Statement of CRD / Transparency International Armenia

A1 Plus | 16:03:02 | 23-04-2004 | Politics |

STATEMENT OF CENTER FOR REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT/TRANSPARENCY INTERNATIONAL
ARMENIA

Considering the unprecedented political persecutions, violence and arrests
that took place in the Republic of Armenia during the last weeks as a direct
result of political corruption manifested at the presidential and
parliamentary elections, Center for Regional Development/Transparency
International Armenia appeals to international community to condemn the
above-mentioned actions undertaken by the Armenian authorities violating
democratic principles, and calls to take real measures against the current
authorities for not following international obligations aimed at ensuring
democratic development of the country.

Protest Action To Be Held in Akhaltskha

A1 Plus | 14:48:50 | 23-04-2004 | Social |

PROTEST ACTION TO BE HELD IN AKHALTSKHA

On Thursday, a cross-stone memorial to the 1915 Armenian Genocide
victims in Akhaltskha was removed from the place by the local police.

The opening ceremony of the memorial was scheduled for April 24, the
day when Armenians worldwide commemorate those killed in the genocide.

As A-Info news agency reports, before removing the stone the police
arrested Ludvig Petrosyan, the head of the memorial erection
committee, and released after holding him in custody for four hours.

Petrosyan says the police have taken such a step following the
instruction instructions of Georgian President Representative in
Javakhetian province Nicoloz Nicolozashvili, who said the monument
erection hadn’t been authorized.

However, Ludvig Pertrosyan says Akhaltskha municipality has given due
permission.

The police move sparked protest from the town residents. They intend
to stage a protest action on Friday.

Youth Against Violence

A1 Plus | 16:40:45 | 23-04-2004 | Politics |

YOUTH AGAINST VIOLENCE

A number of Armenian youth organizations reacted to the assault on Socialist
Forces leader Ashot Manucharyan, who was beaten Wednesday by unidentified
males, by issuing a statement.

“We demand the masterminds and perpetrators of that vicious action to be
tracked down and prosecuted”, the statement says.

The organization’ members gathered today in the street, where Manucharyan
had been attacked, in a protest against ongoing violence to attract, as they
say, public attention to the problem of violence and to restore justice.

Canada should mind its own business

COMMENT

Canada should mind its own business

By JEFFREY SIMPSON
The Globe and Mail
Friday, April 23, 2004 – Page A19

Bring back the friendly dictatorship! Or at least bring it back if the
absence results in the kind of irresponsible, unnecessary and
provocative resolution the House of Commons passed on Wednesday, which
complicates Canada’s relations with an ally and a hugely important
country: Turkey.

That the opposition parties, without having responsibility for Canadian
foreign policy, would act irresponsibly is hardly a surprise. That
government backbenchers would defy their own Prime Minister and Foreign
Minister and muck about in foreign policy for domestic political reasons
should make everyone wonder about the wisdom of free votes in the
Commons.

By a 153 to 68 margin, the Commons adopted a motion from an obscure Bloc
Québécois MP to “acknowledge the Armenian genocide of 1915, and condemn
this as a crime against humanity.”

What happened 89 years ago, before the creation of modern Turkey, still
rankles Armenians. Hundreds of thousands of them were killed, tortured
or deported. Books have been written about it, and movies, too,
including Ararat by Canadian filmmaker Atom Egoyan.

That authors and filmmakers should pick over the events of 1915 is fair
game. That Parliament should have nothing better to do with its time
than pass resolutions about events long ago — resolutions that will
reasonably be interpreted in Turkey as reflecting the opinion of
Canadians, and wrongly interpreted as the official position of the
government — is outrageous meddling, bound to irritate gratuitously one
side, Turkey.

What conceivable business is it of Canada’s Parliament, except for
unwelcome meddling, to muck about in historical matters that do not
concern this country directly? How would we like it if the Turkish
parliament started passing resolutions about, say, the hanging of Louis
Riel; or the French parliament voted on the deportation of the Acadians;
or the New Zealand Parliament voted on the treatment of Canada’s
Indians?

Canada would respond the way the Turkish government did: It called in
the Canadian ambassador in Ankara to lodge a formal protest, and issued
a statement saying correctly that “the responsibility of the negative
consequences to be brought by this motion belongs to the Canadian
politicians.”

No one denies that Ottomans did ghastly things to Armenians 89 years ago
in the context of the First World War. Almost every non-partisan account
underscores those facts. That people can study the historical record and
draw their own conclusions is as it should be.

That doesn’t mean the Canadian Parliament has to set itself up as a
moral arbiter on behalf of the Canadian people — because, why stop
there? Why not condemn the Japanese Rape of Nanking, the killings of
Chinese by European powers during the Boxer rebellion, the invasion of
Turkey by Greece after the First World War, and so on.

Some Canadian politicians were influenced by Armenian or Greek
descendants in their districts. That political pandering to ethnic
sensitivities can be understood, if not justified, but it hardly
explains why so many other MPs couldn’t understand how to conduct
foreign policy, including members of the Conservative Party who hope to
become the government in the next election.

Turkey is an incredibly important country: the only democratic, secular
Muslim state in a troubled part of the world. It is an ally of Canada in
NATO. It has become a democracy, having recently changed its government.
It is trying to solve the Cyprus deadlock, successfully urging Turkish
Cypriots to back the United Nations plan for reunification, which the
Greek Cypriots are apparently going to block. It is trying to meet
European Union conditions for starting entry negotiations.

Canada’s foreign policy, therefore, requires positive, constructive
relations with Turkey. Prime Minister Paul Martin and Foreign Affairs
Minister Bill Graham reminded the Liberal caucus of that yesterday. The
bulk of Liberal MPs told them to get lost, because under the new Martin
rules for remedying the “democratic deficit,” this was a “two-line
whip,” whereby ministers have to support the government but backbenchers
do not.

A handful of assemblies (Italy, Sweden, Russia, Argentina, the European
Parliament) has passed motions similar to the one adopted by the
Commons. All other assemblies, including those of the United States,
Britain, Australia, Japan, and Germany, refused.

Only two governments have made acknowledgment of this “genocide” a
matter of policy: France and Switzerland. Fortunately, the Martin
government, humbled by its own members, said official Canadian policy
won’t change. Thank goodness.

[email protected]

The truth about the Armenian genocide

The truth about the Armenian genocide

Editorial
National Post
Friday, April 23, 2004

Wednesday’s parliamentary resolution recognizing the Turkish slaughter
of Armenians during the First World War as a genocide and a crime
against humanity may seem obscure to many Canadians. But in Turkey, the
issue is extraordinarily sensitive. Most non-Turkish historians agree
that Turks killed up to 1.5 million Armenians in 1915 , in some cases
burning them alive in churches or forcing them into the wilderness,
where they died of starvation and exposure. The Turkish government,
however, claims the real number of deaths was just 300,000, and that
even these fatalities arose not from genocide but from Turkish
“self-defence” against Armenians allied with Russia. Though widely
debunked, this national myth is precious to the Turks, which explains
why Ankara went ballistic yesterday, accusing Canadian legislators of
being “narrow-minded” and sowing “hatred.”

Paul Martin knew this was coming. In 2000, when the U.S. Congress
considered a similar resolution, Ankara threatened to cut America’s
access to its Turkish military bases. Prior to the vote, Mr. Martin had
his Foreign Affairs Minister, Bill Graham, twist arms in an effort to
defeat the motion. But to his credit, the Prime Minister ultimately
refused to declare this a whipped vote — despite the fact there are a
number of Canadian companies with business interests in Turkey,
including Bombardier, which has a $335-million contract with Ankara’s
public transportation system. Ignoring realpolitik, many Liberals voted
their conscience, and the motion passed by a 153 to 68 margin.

All of this leaves us conflicted. On one hand, the MPs who voted for
Wednesday’s motion are certainly on the right side of history — and
there was something gratifying about seeing them buck their party bosses
to speak up for the truth. On the other hand, Parliament’s job is to
make laws — not to decide issues best left to historians and
filmmakers.

This is not to say that governments should never take a position on
historical events. In Germany, it is illegal to deny the existence of
the Holocaust, a law arguably justified by the singularly evil crimes of
the Nazis. And in other Western nations, governments have properly
recognized the campaigns of slaughter their forebears inflicted on
aboriginals. But these are exceptional instances. Our worry is that,
with the passage of Wednesday’s resolution, we will now witness a parade
of aggrieved ethnic groups coming before Parliament, each seeking
recognition of its own historical tragedy. Recall that millions of
Ukrainians were starved by Stalin in the 1930s. Half-a-million Rwandan
Tutsis were killed at the hands of Hutus in 1994. In 1948, Hindus and
Muslims killed one another by the truckload in South Asia. Is our
Parliament to serve as history’s scorekeeper, duly tallying all of these
massacres and the hundreds more like them?

As for the Turkish government, we would urge that it stop insisting on a
blinkered view of history. Even within the Turkish community itself, a
small group of scholars has emerged in recent years to challenge the
official line. Ankara should pay them heed. Though it is not our
Parliament’s job to point it out, Turkey’s refusal to recognize the 1915
Armenian massacre is a stain on the country’s international reputation.

C National Post 2004

FM Addresses Academics, Experts, Diplomats at London’s Chatham House

PRESS RELEASE
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia
Contact: Information Desk
Tel: (374-1) 52-35-31
Email: [email protected]
Web:

Statement by
Vartan Oskanian

Minister of Foreign Affairs
of the Republic of Armenia

at Chatham House, London
April 16, 2004

Thank you for the opportunity to speak with you here today. I look forward
to what is always an interesting dialog.

In preparing my thoughts for this evening, I looked over my talk here at
Chatham House in 1999. I suppose I knew, but those notes, black on white,
drove home the point that the world is a different place today. It is not
only international geopolitical relations and calculations which have
changed, but so has Armenia and our region.

Someone has said, “Show me a country’s location on a map and I’ll describe
to you their foreign policy.” Armenia is in the middle of the Caucasus,
which itself is at the center of three continents, and just north of the
Middle East. You can probably guess that our capacity to contribute to
regional stability depends very much on our success in managing our
relations with disparate and seemingly incompatible actors. Philip Marsden,
the perceptive British author of one of the most engaging books on Armenia
and Armenians, titles it the Crossing Place. No matter what type east-west,
north-south, trade, exchange and migration one talks about, for 3000 years,
Armenia has been at the intersection of millennial traffic.

It is therefore natural that the foreign policy choice, and sometimes
burden, of this young Republic is to pursue a policy of multidirectional
complementarity,

It is no secret, that given our geopolitical situation, the conflicts or
hostilities we face and the limited resources we command, our room to
maneuver is rather small.

It is important therefore for Armenia that our actions, intents and
relations are understood correctly and in their context.

Today, our future depends on how well we handle each of the following four
challenges:
Security, Development, European integration and Nagorno Karabakh.

Let me start with security. Given our history and the current realities in
the region, security is a number one priority for Armenia. Armenians are
extremely security conscious, that is why we have entered into layers of
security guarantees compatible with our policy of complementarity. Those
layers are comprised of our bilateral security arrangements with Russia, our
membership in the Collective Security Agreement, our extensive engagement in
disarmament treaties, most particularly the CFE which provides balance and
transparency in our region, our extensive relations with NATO, and finally
other bilateral arrangements, such as with Greece, and most recently with
the US.

First, Russia, with whom the scope and range of our connectedness is
extensive — economically, militarily, politically, and not unlike our
relations with the US and the EU, influenced more and more by the presence
there of a very large and increasingly more active Armenian Diaspora.
Armenia does have a military pact with Russia. There are Russian military
bases in Armenia. All of this leads to a myth about the degree of Armenia’s
dependence on the Russian Federation. There exist differing assumptions
about Armenia’s absolute margin of maneuver and, more significantly, our
relative margin of flexibility in defining and pursuing our interests, more
particularly with other countries.

Actually, the truth lies elsewhere. The larger, more crucial and
geostrategically more contingent relationship between the US and Russia, and
the EU and Russia, is what will shape the role, significance and performance
of Armenia in that triangle. And that is no myth.

Before the war on terrorism, America itself was reticent to engage Armenia
in military matters, given its desire not to offend or irritate regional
proxies, friends or rivals. Today, we have entered into substantive military
cooperation with the US.

Further, while neither invited nor self-invited to be a candidate for NATO
membership, Armenia, through PfP, is active and interested in the process.
We have just begun our accession process to IPAP. In this and other
instances, we have never been offered more than we have been willing or able
to accept. We are therefore somewhat realistically concerned that if
Armenia’s and our neighbors’ engagement with NATO proceeds unevenly, there
is the danger of new dividing lines being created in the Caucasus, and
that’s not helpful for anyone’s security interests.

Turkey, too, has a role to play in Armenia’s security. Not as a partner,
unfortunately, but as a neighbor whose words, actions, relations ­ or
absence of relations ­ creates the environment in which security concerns
must be addressed. Turkey missed the historic opportunity a dozen years ago,
to use the event of Armenia’s independence to begin a new era of relations.
Turkey is a major regional player with the potential of significantly
impacting the regional environment. Its continuing insistence on
preconditions to normal relations creates a breach in confidence. The
absence of normal relations creates a fear of unexpected actions and
complicates an already tense security environment.

Fortunately, Iran, our southern neighbor has been much more even-handed and
farsighted in its relations with Armenia. By experience and necessity, our
engagement with Iran is not and cannot be superficial and on-and-off again.
What we have is the cooperation of two neighbors, each resisting different
forms of isolation and marginalization.

Our second challenge is sustainable and rapid development. In the dozen
short years since independence, we have secured Armenia’s borders in an
inherently unstable region, we have defended our people by creating a strong
army, we have begun to build state structures where none existed, we have
stopped the economic collapse and begun the climb toward prosperity, we have
resolved the energy crisis and converted energy into a commodity, and in
these last three years have sustained double digit economic growth.

Clearly, more crucial challenges are waiting for us still. This growth,
which admittedly began from a very low point of departure, will be difficult
to maintain. We must continue to create rewarding jobs, elevate people’s
standard of living and eradicate poverty and indignity, we must fight and
win the war against nepotism and corruption, we must dispel the shadow
economy, we must protect the socially vulnerable, advocate for the rights of
women and children, allow entrepreneurs to dream and create, bolster the
vital mission of educators and shape a society where people believe in their
abilities to live up to their dreams.

We must also fashion a government of believers and believers in government.
We often say that the steps we’ve taken toward democratic processes and
democratic institutions have been the easy steps. Now, we need to do the
hard work that results in the absorption and realization of these values in
personal and public life. The recent demonstrations in Yerevan, by an
opposition determined to come to power at all cost, even as they’ve publicly
said by force, demonstrates that we have a ways to go. For Armenia or for
any country in transition, what is needed is not just a government willing
to set the rules and play by them, but also a constructive opposition that
is willing to do the same, without brazenly, aggressively abusing the new
opportunities that a democratic system offers. Only this will provide the
kind of stability that is as important to empower a citizenry, as it is for
a businessman to take risks.

Taken together, all of these efforts ­ economic and political ­ will in turn
create the kind of confidence necessary for direct foreign investments to
increase and exports to find markets. It is the combination of these two
pillars around which our economic growth will be sustained. Towards this
end, we envision the creation of a Caucasus free trade zone, as Presidents
Kocharian and Saakashvili have advocated. The BSEC and CIS can provide
serious opportunities for unhindered economic cooperation among member
states if political obstacles do not interfere. For such an enterprise to
succeed, for foreign investors to engage in Caucasus projects, we need open
communication lines. The closed border with Turkey has resulted in a gap in
operating rail links from Turkey thru Armenia to Georgia. Within the TRACECA
route, this constitutes the only missing link from Europe to Asia.
Doubtless, re-commissioning this existing line is of value to those beyond
our immediate region as well, thanks to waves of regionalization and
globalization. Thus what is good for Armenia’s development is also good for
our neighbors near and far.

>From a common security policy to a free trade area, all are achievable and
workable. Civil society, interstate cooperation, human rights reforms,
legislative compatibility, economic cooperation ­ these are the agenda items
that will drive the development of our region. In the Caucasus, where we
live with unresolved conflicts, a signal that the Caucasus belongs in
Europe, will influence and determine how conflicts are resolved. This is our
third challenge: Euro integration. This would not be a simple affirmation of
cultural and religious affinities. This would be the framework within which
we would view our futures, our borders, our neighbors. The Caucasus in
Europe means a Caucasus where all neighbors quit trying to settle scores,
where borders are no longer viewed as barriers. The countries of Europe and
the European structures talk to the Caucasus, visit us, consider our
problems and progress, our needs and accomplishments, all together, in one
breath. This means that in time, we too, will see our future together.
We appreciated the request by the Council of Ministers of the European Union
to the European Commission to make recommendations about the Caucasus
inclusion into the EU Wider Europe initiative during the Irish Presidency.
We hope for and expect such a positive recommendation.

But let me make a clear distinction, so we do not have any false illusions.
The European Union offers us the prospect, not the promise. This is clearly
understood by Armenia, and I have no doubt that it is understood by our
neighbors. It is we in the Caucasus who will turn that prospect into a
promise.

Europe’s standards force us to reexamine our own conduct and behavior. We
are working to build functional, responsive, responsible societies in this
neighborhood not through an imposition of force, but because we want to be a
part of a greater Europe. Europe’s experiences in regional cooperation,
regional conflicts, regional compromises, influenced by the successes of the
last 50 years can provide examples and guidance.

The prospect of EU membership has already had positive effects for our
neighbor Turkey, which is being forced to revisit its relations with at
least one of its neighbors. In light of possible Turkish membership in the
EU, the normalization of Turkey’s relations with Armenia, should also be
both condition and consequence. After all, this will be Europe’s eastern
border, and the prospect that it might be a closed border sounds improbable
given Europe’s standards and ideals.

As you can see, Turkey is a factor in all the major challenges facing
Armenia today. Whether we consider security interests, development
directions, or European integration, the role that Turkey plays in the
region is of consequence.

Armenia repeats at every possible opportunity that we are prepared to
continue dialogue, to work, without preconditions, for diplomatic relations,
for open formal sovereign communications, without which regional imbalances,
instability and even hostilities cannot be righted, mitigated, or anchored
in reciprocal understanding. The simple fact is that neither our past nor
our geography is going to change.

To ignore this truth means that ­ perhaps ­ we do not want them to go away.
If we do, then their legacy must be transcended together. We are not the
only neighbors in the world who have had, and who continue to have, a
troubled relationship. We know that evil ghosts on the Franco-German border
were exorcised. We know that ours can be as well.

I believe that Turkey’s current government is also interested in working
towards normalizing relations. But I also know that Turkey has fallen
hostage to Azeri pressure. Azerbaijan’s new President Aliyev recently
acknowledged, publicly, that closed borders between Turkey and Armenia is a
huge bargaining chip in Azerbaijan’s hand, and the opening of the border
will impact negatively on the Nagorno Karabakh peace process. He’s wrong on
both counts.

Open borders are in the interests of everyone else, as well, but it would
not be unfair to say that Turkey’s role in Iraq, with Israel, with NATO and
EU defense policy, not to say anything of the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline, are all
too critical to risk jeopardizing by pushing a positive Turkish-Armenian
agenda in the face of Turkish resistance.

We believe that the facts show that the utility of sealed borders has
diminished. On the contrary, their continued existence tends to lessen
Turkey’s credibility as a positive, active, regional player.

This bring us to our fourth challenge: finding a lasting, peaceful
resolution to the Nagorno Karabagh conflict.

I’ve just returned from a meeting in Prague with the new Azerbaijani Foreign
Minister, called by the Minsk Group co-chairs. I must admit that there are
many uncertainties today in the negotiation process and I think that
wittingly or unwittingly, rather than focusing on finding answers to the
causes of this conflict, Azerbaijan is focusing on the consequences, and
looking for ways of unraveling them.

If the stages of this conflict are viewed one frame at a time, and the
analysis is based on a single frame ­ the way the conflict appears today ­
then we will have a distorted view and will apply inaccurate labels and
propose inappropriate solutions. It is 2004 and the current phase of this
century-old conflict, which resurfaced in 1988, has not yet ended. It has
gone through a period of peaceful demonstrations by Armenians, followed by
pogroms in Sumgait and Baku, sanctioned by the Azerbaijani authorities. This
armed response was followed by a full military escalation, then a ceasefire,
then many stages of negotiations, and that brings us to today.
The refugee issue is consequence of the military conflict, and affects us
all. One million refugees Azerbaijan says. That’s true. But more than
one-third of those refugees are Armenians. There were 400,000 Armenians
living in Azerbaijan before this conflict began. If Armenia, with far less
resources than Azerbaijan, has found ways to settle those refugees into some
semblance of normal life, rather than keep them in tents and barracks as a
showcase to the world, that does not mean that they do not exist. There are
refugees from both sides just as there is suffering on both sides. Both
sides have certain rights that need to be addressed.

Second, it is simplistic to assume that Armenians will relinquish control
over territories under their control as some sort of confidence building
mechanism. Whose confidence are we building? Certainly not the confidence
of the population of Nagorno Karabakh which fought for its basic civil and
human rights, but will be left with no prospect of a long-term status and
security to ensure that it will not have to fight again. The conflict is not
over, and we’ve never claimed anything beyond what we think we deserve —
that the international community look at this from the point of view of the
rights of the people who live on those territories. We are both victims. We
have to work towards a solution which allows us both to become victors.

This year, on the 10th anniversary of this, the only self-imposed and
self-maintained cease-fire in the world, what we want for Armenia, for
Nagorno Karabagh and for our neighborhood are visionary, creative, tolerant
responses based on good will. The formula we seek for our conflict and for
our region is one that assumes that tomorrow we will live next door to a
neighbor and not an enemy. Our dream is to create a country that will live
in peace within itself and with its neighbors, a country that will provide
security and comfort to those who wish to return. We dream that there will
be no dead-end roads leading out of Armenia, that they will all be avenues
of opportunity linking neighbor to neighbor, country to country,
civilization to civilization.

Our borders defining our territories will identify our cultures and
identities, not serve as obstacles to free exchange and cooperation. In
other words, putting this conflict within the context of European
integration, finding solutions that are appropriate to the new geopolitical
context is what will move all of the Caucasus to a new level of peace and
prosperity.

Thank you.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.ArmeniaForeignMinistry.am

Minister Oskanian Meets with UK Foreign Secretary Jack Straw

PRESS RELEASE
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia
Contact: Information Desk
Tel: (374-1) 52-35-31
Email: [email protected]
Web:

Minister Oskanian Meets with UK Foreign Secretary Jack Straw

Minister Oskanian paid a working visit to the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland on April 21 – 22. He held a series of official
meetings, spoke to a group of experts and academics, and met with
representatives of the Armenian community.

On Thursday, April 22, Minister Oskanian met with Foreign Secretary Jack
Straw and Parliamentary Undersecretary Bill Rammell. The Minister briefed
them on Armenia’s domestic situation and progress in economic development.
They also spoke about Armenia’s relations with its neighbors, regional
developments, including the Nagorno Karabakh negotiations process, and the
situation in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Secretary indicated their support for
Caucasus inclusion in the European Union’s Wider Europe New Neighborhood
Initiative. Minister Oskanian extended an invitation to Secretary Straw to
visit Armenia.

Earlier in the day, the Minister had a working lunch with Sir Brian Fall,
Special Envoy to the Caucasus, Terry Davis, Member of Parliament and the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe’s Rapporteur on Nagorno
Karabakh, as well as Simon Butt, Head of the UK Foreign Office Eastern
Department. They discussed Armenia’s engagement in European structures, as
well as prospects for the resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

The Minister also held a morning meeting with Angus Robertson, member of
Parliament, and head of the Parliament’s South Caucasus group.

On Wednesday, the Minister made a presentation at the Royal Institute of
International Studies (Chatham House) on The New Caucasus in a Rapidly
Changing Geopolitical Context. The Minister addressed an invited group of
academics, regional experts, journalists and members of the international
community. The Minister talked about four major challenges facing Armenia in
the region: security, development, Eurointegration and the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict. This was a return visit. Minister Oskanian last held such a talk
at the highly respected Chatham House in March 1999.

Questions covered relations with Turkey, prospects for resolution of the
Karabakh conflict, Armenia’s domestic situation, and Armenia’s expectations
of European integration.

The Minister also met with a group of community youth leaders and
representatives about Armenia’s foreign and domestic situation, economic
development. He welcomed the interest of the youth in Armenia’s and
Diaspora’s development and encouraged their continuing involvement. He also
invited them to Armenia to participate in a variety of projects in order to
become more closely engaged and informed.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.ArmeniaForeignMinistry.am

State-Ordered Terror in Justice-Starving Republic

A1 Plus | 17:40:06 | 23-04-2004 | Politics |

STATE-ORDERED TERROR IN JUSTICE-STARVING REPUBLIC

On Friday, human rights activist and the Armenian Helsinki Association head
Mikael Danielyan, who was severely beaten three weeks ago, speaking at a
news conference in Yerevan, called the assault on him as a state order and
state terror.

Danielyan told journalists despite president Kocharyan’s instruction to
trace the offenders, the case investigator had visited him in the hospital
when he couldn’t even speak and his next visit had come two weeks later. The
investigator brought with him a forensic expert, which had nothing to do, as
all trace of violence had almost disappeared.

Mikael Danielyan is convinced neither perpetrators nor masterminds of the
assault to be tracked down and prosecuted.

Speaking on Wednesday’s attack on Socialist Forces leader Ashot Manucharyan
after his article published in Golos Armenii newspaper, Danielyan said those
daring to criticize somebody in government-leaning press, should stay
indoors to avoid beating.

Michael Danielyan said contrary to the authorities attempt to intimidate
him, he remains committed to continue his human rights activist mission of
keeping the world in touch with all illegalities in Armenia, including
illegal arrests, violence against journalists and human rights activists,
committed with impunity.

Another Statement Condemning Assault on Ashot Manucharyan

A1 Plus | 18:42:34 | 23-04-2004 | Politics |

ANOTHER STATEMENT CONDEMNING ASSAULT ON ASHOT MANUCHARYAN

Homeland Popular Front came up with a statement on Friday condemning assault
on Socialist Forces leader Ashot Manucharyan.

“Armenian President is fully responsible for such a terror. We demand to
stop man-hunting and to release political prisoners”, the statement says.

It is also said in the statement that illegitimate authorities’ attempts to
intimidate citizens are doomed to failure, as they are only strengthening
people’s unity and determination to achieve the goal.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

The World Global Hits: Armenian Lullabies by Hasmik Harutyunyan

BBC Global Hits
April 22, 2004
Armenian Lullabies by Hasmik Harutyunyan

Armenia has been an independent state for little more than 12
years. But its culture and traditions are said to go back 7000
years. The folk band Shoghaken Ensemble plays the music of Armenia.

As a former member of the Soviet Union, Armenia had to re-invent a lot
of things when it became an independent nation in 1991. Harold
Hagopian is the Shoghaken Ensemble’s record producer. He says that to
revive Armenia’s authentic folk-dance music the ensemble have had to
undo 70 years of Soviet influence.

Harold Hagopian: A lot of the music had been choreographed and taught
at the conservatories. And though these musicians attended those
Soviet conservatories, since the fall of the Soviet in 1991, they’ve
tried to see how the music might have been played outside of this
rigid structure and so they spent a lot of time with actual villagers
and people who came to Armenia in 1915 and survived the genocide and
fled from Turkey.

89 years ago Turkish nationalists were killing ethnic Armenians in an
attempt to form a homogenous Turkish state.

Today The Shoghaken Ensemble are giving Armenian culture a global
audience. In 2002, cellist Yo Yo Ma invited one of the players to join
his Silk Road ensemble. And that same year, Shoghaken collaborated on
the score of the film “Ararat” about the Armenian genocide. One track
from the film is performed on an oboe-like instrument called the
duduk. The New York Times’ critic Jon Pareles has written: “there may
be no instrument that can sound as richly inconsolable.”

This month, the ensemble is releasing 2 new albums. One of
traditional dances as well as a collection of songs. Harold Hagopian
says singer Hasmik Harutyunyan has memorized quite a repertoire of
traditional songs.

Harold Hagopian: The singer of the group specializes in Armenian
lullabies and she knows over 200 lullabies from all of the regions of
Armenia.

The Shoghaken ensemble are currently on a US tour. They will be
performing in Cambridge, Massachussets, this Saturday, the anniversary
of the 1915 genocide.

Shoghaken Ensemble US Tour Dates:

April 22: Washington DC (Smithsonian Museum)
April 24: Cambridge, MA (Harvard University)
April 30: Hanover, NH (Dartmouth College)
May 2: New York, NY (Symphony Space)
May 4: Ithaca, NY (Cornell University)
May 8: Philadelphia, PA (Annenberg Center)

Audio Report:

Artist: Hasmik Harutyunyan
Title: Armenian Lullabies
Label: Traditional Crossroads
Country: Armenia

http://www.theworld.org/content/04222004.wma
http://www.theworld.org/globalhits/index.shtml