaba called ten days later.
You have to come now. It will be too late if you wait. Before you
didn’t have to, he said. And then I came. I just came, I didn’t know
what I was going to do. They appointed me chairman of the state
council. What kind of job is that? It is not commander-in-chief. The
army was not subordinate to it. It made some decisions, but all of
them secondary. It couldn’t go on for long.

I want to tell you a little-known fact. When I was leaving for
Georgia, I went to Yeltsin and consulted with him. Should I go or
not? Yeltsin said that he didn’t see any choice. Then I called
Genscher [Hans Dietrich Genscher, German foreign minister in 1992].
We are friends. He insisted that I go to Georgia. He said, I really
respect you and love you. You played a decisive role in the
unification of Germany. Now I can come to you. But no cooperation
between the states is possible until you become legitimate. Baker
[James Baker, U.S. secretary of state in 1992] said the same thing
when I consulted with him. They were giving me the opinions of their
heads of state. That was when I began to make decisions. There was no
other choice. Either elections and legitimacy or we return to
isolation, with or without Shevardnadze in Georgia. In the fall of
1992, elections were held – the most just election I have ver held.
There was war. There was shooting. And the people came out to vote!

Putin Told Me, “We Are Continuing to Build Railroads. You Take Care
of Ochamchir and Sukhumi.”

That was a very difficult time for Russia and Georgia both. A lot
might be different today if your relationship with Yeltsin had been
different.

I never had reason to deceive Yeltsin. But Yeltsin looked right at me
and fooled me! It is still hard for me to think about. In 1992, he
called me and said that the war in Abkhazia had to stop. It can be
stopped very easily if Russia wants to do it, Yeltsin said. I suggest
that you go. I’ll call Ardzinba and we will gather all the leaders of
the Caucasus republics. They were all involved in the war too.

Yeltsin opened the meeting by saying, The war in Abkhazia has to
stop! Then everybody spoke. Everyone was in favor. I thanked them for
their concern. Only Ardzinba was against it. He said so. Yeltsin took
him by the arm, led him aside and said something to him. All right, I
agree, he said then. Yeltsin called me over and we shook hands.
Yeltsin placed his hand over ours and announced, The war in Abkhazia
is over!

And what happened? We had no troops. They were all militias. As soon
as they found out that they were saying in Moscow that the war was
over, they began leaving their posts. And a week later the offensive
on Gagra began with Russian volunteers taking part. They were people
who had military training, who had uniforms, weapons and everything
else. And there were several hundred Chechens, a battalion from
Basaev. Do you know what they did? They cut a man’s head off and
played soccer with it.

Do you think Abkhazia will be returned to Georgia whole, or will it
be divided?

Everything depends on Russia. As Grachev said when he was minister of
defense, We cannot leave Abkhazia, because then we would lose the
Black Sea. And what happened, as a matter of fact? They lost all the
ports on the Baltic, they lost the Crimea, Odessa, Sevastopol. Only
Novorossiisk remains. And it is not a fully functional port – for two
months you can’t sail there. So Grachev thought that Russia should
occupy Abkhazia and build a port there. From the point of view of
Russian interests, he was right.

So Russia will stall for time, not returning Abkhazia to Georgia and
talking about territorial integrity.

So far that’s what’s been going on. Some things changed after my
meeting with Putin in Sochi [in March 2003]. We agreed then that
Russia, Armenia and Georgia have an interest in the rail line. We,
Georgia, are interested in returning people who had been driven from
their homes. There were 300,000 of them then. Putin said to me, Let’s
do it gradually. We will start building a railroad to Sukhumi. We
won’t disturb you, we’ll withdraw the peacekeepers, and you return
100,000 residents to the Gal District, it’s one of the biggest. Then
we’ll continue the railroad and you take car eof Ochamchir, then
Sukhumi. That was what we agreed on. There are papers, documents,
there’s everything.

The first half has been fulfilled, the return of the refugees to Gal
and the building of the railroad. About 60 percent of the refugees
have returned to Gal. That’s not bad.

Why did Bagapsh win? His wife is Georgian. I once brought him to
Tbilisi to be on the Central Committee of the Komsomol. Then he
worked in Moscow. In Abkhazia, they see him as someone who can come
to an agreement with Georgia and with Russia. The Abkhazian have
reached that conclusion. Not all of them, of course. But they elected
him, that means a lot. Naturally he is a nationalist. Naturally, I
will ask him to acknowledge that Abkhazia lies with in the borders of
Georgia.

Do you regret resigning?

You know, Bush sent me a telegram after my resignation. He wrote,
Your greatest feat is that you resigned. Otherwise blood would have
been shed. A civil war would have started. My wife (and she was not
just my wife, we were friends, great friends) said, Don’t do that.
Resign. You’ll write, we won’t disappear. My son works in UNESCO. He
called me and said, Don’t make a mistake. And he insisted I resign
too. On the second day, I called the opposition in and said that if
they were able to run the country, I would leave. And I don’t regret
it.

by Valery Kadzhaya

Georgia’s premier welcomes new ferry link with Russia

Georgia’s premier welcomes new ferry link with Russia

ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow
10 Jan 05

Tbilisi, 10 January: A series of documents on the opening of a ferry
rail link between the Georgian port of Poti and the Russian port of
Kavkaz was signed in Tbilisi today. Russian Transport Minister Igor
Levitin and Georgian Economic Development Minister Aleksi Aleksishvili
signed the agreements “On the ferry service”, “The rules of shipping”
and “The temporary rules for the operation of the ferry service”.

Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania, who attended the
document-signing ceremony, said “the signed agreements and the opening
of ferry traffic between the ports of Poti and Kavkaz will create
positive trends in the development of trade relations between Georgia
and Russia”.

The first ferry crossing will be completed in the second half of
January and at first it will operate once every three days,
transporting on average 25 railway carriages. Not only Georgia and
Russia will use the Poti-Kavkaz ferry link, but also Armenia,
Azerbaijan and Central Asian countries.

[Passage omitted]

ANCA: Armenian American Vets Org. Opens Doors for Young Armenians

Armenian National Committee of America
888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: (202) 775-1918
Fax: (202) 775-5648
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet:

PRESS RELEASE
December 31, 2004
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

DONATION FROM A UNIQUE MILFORD, MASSACHUSETTS ORGANIZATION, THE
ARMENIAN AMERICAN VETERANS ORG. INC, AAVO, OPENS DOORS
FOR YOUNG ARMENIANS

— $10,000 Contribution to assist ANCA Capital Gateway Program

WASHINGTON, DC – The Armenian American Veterans Post of Milford
Massachusetts (AAVO) has added to their legacy of charitable
giving with a generous $10,000 donation to the ANCA Capital Gateway
Program – a pioneering initiative to open the door for recent
Armenian American college graduates to political, government,
media, and foreign policy jobs in the nation’s capital.

“The AAVO have long represented the proudest tradition of the
Armenian American community,” said ANCA Chairman Ken Hachikian.
“The children of Genocide survivors who themselves went to war to
protect our freedoms, today continue to give back, opening doors
for a new generation of Armenian Americans dedicated to public
service.”

Launched in August, 2003, through a generous donation from the
Cafesjian Family Foundation, the ANCA Capital Gateway Program
assists Armenian Americans across the U.S. to find job
opportunities on Capitol Hill or other government offices, the
media, and think tanks in Washington, D.C. The program builds on
the successful 20-year old ANCA “Leo Sarkisian” summer internship
program, which has brought hundreds of youth leaders to Washington,
D.C. to learn about the American political process and the growing
role Armenian Americans play in advancing issues of concern to our
community.

Qualified Capital Gateway Program Fellows are provided free housing
and full use of ANCA facilities and staff support in their quest
for the right job or internship in the Nation’s Capital. The over
20 participants in the program have secured positions in a myriad
locations including with Members of Congress, U.S. Chamber of
Commerce, Export-Import Bank, Congressional Quarterly, Center for
the Prevention of Genocide and the American Civil Liberties Union.

AAVO was founded in 1946 in Milford, MA by returning veterans of
World War II. Over the years, it has counted over three hundred
members, including veterans of both the Second World War and the
Korean War, who have called Milford home. During the 1950’s the
group completed work on an attractive building and grounds, a
Veteran’s and community center, which was a vibrant home to
area Armenian American veterans for many years. With the passing
of so many veterans in the decades following the War, the group
sold the building in 1989, and has used the proceeds from this sale
to contribute to a number of worthwhile causes. The AAVO have
been recognized for their generosity in newspapers, official
proclamations, and through the appreciation of the many recipients
of their humanitarian gifts. Among those that the Veterans have
assisted over the years include:

* The Armenian Library and Museum of America, the national
repository for collecting, conserving and documenting Armenian
artifacts, books, textiles, archives and works of art;

* Project Save, the pioneering program that collects and archives
visual information about Armenian people and their history;

* The Milford Senior Center, the town’s gathering place for
members of the “Greatest Generation.”

* Milford Whitinsville Regional Hospital, allowing this community
hospital to expand its facilities and services.

* St. Jude’s Children’s Hospital, which provides free of charge
medical care to the most vulnerable children, suffering from cancer
and other catastrophic diseases.

* Armenian Children’s Milk Fund, a life-saving charity that has
been sending soy-based infant formula and dry powdered milk to
Armenia since 1989.

In addition, the Veterans have contributed to the Armenian Tree
Project, Armenian Eye Care Project, Armenian General Benevolent
Union, several Armenian churches, and individual families in need.
The Veterans group is also working closely with local attorney
Gregory Arabian, an Armenian American community leader, who is
preparing oral histories of the lives of Armenian American World
War II and Korean War veterans.

www.anca.org

Palestinian campaign requires delicate balance

The Baltimore Sun
December 26, 2004 Sunday
FINAL EDITION

Palestinian campaign requires delicate balance;
Campaigns begin with Abbas trying to shore up image

Peter Hermann, SUN FOREIGN STAFF

EL-BIREH, West Bank – The front-runner in next month’s election to
succeed Yasser Arafat as Palestinian leader, Mahmoud Abbas, launched
his campaign yesterday, appealing to voters who worry that he might
surrender core tenets of their long fight for statehood.

The silver-haired, pragmatic 69-year-old reassured a hall filled with
800 supporters in a municipal building here, paying homage to Yasser
Arafat and using language to please militant ears, while not
repudiating previous moderate statements. He shared a dais with
teenagers wounded in the conflict, former prisoners of Israel and
relatives of dead gunmen.

They took turns giving Abbas their support in what was the
candidate’s attempt to reach out to people who have felt slighted by
him in the past, to shore up an image hurt by the tacit support he
enjoys from the United States and Israel and by his urgings for an
end to the armed conflict.

There are six candidates in addition to Abbas; one is under house
arrest in the United States, accused of supporting terrorist groups.

Yesterday was the first day of official campaigning, opening a
two-week process leading up to the vote, scheduled for Jan. 9, to
replace Arafat, who died last month.

`Hopes and the pains’

“The people at this table represent the hopes and the pains of the
Palestinian people,” Abbas said, after the group raised their joined
hands in a show of solidarity.

Addressing some of the concerns emanating from the street while
embracing Arafat’s legacy, he added, “We need only to be faithful to
our people.”

Abbas avoided any mention of his previous calls for gunmen to
surrender their arms, nor did he repeat his unpopular assertions that
militarizing the uprising was a “historic mistake.”

He pushed for national unity and the rule of law but appeared to rule
out a police crackdown on militant groups.

“We will not raise weapons in the faces of our brothers,” he said to
cheers from teenagers in the audience, who represent a young
generation of Fatah political party leaders who feel left out by the
entrenched old guard, epitomized by Abbas.

The only other relatively well-known candidate, Mustafa Barghouti, a
doctor from Ramallah, began his campaign in a more traditional style,
by visiting several Palestinian cities on an opening-day tour to get
close to the people.

Uncomfortable speaking

Abbas, widely known as Abu Mazen, is uncomfortable giving public
speeches, and he spent the past several weeks traveling and meeting
Arab leaders.

Last week, Abbas met with British Prime Minister Tony Blair, and on
Friday he attended midnight Mass at the Church of the Nativity in
Bethlehem – carefully choreographed events in which he is clearly at
ease.

Yesterday’s campaign event was designed to quell concerns resonating
from a speech Abbas made last year at a peace summit in Jordan in
which he renounced violence and did not mention the plight of
thousands of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel.

Abbas sat between the Muslim cleric who had pronounced Arafat dead in
Paris and an Armenian priest.

Next to them sat Israel’s longest-held Palestinian prisoner, released
when Abbas was prime minister, along with the son of a man killed by
Israel and a teenager wounded in the conflict.

Also on the stage was Fadwa Barghouti, the wife of jailed uprising
leader Marwan Barghouti, who bowed out of the race this month under
pressure from Fatah, whose leaders were worried that his popularity
would split the dominant party and endanger Abbas’ candidacy.

Inclusive language

Abbas made sure not to leave out any part of his constituency,
especially those still involved in a conflict he wishes to end.

The song that preceded his remarks opens with the line: “We are not
terrorists, Muslims and Christians; we are struggling for freedom; we
are an Arab nation; we are struggling to liberate Palestine; they hit
us with missiles; we hit them with stones.”

He appealed to the young, often disillusioned Palestinians, saying,
“We know the suffering of our youth.”

He promised never to give up on Jerusalem as the capital of a future
Palestine and never to surrender the rights of refugees to return to
their former homes in Israel.

“We are choosing a path of peace and negotiations,” Abbas said. “If
there is no peace here, there will be no peace in the Middle East and
in the rest of the world. We know that the others do not want us to
be in peace, so they choose to kill and demolish us. But we will
stay.”

Homage to Arafat

Abbas sprinkled his lengthy address with references to Arafat, giving
him credit as “the one who exploded our revolution.” He referred to
Arafat’s final speech to legislators, in which he urged internal
reform to end corruption and made a stark admission that he and
others made mistakes in their quest for an independent state.

Abbas referred to that speech as Arafat’s will, and promised, “We
will do it” – using Arafat’s address as a bridge to a new era, away
from the rule of one man and toward the rule of democratic
institutions.

The large crowd only occasionally reacted with enthusiastic applause.

Often, it was the small groups of young activists whose loud shouts
provided the only lively spark in what was, for Abbas, a typically
dry speech.

At one point, they chanted, using Arafat’s nom de guerre, “Abu Amr,
he is resting and we will continue our struggle. Abu Mazen, we will
follow you to liberation.”

Akiam Mazaham, a 22-year-old biology student at Birzeit University,
was one of Abbas’ liveliest supporters.

Putting down his flag and removing his scarf adorned with the
Palestinian colors, he said he is convinced that Abbas will not sell
out Arafat’s legacy.

But he acknowledged that cheering a man clad in a gray suit and tie
is a bit harder than rooting for the more animated Arafat, the
embodiment of their movement.

“Abu Mazen is a man of institutions, and that can help us build a
state,” Mazaham said. The student smiled when asked about Abbas’
subdued speaking style, saying diplomatically, “He acts more than
talks.”

A campaign aide, Mohammed Ishtyeh, told reporters that Abbas planned
a vigorous schedule.

“Wherever he can go, he will go,” Ishtyeh said. “We want him to react
to the people, and we want the people to react to him, even though we
know what the end result will be.

“We want to keep up the momentum of the democratic process.”

Miami celebrates parish anniversary

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

December 23, 2004
___________________

STEWARDS PAST ARE CELEBRATED, WHILE NEXT GENERATION TAKE UP
RESPONSIBILITIES

Six years ago the parishioners of St. Mary Church of Hollywood, FL,
built a new sanctuary. They had been gathering at St. John the Baptist
in Miami, but the surrounding neighborhood had deteriorated, and they
decided to move to nearby Hollywood.

On Sunday, December 12, 2004, Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of
the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern), joined more
than 100 parishioners at St. Mary to celebrate the new parish’s sixth
anniversary.

“It was exciting because it’s just the beginning,” said Fr. Vartan
Joulfayan, the parish priest in Hollywood. “The sixth anniversary is
not like the 60th. It is the beginning of our new parish, the beginning
of coming together with new parishioners.”

The day of celebration was marked by a ceremony honoring two long-time
stewards and another ordaining the newest leader of the parish.

HONORING THE PAST

Honored during the Divine Liturgy were James and Shocky Pilafian, who
are the surviving founding members of the original St. John the Baptist
Church and on the building committee of St. Mary Church.

“They are truly representatives of a great generation who, throughout
the Diocese, recognized that the Armenian Church is indeed important,
but that the Armenian Church does not live without active parish
leaders,” said Archbishop Barsamian. “They are truly dedicated stewards
of the church, who have shown countless others how to live solid
Christian lives.”

During a touching ceremony, the Primate presented the couple with a
Pontifical Encyclical on behalf of His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme
Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians.

“After almost a half century, they received this encyclical for all the
devotion and time and effort and treasure they have given to the
original parish and that they continue to give to this new parish,” Fr.
Joulfayan said of the couple, who because of advanced age are no longer
active in parish leadership but who still, none the less, remain
constant supporters and benefactors of the parish. “They’ve become
stewards of the church. They are very kind, very devoted Christian
people. They are examples for many others who are now following them in
contributing to the life of the parish.”

WELCOMING NEW LEADERSHIP

During the badarak marking the parish anniversary, the Primate also
ordained Ryan Patino, 14, as a tbir. He had been serving the parish as
an altar server for a little more than one year.

“It is very, very important and exciting for parishioners who see a
young person coming forward who is willing to serve his parish and who
also has the faith and the devotion to his or her church,” Fr. Joulfayan
said. “This young man was looking forward to this ordination. He was
humbly willing to take this type of responsibility upon his shoulders.”

He was not the only young parish member to take part in the anniversary
celebration. Harout Esmerian, a young member of the parish, served as
the master of ceremonies during an anniversary banquet. And three
Sunday and Armenian School students offered musical performances to the
120 people at the banquet.

Though a small parish, with only about 60 highly active members and 120
people who attend services and events, Fr. Joulfayan said parish leaders
are committed to making sure people get involved and stay involved in
the church.

“Without the participation of parishioners, the church cannot survive,”
he said. “We would have the walls and dome and stained glass, but
without the soul in it a church cannot survive.”

— 12/23/04

E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable in the News
and Events section of the Eastern Diocese’s website,

PHOTO CAPTION (1): Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese
of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern), presents a Pontifical
Encyclical to James and Shocky Pilafian, founding parishioners at the
St. Mary Church of Hollywood, FL, during a Divine Liturgy celebrating
that parish’s sixth anniversary on Sunday, December 12, 2004.

PHOTO CAPTION (2): The Primate ordains Ryan Patino as a tbir during an
anniversary celebration at the St. Mary Church of Hollywood, FL, on
December 12, 2004.

# # #

www.armenianchurch.org
www.armenianchurch.org.

Clash Between High-Ranking “Armenian” and “Nakhijevani” AzeriOfficia

CLASH BETWEEN HIGH-RANKING “ARMENIAN” AND “NAKHIJEVANI” AZERI OFFICIALS AGGRAVATES

Azg/arm
22 Dec 04

According to the reporter of Baku-basedZerkalonewspaper, Azeri
ministers born in Armenia and in Nakhijevan are likely to declare
a war against each other. The article of the Azeri reporter titled
“Ilham Aliyev Provokes Dangerous War of Ministers” was published in the
recent issue ofNezavisimaya Gazeta, thus making the hidden war public.

First of all, he reminds in the article that the political elite of
Azerbaijan is ruled by two clans, i.e. the “Armenian” clan and the
“Nakhijevan” clan. In particular, recently, when discussing the state
budget of 2005, “Nakhijevani” Ali Nagiev, labor and social security
minister, and Misir Mardanov, education minister, clashed. Earlier,
the “Armenian” Farhad Aliyev, economic development minister, clashed
with “Nakhijevani” Kamaleddin Heidarov, head of tax committee.

There have been contradictions and quarrels between the “Armenian” and
“Nakhijevani” Ministers when Heydar Aliyev was at power but “Aliyev
(senior) who originated from Armenia and was born in Nakhijevan” could
be a third side in the clashes between the clans. The newspaper noted
that both clans considered Aliyev was on their side “while Aliyev
junior is not that versatile,” the newspaper wrote.

The reporter emphasized that “Armenians” donâ~@~Yt seem to have
firm positions. The leaders of this clan are Ali Insanov, healthcare
minister, and Murtuz Alesqerov, head of the parliament. While “dark
cardinal” Ramiz Mehtiev, head of the presidentâ~@~Ys staff, is known
as the leader of the “Nakhijevani” clan. According to the newspaper,
Ilham Aliyev fails to hold control over the clash between the clans
and he advised the ministers who decided to get involved in the public
politics to resign from their state posts.

–Boundary_(ID_A6wwGh5/rcaGTXzDYXK6MA)–

The art of slow nurturing; Maro Gorky

Los Angeles Times
December 20, 2004 Monday
Home Edition

The art of slow nurturing;
Maro Gorky, daughter of an influential painter, found a muse for her
own work in her Tuscany garden.

by Hunter Drohojowska-Philp, Special to The Times

When you keep a guest room available for director Bernardo
Bertolucci, you are bound to see yourself in his films sooner or
later. So it was that Maro Gorky and Matthew Spender saw their
artistic lives in Tuscany used as fictional backdrop for the 1996
romantic coming-of-age film “Stealing Beauty.”

“It wasn’t even our house,” protests Gorky, who is seated on the
damask sofa of Silva Bezdikian, an art dealer who is showing Gorky’s
paintings at her Beverly Hills home. Gorky’s jewel- toned views of
the Tuscan landscape are mounted on easels in the living room.
Opening a book called “Tuscan Interiors,” she turns to an 18th
century stone hunting lodge that really is their home. “See? Our
house is much prettier. I think the house is my installation. Matthew
has a beautiful barn — his cathedral to the arts. Also, we are much
tidier than the people in the film.”

The film portrays a middle-aged couple thriving in idyllic
surroundings with fresh, delicious food, diverting company and
dedicated creative enterprise. It is an idealized view, of course,
but still based on the truth of their remarkable lives. “In the
morning, I do my gardening and in the afternoon, I paint and cook and
make supper,” says Gorky, 62. “Weekends or holidays, we have company.
Otherwise, it is a lonely life in the most beautiful part of the
world.”

Gorky and Spender moved to Avane, as their Tuscan home is called, in
1968. They were members of the counterculture that fled London for a
more rural existence. Just as important, they are children of famous
parents, and they sought both geographical and emotional distance
from their past.

Abstract painter Arshile Gorky committed suicide in 1948 when his
daughter Maro was just 5. Her memories of him are slim but potent and
drove her commitment to become a painter, leading her to study with
Frank Auerbach at the prestigious Slade School of Art in London,
where she graduated in 1965.

Her husband of 42 years, Matthew, is the son of the late English poet
Stephen Spender. After reading history at Cambridge, Matthew pursued
poetry but disliked living in the shadow of his legendary father so
instead became a writer and sculptor. His carved-wood and stone
figures populate the land around their Tuscan villa and were featured
in the film.

“Because we had complicated parents, our aim in life is a simple and
quiet life in the country,” Gorky says. Her round eyes and prominent
features make her look as though she stepped out of one of her
father’s canvases. While living their rural lives, the couple had two
daughters, Cosima and Saskia. As teenagers, those daughters decided
country life was a bit too quiet. Cosima married Valerio Bonelli, who
is now working as a production assistant on a film being made in Los
Angeles. (Saskia married writer Carter Coleman.) Because Cosima and
her young daughter were going to be spending many months in Los
Angeles, Gorky saw this as an ideal time to show her abstract
landscapes with Bezdikian.

Bezdikian is Lebanese Armenian. Gorky, who usually exhibits at Long &
Ryle gallery in London, finds it ironic to be sought out at least in
part because of her Armenian roots. After moving to America in 1920,
her father denied his origins, falsely claiming to be Russian and a
nephew of the writer Maxim Gorky. Still, she was drawn to art by her
heritage. “It was my father who made me a painter. Not by compulsion,
of course, but by example,” she says.

A show of Arshile Gorky’s works on paper and paintings is at Jack
Rutberg Fine Arts on La Brea Avenue through Friday. The drawings were
in the estate of Hans Burkhardt, an artist represented by the
gallery. Spender, who wrote a book on Arshile Gorky, says: “The
drawings have the sense of Gorky as a teacher. He taught Hans
Burckhardt but also Mark Rothko. He was authoritarian …. This is an
opportunity to see how helpful he was as a teacher.”

Maro Gorky adds: “My father’s spirit is strong. His ghost makes
itself felt. It is a privilege up to a point but also invidious
comparison. People will look at what you do and say, ‘Ah, but her
father was so much better.’ ”

Gorky finds her inspiration in the natural world. Of the 32 acres
that they own, she cultivates a dozen. She is an avid gardener who
dedicates each morning to pruning and caring for trees, vines and
olives, not to mention the kitchen garden. Pulling her red shawl
around her, she talks about the influence of such lush surroundings.

“It is very important because you learn about the pruning of trees,
and that affects the structure in the painting.” Discussing her 2003
painting “The Drive,” she explains, “You can see a well-pruned
mulberry and a climbing pink clematis. A pruned honeysuckle, cypress
trees, lime trees and industrial vineyards around a blue drive. They
are almost like aboriginal paintings, maps of what I see in front of
me. I see things next to one another in spatial relationships.” ”

*

Maro Gorky

Paintings by Gorky may be seen by appointment at SB Fine Art in
Beverly Hills. Contact: (310) 276-7766 or

“Arshile Gorky: The Early Years” is

on view at Jack Rutberg Fine Arts, 357 N. La Brea Ave., through
Friday. Contact: (323) 938-5222 or www .jackrutbergfinearts.com

www.sbfineartgallery.com