Armenian President To Visit Egypt for 7 days

Qatar News Agency, Qatar
April 7, 2007 Saturday 4:46 PM EST

Armenian President To Visit Egypt

Cairo, April 07 (qna)- Armenian president Robert Kocharian will pay
On April 14 a seven day visit to Egypt..

During the visit Kocharian will meet with Egyptian president Hosni
Mubarak to discuss the latest regional and international developments
as well as matters of interest to both countries..

He will also attend the signing of a number of cooperation agreements
between the two countries in various fields.(qna)

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

‘Istanbul’ features rich, complex characters, a little magic

Flint Journal (Michigan)
April 1, 2007 Sunday
THE FLINT JOURNAL FIRST EDITION

‘Istanbul’ features rich, complex characters, a little magic;
FLINT JOURNAL REVIEW

by Carol Azizian, [email protected] * 810.766.6245

If "every unhappy family is unhappy in its own way," as Tolstoy said,
then the families in Elif Shafak’s latest novel, "The Bastard of
Istanbul," surely have an edge on dysfunction.

Shafak weaves a complex web of characters with magic realism and
historical events but focuses on two extended families – a Turkish
one in Istanbul and an Armenian one in San Francisco and Tucson.

The Tchakhmakhchians, an Armenian family, can’t seem to forget their
tragic history of massacres and deportations. The Kazancis, a Turkish
family, live in a state of denial or ignorance – much like the
Turkish state, which has not yet acknowledged the genocide of 1.5
million Armenians in 1915.

"The Bastard of Istanbul" is Shafak’s second novel in English and
some critics contend that she’s still finding her voice in that
language.

I, too, stumbled over several sentences (for example, "sex is far
more sensual than physical"). At times, her digression into magic
realism, along with her enormous cast of characters, grow tiresome
and overwhelming.

But Shafak challenges the reader and tackles profound subjects with
wit and wisdom.

The lives of the two families intersect when Armanoush, an
intellectually curious woman who discusses Armenian/Turkish relations
in a cybercafe, travels to Turkey to visit the family of Mustafa, her
stepfather. (Her biological father is Armenian; her mother is from
Kentucky.) Mustafa is the long-lost brother of the Kazanci clan.

That clan includes Mustafa’s outrageous sisters: Zeliha, the bold,
sexy owner of a tattoo parlor; Banu, a clairvoyant who believes she’s
informed by djinns on each shoulder, one evil, one good; Feride,
whose hairstyles change as often as her mental diagnoses; and
Cevriye, a teacher of Turkish history who spouts propaganda.

Asya, a 19-year-old existentialist who loves Johnny Cash, is Zeliha’s
daughter and the "bastard" of the title. She forms a bond with
Armanoush, her American contemporary.

With the exception of Armanoush, most of the women are a bit
off-kilter or just plain zany.

Especially entertaining for anyone who comes from an ethnic
background is the section where Armanoush posts a "self-scoring test
(on an Internet forum) that measured the degree of one’s
‘Armenianness.’"

"The Bastard of Istanbul" is a book that titillates the senses, with
the sights, smells and sounds of Istanbul coming through vividly.

The secrets uncovered in the journey are intriguing and by the end,
deeply disturbing. The story ends unresolved, much like the political
stalemate between Turkey and Armenia. But its universal message is
undeniable (consider Darfur, for one).

Shafak knows all too well the consequences of discussing a taboo
subject like the genocide in her homeland. She was tried in the
Turkish courts, and later acquitted, of "insulting Turkishness"
because some of her fictional characters talk about it. In one
segment, she flashes back to the past and depicts graphic scenes from
the massacres.

Like the Nobel Prize-winning Turkish author Orhan Pamuk, Shafak has
become a target of rightist groups and a popular figure among the
literati of Turkey.

A professor at the University of Arizona, she curtailed her American
book tour after the murder of Hrant Dink, a prominent Turkish
newspaper editor of Armenian ancestry and a friend of hers.

In Turkey, "eventually, every writer has to face the question – are
you ready to be a public intellectual?" she told The New York Times.

Give Shafak a few more years and she’ll master the English language
while turning out even more provocative novels. No doubt she’ll
become a public intellectual here, too.

Carol Azizian is a feature writer in The Journal’s Today section.

NOTES: THE BASTARD OF ISTANBUL

By Elif Shafak

Viking, 357 pages

Applewild students know their history

Lowell Sun (Massachusetts)
April 1, 2007 Sunday

Applewild students know their history

FITCHBURG — Students in the eighth and ninth grades at Applewild
School received nine awards in the Central Massachusetts Regional
History Day competition held recently in Barre.

Of the nine award-winners, eight qualified to compete in the state
finals on March 31 at Clark University in Worcester. Six entries won
first-place medals, and the school’s students swept the senior
division group-exhibit category.

National History Day has seven categories: historical papers;
individual and group exhibits; individual and group performances; and
individual and group documentaries.

There are two divisions, junior (grades 6-8) and senior (grades
9-12).

In the regionals, Massachusetts is divided into five regions, and the
two qualifiers in each category qualify for the state competition.
The top two finishers in each category at the state contest qualify
for nationals.

Following are Applewild’s award-winners:

* Dewey Knapp, first place, individual exhibits, Junior Division; "A
Triumphant and Tragic Day in Infamy — Dec. 7, 1941."

* David Niemann, second place, individual exhibits, Junior Division;
"The Triumphs and Tragedies of the Apollo Project."

* Katie Annand and Ali Lorden, first place, group exhibits, Junior
Division; "Triangle Factory Fire."

* David Anderson and Tom Hongsmatip, first place, group documentary,
Junior Division; "The Triumph and Tragedy of D-Day."

* Susanna Bishop, first place, individual exhibits, Senior Division;
"Titanic: A Ship of Death and Dreams."

* Haley Pickford and Katie Regan, first place, group exhibits, Senior
Division; "The Triumph of the Corps of Discovery and the Tragedy of
Meriwether Lewis."

* Lilly Feinberg and Tyler McKenzie, second place, group exhibits,
Senior Division; "The Eagle Has Landed. Where Is the Hammer and
Sickle?"

* Sophia Bogdanov and Collin Pawlak, honorable mention, group
exhibits, Senior Division; "Stalin … Man or Monster?"

* Ben Luton and Amelie Touroyan, first place, group documentary,
Senior Division; "Who Remembers Today the Extermination of the
Armenians?"

`Farm’: Family tree dripping blood bears fictional fruit

The San Diego Union-Tribune
April 1, 2007 Sunday

`Farm’: Family tree dripping blood bears fictional fruit

by Tiffany Lee-Youngren, Tiffany Lee-Youngren is a freelance writer.

Skylark Farm
Antonia Arslan
Knopf, 278 pages, $23.95

Each year in early spring, just as the crocuses are pushing their way
through the sun-warmed soil in a glorious display of regeneration,
the world commemorates the ashes and dust of the 6 million Jews who
perished during the Nazis’ "Final Solution." Early spring also brings
the anniversary of a lesser-known genocide, one that predates the
Nazi purges and killed more than 1 million Armenians. But in Turkey,
where most of those murders took place, Armenian Genocide Remembrance
Holiday goes officially un-commemorated. That’s because the Turkish
government, despite more than 90 years of international scholarly
research suggesting otherwise, insists that the Armenian massacres
resulted not from genocide but from inter-ethnic strife, disease and
famine caused by the chaos of World War I. When placed in this
contemporary political context, "Skylark Farm" bears the weight of
cold, hard evidence to the contrary. Antonia Arslan’s lyrical
meditation on the bonds of her Armenian family amid incomprehensible
suffering is too real, too harrowing to be a work of imagination or
obfuscation. Her decision to cast the members of her own family as
characters in her novel was a wise one: It brings murder on a
horrific and widespread scale down to a level any reader can
understand.

The merits of Arslan’s approach are nevertheless slow to reveal
themselves. It’s human nature (ghastly as it may be) to anticipate
the moment in a story when things go wrong, and this author takes a
long time getting there. She plucks names from her family tree and
drops them into her narrative like apples into a barrel, filling the
empty spaces, yes, but also weighing her story down with countless
names and faces.

But before this litany of family remembrances becomes too wearisome,
Arslan launches into the real story, a tale of humiliation, hunger
and suffering so great that it has gone down in history as the
world’s second-most studied case of genocide. With chilling attention
to detail, Arslan recounts the fateful day in May when most of the
men in her family were slaughtered as they picnicked on their
ancestral farm, save for one tiny baby boy whom the womenfolk had
dressed in girl’s clothing. Soaked with the blood of their husbands
and fathers, the females of the family were rounded up and marched to
a far-off city in the desert, food and water denied to them, human
dignity in even scarcer supply. Their struggle to survive becomes the
crux of Arslan’s tale, family lore passed down to her from the
estranged grandfather who tried to prevent it all from happening.

Arslan’s tone is detached enough to keep her story from becoming
maudlin, and although she has crafted a work that is technically
historical fiction, her poetic descriptions and portrayal of her
family’s Christian devotion imbue "Skylark Farm" with a poignancy
redolent of a fable. Arslan has done her family — and her people —
proud with this novel, proving herself an apt and capable chronicler
of a most shameful period in human history.

A Far Country

Daniel Mason

Knopf, 272 pages, $24

Starvation and suffering also play a central role in Daniel Mason’s
wrenching account of one girl’s search for her brother amid a
landscape of poverty and depression. "A Far Country" takes place in
an unnamed Third-World country that bears a notable resemblance to
Brazil, with its thorny backcountry and slum-riddled cities (one of
them marked by a cross on a tall mountaintop).

Isabel’s brother, Isaias, has joined the exodus of people who have
migrated from her tiny village to the city in the south, where
vermin-infested apartments and grueling factory jobs seem like an
escape when the worse fate is to spend one’s life cutting sugar cane
and subsisting on cactus during times of drought. Isabel, gifted with
the talent of "seeing farther," can’t bear to live without her
brother and soon follows him to the city, only to find racism,
violence and more poverty in place of the love she seeks.

But she also discovers that the skills she learned in the Backlands
— "skills for scavengers," she calls them — provide her with the
strength and savvy she needs to survive, the means to "find uses for
useless things."

Mason ("The Piano Tuner") has a preternatural gift for prose, and his
characterization of Isabel is one of the finest in any book of
fiction to have been released in the past year. Although Isabel’s
metaphysical talent for sensing presences is more alluded to than
illustrated in any detail, Mason has created in her a true heroine, a
young girl who manages to keep her honor and purity in a place and
time when anything can be bought, sold or stolen.

"It’s not too often that I get to do something good for someone
else," says a bus driver who takes Isabel to a hospital after she
collapses from dehydration. She may have found herself in "a far
country" with little compassion and little of familiarity to ground
her, but she knows the Earth, knows which people to seek out, which
trees to climb in search of the lofty salvation she is after.

Stop genocide in Darfur

San Gabriel Valley Tribune (California)
April 1, 2007 Sunday

Stop genocide in Darfur

What are we waiting for?

As the richest country in the world, we have to stop the genocide in
Darfur, Sudan!

According to the U.N., 400,000 men, women and children have been
killed in Darfur. Millions of people have been forced from their
homes and face starvation, rape and the constant threat of violence.

I have been a world history teacher for the past eight years.

Each year, when I teach about the genocides of the 20th century, like
the Armenian Genocide of 1914, the Holocaust of World War II, the
Rape of Nanking of 1937 and Rwanda in 1994, students are always
baffled as to why didn’t anyone do anything to stop these atrocities.

I try my best in explaining that some people did try but not those in
power.

So today, in 2007, what are those in power waiting for?

The U.N. has already declared the genocide in Darfur to be the worst
humanitarian crisis in the world today.

Right now, candidates for public office are traveling the campaign
trail describing their visions for the future.

As Election Day approaches, stopping the genocide in Darfur must be
on the agenda.

I, for one, will not vote for any candidate who doesn’t use his or
her position of power to stop these inhumane massacres.

Araceli Castillo-Parrales
Baldwin Park

The Evil That Americans Did

The Chronicle of Higher Education
March 9, 2007 Friday
SECTION: THE CHRONICLE REVIEW; Pg. 9 Vol. 53 No. 27

The Evil That Americans Did

by JOHN DAVID SMITH

In 1997, Rep. Tony P. Hall, a Democrat of Ohio, proposed that the
federal government offer an official apology for slavery, a proposal
that President Bill Clinton took to heart when, on June 13, 1997, he
issued an executive order establishing the President’s Advisory Board
on Race. The following day, the president commenced what he described
as "a great and unprecedented conversation about race."

Nine months later, when visiting Africa, Clinton sparked an
international debate over what has become known as the Apology.
"Going back to the time before we were even a nation," he said while
in Uganda, "European-Americans received the fruits of the slave
trade, and we were wrong in that." Echoing the thoughts of many
moderates, the Chicago Tribune columnist Clarence Page wrote that "as
statements go," Clinton’s "was about as safe and factually accurate
as any could be. He didn’t even apologize. Not quite. But judging by
the fallout on some radio talk shows, you might think the president
not only had apologized but called for reparations." Last fall, Brown
University again sparked debate when it reported on the role its
founders had played in the slave trade, but it offered no
institutional apology and declined to recommend reparations to
descendants of slaves.

Slavery’s unequivocal evil lies at the heart of debates over
apologizing for America’s "peculiar institution" and awarding
reparations. In The Problem of Evil: Slavery, Freedom, and the
Ambiguities of American Reform (University of Massachusetts Press,
2007), a provocative collection of original essays, the editors
Steven Mintz and John Stauffer, along with 23 contributors, admonish
scholars to place moral questions in general, but especially American
slavery and its legacy, at the center of their work.

"Slavery," writes Mintz, a professor of history at the University of
Houston, "is a historical evil that the United States has never
properly acknowledged or atoned for." Nor have historians grappled
with those issues. Stanley L. Engerman, a professor of economics and
history at the University of Rochester, and David Eltis, a professor
of history at Emory University, find it noteworthy "how little
scholarly effort has been expended on explaining how and why evil has
been redefined over time, and how much academic work assumes that the
values that hold today are somehow unchanging and universal."

As Germans have learned since World War II, coming to terms with
one’s past is a wrenching and continuing process. The flood of works
on Nazi Germany and the Holocaust, according to the essay by
Catherine Clinton, currently a lecturer in history at Queens
University in Belfast, Northern Ireland, has inspired what she terms
"a booming enterprise" in the study of evil. In the past few years,
books on American reactions to 20th-century genocide, the Soviet
Union’s forced-labor camps in the gulag, and the Armenian genocide
have joined the list. Other scholars are at work on the ethnic tribal
wars in Rwanda and atrocities and war crimes in Bosnia. At Yale
University, the Cambodian Genocide Program is devoted to documenting
the murderous history of the Khmer Rouge.

Still, for all the attention paid to the subject of world and
comparative slavery (according to the essay by Joseph C. Miller, a
professor of history at the University of Virginia, 15,000 books,
articles, theses, and conference papers alone have appeared since
1991), remarkably few historians have examined the ethical and
philosophical questions that run like a leitmotif through the history
of slavery and race relations in the United States. The lacuna in the
historical literature may be because of scholars’ attempts to be
"objective," but that has meant that much of the work has undervalued
slavery’s cruelties, especially its short-term and long-term
psychological horrors.

That is not to suggest that in the wake of the Civil War, former
slaves and their abolitionist friends, and later African-American
commentators, ignored slavery’s exploitation and degradation of human
beings and its moral emptiness — what the North Carolina slave
Harriet Jacobs described as its "atmosphere of hell." In her memoir,
Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl: Written by Herself (1861),
Jacobs recorded vividly the horrors of her enslavement, the dominance
her master held over her, and her determination to be free. Rejecting
his sexual advances, she chose another white man as her lover,
remarking that "it seems less degrading to give one’s self, than to
submit to compulsion." Frederick Douglass, in his Narrative of the
Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave (1845), remembered that
slaveholders had worked systematically to destroy the slaves’ sense
of self, to diminish their humanity, to make them extensions of their
masters’ will.

No one underscored slavery as the embodiment of evil more than W.E.B.
Du Bois. In The Souls of Black Folk (1903), he wrote that
African-Americans considered enslavement "the sum of all villainies,
the cause of all sorrow, the root of all prejudice." Three decades
later, in Black Reconstruction in America, 1860-1880 (1935), Du Bois
blasted American historians for substituting propaganda for history
when writing about slavery and the Civil War and Reconstruction: "Our
histories tend to discuss American slavery so impartially, that in
the end nobody seems to have done wrong and everybody was right."

Many other Americans took a more circuitous path to confronting the
evil of slavery, according to some of the contributors to The Problem
of Evil, who chronicle the ambiguities of moral perception — how,
why, when, and if people came to view slavery as a moral evil. In his
essay, for example, Peter Hinks, an independent scholar, examines the
antislavery thought of the Yale president and theologian Timothy
Dwight. Recent scholars have denounced Dwight as a champion of
slavery and as an influential pro-slavery ideologue, but according to
Hinks he came to espouse "the fundamental unity of all humankind
through God." Hinks interprets Dwight as "an important transitional
figure," connecting early theologians who denied that the Bible
condoned or endorsed slavery and later abolitionists who demanded
immediate emancipation and repatriation of the freedmen beyond
America. Viewed through Hinks’s lens, Dwight recognized slavery as an
evil and underscored the "invidious racial distinctions" at its core.

In a similar revisionist take, David Waldstreicher, a professor of
history at Temple University, revises Benjamin Franklin’s vaunted
reputation as one of the new nation’s earliest antislavery
proponents. To be sure, shortly before his death Franklin condemned
slavery as "an atrocious debasement of human nature"; as president of
the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery, he
submitted a petition to Congress opposing slavery and the slave
trade. However, Waldstreicher convincingly argues that for much of
his adult life, Franklin benefited directly and indirectly from
slavery. He owned slaves and profited from publishing notices of
slave auctions and advertisements for escaped slaves. When, in the
1750s and 1760s, Franklin openly attacked slavery, he did so "on
economic and racism-based, not religious, grounds, subordinated to
arguments for colonial autonomy from imperial regulations."

Antebellum Roman Catholics generally championed slavery as long as
masters respected their chattels’ marriages and provided them access
to catechesis and the sacraments. Paula Kane, an associate professor
of religious studies at the University of Pittsburgh, argues that
although the Vatican in 1839 had condemned the slave trade (but not
slavery), working-class American Catholics in the mid-1800s tended to
support it because they feared competition from free blacks, and
because elite Protestants favored abolition. In her most original
interpretation, Kane maintains that American Catholics’ "recourse to
devotions and supernatural power fortified an antimodern outlook that
accepted slavery."

The abolitionist John Brown directly confronted slavery as an evil
and sought to destroy it. But while Brown’s militant abolitionism
established him as a heroic martyr among many Northerners, as Laura
L. Mitchellacting president of the Luther Institute, in
Washingtonexplains, by resorting to violence Brown disregarded both
civil and sacred authority, thereby alienating many abolitionists.
"Eventually," Mitchell concludes, "many of Brown’s pacifist
supporters did condone his methods, but in so doing, they embraced
him only as an imperfect tool of divine justice, like a plague."

Almost 150 years later, most Americans remain uncomfortable engaging
and reckoning with their slaveholding past. Most people sneer at the
mere idea of reparations, considering the notion of awarding
compensation to the descendants of American slaves somewhere between
a scam and a pipe dream. Perhaps our distance from slavery’s
barbarities desensitizes us to its evil, blinds us from seeing how it
stained and continues to soil the fabric of American democracy.

Another problem concerns comparing slavery and genocide in the world
with America’s twin evils, slavery and racism. Drawing comparisons
invariably highlights similarities and differences, but it also risks
relativizing evil and horror. How does one juxtapose American slavery
with systematic mass murder, human-rights violations, and other
horrendous evils over time and place?

The contributors to Mintz and Stauffer’s excellent collection largely
sidestep defining and comparing degrees of evil, but they
nevertheless remind us of slavery’s timelessness and the ubiquity of
moral wrongs. Focusing on evil enables us to see, if not feel, the
wicked acts that persons inflict on one anotherwhat Stauffer, a
professor of literature and African and African-American studies at
Harvard University, eloquently terms "the dark side of the American
soul."

John David Smith is a professor of history at the University of North
Carolina at Charlotte. Among his recent books is Black Judas: William
Hannibal Thomas and "The American Negro" (Ivan R. Dee, 2002).

EDM: Russia’s Fifth Frozen Conflict?

Eurasia Daily Monitor

April 2, 2007 — Volume 4, Issue 64

KOSOVO: RUSSIA’S FIFTH FROZEN CONFLICT?

by Vladimir Socor

To continue freezing the resolution of the four post-Soviet
secessionist conflicts, Russia needs a fifth frozen conflict in Kosovo and a
linkage to make resolution of one dependent on resolution of the others. At
the same time, Moscow hopes that a linkage policy could lead to
breakthroughs by means of tradeoffs, whereby Russia could sacrifice its
clients in one conflict for a free hand in settling another on its own
terms.

On a parallel agenda, Russia hopes to retain and expand a foothold of
strategic influence in the Balkans by resuscitating Greater-Serbian
nationalism in Belgrade over Kosovo. Moscow hopes to close off Serbia’s
prospects of partnership and association with the European Union, drawing
that country toward closer reliance on Russia.

The international negotiations on the status of Kosovo are now moving
into the endgame phase, with the EU and NATO on the cusp of a solution that
could guarantee stability and Europeanization in Kosovo and the Western
Balkans. At this juncture, Russia’s top priority is simply to stall the
negotiating process, without prejudging its ultimate outcome, and not ruling
out any type of solution on Kosovo’s status.

On March 28, Russian President Vladimir Putin told U.S. President
George W. Bush by telephone that any solution on Kosovo’s status must be
accepted by Belgrade as well as Pristina and approved by the UN Security
Council (UNSC) (Interfax, March 28). In practice, this means awarding Serbia
a veto regarding the further course of negotiations (or indeed their
continuation as such) and holding any solution hostage to Russian approval
in the UNSC. To all intents and purposes, Moscow is delegating its veto
power to Belgrade in the UN-mediated negotiations while threatening to
exercise its own veto in the UNSC on Serbia’s behalf.

To string out the process, Moscow has joined Belgrade in rejecting UN
Mediator Martti Ahtisaari’s report on Kosovo’s status. The document
recommends a status very close to independence with international
recognition, time-limited international supervision, and clear prospects for
full-fledged independence and close relations with the EU. For its part,
Russia calls for the start of new negotiations under another UN mediator.

The United States and European Union have endorsed the Ahtisaari plan,
as has UN Secretary-General Ba Ki Moon. Western support enabled Ahtisaari to
up the ante against Moscow on March 26, announcing, `The potential for
negotiations has been exhausted,’ and using for the first time the word
`independence’ to define Kosovo’s status under his Western-approved plan
(Ahtisaari’s initial report had stopped short of using the word
`independence,’ but was rejected by Russia regardless) (Interfax, March 26,
27).

Moscow certainly calculates that blocking the process might trigger
potentially violent protests by some Albanian groups against UN and EU
authorities in Kosovo and possibly also riots targeting minority Serbs,
which may require locally stationed NATO troops to intervene for maintaining
order. Any such turbulence would then enable Russia to argue — and win some
support from certain wavering European governments for this argument — that
Kosovo does not meet the standards for recognition of its independence and
that the process must again be postponed. This, too, could become a
prescription for freezing the Kosovo conflict resolution — or perhaps a
prelude for Moscow to seek equivalent compensation for thawing the Kosovo
freeze.

The EU is well advanced in its preparations to take over from the UN
the exercise of international authority in Kosovo, with NATO retaining
responsibility for security. The Ahtisaari report as well as EU planning
envisage a 120-day transition from UN protectorate to independent state
under EU supervision, then two or three years of `supervised independence’
post-recognition, with the EU mentoring Kosovo’s institutions of governance.
Anticipating the risks of unrest in the event that Russia and Serbia force a
postponement of the solution, the EU is prepared to enlarge its
responsibility for policing and the judiciary in Kosovo.

Under an internal report just circulated under the imprint of High
Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy Javier Solana and
Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn, the EU is about to embark on its
largest-ever civilian crisis-management mission, with up to 1,500 personnel
for at least two years in Kosovo. Meanwhile, NATO will continue providing
the hard security in Kosovo, with troops mostly from European member
countries of the alliance as well as the U.S. base in Kosovo at Camp
Bondsteel. NATO takes the position that its Kosovo presence is an open-ended
one.

For its part, Russia threatens to veto any kind of solution on Kosovo’
s status at this time. Instead, it aims for stalemate and lumping settlement
in Kosovo with settlement of the post-Soviet conflicts. Such linkage would
enable Moscow to use one negotiating process to obstruct or manipulate the
other negotiating processes, either prolonging all of them indefinitely or
offering concessions in one theater to obtain satisfaction in other
theaters.

The United States and the European Union reject any such linkage as
baseless. Russia, however, seeks to convert several EU and NATO member
countries to the linkage thesis by exploiting variously their fears or
ambitions. Discomfiting its post-Soviet secessionist clients, Moscow tilts
clearly ar this stage toward a Kosovo settlement ostensibly based on the
principle of territorial integrity of states, "under international law."
Moscow’s top priority now is to win over Serbia as a strategic ally while
consolidating Russia’s gains already achieved in the post-Soviet conflicts
through military conquest and ethnic cleansing within other states’
territories against international law.

–Vladimir Socor

Kurdish leader warns Turkey not to intervene in Kirkuk

Kurdish leader warns Turkey not to intervene in Kirkuk

The Associated Press
Published: April 7, 2007

BAGHDAD: Turkey must not interfere in the Kurds’ bid to attach Iraq’s
oil-rich city of Kirkuk to the Kurdish semiautonomous zone, the top
official in Iraqi Kurdistan said in remarks broadcast Saturday.

Otherwise, Kurdish leader Massoud Barzani said, Iraq’s Kurds will
retaliate by intervening in Turkey’s predominantly Kurdish southeast,
where insurgents have battled for decades to establish their own
autonomy.

Barzani, president of the 15-year-old Kurdish autonomous region in
northern Iraq, issued the warning after last week’s endorsement by the
Iraqi government of a decision to relocate and compensate thousands of
Arabs who moved to the city as part of Saddam Hussein’s campaign to
push out the Kurds.

The government’s decision was a major step toward implementing a
constitutional requirement to determine the status of the disputed
city by the end of the year. The plan will likely turn Kirkuk and its
vast oil reserves over to Kurdish control, a step rejected by many of
Iraq’s Arabs and Turkmen ‘ ethnic Turk who are strongly backed by
Turkey.

"We will not let the Turks intervene in Kirkuk," Barzani said in an
interview with Al-Arabiyah television. "Kirkuk is an Iraqi city with a
Kurdish identity, historically and geographically. All the facts prove
that Kirkuk is part of Kurdistan."

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Some in Turkey have hinted at military action to prevent the Kurds
from gaining control of Kirkuk.

Turkish leaders are concerned that Iraq’s Kurds want Kirkuk’s oil
revenues to fund a bid for outright independence, not just
autonomy. The Turks fear that would encourage separatist Kurdish
guerrillas in Turkey, who have been fighting for autonomy since
1984. The conflict has claimed the lives of 37,000 people.

"Turkey is not allowed to intervene in the Kirkuk issue and if it
does, we will interfere in Diyarbakir’s issues and other cities in
Turkey," Barzani said. Diyarbakir is the largest city in Turkey’s
Kurdish-dominated southeast.

Asked if he meant to threaten Turkey, Barzani responded that he was
telling Ankara what would happen "if Turkey interferes." He said
Turkey had military and diplomatic clout, but that the Kurds had
survived through the Saddam Hussein regime and that what happened in
Kirkuk was "none of their (Ankara’s) business."

When asked about the Turkmen minority in Kirkuk and Turkey’s concern
for its ethnic brethren, Barzani shot back:

"There are 30 million Kurds in Turkey and we don’t interfere there. If
they (the Turks) interfere in Kirkuk over just thousands of Turkmen
then we will take action for the 30 million Kurds in Turkey."

"I hope we don’t reach this point, but if the Turks insist on
intervening in Kirkuk matter I am ready to take responsible for our
response," Barzani said.

The ancient city of Kirkuk has a large minority of Turkmen as well as
Christians, Shiite and Sunni Arabs, Armenians and Assyrians. Turkmen
were a majority in the city during the Ottoman Empire.

Barzani said the independence and statehood for Kurds, who live in
Turkey, Iran, Syria and Iraq was a "legitimate and legal right."

"But I am against the use of violence to reach this goal," he
continued.

Istanbul Armenians to celebrate Holy Easter under police control

Armenians of Istanbul to celebrate Holy Easter under the control of
policemen

07.04.2007 14:46
Marlena Hovsepyan
"Radiolur"

`The Armenian community of Constantinople is closely connected with
its Church,’ writer and famous intellectual Rober Hatechian told
`Radiolur’ correspondent. At this point there are more than 30
operating Armenian Churches in Istanbul. On religious holidays these
are crowded with pious people and, of course, if there are clergymen.

The Holy Easter is usually celebrated in at least 20 Armenian
Churches, since, according to Mr. Hatechian, the number of clergymen
is small. `During the recent years the Armenian Patriarch has started
inviting clergymen from Europe, Anthelias and Armenia, who come to
participate in religious ceremonies,’ he said.

The Armenians of Istanbul celebrate Easter with great
luxury. According to tradition, in the second half of the day the
Armenian Patriarch organizes a reception in the hall of the
Patriarchate.

However, this year the Armenian community has certain concerns before
the holiday. After the assassination of Hrant Dink and the threats to
the Armenian Patriarch of Istanbul, Armenians have decided to
undertake strict security measures round public establishments and
churches.

‘Unfortunately, today we are not surprised to see at least 15-20
policemen next to our churches, who are working to prevent
interference.

Certainly, enetering the church under the guidance of Turkish
policemen is not that pleasant for Aremenians of Istanbul, but they
hope that next year they will not be in the centre of attention of
nationalists,’ Mr. Hatechian says.

Kerkorian ready for gamble: Casino mogul takes shot at Chrysler

Kerkorian ready for another gamble: Casino mogul takes shot at Chrysler
John Gallagher, Detroit Free Press – Michigan – KRTBN
Published: Apr 06, 2007

Kirk Kerkorian, part shark and part savior, is back.

Kerkorian’s 17-year duel with Detroit entered yet another stage
Thursday with the billionaire investor’s offer to buy Chrysler Group.

The offer could set up his third major encounter with Detroit
automakers.

The son of Armenian immigrants who ran a produce business in Fresno,
Calif., Kerkorian quit school as a teenager to go to work. He flew
military planes during World War II and after the war ran a small
air-charter service to ferry gamblers between Los Angeles and Las
Vegas.

Kerkorian paid $60,000 for the charter service in 1947 when he was
30. In 1968, he sold it to Trans-america Corp. for a little more than
$100 million. It was his first fortune, and a banker friend, Walter
Sharp, said much later that the transaction transformed Kerkorian.

"Kirk realized then that everything was in the timing," Sharp said in
1995. "He became fascinated with the idea of making deals."

With the proceeds of his airline sale, Kerkorian acquired the Flamingo
Hotel in Las Vegas in 1969. It was the first of several casino-hotels
he would buy, sell or build in the decades since.

For 20 years, his Tracinda Corp. has been the controlling shareholder
of what is now MGM Mirage, owner of the MGM Grand Detroit Casino and a
gaming company with a market value of almost $21 billion.

It was a meeting with former Chrysler Corp. boss Lee Iacocca that
sparked Kerkorian’s interest in Detroit. Meeting the then-automotive
executive at a Florida racetrack, Kerkorian agreed in 1990 to invest
in Chrysler.

Five years later, his stance as a passive investor gave way to a
takeover bid when the company didn’t perform as he’d hoped.

At the height of the controversy, Kerkorian was demanding three seats
on the board of directors, a prohibition on issuing new stock that
would dilute shareholders’ voting rights, and the right to buy more
Chrysler stock without penalty.

That bid ended when Kerkorian couldn’t stitch together a workable
deal.

Later, he was an early and avid supporter of the deal that saw
Daimler-Benz AG merge with Chrysler in 1998.

But pleasure turned to anger once again when Kerkorian came to believe
that the merger was really an ill-disguised takeover that devalued his
shares. He sued DaimlerChrysler AG in a bitter and protracted battle
that he ultimately lost.

He did make $2.7 billion on his stock.

Beginning in spring 2005, about the same time he lost his Chrysler
lawsuit, Kerkorian began buying shares of General Motors Corp. stock
and increasingly trying to exert his influence over the company. He
began to push GM management to make bigger changes, and in February
2006 got his aide, former Chrysler finance officer Jerome York,
elected to GM’s board of directors.

In his boldest move, Kerkorian pushed GM last July into considering a
three-way global alliance with Nissan Motor Co. and Renault SA. But
exploratory talks ended in October, with GM saying an alliance would
have provided more benefits for Renault-Nissan than for GM.

Disappointed, Kerkorian began to sell his GM shares. York resigned
from the GM board.

Although he sold his GM shares at a slight loss, when dividends were
included, Kerkorian apparently made a profit of about $112 million
before taxes and expenses on his $1.7-billion investment in GM.

By Nov. 30, Kerkorian had sold all his GM shares, and Detroiters
thought they might have seen their last of him.

Now’s he back.

Contact JOHN GALLAGHER at 313-222-5173 or [email protected]_
(mailto:gallagher@freepr ess.com) .

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress