Turkish Min. puts off visit to Switzerland to protest Criminal Inv.

Turkish minister puts off visit to Switzerland to protest criminal
investigation of historian
AP Worldstream
Jun 09, 2005

A Cabinet minister postponed a visit to Switzerland to protest a Swiss
investigation of a Turkish historian who denied that the mass killings
of Armenians in the early 1900s amounted to genocide, officials said
Thursday.
Trade minister Kursat Tuzmen had been scheduled to take part in a June
22-24 Turkish-Swiss business forum. But his visit and the conference
were “indefinitely postponed” because of an ongoing Swiss criminal
probe into Yusuf Halacoglu, the head of the Turkish Historical
Society, officials in Tuzmen’s office said.
The probe was launched because of suspicions that Halacoglu violated
Swiss anti-racism laws by denying that the killings of Armenians
around the time of World War I amounted to genocide in a speech last
year.
Turkey’s semiofficial Anatolia news agency said a visit by Swiss
Economics Minister Joseph Deiss to Turkey, slated for September, had
also been put off. Turkish officials could not immediately confirm
that report.
Manuel Sager, spokesman for the Swiss Economics Ministry, said that
Deiss would like to travel as scheduled to Turkey, but “the trip has
yet to be confirmed from the Turkish side.”
The postponement is the latest row between Turkey and Switzerland over
the killings.
Micheline Calmy-Rey, the Swiss foreign minister, had been scheduled to
travel to Turkey in 2003, but Turkey withdrew its invitation after the
parliament of a western Swiss canton (state) recognized the killings
of Armenians in Turkey as genocide. Calmy-Rey visited Turkey in March.
Armenians say 1.5 million of their people were killed as the Ottoman
Empire forced them from eastern Turkey between 1915 and 1923 _ and
that this was a deliberate campaign of genocide by Turkey’s rulers at
that time.
Turks say the death count is inflated and insist that Armenians were
killed or displaced as the Ottoman Empire tried to secure its border
with Russia and stop attacks by Armenian militants.

Armenian MP denies Russia boosting military presence

Armenian MP denies Russia boosting military presence
Arminfo
8 Jun 05
YEREVAN
Armenia and Russia have not signed an agreement on increasing the
staff of the Russian military bases in Armenia, and therefore, all
talk about the relocation of the Russian military bases from Georgia
to Armenia is groundless, Mger Shakhgeldyan, chairman of the defence,
national security and internal affairs commission of the Armenian
National Assembly, has said in a conversation with our Arminfo
correspondent.
He pointed out that the issue of expanding Russia’s military presence
in Armenia is not on the agenda of Russian-Armenian relations, the
talk is only about replacing worn-out military hardware at the Russian
bases in Armenia with new hardware from the military bases in Georgia.
“All these actions are being taken within the framework of the
Armenian-Russian agreement on military cooperation. At the current
stage, Russia’s military presence in Armenia is reasonably
sufficient,” the chairman of the commission stressed.
Shakhgeldyan stressed that the presence of Russian military bases in
Armenia is a major component of the regional security system. At the
same time, Armenia is an independent state that is setting up its own
security system in cooperation with NATO and the European Union.
Armenia is also interested in setting up a unified regional security
system and in signing a security pact in the South Caucasus,
Shakhgeldyan said.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian President Visits RF Embassy in Armenia

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT VISITS RF EMBASSY IN ARMENIA
YEREVAN, June 9. /ARKA/. RA President Robert Kocharyan has visited the
RF Embassy in Armenia on the occasion of the Russian national holiday,
Day of Declaration of State Sovereignty. The RA presidential press
service reports that in his congratulatory address he expressed
confidence that the centuries-old Armenian-Russian relations will be
consolidated. P.T. -0–
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Silver Coins Dedicated to 1400th Anniversary of Anania Shirakatsi

SILVER COMMEMORATIVE COINS DEDICATED TO 1400TH ANNIVERSARY OF ANANIA
SHIRAKATSI TO BE ISSUED IN ARMENIA
YEREVAN, June 9. /ARKA/. Silver commemorative coins dedicated to
1400th anniversary of Anania Shirakatsi will be issued in Armenia with
nominal value at AMD 100. According to CBA Press Service Department,
500 coins of silver 925 0 metal will be issued. Anania Shirakatsi was
born in Shiraki Aneanq or Shirakavan village. He is a 7th century
Armenian philosopher, mathematician, astrologer, calendar man, founder
of exact sciences and natural sciences in Armenia. Anania
Shirakatsi’s scientific heritage witnesses to the absolute depth and
independence of his vision. The coin was mint at the Mint Place of
the Kingdom of the Netherlands. L.V.–0–
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian Genocide conference held in Riga

Armenian Genocide conference held in Riga
09.06.2005 17:00
YEREVAN (YERKIR) – A conference to mark the 90th anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide was held in the Latvian capital, Riga on May 27,
according to a June 9 Armenpress report.
“The Armenian Genocide: A Look from the 21st Century” conference was
organized jointly by the Havatq Organization and the Assembly of
European Armenians, and was attended by prominent figures from Latvia,
Lithuania, Estonia, Sweden, Germany and other European countries. The
goal of the conference was to present the historical evidence of this
crime against humanity perpetrated by the Ottoman Empire 90 years ago.

Azerbaijan’s war against Russia, not Armenia, Fmr Azeri Advisor Says

Azerbaijan’s war is against Russia, not Armenia, former Azeri official says
09.06.2005 14:26
YEREVAN (YERKIR) – Speaking at a conference in Baku, a former
Azerbaijani state advisor said that Russia pursues a goal to restore
its military influence on Azerbaijan.
Vafa Guluzade also said that the war in Karabakh would not resume and
a peace would be established according to an American scenario, and
the Caucasus would be under the U.S. influence over time.
He went on saying that the Karabakh conflict is not an Armenian-Azeri
one, in fact it is a Russian-Azerbaijani confrontation.

Armenian groups in Georgia protest re school principal’s dismissal

Armenian groups in Georgia protest against school principal’s dismissal
Noyan Tapan news agency, Yerevan
9 Jun 05
Akhalkalaki, 9 June: The council of Armenian public organizations of
Samtskhe-Javakheti has expressed its concern over the dismissal of
Lyuba Matevosyan, the principal of Armenian secondary school No 3 in
Akhalkalaki, as well as the over forced dispersal by the police of
protest actions staged by Akhalkalaki residents.
In a telephone conversation with Matevosyan, Georgian Minister of
Education and Science Kakha Lomaia promised her to review his 24 May
order to dismiss Matevosyan. The council has refrained from taking
drastic steps yet.
The Akhalkalaki police department attempted to use force to disperse
an action staged in protest against Matevosyan’s unfair dismissal. As
a result, four Armenians were injured, A-Info agency reports.

Fifty Int’l observers to monitor polls in NKR

Fifty international observers to monitor polls in Nagornyy Karabakh Republic
[NKR]
Arminfo, Yerevan
9 Jun 05
STEPANAKERT
The election campaign in the Nagornyy Karabakh Republic [NKR] is
proceeding as normal and the electoral commissions have received no
complaints as yet, the chairman of the NKR Central Electoral
Commission, Sergey Nasibyan, has told journalists.
About 89,000 voters have been registered in the republic by now, an
Arminfo correspondent reported from Stepanakert.
One hundred seven candidates will run under the first-past-the-post
and six parties and one bloc under the proportional representation
system.
To recap, voting will be held in 275 electoral districts and one
office will be opened in the Republic of Armenia by the NKR
representative office for citizens of Karabakh who are temporally
living in Armenia.
Transparent ballot-boxes will be used during the voting. According to
preliminary information, about 50 international observers will monitor
the elections on 19 June.

Berge Avadanian; hero kept fellow soldiers in his heart

Boston Globe
Berge Avadanian; hero kept fellow soldiers in his heart
By Tom Long, Globe Staff | June 9, 2005
Berge Avadanian was a World War II hero who threw out the opening ball for
the Red Sox fifth-game victory over the Yankees in last year’s American
League Championship Series. He was 86.
Mr. Avadanian, who was born on Flag Day 1918, the year of the Red Sox World
Series victory, died in his Watertown home on June 6, the 61st anniversary
of the day he parachuted into France during the D-day invasion of France.
”I wonder if he was just waiting for the anniversary of D-day. It was a
wonderful thing in some ways,” Mr. Avadanian’s daughter, Sandra A. Starck of
Watertown, said yesterday.
Although he worked for the Coast Guard and later dealt in antiques, Mr.
Avadanian never forgot his fellow soldiers. Each year in the days before
Memorial Day he would visit cemeteries in Belmont, Newton, Watertown, and
Waltham and place a flag and a personal letter on the graves of about 150
veterans.
”Dear old friend Tom,” read one of the notes, according to American Veteran
magazine. ”I will always remember you. Your great-grandchildren visited me
last week. They are beautiful.”
A native of Lynn, who grew up on a farm in Bellingham, Mr. Avadanian joined
the Army shortly after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. As a sergeant in
the 82d Airborne Division, he participated in seven major campaigns,
including the invasion of Italy, the Battle of the Bulge, and the D-day
invasion of France.
Mr. Avadanian remembered D-day in a story published in the spring 2003 issue
of American Veteran: ”Enemy antiaircraft fire was intense,” he said of his
jump into France with 150 pounds of equipment strapped to his body. ”And I
could see cows but at first, no people and no Germans. That changed in a
hurry. I can recall a fine young lieutenant who had gotten a haircut from
our company barber a couple of days prior to D-day, just as I had done. The
next time I saw him he was still in his parachute hanging from a tree near
the churchyard at St. Mere Eglise with his throat cut. The Germans who had
bivouacked in and around the town were merciless.”
During the 34 days of intense combat that followed, the 82d Airborne
suffered heavy casualties. ”Wherever we fought, those once-quiet little
Norman towns became intense rubble within days, sometime hours,” Mr.
Avadanian recalled. ”The airborne division spearheaded inland of those
beaches with almost 13,000 men and returned to England with only 5,800 —
all the rest were missing, wounded, or dead.”
Mr. Avadanian was wounded twice. He was awarded a number of decorations,
including the Silver Star, Bronze Star, and Croix de Guerre.
After the war he was a procurement officer for the Veterans Administration
in Boston for several years and principal contracting officer of the US
Coast Guard’s North Atlantic Region for decades.
Mr. Avadanian held a number of posts in AMVETS and was the national
commander of the service organization in 1973 and 1974.
He never regretted his military service and said he would be happy to do it
all over again.
”If God would allow me to be born again, I would pray to God to put me on
that same road to Normandy,” Mr. Avadanian said in a story published in the
Boston Herald in 2004. ”It was the most gratifying thing I have ever done.
I was so proud to be fighting for my country.”
Mr. Avadanian was also a lifelong Red Sox fan.
”I listened to them on one of those homemade radios on the farm when I was
a little boy,” he said in a story published in The New York Times in 2004.
”I was in Paris listening to them on a shortwave radio when they played the
World Series in 1946. And when I jumped out of a plane in Normandy, one of
the last things I said before I went out the door was, ‘I wonder what the
Red Sox are doing,’ and a wise guy from New York said, ‘They probably lost
as usual.’ ”
When Mr. Avadanian threw out the first ball for the fifth game of the
championship series last October at Fenway Park, it was like a dream come
true. ”He had a wonderful time,” said his daughter. ”They picked him up in
a limousine.”
In addition to his daughter, Mr. Avadanian leaves his wife, Rose Marie
(Bazarian); a son, Paul B. of Waltham; a sister, Mary Kachichian of
Stoneham; and two grandchildren.
A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. tomorrow in St. James Armenian
Apostolic Church in Watertown. Burial will be in Mount Auburn Cemetery in
Cambridge.

Armenians are experts in classical music

A1plus
| 17:11:36 | 09-06-2005 | Culture |
ARMENIANS ARE EXPERTS IN CLASSICAL MUSIC
On invitation of the Philharmonic Orchestra famous US musicians Jane
Thorngren – soprano, Duane Funderburk – piano, Alex Russell – violin and
Donovan Grey – horn arrived in Armenia to perform a joint concert in the
concert hall after Aram Khachaturyan on June 10. {BR}
Today the musicians rendered a press conference in the House of Journalists.
In their word, they have already visited Armenia and are convinced that
Armenians are joyful people, who appreciate and perceives classical music.
According to Donovan Grey in the US young people prefer TV to classical
music. He said he would like to learn to play duduk while Jane Thorngren
noted she wants to learn an Armenian dance.
The concert program will include the works by Gershwin, Mendelssohn, Puccini
as well as American church hymns. The benefit will be conveyed to the UN
International Food Program.