Embassies, From Landmark To Bulwark

EMBASSIES, FROM LANDMARK TO BULWARK
by Susan Spano, Times Staff Writer

Los Angeles Times
September 11, 2005 Sunday
Home Edition

HER WORLD;
To protect diplomats abroad, new building designs play up security
while downgrading architectural singularity.

AMERICAN travelers may not know it, but they own a magnificent 18th
century palace on the Place de la Concorde in Paris. After World War
II, the U.S. government bought the building at this enviable address,
and it now serves as the consular services division of the U.S.
Embassy, a proud postage stamp of America and symbol of our long,
complicated relationship with France.

The neoclassical Hotel de Talleyrand, as it is called, is one of the
grandest of about 270 U.S. embassies and consulates around the world
dedicated to promoting U.S. foreign policy and serving as the face
of America abroad.

Some are as distinguished as the Hotel de Talleyrand in historic
and architectural terms. But since the 1998 Al Qaeda bombing of U.S.
embassies in Kenya and Tanzania and in the wake of Sept. 11, 2001,
many more have been deemed a security risk and will soon be replaced
in an unprecedented wave of embassy building. The construction,
estimated to cost $17 billion, is aimed, above all, at safeguarding
the people who work in American diplomatic installations abroad.

More than 200 people died as a result of the embassy bombings in Kenya
and Tanzania, including 12 U.S. diplomats. The two attacks were hardly
isolated incidents; embassies have become prime terrorist targets.

“Every year on Foreign Service Day in May, more names are added to
the plaque at the U.S. State Department in Washington, commemorating
members of the foreign service who have died in the line of duty,” John
M. Evans, U.S. ambassador to Armenia, said in a telephone interview.

His mission has just moved into one of the new embassies mandated by
the 1999 Secure Embassy Construction and Counterterrorism Act. The
State Department’s Bureau of Overseas Buildings Operations, led by
retired Maj. Gen. Charles E. Williams, recently completed 15 new
embassy compounds in such countries as Turkey and Bulgaria; 39 others
are being designed or constructed around the world; and contracts will
soon be awarded for 13 more State Department facilities in foreign
lands, which include embassies, consulates, office buildings and
ambassadorial residences.

New or old, embassies generally are places of business, not museums
or cultural centers open to casual inspection. Besides serving as the
headquarters of U.S. diplomatic missions, they often house a variety
of federal agencies such as the FBI and the Internal Revenue Service.
Consular services, however — which can be at an embassy or in a
separate building — are available to American citizens in case of
such emergencies as a lost passport.

As a result, Americans abroad get to know U.S. embassies and consulates
only if they get into trouble, which is a pity. Some, like the Hotel
de Talleyrand, are exceptional enough to warrant a visit.

The State Department keeps a register of culturally significant
properties, including Winfield House, an ambassadorial residence near
London’s Regent’s Park, surrounded by a 12-acre garden. It was built
in 1936 by Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton, who sold it to the U.S.
government after World War II for $1.

A changing world

ALSO on the register are the Palazzo Margherita, a U.S. Embassy
office building on the Via Veneto in Rome, atop an archeological
trove of 2,000-year-old Roman Imperial frescoes; the French colonial
ambassador’s handsome residence in Hanoi; Schoenborn Palace in Prague,
Czech Republic, with a Baroque facade and interior features from the
Renaissance; and the American Legation at Tangier, Morocco, the first
U.S. government property acquired abroad, a gift from sultan Moulay
Suliman in 1821. Unlike other entries on the register, the Tangier
Legation is a museum that can be visited.

Other noteworthy properties are more recent. In “Building Diplomacy:
The Architecture of American Embassies,” author Elizabeth Gill
Lui identifies the 1950s as another time of accelerated embassy
construction. Many facilities from that era, like the Athens embassy,
designed by Walter Gropius, were built by modern architectural masters
as symbols of democratic openness. In the busy hearts of foreign
cities, they had plenty of windows and relatively easy access but
little concern for security. “The architecture of embassies reflects
our changing relationship with the outside world,” Lui said in a
recent telephone interview.

That relationship turned ugly with the 1965 bombing of the U.S.
Embassy in Saigon, Vietnam. “The political shock was that an absolutely
fundamental principle of international order — the mutually agreed
upon inviolability of diplomats and their missions operating in host
countries — was violated,” Charles Hill, a diplomat and fellow of
Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, said in an e-mail. Subsequent
attacks on American diplomatic facilities — in Tehran; Beirut;
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania; and Nairobi, Kenya — ultimately resulted
in the current rush to build new, more secure embassies. Since 2001,
when Williams was put in charge of the program, the Overseas Buildings
Operations bureau has cut costs and construction time, chiefly because
of the introduction of a standard embassy design.

Sized, like the three bears — small, medium and large — the design
template de-emphasizes architectural singularity. Instead, security
is optimized, with such features as perimeter walls, guard booths,
bulletproof windows and doors, leeway separating the building from
the street, anti-ram barriers and sites at a distance from congested
city centers.

Though the State Department intends to customize its new
standard-design embassies to their settings — for instance, the
Armenian embassy is on a lake reflecting Mt. Ararat (actually in
neighboring Turkey) thought to be the biblical landing place of
Noah’s Ark — critics have called them bunkers, reflections of fear,
not the free and open values of American democracy.

At the very least, post-9/11 requirements for secure embassy buildings
make it harder for the State Department to maintain historic landmarks
like the Hotel de Talleyrand. The choice of new building sites outside
city centers signals the abandonment of storied embassy districts. And
it’s unknown whether access to consular services may become, in
certain cases, more difficult for American travelers in trouble.

“What the average American tourist needs to know,” said diplomat
Hill, “is that the American government is not responsible for these
difficulties. It is the rise of terrorist movements, which have set
themselves monstrously against the basic foundations of international
order, law and established diplomatic practice.”

The recent relocation of the U.S. Consulate in Istanbul, Turkey,
from a landmark palazzo downtown to a new building 45 minutes outside
the city illustrates the increasingly conflicted claims on American
diplomatic missions abroad.

The former consulate, known as the Palazzo Corpi, in the busy Beyoglu
district, was completed around 1882. It was then purchased for use
as an embassy by Ambassador John G.A. Leishman, who assumed that
the government would ultimately reimburse him. But Congress was
in a stingy mood, so back in Washington, D.C., Leishman staked the
building in a poker game with a handful of influential lawmakers,
who promised to see that the ambassador was repaid for the property if
he won. The Palazzo Corpi has the distinction of being the only U.S.
Embassy acquired by the government at a card table.

But the building’s vulnerable architecture and location fated it for
replacement, and in 2003 the consulate moved to a new building so
impregnable that it has been likened to a maximum-security prison.
Just a few months later, a terrorist bomb hit the British consulate
and London-based HSBC bank, near the Palazzo Corpi in central Istanbul,
killing 32 people, including Britain’s consul general, Roger Short. One
of the suspected perpetrators arrested after the bombing reportedly
told investigators that his group would have targeted the American
consulate had it not moved to a more secure facility.

In these highly charged times, balancing security requirements with
access, cultural exchange and the promotion of American values so
vital to effective diplomacy is the great challenge of the State
Department’s embassy building program. “We can’t do our work in a
fortress,” said Ambassador Evans. “But in Yerevan [Armenia], we’ve
got the balance right.”

Mixing business, comfort

THE new American embassy in Yerevan, Armenia’s mountain-bordered
capital, is nothing like a bunker, said Evan. It’s a five-minute drive
from Yerevan’s central square, and the building, completed earlier
this year, is surrounded by lakefront and three perimeter walls,
providing protection to 70 Americans, as well as 328 Armenians who
work there. “But once you’re inside, it’s like a college campus, with
lawns and trees and more space for receiving guests,” said Evans. The
waiting area for visa applicants and U.S. citizens in need of consular
services is more comfortable, he said, and the embassy’s library is
open to the public.

Seemingly successful applications of the secure embassy design are
hopeful signs, even if their out-of-town locations speak volumes about
America’s response to the changing world. “When we build, they will
come,” Williams said by e-mail, referring to his belief that embassy
construction outside city centers would stimulate development.

At the very least, it’s a safe bet we won’t be buying new property
on the Place de la Concorde, which is why, here in Paris, I keep
walking by to admire the Hotel de Talleyrand. Keeping diplomats and
foreign service workers safe comes first, of course. I just hope
the illustrious old building will never be deemed too insecure to
serve as a part of the U.S. Embassy to France. Every time I pass it,
I feel proud to be an American.

*

Susan Spano also writes “Postcards From Paris,” which can be read
at latimes.com/susanspano.

Exhibition of Thai goods to open in Yerevan

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
Sept 9 2005

THE EXHIBITION OF THAI GOODS TO OPEN IN YEREVAN

An exhibition of Thai goods is to open in Yerevan in 2006, and
representation of RA Trade Industrial Chamber will open in Bangkok
and Thailand. RA deputy foreign minister Armen Bayburtyan informed of
the fact on the outcomes of the talks with Thai deputy foreign
minister Virachai Virameteecul.
According to Bayburtyan, `The Joint Programs of Actions’ will
contribute to the development of bilateral ties and stimulate the
development of trade between the two countries. In his words,
Armenian – Thai cooperation is especially successful in agriculture.

The court cannot help the students

A1+

| 12:57:34 | 09-09-2005 | Social |

THE COURT CANNOT HELP THE STUDENTS

The students of the University after Hrachya Acharyan are still on strike.
Let us remind you that they are worried about the sudden raise of education
fees at the beginning of the new educational year. Losing the hope to meet
with the rector, the students again turned to the pro rector Aram
Khachatryan, who received several students.

The latters informed the pro rector that they have initiated a collection of
signatures. The decision was made after the latest meeting with Aram
Khachatryan when the pro rector had announced that the appellants for only
20% of all the students.

So, with the help of the collection of signatures, the students want to
represent the real numbers of the appellants. During the latest meeting with
the students, Mr. Khachatryan was unyielding and said that the students can
even apply to court. `We cannot solve the problem all the same’.

According to eh students, after the letter sent to the Government yesterday,
a call has been from the Education department made to the pro rector, who
said that he cannot pay enough wages to the professors stuff. So, the
reduction of educational fees is impossible.

There Is Opportunity For Settling Karabakh Conflict: OSCEChairman-In

THERE IS OPPORTUNITY FOR SETTLING KARABAKH CONFLICT: OSCE CHAIRMAN-IN-OFFICE

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 6. ARMINFO. There is an opportunity for settling
the Karabakh conflict, OSCE Chairman-in-Office Dimitrij Rupel said
Monday commenting on his meeting with President of Nagorno Karabakh
Republic Arkady Ghoukassyan.

He said that he and Ghoukassyan exchanged opinions on the present
situation in the peace process. Rupel told Ghoukassyan about his visit
to Azerbaijan. He pleaded cooperation between the conflicting parties
and noted that OSCE does not support either of the nations but tries
to attain together with them some mutually acceptable resolution.

Rupel said that there is no much time for resolution and now there
is an opportunity for that. He said that he had brought a clear
message of Azeri President Ilham Aliev for Armenian President
Robert Kocharyan. Rupel hopes that both the presidents and the FMs
will continue their talks and that a constructive dialogue will be
established in the region.

Rupel said that in the Karabakh peace process the question is
about reconciling two principles – territorial integrity and
self-determination right. As to attaining resolution as early as this
year this would not be bad but the Nov 2005 parliamentary elections in
Azerbaijan are not a very good component for the negotiating process.

Asked by ARMINFO when one can expect the involvement of Karabakh as a
full party to the peace talks Rupel said that there already is a quite
expansive negotiating format – OSCE Minsk Group, Armenian and Azeri
presidents and FMs. But Rupel is ready to negotiate with anybody to
facilitate the resolution.

Turkish Novelist Faces Charges For Mentioning Genocide

TURKISH NOVELIST FACES CHARGES FOR MENTIONING GENOCIDE

Socialist worker, UK
Sept 6 2005

Turkey’s most acclaimed novelist, Orhan Pamuk, faces a possible three
years in jail after being charged last week with “publicly denigrating
Turkish identity”.

The attack on the 53 year old novelist stems from an interview he
gave to the Swiss newspaper Tages-Anzeiger in February this year.

During the interview Pakuk said, “Thirty thousand Kurds were killed
here, one million Armenians as well. And almost nobody talks about
it. Therefore, I do.”

The references to the Turkish government’s murderous suppression of
the country’s Kurdish minority, and to the massacre of Armenians by
Turkish soldiers in 1915, have enraged Turkey’s ultranationalists.

This has resulted in the author facing a criminal trial on 16 December
under the country’s new penal code.

Pamuk’s novels have been translated into over 20 languages. They
include My Name Is Red and his latest book Snow, which examines the
conflicts between Turkey’s secular elite and Islamist opposition
movement.

The charges against him have drawn condemnation from human rights
groups around the world.

The international row is caught up with negotiations over Turkey’s
entry to the European Union. The EU is insisting that Turkey’s human
rights record is brought up to “European standards”.

Ironically, under the Ottoman Empire Turkey had historically been very
tolerant of subjects from different cultural backgrounds. The country’s
elite turned to racism and genocide in the early years of the twentieth
century precisely as they came to emulate Western “civilisation”.

In Search For Islamised Armenian Orphans

IN SEARCH FOR ISLAMISED ARMENIAN ORPHANS
By Hakob Tsulikian

AZG Armenian Daily #159
07/09/2005

According to a BBC message published in Armenian Mirror Spectator
weekly, a Turkish documentary filmmaker Berke Bas left for his
birthplace of Ordu at the Black Sea to look for Armenian orphans to
shoot a documentary about them. Speaking to her relatives there, she
found out that her parents once adopted at least 5 Armenian children.

No one has so far taken up the story of Armenian children spared by
the Armenian Genocide and converted into Islam. Discussions of the
Armenian Genocide issue incited by Turkey’s furious efforts to join
the European Union were apparently the cause for removing the taboo
from these issues.

“I’m sure it will be difficult. People are unwilling to respond to my
initiative and ask why I dig the past”, Bas confessed, noting that many
Turkish families refuse that they once had Armenians in their families.

“But we know that there were many such families to the extent that the
Ottoman authorities issued a secret order to punish all those saving
Armenian children by hiding them in their families”, Prof. Selim
Deringil of Bosphorus University of Istanbul assures.

“Those Islamised Christians fear to speak about their past. If a Turk
says that his parents were Armenians, he will be labeled “gyavur”
(unfaithful) and classified as an outcast”, editor of Akos newspaper
Hrant Dink said during the talk with Bas.

ASBAREZ Online [09-06-2005]

ASBAREZ ONLINE
TOP STORIES
09/06/2005
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1) Armenia Ready to Help Hurricane Victims
2) ARS Urges Opening Hearts to Hurricane Victims
3) Cheney Fails to Explain Letter on Armenian Genocide
4) Armenian Genocide Legislation Scheduled for Committee Consideration

1) Armenia Ready to Help Hurricane Victims

President, Spiritual Leaders Send Condolences

(Combined Sources)–Armenia conveyed its readiness to provide assistance to
the US Government in the wake of Hurricane Katrina’s devastation. Armenian
foreign minister Vartan Oskanian said on Monday that the US Embassy in Armenia
would be providing a list of necessary items, and that, `Armenia is ready to
provide both financial and professional assistance to the US to the best of
its
abilities. Rescue teams, physicians, and other specialists will depart from
Armenia to the US in case of need.’ Oskanian said.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said on Friday that “no aid would be
turned down from foreign countries” in assisting residents along the Gulf
Coast.
In a letter to US President Bush, Armenian President Robert Kocharian sent
condolences on behalf of the Armenian people. “We share your pain and sadness.
Please accept… most sincere words of condolence and convey them to the
families
of those who are suffering. We wish you strength, patience, and courage.”
His Holinesses Aram I and Karekin II sent letters to Bush as well, expressing
support and condolences to the American people in light of the losses
suffered.
In the letter, His Holiness Aram I said that “the tragic images that I see on
television are, indeed, disturbing and heartbreaking. This is, in fact, one of
the biggest natural disasters in the recent memory of the USA. I share the
pain
and anxiety of those who have been affected by this disaster.”
The Catholicos also informed the president that he has advised the two
prelates of the Catholicosate of Cilicia in the United States to encourage
Armenian-American communities to actively participate in the post-hurricane
humanitarian efforts.
His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians,
stated “We extend to you, your government and all the people of the United
States, the sorrow and sincere condolences of the Armenian Church and all
Armenians throughout the world. As head of the Armenian Apostolic Holy Church,
we offer our solemn prayers for eternal rest for all those who perished in
this
disaster, and solace and comfort to their families and friends. We ask the
Almighty to grant recovery to the thousands of afflicted, hurt and homeless
families, and strength to you and your government at this difficult time.”
Also responding to the hurricane was His Eminence Archbishop Moushegh
Mardirossian, Prelate of Western USA, who sent a solidarity letter to Lousiana
state Governor Blanco on the unprecedented event that devastated the whole
region.
In his letter, the Prelate expressed his condolences for the human losses,
and
His Eminence mentioned that he had urged and appealed to the faithful of the
churches and parishes to pray for the rest of the souls of the victims, and
participate by contributing abundantly to the American Red Cross and the
Armenian Relief Society in order to assist the national efforts and help the
devastated and most unfortunate families.
On September 4, the Prelate’s appeal and directives circulated to all
pastors,
churches, and communities of the Western Prelacy inviting, calling and urging
them all to contribute generously and assist the relief efforts to reach
out to
the millions of the affected by this disaster.

Brewing Anger

In Washington, President Bush said he was dispatching Vice President Dick
Cheney to the battered Gulf Coast to assess relief efforts.
But local and state officials, particularly in Louisiana, have bitterly
criticized what they see as a slow response to the plight of people caught in
the disaster.
Appearing on the CBS-TV “Early Show,” Aaron Broussard, president of Jefferson
Parish just outside New Orleans, remains angry.
“Bureaucracy has murdered people in the greater New Orleans area,” he said.
“And bureaucracy needs to stand trial before Congress today. So I’m asking
Congress, please investigate this now. Take whatever idiot they have at the
top
of whatever agency and give me a better idiot. Give me a caring idiot. Give me
a sensitive idiot. Just don’t give me the same idiot.”
Congress has pledged an investigation into the federal response. President
Bush likewise promised Tuesday to lead his own investigation to determine, as
he put it, “what went right and what went wrong” in the response to Hurricane
Katrina.

2) ARS Urges Opening Hearts to Hurricane Victims

Humanitarian organization appeals to Armenians for assistance

Following the devastation and flooding in the wake of Hurricane Katrina,
the Armenian Relief Society of Western USA has begun collecting monetary
donations for the victims of the Gulf Coast disaster. As rescue workers
continue to pluck people from their rooftops and evacuate ravaged areas, the
realization that thousands of survivors will not have homes or jobs to return
to along the Gulf coast of Louisiana and Alabama is daunting.
Last January, the ARS-WR successfully collected donations for Tsunami
victims.
In a press release, the ARS appealed to the community to give back in this
time
of dire need. `We are sure that all Armenian-Americans who have felt the
impact
of helping hands through natural disasters, whether in Northridge or Armenia,
will give generously to the ARS.’
The Western Region’s chair of the ARS Angela Savoian urged the organization’s
members, supporters, and the community-at-large to lend a hand to victims.
“These are times to let actions speak for themselves,” said Savoian.
“The aftermath of Hurricane Katrina is too disastrous to describe, but we…
all
of us are ready to take on the responsibility to alleviate the suffering of
fellow citizens in the Gulf States. Let’s open up our hearts to the losses of
lives, homes and livelihoods, and be generous with our donations.”
The Western Prelacy has designated the ARS as one of the agencies to contact
for offering Gulf Coast disaster relief donations. Send your tax-deductible
donations payable to the ARS of Western USA, Regional Executive immediately.
Please indicate that your donation is for the “Hurricane Victims Fund.”
Donations can be mailed to: Armenian Relief Society of Western USA Inc,
Regional Executive, 517 W. Glenoaks Blvd., Glendale, CA 91202-2812, or by
visiting the ARS Western regions headquarters at the same address.

3) Cheney Fails to Explain Letter on Armenian Genocide

Vice President sidesteps query from twenty-two Congress members regarding
reason for letter to Genocide survivor

WASHINGTON, DC–Vice President Dick Cheney has sidestepped a Congressional
request for clarification regarding the reasons behind his
forthright–although
apparently mistaken–characterization of the Armenian genocide in letter sent
this April to survivor Maritza Ohanessian, reported the Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA).
In an April 22 letter to Ohanessian on the occasion of her 100th birthday,
the
Vice President properly described the Armenian genocide, a departure from the
Administration’s standard practice of using evasive or euphemistic terminology
to downplay the true historical, legal, and contemporary geopolitical
implications of this crime against humanity.
In response to this letter, Congressman Steve Rothman (D-NJ) and
twenty-one of
his House colleagues asked the Vice President if this letter represented a
formal shift in the Administration’s policy. The Vice President’s response,
signed by his Principal Deputy for National Security Affairs John P. Hannah,
simply notes that “there has been no change in Administration policy on this
issue,” without any articulation of the nature of the policy.
“The Vice President should explain to Maritza Ohanessian and all Armenian
Americans why he sent this letter recognizing the Armenian Genocide but cannot
now stand behind his words or even offer an explanation for his reversal,”
said
ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “We appreciate Congressman Rothman’s
leadership on this issue and want to thank all those who joined with him in
this effort.”
Joining Congressman Rothman as signatories to the June 23rd Congressional
letter were Representatives Rob Andrews (D-NJ), Lois Capps (D-CA), Joe Crowley
(D-NY), Anna Eshoo (D-CA), Barney Frank (D-MA), Patrick Kennedy (D-RI), Mark
Steven Kirk (R-IL), Sander Levin (D-MI), Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), Thaddeus
McCotter (R-MI), James McGovern (D-MA), Michael McNulty (D-NY), Richard Neal
(D-MA), Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ), George Radanovich (R-CA), Adam Schiff
(D-CA), Brad Sherman (D-CA), Mark Souder (R-IN), John Tierney (D-MA), Edolphus
Towns (D-NY), and Peter Visclosky (D-IN).

4) Armenian Genocide Legislation Scheduled for Committee Consideration

May be `Marked-Up’ as Early as September 14

WASHINGTON, DC–Armenian Genocide legislation appears set to come before the
influential House International Relations Committee as early as Wednesday,
September 14th, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).
According to Congressional sources, Committee Chairman Henry Hyde (R-IL) is
prepared to `mark-up’ both Armenian Genocide Resolutions (H.Res.316 and
H.Con.Res.195). During this mark-up session, the fifty members of the panel
will have an opportunity to consider changes and then to vote to either
approve
or disapprove each
measure.
`We want to thank Chairman Hyde for his leadership in ensuring that the
members of his Committee have the opportunity to vote on Armenian Genocide
legislation,’ said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. `Along with our
local chapters around the nation and coalition partners here in Washington,
DC,
we are working hard to support the efforts of our friends– Congressmen George
Radanovich, Adam Schiff, and Armenian Caucus Co-Chairmen Joe Knollenberg and
Frank Pallone– in encouraging the Committee to act favorably on this
legislation.
H.Res.316, which was introduced by Representatives George Radanovich (R-CA),
Adam Schiff (D-CA), and Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone
(D-NJ) and Joe Knollenberg (R-MI), calls upon the President to ensure US
foreign policy reflects appropriate understanding of the Armenian Genocide.
The
resolution includes thirty detailed findings from past US hearings,
resolutions
and Presidential statements, as well as references to statements by
international bodies and organizations. As of today, a bipartisan group of
over
one hundred and twelve Representatives have already agreed to cosponsor this
measure.
H.Con.Res.195, introduced by Rep. Adam Schiff and cosponsored by over eighty
Representatives, was offered following direct negotiations with House
International Relations Committee Chairman Henry Hyde (R-IL). The Chairman
agreed to Committee-level consideration of Armenian Genocide legislation in
return for Rep. Schiff tabling a planned June 8 Armenian Genocide amendment to
the House Foreign Relations Authorization bill. The agreement addressed
serious
concerns on the part of the Administration and Congressional leaders that the
Schiff Amendment– which had strong prospects of passing–would overshadow the
White House meeting, held that same day, between President Bush and Turkish
Prime Minister Erdogan. This measure, which is in the process of being
amended,
reaffirms the Armenian Genocide within the broader context of regional
relationships and addresses Turkey’s efforts to join the European Union.
The Turkish Ambassador and his lobbyists–including the Livingston Group–are
actively making the rounds to members of the International Relations
Committee,
seeking to block any action on US reaffirmation of the Armenian Genocide. As
part of this effort, the Livingston Group has been distributing a four-page
genocide-denial document to Congressional offices.

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Toronto: System of a Down sings different metal tune

Hamilton Spectator (Ontario, Canada)
September 1, 2005 Thursday Final Edition

System of a Down sings different metal tune
by Graham Rockingham

Showtime

What: System of a Down, with The Mars Volta and Bad Acid Trip
When: Saturday, doors open at 6 p.m., show at 7 p.m.
Where: Copps Coliseum

Tickets: $31 to $56.50 through Ticketmaster or at the Copps Coliseum
box office. 905-527-7666

Sometimes music writers can simply dig too deep in their quest for
answers. Take the case of System of a Down.

In the overly homogenous world of metal music, this California
quartet with the strange name stands apart from the pack. So far, in
fact, that the metal brand is disingenuous.

Their vocal harmonies are theatrical in character, at times almost
operatic. Their music, especially off their latest release Mezmerize,
is intricate and melodious, combining thrashing guitar attacks with
prog/rock themes and soft acoustic interludes.

Their lyrics offer some of the finest social satire since Frank
Zappa’s cinematic explorations in the early ’70s, offering up savage,
yet often hilarious, attacks on war, greed, drugs and the Hollywood
celebrity machine.

It’s only natural that observers would search for answers to what
makes System of a Down so different. Much of the analysis has centred
on the band’s Armenian ethnic roots.

Bassist Shavo Odadjian, guitarist/singer Daron Malakian, singer Serj
Tankian and drummer John Dolmayan all speak the mid-eastern language.
Although only Odadjian was born in Armenia, all are well acquainted
with the brutal persecution Armenians suffered at the hands of Turkey
in the early 20th century. Malakian and Dolmayan were both born in
Lebanon. All four were raised in Hollywood, Calif.

It’s easy to be overly analytical about this stuff. Here’s a
long-winded example from the Miami Herald: “The band members’
experiences as progeny of the Armenian diaspora provided the fuel for
(the album) Mezmerize.”

When I interviewed Odadjian this week, I asked him about the effects
of this “diaspora.” The answer surprisingly enough, focused on the
Swedish ’70s disco band Abba.

“It comes from us listening to a lot of music, not from us coming
from a specific place,” the 31-year-old said just before going on
stage in Montreal.

“From The Beatles to Slayer, from Abba to Frank Zappa. You might be
able to tell we listen to Zappa but did you know we listen to Abba?”

No. In fact I would never have dreamed such a thing. Slayer, yes. But
Abba? The Swedish disco singers are about everything anathema to
heavy metal. Is he serious?

Even over the phone, Odadjian can sense my incredulity. He offers to
recite every word of Abba’s hit Dancing Queen just to prove he’s not
joking. Please don’t.

“But it’s true,” he continues listing some Broadway show tunes to
underscore his point. “Go put on a good old Iron Maiden record and
then listen to Phantom of the Opera. Then you’ll see where we get
some of our stuff from.”

That, I admit, would go a long way toward explaining the band’s
theatrical sound. But what about those lyrics — the wickedly
sardonic anti-war politics of their latest hit single B.Y.O.B. (Bring
Your Own Bombs) or the hilariously witty This Cocaine Makes Me Feel
Like I’m On This Song?

Bands like System of a Down and Green Day have made it cool again for
kids to take an interest in politics or at least question authority.
Odadjian, however, says the band isn’t trying to be preachy or
convert anyone.

“We don’t tell them ‘This is right and this is wrong.'” he says. “We
tell them to, at least, have an opinion. We’re not going to preach
.. because it wouldn’t go with what we are saying which is have your.
own specific thought. I don’t want them to have the same thoughts
about government or politics that we do. Just have some thoughts
about it.”

Whatever the message, it’s certainly working. Mezmerize was released
in May, opening at the top of the charts. Sales are pushing toward a
million.

The followup album Hypnotize, recorded at the same time as Mezmerize,
is slotted for release in November.

[email protected]

905-526-3331

GRAPHIC: Photo: SPECIAL TO THE HAMILTON SPECTATOR; System of a Down
also known as John Dolmayan, left, Daron Malakian, Serj Tankian and
Shavo Odadjian perform at Copps Saturday night.

Athens: Greece’s biggest illegal cigarette ring smashed

Greece’s biggest illegal cigarette ring smashed

Kathimerini, Greece
Sept 2 2005

A criminal ring using immigrants to produce millions of contraband
cigarettes in an underground factory near Thessaloniki has been broken,
police said yesterday after arresting a suspected gang member.

The 35-year-old ethnic Greek from Armenia is thought to be one of at
least 10 members of a ring employing Ukrainian and Moldovan immigrants,
in rotating groups of 20, over the past six months in exchange for
room and board.

He has been charged with forming a criminal organization, money
laundering, forgery and customs violations.

Raids on the illegal factory and on two nearby warehouses unearthed
more than 80 tons of tobacco and 2.3 million packs of contraband
cigarettes, most bearing the forged logo of a well-known Greek brand.

The factory comprised state-of-the-art manufacturing and packaging
machines, underground living quarters for staff and closed-circuit
television, police said.

Officers described the operation as unprecedented in Greece.

Free speech row clouds Turkey’s EU hopes

Free speech row clouds Turkey’s EU hopes
By Elizabeth Davies

Belfast Telegraph, United Kingdom
Sept 2 2005

02 September 2005 — Turkey faces mounting criticism over its decision
to bring criminal charges against its foremost writer yesterday,
as Europe’s foreign ministers met in Wales to discuss the country’s
prospects for EU membership.

The Turkish government, already under pressure to recognise EU member
Cyprus, is pushing for a date to begin full membership talks and can
ill afford a new row over freedom of speech.

Orhan Pamuk, the internationally acclaimed author of My Name is Red,
could face up to three years in prison for comments made in a Swiss
interview when he condemned the mass killing of Armenians in the
aftermath of the First World War.

Denis MacShane, former Europe minister and Labour MP for Rotherham,
said: “It is a sickening blow to all pro-Turks in Britain and Europe
.. to hear the news that the Turkish authorities seek to persecute.
this great European writer.”

Calling on the European Commission to lobby Turkey to drop the charges,
Mr MacShane added: “I will continue to support and argue for (Turkey’s)
right to start EU membership talks. But if the authorities persist
with this attack on a great European writer then many of us who are
strong supporters of Turkey will be forced to change our minds.”

A Turkish public prosecutor said Mr Pamuk’s comments violated Turkey’s
penal code. The award-winning writer is charged with “denigrating
Turkish identity”. Mr Pamuk is prohibited from commenting on the
charges but his associate and translator Maureen Freely launched a
scathing attack over the charge. “How can Turkey possibly claim to be
a European country if it has such laws on the books and prosecutors
can bring such cases?” she asked.

The row threatens to overshadow the meeting of EU foreign ministers
intended to assess the country’s compliance with conditions to open
membership talks next month.

In recent years, Turkey has had to enact major political and economical
reforms to overcome its reputation as a country that violates human
rights and has a weak, uncompetitive economy.

Abdullah Gul, the Turkish Foreign Minister, said talks should begin
on schedule as Turkey had met all of the objective criteria.

However, preparations for the talks have already hit a major obstacle
over Cyprus. In July, Turkey signed a deal extending a customs union
with the EU to include Cyprus and nine other countries that joined
the bloc in 2004. Turkey upset many EU governments by insisting its
signature on the customs deal did not mean Ankara now recognised the
Cypriot government.

Critics have seized on Cyprus to call for a watered-down associate
member status for Turkey.

Mr Pamuk caused a storm last year when he told the Swiss newspaper
Der Tagesanzeiger that “30,000 Kurds and one million Armenians were
killed in these lands and nobody but me dares to talk about it.”

Turkey denies a genocide of Armenians between 1915 and 1923, claiming
instead that hundred of thousands of Armenians died of famine and
disease only.