U.S. Welcomes Dialogue on Political Reforms in Armenia

06 May 2004

U.S. Welcomes Dialogue on Political Reforms in Armenia
Davidson calls on authorities to investigate assaults on political activists

The United States welcomes the recent dialogue on political reforms between
the Armenian government and opposition parties, and sees the new law on
demonstrations and rallies passed by the National Assembly as a “step in the
right direction” towards greater political freedom, U.S. diplomat Douglas
Davidson told the OSCE Permanent Council May 6.

Davidson also called on Armenian authorities to “fully investigate” recent
assaults on political activists.

Following are Davidson’s remarks:

(begin text)

United States Mission to the OSCE
Vienna

STATEMENT ON THE POLITICAL SITUATION IN ARMENIA

As delivered by Deputy Representative Douglas Davidson to the Permanent
Council

May 6, 2004

Mr. Chairman, the United States is pleased that Armenian parliamentarians
from the governing coalition and opposition parties met on April 26 and 27.
We encourage both sides to continue meeting and to work within the
constitutional process to promote political reform in Armenia.

The United States has long been concerned about the practice of
administrative detention and the Soviet-era Code of Administrative Offenses
still in force in Armenia.

We note that the new law on Public Demonstrations, Gatherings and Rallies,
passed by the National Assembly on April 28, is a step in the right
direction. However, we encourage the government to work with the Council of
Europe and other experts to further refine the law to bring it fully in line
with international standards.

We also look to the Armenian authorities to fully investigate recent
assaults on political activists and we look forward to the swift and
thorough resolution of these cases.

Thank you very much.

(end text)

(Distributed by the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: )

http://osce.usmission.gov
http://usinfo.state.gov

BAKU: OSCE MG co-chairmen attend Azeri-Armenian summit in Warsaw

OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen attend Azeri-Armenian summit in Warsaw

ANS TV, Baku
28 Apr 04

[Presenter] President Ilham Aliyev spoke at the European Economic
Summit in Warsaw today [28 April]. His speech was devoted to the
regional economic projects and security issues in the South
Caucasus. Aliyev also spoke of the Nagornyy Karabakh
problem. Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents met today at 1300 Baku
time [0800 gmt]. More details to follow from ANS TV’s special
correspondent Qanira Pasayeva.

[Correspondent Pasayeva over a still of her photo] Aliyev delivered a
speech at the European Economic Summit about implementation of the
energy projects [in the region]. He is the main speaker on this topic.

He imparted information on Azerbaijan’s economic development. He said
that an attractive climate has been created in Azerbaijan for foreign
investment and such investments are increasing year after year. He
briefed the audience on Azerbaijan’s economic indicators.

The large economic projects under way in the region were the main
topic. Aliyev said that Azerbaijan is implementing projects which are
crucial for the entire region.

Aliyev also touched on the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict. He said that
the regional conflicts, including the one in Nagornyy Karabakh, posed
a threat to such large economic projects. Armenia’s intransigent
stance and its unwillingness to withdraw from the Azerbaijani lands it
has occupied affects the general economic development of the South
Caucasus.

Following the speech, Aliyev met Armenian President Robert Kocharyan.
Interestingly and contrary to the protocol, the co-chairmen of the
OSCE Minsk Group attended the first part of the meeting.

Now, Aliyev and Kocharyan are having a tete-a-tete meeting. We asked a
question before the meeting whether there were a new proposal [to
settle the conflict] was being discussed. The co-chairmen said that
there would be a discussion of ideas.

Next, the three South Caucasus leaders – Aliyev, Kocharyan and
Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili – will have a small lunch to
discuss the situation in the Caucasus.

There was a change in the protocol: instead of having separate
meetings with the presidents, the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen
attended the meeting between Aliyev and Kocharyan.

128 bank accounts for large families

Azat Artsakh – Republic of Nagorno Karabakh (NKR)
April 27, 2004

128 BANK ACCOUNTS FOR LARGE FAMILIES

According to the November 26, 2002 decision N 62 of the NKR government
measures are taken to raise birthrate, improve material supply and
education of the growing generation and the quality of life of large
families, the final aim being social security of the Karabakh
population and relief of the social tension. According to the head of
the department of benefits of the NKR Ministry of Social Security
Samvel Dadayan, for several years now in the first trimester of the
current year in the regional branches of “Artsakhbank” 128 bank
accounts were opened for the 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 9th and 11th
child in their families until the age of 18, the total amount of money
is 115 thousand 400 US dollars. According to the mentioned decision of
the government, within the framework of providing financial aid to the
families having more than 5 children 1329 children of 241 families
received in total 3 million 409 thousand 700 drams (subsidy for 60
kW/h electricity per child). The official of the Ministry of Security
informed that in the first trimester of the current year on the birth
of the 11th child in the family of Tamara Sarghissian, village
Vazghenashen, Martouni region, for improving the social and economic
condition of the family, 2 million 823 thousand 900 AM drams equal to
5000 US dollars was transferred on the account opened in the Martouni
branch of “Artsakhbank”. According to Samvel Dadayan, the
implementation of the program has already produced desirable results,
and in parallel with the policy of encouraging birthrate the outflow
of the villagers is also slowed down.

AA

Fresno: Armenians Remeber

Armenians Remember
Fresno Bee
B Section
April 25, 2004

About 800 people turned out Saturday for a ceremonial raising of the
Armenian flag over Fresno City Hall. The event was part of the weekend
observance commemorating the Armenian Genocide, in which 1.5 million
Armenians were killed in Turkey from 1915 to 1923. Also Saturday, an
Armenian Martyrs Day Commemoration ecumenical service was held at Holy
Trinity Apostolic Church with
Rabbi Kenneth Segal as speaker. At 1 p.m. today there will be an observance
at Soghomon Tehlirian’s monument in Ararat Masis Cemetery.

(Picture Caption) Veraim Krikorian, 77, sings the Armenian National anthem
as the flag goes up.
(Picture Caption) A gust of wind unfurls the flag as it is raised be Sevag
Jierian, member of the Homenetmen Armenian Scouts, Troop 12. Other Scouts
pictured are Aleen Postoyan, and Jenya Bakanian.

Canada: Concern Over Bombardier Contract

Thunder Bay Post, Canada
April 23 2004

Concern Over Bombardier Contract
Tb News Source

There are some worries that a vote in the House of Commons
yesterday could impact on negotiations for a major contract for
Bombardier and the company’s plant here in Thunder Bay.
Bombardier is in the running for a huge order for rail cars for
Ankara, Turkey but yesterday, Members of Parliament voted to formally
recognize the genocide of Armenian Turks during the First World War.
The motion is sure to anger the Turkish government which has never
acknowledged the massacre of 1.5 million Armenians. Turkey had warned
Ottawa there could be economic consequences if the vote passed.

Liberal backbenchers voted massively in favour of the motion, but
Cabinet ministers opposed it. Bombardier spokesperson Helen Gagnon
says, while they’ve not heard directly from the Turkish government,
the company has expressed its concerns over the issue to our own
federal officials.

Gagnon says Bombardier remains hopeful it’s strong track record
supplying light rail systems to the country will work in its favour
with future contracts there.

Armenian leader says opposition “obstinate child”

Armenian leader says opposition “obstinate child”

Arminfo
20 Apr 04

YEREVAN

The Armenian authorities will respond to the opposition’s protests
appropriately, Armenian President Robert Kocharyan told a news
conference in Yerevan today, commenting on the actions of the Armenian
opposition which had led to the aggravation of the political situation
in the country.

The Armenian leader said that the opposition had the only way out of
the current situation – to return to their deputy duties without any
preconditions. “If they do not want to fulfil their duties, this is
their own business,” the president said.

He compared the opposition with an obstinate child who does not want
to eat and demands a toy. He said that in order to improve the
situation, one should leave the child hungry for a couple of hours,
then he will eat his meal himself.

Armand Arabian puts award in focus

Los Angeles Daily News

Armand Arabia puts award in focus
Noted jurist to get Ellis Island medal

By Dennis McCarthy

Thursday, April 22, 2004 – It was their first family portrait together
in America, and they’re posed like the Rockefellers like they’ve got a
million bucks in the bank.

But they have nothing, really just each other. When this picture was
taken in December 1934, the family had been in this country only a few
years, survivors of the Armenian Genocide.

They were living in a tenement on New York City’s Lower East Side not
too far from Ellis Island, where they and tens of thousands of other
immigrant families entered this country, seeking a better life.

At Ellis Island next month, the man shown in an old photo as a baby
sitting on his grandmother’s lap will receive a coveted award the
Ellis Island Medal of Honor given to U.S. citizens who “preserve and
reinforce the value of their heritage, and contribute extraordinary
service to humanity in any field, profession or occupation.”

Former California Supreme Court Justice Armand Arabian of Van Nuys
will have his name added to the Ellis Island honor roll with those of
presidents, political leaders, sports and entertainment legends, and
successful businessmen and artists from every walk of life.

It’s pretty heady company for the first-born son of immigrants who
lived in a New York City tenement. But he won’t be thinking about any
of that when they put the medal around his neck next month.

He’ll be thinking of the faces in this family portrait and those
missing from the picture.

Judge Arabian has a harrowing family history. His grandfather had been
a leader in the village of Chengeller, Turkey, not far from
Constantinople, now Istanbul. One morning in 1915 the village was
attacked by Turkish soldiers, and the nightmare began, he says.

His grandfather was taken to the center of town, placed against a wall
and executed by a firing squad. His crime? He was Armenian.

“My grandmother was driven from her home with nothing but the dress on
her back,” Arabian says. “Along with others, she and two of her sons
were marched for days until they reached the banks of a swift river.

“A mounted gendarme with bandoleers of ammunition crossing his chest
ordered her to swim across the river or be shot on the spot. Some
soldiers were already killing those who couldn’t make it.

“Holding the hands of her two sons, she faced an impossible dilemma:
She could save the life of one son by swimming across the river with
him, but she would have to leave the other son behind.

“She chose the eldest, 11-year-old Ovanes, my father,” Arabian
said. “Helping each other, they swam across. Left on the riverbank was
4-year-old Oskian standing with his arms outstretched, crying for his
mother and brother.

“He never saw them again. Not a day went by in my grandmother’s life
that she didn’t relive the heartbreak and pain from leaving her
4-year-old son standing on that riverbank crying,” Arabian said.

“Years later, her daughter, Araxi, was rescued from an orphanage in
France.

One of her beautiful orphan playmates, Aghavnie, later became my
mother,” he says, for Ovanes married her.

Aunt Araxi stands over her mother’s right shoulder in the
picture. Arabian’s mother stands alongside his father, a tailor. And,
of course, in the middle sits the matriarch of the family his
grandmother, Soultana, who relived that swim across the river every
day of her life until she died in 1982.

It is in their memory, their honor, that he will lower his head and
accept the Ellis Island Medal of Honor, Arabian says. Not for himself
or anything he did but for what they did.

“My father used to say the only country club Armenians belong to is
the one at Ellis Island. It was the only one that accepted them.”

Arabian will visit his ancestors’ graves before he returns home. He
knows it will be an emotional moment as he kneels before their graves
with that medal of honor hanging from his neck.

It says a lot about the greatness and heart of this country that
immigrant families, like his, were invited into the country club at
Ellis Island after fleeing so much heartbreak, poverty, and violence,
Arabian says.

And that, after only a few years in America, they faced the camera
like they were the Rockefellers like they had a million bucks in the
bank.

Dennis McCarthy’s column appears Tuesday, Thursday, Friday and Sunday.

Dennis McCarthy, (818) 713-3749 [email protected]

BAKU: Foreign Ministers To Discuss Nagorno-Karabakh In May

Baku Today
April 20 2004

Foreign Ministers To Discuss Nagorno-Karabakh In May

Baku Today 20/04/2004 11:36

The new U.S. co-chair of the OSCE’s Minsk Group, Stephen Mann, said
on Monday that finding a peaceful solution to Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict is in the interests of his government.
“What I will be doing in this position is representing the U.S.
national interests and it is in the American national interest to
work for a peaceful, negotiated settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh
issue,” Mann told reporters while in Yerevan, according to The
Associated Press.

Having discussed the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenian
diplomats in Yerevan, the U.S. diplomat is due to visit Baku on
Tuesday.
Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian said on Monday that he
planned to meet with his Azerbaijani counterpart, Elmar Mammadyarov,
in May.

Oskanian said that the meeting he held last week in Prague with
Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Mamedyarov was useful but did not yield
any result.

Azerbaijan’s former autonomous western region of Nagorno-Karabakh is
home for some 100,000 ethnic-Armenians. The region along with seven
of Azerbaijan’s administrative districts was occupied by Armenian
troops in 1991-94 war.

Major military operations between Armenia and Azerbaijan ended in may
1994 after a cease-fire was signed between the two neighbors. But
despite the cease-fire, shooting still breaks out sporadically across
the line separating Azerbaijan from its occupied territories.

The Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe has been unsuccessfully mediating between Armenia and
Azerbaijan since 1992 to find a peaceful solution to the conflict.

The Group is led by a troika of diplomats from the United States,
France and Russia.

Lt. Gov. Lise Thibault Pays Historic Visit to Armenians of Quebec

Press Release
For Immediate Release Contact: Mr. Edward Hagopian
April 14, 2004 Tel: 514-880-0400
Lt. Governor Lise Thibault Pays Historic Visit to The Armenian Community of
Quebec

Montreal, QC – On Wednesday April 14, 2004 her Excellency Madame Lise
Thibault, Lieutenant Governor of Quebec, paid an official visit to the
Armenian Community Centre of Montreal, announced the Armenian National
Committee of Quebec (ANCQ). This historic visit follows the passing
and Royal Assent of Bill 194, “An Act To Proclaim Armenian Genocide
Memorial Day”.

The event, a cocktail reception, was highlighted by speeches from the
Armenian National Committee of Quebec, Monsieur Alain Paquet
(MNA-Laval Des Rapides), His Eminence Archbishop Khajag Hagopian –
Prelate of the Armenian Prelacy of Canada, and Her Excellency Madame
Lise Thibault.

“The Armenian Community of Quebec is extremely pleased and honoured by
Her Excellency’s visit to our Community Centre,” stated Norair
Serengulian, President of the ANCQ, “We are especially moved by Madame
Thibault’s eloquent and heartfelt words of remembrance for the one and
a half million Armenian victims of the 20th century’s first Genocide.”

Her Excellency’s visit included a tour of Sourp Hagop Armenian
Apostolic Church, a formal greeting by the Homenetmen Gamk Scouts, and
introductions to leaders of the Armenian Community. Those present also
included politicians of the three levels of government and members of
the diplomatic community.

The Armenian National Committee of Quebec is a grassroots organization
representing the interests of the Armenian Community in Quebec.