Armenia Hopeful About Start Of Turkey’s EU Talks

ARMENIA HOPEFUL ABOUT START OF TURKEY’S EU TALKS
By Emil Danielyan

Armenialiberty.org, Armenia
Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Oct 4 2005

Official Yerevan expressed hope late Tuesday that Turkey will be more
interested in normalizing relations with Armenia and recognizing the
Armenian genocide after the difficult start of its membership talks
with the European Union.

“Armenia hopes that the start of the EU accession process will prompt
[Turkey] to open the border with Armenia as soon as possible and to
make real efforts to protect minority rights and uphold freedom of
speech and other democratic values and standards in the country,”
Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamlet Gasparian said in a statement.

“We also hope that during the process Turkey will recognize the
Armenian Genocide, something which the European Parliament deemed
a precondition for Turkey’s membership of the EU in its latest
resolution,” said Gasparian.

The resolution adopted on September 28 “calls on Turkey to recognize
the Armenian genocide” and “considers this recognition to be a
prerequisite for accession to the European Union.” It also urges
Ankara to drop preconditions for improving its strained ties with
Yerevan. The demands were rejected by Turkish leaders, with Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan pledging to “continue on our way.”

Armenia has repeatedly urged the EU make Turkish membership conditional
on genocide recognition and the lifting of the Turkish blockade imposed
in 1993. But EU officials say while the Armenian demands will be on
the agenda of the accession talks, they are not a precondition for
Turkish’s accession to the union, which is strongly opposed by the
Armenian Diaspora in Europe.

Hundreds of Armenians demonstrated on Monday outside a government
building in Luxembourg where the foreign ministers of the 25 EU
member states were discussing terms for the start of the accession
talks. The negotiation process formally began later in the day and
is expected to take 10 years or more.

(GI-Photolur photo: Turkish Foreign minister Abdullah Gul, right,
arrives with British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw at the EU
headquarters in Luxembourg on Monday for a working session with EU
foreign ministers.)

RFE: Armenia To Hold Constitutional Referendum Next Month

ARMENIA TO HOLD CONSTITUTIONAL REFERENDUM NEXT MONTH

RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty, Czech Republic
Oct 4 2005

4 October 2005 — Armenian President Robert Kocharian has signed an
order to hold a referendum on constitutional amendments next month.

Kocharian’s office today said the vote would take place on 27 November.

The Armenian parliament passed the amendments last month.

Kocharian and his government say the changes, which are backed by the
Council of Europe and the United States, aim at ensuring a stricter
separation of powers among the judicial, executive, and legislative
branches of power.

But the opposition claims the planned reform will play in Kocharian’s
hands.

Opposition lawmakers, who boycotted last month’s vote, have called
upon Armenians to reject the constitutional amendments.

The proposed changes would also remove a legal provision outlawing
dual citizenship for millions of members of the Armenian diaspora.

Talks Pose Tough Test For Ankara Bureaucracy

TALKS POSE TOUGH TEST FOR ANKARA BUREAUCRACY
By Vincent Boland in Ankara

Financial Times, UK
Oct 4 2005

Turkey could be in for a tough few years of political partisanship
as it seeks to meet the requirements of European Union entry while
allowing for an unprecedented level of interference in its internal
affairs from Brussels.

This will pose a severe test of Turkey’s vast and truculent
bureaucracy.

Turks greeted the start of a long process of joining the EU with a
mixture of pride, emotion and criticism on Tuesday, as newspapers
gave celebratory coverage to the middle-of-the-night moment when the
formal accession negotiations got under way in Luxembourg on Monday.

In an emotional column, Mehmet Ali Birand, the veteran journalist
who has covered every event of Turkish history since the invasion of
Cyprus in 1974, wrote that Monday was “the best day of my life”.

But there was dissent from the political opposition.

Deniz Baykal, leader of the main opposition Republican People’s party,
accused Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the prime minister, of having settled
for a second-class status for Turkey.

Mr Baykal said the accession process did not guarantee entry to the
EU, as it did for every other aspiring member, and did not give Turks
full labour mobility rights. “This is not full membership,” he charged.

Abdullah Gul, the foreign minister, insisted on Monday night, however,
that full membership was essential for Turkey “and we have it”.

Some analysts argue that making Turkey more European, or at least
more EU-compatible, ought not to be too difficult.

Resat Arim, director of studies at the Foreign Policy Institute at
Bilkent University, says: “The general look of Turkey may not give
the impression that everything is European, but much of our system
is geared to Europe and on the whole our legislation and regulations
are not basically very different. The accession process should not
be very difficult. There is no reason why it should fail.”

The next few years will pose more than an administrative challenge for
Turkey, however. It is likely to present philosophical, intellectual
and historical tests.

Serhan Cevik, who follows Turkey for Morgan Stanley, the investment
bank, wrote to investors on Monday that the most important benefit of
the accession process would be that it provided “a favourable setting
to address historical baggage and entrenched positions”.

These include the continued division of Cyprus into Greek and Turkish
Cypriot areas (Turkey has nearly 40,000 troops in northern Cyprus); the
pressing issue of Turkey’s stance on the mass killing of Armenians by
Ottoman Turks, which some historians say was the first genocide of the
20th century; and the unresolved question of Turkey’s Kurdish minority.

All of these questions go to the heart of Turkish identity: its
constant struggle to square its geographical, historical and cultural
position between Europe and the Middle East with its modernising
desire to integrate fully into Europe.

Some commentators say the EU process is intimately linked with this
identity question, and may even resolve it.

Taking It Out On Turkey

TAKING IT OUT ON TURKEY
by Josie Appleton

Spiked, UK
Oct 4 2005

The tortured debate about the Turks joining the EU is a product of
crises in the West more than the East.

Turkey appears to be causing drama in the European Union (EU). First
there was talk of crisis, when EU nations couldn’t agree on the issue
of Turkish membership. Austria led the opposition, backed up by blocs
within countries such as France and Germany. Now that accession talks
are agreed, rhetoric abounds about this being a ‘truly historic day
for Europe’.

This isn’t about Turkey, though. Instead, it’s about EU elites
jostling for position. Elites shaken over the recent ‘no’ votes
on the EU Constitution are now trying to take a stand on Turkish
accession. Some hope that Turkish membership will pave the way to
a confident, multicultural Europe; others think that keeping Turkey
out will keep Europe secure. But Turkey is neither the cause of nor
solution to the EU’s problems – and the membership debate can only
expose the EU elites’ isolation and vacuity.

The UK, which currently holds the EU presidency, is the staunchest
supporter of Turkish entry. By letting in a Muslim nation, the Brits
argue, the EU will prove its cosmopolitan credentials. Part of this
is about invigorating Europe internally; sociologists Ulrich Beck and
Anthony Giddens recently argued that accession is part of a project
for a vibrant, post-national Europe, based on diversity (1). European
politicians also hope to win the favour of Muslim communities both
abroad and at home, an argument that gets US backing. The Turkish
prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan recently claimed that membership
‘would help to build a bridge between Christian and Muslim countries’,
while rejection would reveal the EU as a ‘Christian club’ (2).

Austria and co, meanwhile, counter Turkey in an attempt to win favour
with their own populations. One opponent warned of the danger of
letting in ‘a poor, culturally alien nation’. Former French president
Valery Giscard d’Estaing, who spearheaded the effort to rewrite the
Constitution, has taken this tack in an attempt to save his reputation,
arguing that ‘there is an obvious contradiction between the pursuit
of Europe’s political integration and Turkish entry into European
institutions’ (3).

Both sides are on a hiding to nothing. It will take more than a bit of
‘diverse’ Eastern spice to enliven stodgy EU politics. Similarly, it is
delusional to think that radical Islamists will call off their battles
just because Erdogan has a seat in Brussels, any more than they will
be won over by Bush and Blair reading the Koran. Meanwhile, posturing
against Turkey isn’t going to solve the problems of Giscard and others
– that is a see-through attempt to cover up their own failures.

This debate reveals the isolation of EU leaders from their publics.

On the one hand, both Turkish and European people are told to just
accept that accession is inevitable. Erdogan counsels that ‘in today’s
Turkey, there is no possibility left other than change.

Turkey will no longer yield to political deadlocks to those who are
ideological exploiters of emotion’ (4). Similarly, US deputy assistant
secretary of state, Matthew J Bryza, argued that ‘our friends in the
EU completely understand how important it is to continue that process
of Turkey’s anchoring in Europe. It would be a shame if that process
didn’t complete itself. But I think it will’ (5).

‘The process’ is really a business for Brussels lawyers. Turkey has
been busily passing the kinds of laws that will help it jump through
EU hoops – giving Kurds more autonomy, abolishing capital punishment,
and cleaning up archaic legislation such as the rape law. These changes
aren’t bad things in themselves; the problem is the automatic way in
which they were brought through. ‘We returned the abnormal heartbeat
of this country to normal’, said the prime minister.

The crowd-playing opponents of accession are no better

Supporters present accession as a continuation of Turkey’s past,
especially the dramatic Westernising reforms brought through by Mustafa
Kemal Ataturk in the 1920s. But while Ataturk’s (often heavyhanded)
reforms were driven by revolutionary zeal, today’s Turkish elite is
copying out the EU lawbook. Modernisation now is about bowing down in
acceptance, not seizing the reins of national destiny. Hence the EU’s
insistence that Turkey recognise the Armenian genocide. The Turks are
asked to prove their membership of the Western club by flagellating
themselves – joining UK prime minister Tony Blair in apologising for
the potato famine, and former US president Bill Clinton in apologising
for slavery.

EU publics are viewed with similar contempt. Opposition to Brussels’
plans is seen as the result of a chauvinistic yearning for security.

Beck and Giddens say that suspicion of the EU is driven by ‘social
and economic anxieties’ and an ’emotional return to the apparent safe
haven of the nation’; they warn that there is no option but to adapt
to globalisation and adopt their cosmopolitan attitudes.

Given this, it’s no surprise that both EU and Turkish publics have
started going cool on the idea of Turkish membership. Turkish support
has gone down from three quarters to two thirds over the past year, and
60,000 people gathered in Ankara on Sunday to voice their opposition
to the process. Speaking to the rally, party leader Devlet Bahceli
argued that Turkey was facing ‘an environment of enmity from outside
and an environment of treason from within’ (6).

The crowd-playing opponents of accession are no better, though. This is
a desperate attempt to connect with a distant public, appealing to what
elites see as the masses’ knee-jerk racism. Their attempt at populism
could win them attention, but is unlikely to provide a secure support.

The debate about Turkish membership may be leading to a fracas in the
EU, but Turkey itself isn’t the cause of the problem. The discussion
may look east, but its roots lie in the west.

Armenian And Azeri FMs To Meet In Ljubljana On Dec. 4-5

ARMENIAN AND AZERI FMS TO MEET IN LJUBLJANA ON DEC. 4-5

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
Oct 4 2005

Armenian and Azeri FMs may meet within the frames of OSCE member
countries FMs summit in Ljubljana on December 4 – 5. Azeri FM Elmar
Mamedyarov informed of the fact, Day.Az reports.

Elmar Mamedyarov also said the OSCE MG American Co – Chair Steven
Mann was to visit Baku in mid – October. In the course of the visit
the American Co – Chair is to meet Azeri leadership.

The OSCE MG three Co – Chairs are to arrive in the region in early
November. The mediators are expected to negotiate with Azeri and
Armenian Presidents on the Nagorno Karabakh settlement process.

Mamedyarov Refutes Information Concerning Breeding Impediments ToAze

MAMEDYAROV REFUTES THE INFORMATION CONCERNING BREEDING IMPEDIMENTS TO AZERBAIJAN’S COOPERATION WITH EU

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
Oct 4 2005

In the course of the press conference conducted on October 30 Azeri
FM Elmar Mamedyarov stated there were no obstacles to Azerbaijan’s
cooperation with the European Union (EU), Trend reports.

When commenting on “the EU Special Representative for the South
Caucasus Heikkie Talvitie’s statement on braking the program “Enlarged
Europe: New Neighbors” in the South Caucasus in connection with Cyprus’
stand towards Azerbaijan circulated by Armenian mass media” Azeri
FM said “there have been no statements on breeding impediments to
Azerbaijan – EU cooperation in the context of the present realities”.

It is strange that Azeri FM refers to Armenian mass media, as the
information concerning the fact that Republic of Cyprus has vetoed
Azerbaijan’s candidature and blocked Baku’s participation in the
program titled “Enlarged Europe: New Neighbors” has been spread by
Day.Az Azeri agency.

To note, in the course of the press conference in Yerevan the EU
Special Representative for the South Caucasus Heikkie Talvitie
stated consultations between the South Caucasus and the EU, which
were to start in early September, had been postponed for early
October because of differences between Azerbaijan and one of the
EU countries. According to Talvitie, unless the issue referring
to Azerbaijan is settled they will begin cooperating with Armenia
and Georgia.

Study By UNICEF’s Innocenti Research Center

STUDY BY UNICEF’S INNOCENTI RESEARCH CENTER
By Bradley S. Klapper

The Associated Press
10/04/05 13:40 EDT

GENEVA (AP) – Many disabled youths in the former communist countries
of Eastern Europe and Central Asia are being institutionalized,
perpetuating the Soviet Union’s practice of “child abandonment,”
according to a report released Wednesday by the U.N. Children’s Fund.

While attitudes toward disabled children are getting better in these
regions, improvements in state support are lagging behind, said the
64-page study undertaken by UNICEF’s Innocenti Research Center in
Florence, Italy.

Instead of searching for ways to integrate children with disabilities
into general schools, these countries still overwhelmingly employ a
policy of “defectology,” a leftover Soviet discipline where disabled
children are put in residential schools and institutions, separated
from society, community and family.

As of 2002, some 317,000 children in these countries lived in such
separated institutions, a number largely unchanged since the fall
of the Iron Curtain, the report found. By contrast, the rate of
institutionalization in Western countries is up to three times lower.

“The prospect for these children is to graduate to an institution
for adults and to face a pattern of denial of human rights,” the
study said.

The countries studied included eight former communist states that
have since become members of the European Union – Czech Republic,
Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Slovakia and Slovenia –
and two others scheduled to join soon – Bulgaria and Romania.

The study also included Balkan states Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Croatia, Macedonia and Serbia and Montenegro, as well as former
Soviet republics Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Russia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine and
Uzbekistan.

“Although children with disabilities have become more visible since
the beginning of (the post-communist) transition and attitudes towards
them and their families are changing, many of them are simply ‘written
off’ from society,” said Innocenti’s director Marta Santos Pais.

Santos Pais said the “high rates of child abandonment” could be
explained by these countries’ outdated medical approaches and lack
of alternative methods for dealing with disabilities.

UNICEF is calling for an end to the segregation of disabled children,
suggesting instead an increase in social benefits to affected families
and greater participation of parents in decisions affecting their
children.

“The reality is many parents feel they have no choice but to give
up their children,” Santos Pais said. “What these families need is
strong social and economic support.”

Some 1.5 million children in these 27 countries were registered as
disabled in 2000, triple the number in 1990, the report said.

However, the surge was largely the result of better recognition and
registration of disabilities, rather than any actual increase in the
number of children disabled.

Armenian President Sets Constitutional Referendum For Next Month

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT SETS CONSTITUTIONAL REFERENDUM FOR NEXT MONTH

The Associated Press
10/04/05 12:36 EDT

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) – Armenia’s President Robert Kocharian has
signed an order to hold a constitutional referendum next month,
the presidential office said Tuesday.

Kocharian signed the constitutional amendments, passed by the Armenian
parliament last month, and scheduled a referendum for Nov.

27 to vote on them, his office said in a statement.

The amendments are intended to impose a more strict separation of
powers between the judicial, executive and legislative branches. The
proposed changes also include removal of a clause outlawing dual
citizenship for members of Armenia’s large foreign Diaspora.

Lawmakers passed the amendments on Sep. 28 by a 89-0 vote, with one
abstention. The 24 opposition deputies, however, boycotted the vote,
just as they have boycotted most sessions of parliament on the grounds
that their proposals were not taken into account.

The opposition has called on Armenians to reject the amendments in
a late November referendum.

Armenia’s Foreign Debt On Rise

ARMENIA’S FOREIGN DEBT ON RISE

Armenpress
Oct 4, 2005

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 4, ARMENPRESS: Armenia’s foreign debt is expected
to stand at $1.227 billion by the end of the year, deputy economy
and finance minister Pavel Safarian said today.

He said Armenia’s next year’s budget includes $107.9 million in
credits, of which $95.202 million under government liabilities. The
budget also foresees $50.2 million in re-payment of the debt. By the
end of next year the overall foreign debt will increase further making
$1.285 billion. In 2006 Armenia expects loans from International
Development Agency, International Fund for Agricultural Development
(IFAD), German KfW and the International Japanese Cooperation Bank.

Do Not Eat Unfamiliars

DO NOT EAT UNFAMILIARS

Panorama News
14:31 04/10/05

On October 3 N. Iskandaryan (55 years old) and D. Sargsyan (46 years
old) have been poisoned with mushrooms and sent to hospital N 1
in Vanadzor.

According to the doctors the health situation of two patients is
satisfying.

“We always say, do not gather mushrooms from unknown places, but people
don’t listen to us”, said the deputy chief of hygienic anti epidemic
inspection of Ministry of Healthcare Marieta Basilisyan referring to
the frequent mushroom poisoning incidents.

As she mentioned, among food poisoning, especially during autumn and
winter, botulism and mushroom poisoning are largely spread. To avoid
these incidents M. Basilisyan advised to boil canned goods and do
not eat unfamiliar mushrooms.

“Unfortunately, food poisoning sometimes becomes the main reason
of death for the whole family. It is pity that nobody follows our
advices”, added Mrs. Basilisyan.