BAKU: French Historian Denying False Armenian Genocide Wants To Beco

FRENCH HISTORIAN DENYING FALSE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE WANTS TO BECOME TURKEY CITIZEN

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Oct 11 2006

French historian Jean-Michel Thibaux who objects to the discussion
of draft law about false Armenia Genocide in France Parliament wants
to become Turkey citizenship, APA Turkey bureau reports.

The historian appealed to Turkey Parliament Foreign Affairs
Commission chief, PM Mehmet Dulger with the help of his Turkish
acquaintance. The appeal says: "France President Jacques Chirac’s
statement "If Turkey wants to enter EU, it should recognize Armenian
Genocide" is blackmail. I protest against this policy. In this case,
Turkey can demand the recognition of the genocide committed in 1789 in
France. Hundreds of French were killed during the revolution; their
skins were used as material for cloths, and their grease used in the
kitchens of detention places. So, American people should be accused
of the death of millions of Indians, and Spanish people should be
blamed for destroying the culture local resident in South America,"
the historian said.

Justice and Development Party member Mehmet Dulger brought his appeal
to Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan’s notice. Edogan wanted the letter
to be investigated in the Interior Ministry.

BAKU: French Ambassador: France`s Parliament`s Adopting An Armenian

FRENCH AMBASSADOR: FRANCE`S PARLIAMENT`S ADOPTING AN ARMENIAN GENOCIDE LAW NOT TO HAVE AN INFLUENCE ON OSCE`S ACTIVITY
Author: A. Ismayilova

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Oct 11 2006

France will not gain from the adoption of the law that will envisage
a criminal responsibility for a denial of the "Armenian Genocide",
Bernard du Chaffaut, France`s Ambassador to Azerbaijan told during
the press-conference held today.

He pointed out that France`s National Assembly is expected to put
forward this draft which was initiated by France`s Socialist Party
for the Parliament`s discussion.

The French Ambassador underlined that if even the national Assembly
adopts this draft, it will not speak that it will certainly put into
force. The Senate`s adoption is also needed for this aim. And even
if the Senate adopts the draft, that will not be an official position
of the French Government.

The French diplomat also pointed out that the adoption of the law
cannot have an influence on France`s relations with Turkey and
many countries, including Azerbaijan. This position will not have
any influence on Turkey`s joining EU, and it should be mentioned
that President Jack Shirak voted "pro" Turkey`s affiliating to
the organization. He also added that according to French laws, the
President has no right to veto any bill adopted by the legislative body
of the country. France has the analogical law concerning Holocaust.

Commenting expressions concerning the demands to expel France from the
team of the Co-Chairs of OSCE Minsk Group on the Azerbaijani-Armenian
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement, Mr.

Chaffaut said that French Co-Chairman Bernard Fasier represents
France`s Government, not its Parliament. Therefore, in his opinion,
France`s expelling from the organization is out of the question.

"Moreover, neither Azerbaijan`s President nor its Foreign Office have
not made any announcement in this connection", he told.

Soccer: Serbia Vs Armenia

SERBIA VS ARMENIA

AsianHandicap.com, UK
Oct 11 2006

Serbia is leading the Group A after three games winning against
Belgium at home and earning an important point away in Poland, one
of their main rivals in the race to qalify for the Euro 2008.

With Portugal on the third place with a game in hand the situation is
not very clear yet in this group as five teams are having good chances
to move further. The strong display from Finland is an extra reason
of concern as they were not among the favourites in this group yet
the scandinavian team is on the second place just two points behind
the leaders.

On the other hand we have Armenia a team with no chances to qualify,
but a formation that managed so far not to be thrashed by the better
teams drawing at home with Finland and loosing by 1-0 to Belgium.

Perhaps the only objective reachable for them is to play the best
fotbal they can and in the end secure the sixth position, just for
the records.

The trip to Serbia is going to be the real test so far for Armenia
as they will be under pressure the enitre games as the host will
look forward to widen the gap between them and the runner-ups. With
Finland having to travel to Kazahstan for a game more difficult that
the odds show and with Portugal involved in today’s derby against
Poland things are looking good for the serbians.

Armenia will defend and a draw would be a great result is they will
be able to reach it, and although I am not sure they are going to
earn a point tonight I am confident that they are not going to allow
many goals. If Serbia will win they are not going to do it by more
than 2 goals for sure.

Date: 2006-10-11 League: Euro 2008 Qualifying Match: Serbia v Armenia

Page=TipsterPicks&Match=928600

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.asianhandicap.com/default.asp?

Christian Democratic Party Criticizes Anti-Criminal Movement

CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATIC PARTY CRITICIZES ANTI-CRIMINAL MOVEMENT

Panorama.am
15:19 10/10/06

"Anticriminal movement cannot become an underlying question for
the whole political process and unify political forces," Khosrov
Harutunyan, chairman of Christian-democratic party, said. The
movement joins 16 political parties, mainly from opposition. However,
Harutunyan believes it may serve a negative aim. "The movement may
turn into persecution of witches with its unclear definitions,
i.e., if you are not in my political team, you are criminal,"
Harutunyan said also saying it may cause extra tension at the doors
of elections.

Speaker Of Parliament Says Azerbaijan Needs Cold Shower

SPEAKER OF PARLIAMENT SAYS AZERBAIJAN NEEDS COLD SHOWER

Panorama.am
17:13 10/10/06

"The growing impudence of Azerbaijan is explained not only with the
expected oil revenues but also because our authorities have annoyed
the world with their concession disposition," Vahan Hovhannisyan,
parliament speaker, told a press conference today.

In his words, we are really ready for mutual concessions but Azerbaijan
thinks it is a weakness.

Therefore, there is a need to open a cold shower on the growing
aggressiveness of our neighbor, he said.

Speaking about Georgian-Russian conflict, Hovhannisyan said Armenia
is not interested in super-power of Russia in the region. Neither does
it want weak position of another country in the region. "The truth is
somewhere in between," he said. Hovhannisyan believes Armenia has more
"balanced and guided policy" as compared to our neighbors. However,
he thinks we need more emotion.

Parliament Speaker Believes Turkey Is A Danger To European Values

PARLIAMENT SPEAKER BELIEVES TURKEY IS A DANGER TO EUROPEAN VALUES

Panorama.am
17:20 10/10/06

Asked if France will go for the Turkish blackmail refusing to adopt
a law which proposes punishment for denial of the Armenian genocide,
speaker of parliament, Vahan Hovhannisyan said, "Turkish blackmail
is very active in European countries."

In his words, Turkey variously tries to convince European states
that they are more needed than Armenians. However, Turkey is a
danger to Europe and European values, Hovhannisyan said. Moreover,
he believes Turkey will distort European values when it becomes a
member of European Union.

Hovhannisyan said France has proposed three preconditions for
refusal to adopt a law on punishment for denial of genocide. First,
a Turkish-Armenian joint committee should be set up. Second,
Turkish-Armenian border should be opened. Thirds, Turkey must
reconsider article 301 of its Criminal Code. Hovhannisyan said
these preconditions "open a way for Turkey." He also said they are
expressed by French minister Nikolas Sarkozi who has high reputation
among the French public. He believes Sarkozi has uttered France’s
disposition.

Turkey Warns France Over Armenian Genocide Bill

TURKEY WARNS FRANCE OVER ARMENIAN GENOCIDE BILL
Angelique Chrisafis in Paris

The Guardian
Wednesday October 11, 2006

The French parliament has been warned it could undermine relations
between the EU and Turkey if it passes a law tomorrow making it a
crime to deny Armenians suffered genocide at the hands of Ottoman
Turks during the first world war.

The draft bill, which is to be debated by the national assembly, was
put forward by France’s opposition Socialist party, and recommends
that anyone who denies the mass-murder of Armenians between 1915
and 1917 was genocide should face a year in prison and a â~B¬45,000
(£30,500) fine.

Olli Rehn, the commissioner in charge of Turkey’s EU membership
negotiations, warned this week the law could have "serious
consequences" for EU relations with Turkey. He said it would jeopardise
efforts by Turkish intellectuals to develop an open debate on the
Armenian question.

Ankara has deemed it ironic that France is preparing to punish those
who express a particular view of history at a time when Turkey is under
heavy EU pressure to change some of its own laws which are viewed
as restricting freedom of expression. The Turkish prime minister,
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, yesterday referred to the proposed law as a
"systematic lie machine". Turkey recalled its ambassador to France in
May after the Socialist party first presented the bill in parliament.

Turkish politicians have since warned that French-Turkish trade links
will suffer if the bill is adopted, and some are discussing possible
retaliatory measures, including criminalising the denial of genocide in
Algeria which France ruled from 1830 to 1962. One Turkish MP suggested
expelling all illegal Armenian immigrants if the bill was passed.

Mr Erdogan said he would not engage in tit-for-tat measures but
said France should reexamine its colonial past before pronouncing on
history elsewhere.

He repeated calls to Armenia to jointly research the killings by
opening the historical archives of both countries to historians.

Turkey’s official policy is to acknowledge that large numbers of
Armenians were killed by Turks, but to reject the overall estimate
of 1.5 million deaths as inflated. It maintains that deaths occurred
as part of civil unrest during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire and
thousands of Turks also died. Saying otherwise in Turkey can lead to
criminal prosecution.

Yesterday Turkey’s foremost Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink, who has
been repeatedly tried for "insulting Turkishness" by urging Turkey
to come clean on its part in the massacres, said passing the French
law would be a mistake. "I will go to France to protest against this
madness and violate the [new] law if I see it necessary. And I will
commit the crime to be prosecuted there so that these two irrational
mentalities can race to put me into jail," he told Reuters. He said
the French draft law and the Armenian issue was being exploited by
those in France and the EU opposed to Turkey’s EU entry.

Other Turkish writers criticised the French bill, including Elif
Shafak, who was acquitted last month after she was charged with
"insulting Turkishness" over one of her fictitious characters who
referred to the Armenian "genocide".

–Boundary_(ID_jiZE6ezgOoYr EPxgL6OByA)–

Publisher And Jazz Enthusiast

PUBLISHER AND JAZZ ENTHUSIAST
Adrian Dannatt

The Independent/UK
09 October 2006

Jean Claude Abreu, publisher, collector and musicologist: born
Paris 11 January 1922; married 1960 Mary-Sargent Ladd (one son, two
daughters; marriage dissolved), 1973 Georgiana Manley; died Paris 9
September 2006.

Jean Claude Abreu was last of a generation who regarded even the
mildest self-promotion as utter anathema, his resistance to any form
of fame ensuring his contributions to our culture went persistently
unnoticed. As a man of letters, conversationalist, mountain climber
and jazz expert, Abreu was the ultimate enthusiast for everything
from Formula One to chess, tennis and even yoga, of which he was a
Parisian pioneer.

He was born in Paris in 1922 to a French-Armenian mother and a father
from the fabled Abreu family of Santa Clara, Cuba, a town created by
his family and dominated to this day by a sculpture of its founding
Abreu.

Educated at the Ecole des Roches in Normandy, where his passion
for American jazz was first lit with a clandestine wind-up, Abreu
went to Harvard to study science before going to live in Cuba at the
Quinta Palatino. This eccentric mansion was built by his grandmother,
who filled it with 360 species of exotic monkeys, donated to Harvard
upon her death. Abreu assisted with aspects of the family business,
but as a young man in his bachelor retreat overlooking Havana’s old
harbour he knew everyone, from the writer Lezama Lima to Julio Lobo,
"the richest man in Cuba", and was also constantly travelling (by
ocean liner, of course), returning regularly to Europe and spending
six months in Mexico City as a simultaneous translator for Unesco.

In 1952 Abreu inherited and began developing land around the suburbs
of Havana, but these properties were swiftly requisitioned with
the revolution.

Abreu left Cuba soon after, in 1960, but he had already been spending
much of his time elsewhere, not least in Zermatt, the alpine town he
had discovered in Switzerland.

In 1956, Abreu had begun construction on his mountain residence,
named Chalet Turquino after the highest summit in Cuba, the first
building constructed in Zermatt by a foreigner. With its 12 bedrooms
and adjoining bathrooms, Turquino was soon filled with a roster of
international characters, from Alan Clark and Mark Birley to the
actor Robert Montgomery and painter Ernst Fuchs, many of whom were
later to take a place in Zermatt.

Thus Abreu created Zermatt society, transforming it from a remote
village into a fashionable resort. But Abreu was not there merely
for parties; much time was spent walking and climbing mountains,
all of which he conquered, Matterhorn and Monte Rosa included.

If Abreu can take credit for "inventing" Zermatt he was also busy
creating another monument, the magazine L’Oeil, first published
in 1957, entirely thanks to his generosity. Contacted by the
writer Georges Bernier with the idea of creating a luxurious,
sophisticated publication to cover all visual and decorative arts,
Abreu agreed to become backer and publisher. This celebrated
publication (the only magazine in Dr Lacan’s waiting room) still
appears today and was subsidised by Abreu until 1972, when he sold
the title. Characteristically he ensured his name never once appeared
on the masthead or even in the smallest print.

Abreu’s interest in the arts began back in Cuba, with friends like
Wilfredo Lam or Cundo Bermúdez, and continued in an eclectic manner,
juxtaposing an Egyptian falcon in his collection with a Courbet
or Claes Oldenburg. A major contribution also came from his aunt,
Lilita Abreu, close confidante of "les Sept" and an adored muse to
the writers Saint-John Perse and Jean Giraudoux.

On her death Lilita left Abreu major works by Vuillard, Bonnard and
Klee, and a Picasso or two.

Over the decades the collection was displayed with soigné relaxation
in a series of suitable apartments around Paris, Abreu being au fait
with the work of leading decorators of the day, not least his fellow
Cuban exile Emilio Terry. Grandest of these abodes was an Hôtel
Particulier with its own park in the Marais which he swapped for a
high-ceilinged apartment on the rue Verneuil, his final habitat,
adorned with perfect pitch by the great Italian designer Renzo
Mongiardino.

In 1960 Abreu married Mary- Sargent ("Didi") Ladd, a Boston
debutante who had graced the cover of Harper’s Bazaar, whose family
covered Republican politics, Intelligence operatives and, indeed,
the portraitist John Singer Sargent. The Abreus entertained on a
generous scale for an astonishing range of people, the sort of people
whose inherent glamour depends upon its being hidden from the larger
public. These included the Surrealist poet Joyce Mansour, Nan Kempner,
Hans Bellmer, the Scottish laird Simon Fraser, the screenwriter Paul
Gégauff, the shipping magnate Jean Alvarez de Toledo and a judicious
scattering of crown princes.

But some of Abreu’s most favoured figures were his "fournisseurs"
or specialist suppliers, not least his English tailor who catered to
his strict palette of grey suits and blue shirts. There was also his
expert car mechanic and his personal horological provider. Abreu was
fiercely loyal to these artisans, going specially to Geneva for any
work that needed doing on watch or automobile, as he had a delight
in alterations and improvements.

For Abreu had a brand theory – never buying from the best-known
source but the more recherché competition. As he put with his usual
Anglo-Gallic admixture; "Second to best, plus difficile a trouver,
encore plus cher."

Thus his man at Gubelin in Geneva would create a version of the
Rolex Explorer made from white gold, absolutely indistinguishable
from others but far more costly. He would also have his "trombone"
collar-stiffeners crafted from white gold, precisely because they
were never visible. Or he would drive his new Aston Martin DB4 over
to Switzerland to have it fitted with radial tyres and family seating.

This accommodated his progeny, two daughters and a son, on numerous
trips through the mountains, emulating his favoured Formula One
drivers. Having remarried in 1973, to the equally ideal Wasp beauty
Georgiana ("Georgie") Manley, Abreu continued his charmed existence
of reading, skiing, climbing and collecting – friends and objets –
and not least improving his important jazz collection.

A tootler himself, Abreu had a particular love of Pee Wee Russell,
matched by his passion for Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Louis
Armstrong. In fact one of his few recorded public acts was to vote
on the international panel for the Jazz Hall of Fame put together by
his old friend Ahmet Ertegun.

In respect of his Cuban heritage a formal mass for the eternal
peace of "Juan Claudio", complete with children’s choir, was given
by Monsignor Carlos Manuel de Céspedes, Vicar General of Havana
in the city’s Art Deco church of San Agustín. Meanwhile in France
his memorial was attended by le tout Paris from the Ganay brothers,
Francois Pinault, Barbara of Yugoslavia and Jean d’Ormesson – who gave
an oration recalling yacht trips through the Aeolian islands. Here
he arose early to see Abreu already on deck playing his clarinet,
but with typical discretion silently, so as to wake no one.

Adrian Dannatt

Jean Claude Abreu, publisher, collector and musicologist: born
Paris 11 January 1922; married 1960 Mary-Sargent Ladd (one son, two
daughters; marriage dissolved), 1973 Georgiana Manley; died Paris 9
September 2006.

Jean Claude Abreu was last of a generation who regarded even the
mildest self-promotion as utter anathema, his resistance to any form
of fame ensuring his contributions to our culture went persistently
unnoticed. As a man of letters, conversationalist, mountain climber
and jazz expert, Abreu was the ultimate enthusiast for everything
from Formula One to chess, tennis and even yoga, of which he was a
Parisian pioneer.

He was born in Paris in 1922 to a French-Armenian mother and a father
from the fabled Abreu family of Santa Clara, Cuba, a town created by
his family and dominated to this day by a sculpture of its founding
Abreu.

Educated at the Ecole des Roches in Normandy, where his passion
for American jazz was first lit with a clandestine wind-up, Abreu
went to Harvard to study science before going to live in Cuba at the
Quinta Palatino. This eccentric mansion was built by his grandmother,
who filled it with 360 species of exotic monkeys, donated to Harvard
upon her death. Abreu assisted with aspects of the family business,
but as a young man in his bachelor retreat overlooking Havana’s old
harbour he knew everyone, from the writer Lezama Lima to Julio Lobo,
"the richest man in Cuba", and was also constantly travelling (by
ocean liner, of course), returning regularly to Europe and spending
six months in Mexico City as a simultaneous translator for Unesco.

In 1952 Abreu inherited and began developing land around the suburbs
of Havana, but these properties were swiftly requisitioned with
the revolution.

Abreu left Cuba soon after, in 1960, but he had already been spending
much of his time elsewhere, not least in Zermatt, the alpine town he
had discovered in Switzerland.

In 1956, Abreu had begun construction on his mountain residence,
named Chalet Turquino after the highest summit in Cuba, the first
building constructed in Zermatt by a foreigner. With its 12 bedrooms
and adjoining bathrooms, Turquino was soon filled with a roster of
international characters, from Alan Clark and Mark Birley to the
actor Robert Montgomery and painter Ernst Fuchs, many of whom were
later to take a place in Zermatt.

Thus Abreu created Zermatt society, transforming it from a remote
village into a fashionable resort. But Abreu was not there merely
for parties; much time was spent walking and climbing mountains,
all of which he conquered, Matterhorn and Monte Rosa included.

If Abreu can take credit for "inventing" Zermatt he was also busy
creating another monument, the magazine L’Oeil, first published
in 1957, entirely thanks to his generosity. Contacted by the
writer Georges Bernier with the idea of creating a luxurious,
sophisticated publication to cover all visual and decorative arts,
Abreu agreed to become backer and publisher. This celebrated
publication (the only magazine in Dr Lacan’s waiting room) still
appears today and was subsidised by Abreu until 1972, when he sold
the title. Characteristically he ensured his name never once appeared
on the masthead or even in the smallest print.

Abreu’s interest in the arts began back in Cuba, with friends like
Wilfredo Lam or Cundo Bermúdez, and continued in an eclectic manner,
juxtaposing an Egyptian falcon in his collection with a Courbet
or Claes Oldenburg. A major contribution also came from his aunt,
Lilita Abreu, close confidante of "les Sept" and an adored muse to
the writers Saint-John Perse and Jean Giraudoux.

On her death Lilita left Abreu major works by Vuillard, Bonnard and
Klee, and a Picasso or two.

Over the decades the collection was displayed with soigné relaxation
in a series of suitable apartments around Paris, Abreu being au fait
with the work of leading decorators of the day, not least his fellow
Cuban exile Emilio Terry. Grandest of these abodes was an Hôtel
Particulier with its own park in the Marais which he swapped for a
high-ceilinged apartment on the rue Verneuil, his final habitat,
adorned with perfect pitch by the great Italian designer Renzo
Mongiardino.

In 1960 Abreu married Mary- Sargent ("Didi") Ladd, a Boston
debutante who had graced the cover of Harper’s Bazaar, whose family
covered Republican politics, Intelligence operatives and, indeed,
the portraitist John Singer Sargent. The Abreus entertained on a
generous scale for an astonishing range of people, the sort of people
whose inherent glamour depends upon its being hidden from the larger
public. These included the Surrealist poet Joyce Mansour, Nan Kempner,
Hans Bellmer, the Scottish laird Simon Fraser, the screenwriter Paul
Gégauff, the shipping magnate Jean Alvarez de Toledo and a judicious
scattering of crown princes.

But some of Abreu’s most favoured figures were his "fournisseurs"
or specialist suppliers, not least his English tailor who catered to
his strict palette of grey suits and blue shirts. There was also his
expert car mechanic and his personal horological provider. Abreu was
fiercely loyal to these artisans, going specially to Geneva for any
work that needed doing on watch or automobile, as he had a delight
in alterations and improvements.

For Abreu had a brand theory – never buying from the best-known
source but the more recherché competition. As he put with his usual
Anglo-Gallic admixture; "Second to best, plus difficile a trouver,
encore plus cher."

Thus his man at Gubelin in Geneva would create a version of the
Rolex Explorer made from white gold, absolutely indistinguishable
from others but far more costly. He would also have his "trombone"
collar-stiffeners crafted from white gold, precisely because they
were never visible. Or he would drive his new Aston Martin DB4 over
to Switzerland to have it fitted with radial tyres and family seating.

This accommodated his progeny, two daughters and a son, on numerous
trips through the mountains, emulating his favoured Formula One
drivers. Having remarried in 1973, to the equally ideal Wasp beauty
Georgiana ("Georgie") Manley, Abreu continued his charmed existence
of reading, skiing, climbing and collecting – friends and objets –
and not least improving his important jazz collection.

A tootler himself, Abreu had a particular love of Pee Wee Russell,
matched by his passion for Duke Ellington, Count Basie and Louis
Armstrong. In fact one of his few recorded public acts was to vote
on the international panel for the Jazz Hall of Fame put together by
his old friend Ahmet Ertegun.

In respect of his Cuban heritage a formal mass for the eternal
peace of "Juan Claudio", complete with children’s choir, was given
by Monsignor Carlos Manuel de Céspedes, Vicar General of Havana
in the city’s Art Deco church of San Agustín. Meanwhile in France
his memorial was attended by le tout Paris from the Ganay brothers,
Francois Pinault, Barbara of Yugoslavia and Jean d’Ormesson – who gave
an oration recalling yacht trips through the Aeolian islands. Here
he arose early to see Abreu already on deck playing his clarinet,
but with typical discretion silently, so as to wake no one.

–Boundary_(ID_Cvuy9rLqSnSetppdTEoKZA)–

Baku Draws Parallels Between French Bill On Genocide And Karabakh

BAKU DRAWS PARALLELS BETWEEN FRENCH BILL ON GENOCIDE AND KARABAKH

PanARMENIAN.Net
11.10.2006 13:31 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The legislation criminalizing the denial of
the Armenian Genocide to be discussed at the French Parliament
on October 12th, will doubt France’s being impartial as an OSCE
MG co-chair, says a statement of Azeri Milli Mejlis to the French
Parliament. "Milli Mejlis urges its colleagues in the French Parliament
to be attentive and sensitive in discussing the matter in question,"
runs the statement.

In her tern MP Ganira Pashayeva states that introducing the bill in
the French Parliament may result in all Turks and Azeris having to
leave France.

The following is of importance. Azerbaijan has its unsolved problem
– Nagorno Karabakh. Azerbaijan is a CE member and if the EU member
states decide to recognize the Armenian Genocide, it may damage the
Karabakh talks. All diplomatic, interparliamentary steps should be
used to resist to passage of the bill along with Turkey," Pashayeva
underscored, reports Day.az.

Armenian Community Candidates Did Not Win Local Election In Belgium

ARMENIAN COMMUNITY CANDIDATES DID NOT WIN LOCAL ELECTION IN BELGIUM

PanARMENIAN.Net
11.10.2006 13:42 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ As reported earlier, ethnic Armenian candidates were
included in election lists of various parties at regional elections in
Belgium. In Jette Brussels district, where Armenians compactly live,
Melik Melikyan was nominated from the Liberal Party, while Krikor
Kaspar represented socialists. As the Armenian community of Brussels
told a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter, none of Armenian candidates won
the elections. As for ethnic Turk candidates, they won in regions,
where the Turkish population forms the majority.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress