BAGHDAD: Minorities in Iraq want rights enshrined in new constitutio

Minorities in Iraq want rights enshrined in new constitution

KurdishMedia, UK
April 21 2005

21/04/2005 IrinNews

BAGHDAD, 20 Apr 2005 (IRIN) – Iraqi NGOs, representing minority ethnic
groups in the country, held a two-day conference in the capital
Baghdad this week to ensure that their rights are enshrined in the
new constitution being drafted by the transitional government.

“Through this conference, we have tried to highlight the fact that
Iraqi minorities have the right to be involved in the preparation
and writing of the new constitution to ensure our rights are the same
as other groups such as the Muslims and Christians,” director of the
Iraqi Commission for Civil Society Enterprises (CCSE), Basel al-Azawi,
told IRIN in Baghdad.

The event, organised by the CCSE, came to an end on Tuesday. It
resulted in the formation of a committee which will liaise with the
new government to ensure that minority rights are genuinely protected
under the new constitution.

“Promises of participating in the new government were given from
the bigger parties like the Shi’ite Iraqi Alliance, but nothing has
been done so far and we are afraid that we will lose our rights when
they write the constitution,” a member of the Mandaean Democracy
Congregation (MDC), working to protect the rights of the Mandaean
community, Sameea Dawood Salman, told IRIN.

Iraq consists of a number of ethnic and religious groups. According
to the US State Department, 97 percent of a population of 22 million
people are Muslim.

Shi’ite Muslims, predominantly Arab, although some come from Turkomen,
Kurdish and other ethnic origins, constitute 60 percent of the
population. Sunni Muslims make up 37 percent and the remainder are
Christians, comprised of Assyrians, Chaldeans, Roman Catholics and
Armenians.

There are also a small number of Jews, Mandaeans, who follow the
teachings of John the Baptist and Yazidis, who follow a mixture of
religions. It is these smaller groups, particularly the latter two
and the Assyrians, which are voicing their concerns.

The Yazidis live near the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, with smaller
communities in Syria, Turkey, Iran, Georgia and Armenia, and are
estimated to number 500,000. The Mandaeans are smaller in number at
some 100,000 and live mainly in southern Iraq, according to members
of both groups.

Under the former Iraqi leader, Saddam Hussein, who ruthlessly promoted
his Sunni brethren, a campaign of persecution against religious
leaders and followers of the majority Shi’ites was carried out, as
well as no acknowledgement of Assyrian, Chaldean and Yazidi groups,
according to human rights observers.

In addition, the minority groups were not allowed to participate in
elections with their own independent parties.

Following the fall of Saddam’s regime in 2003 and the 30 January
election, minority religious groups want to make sure that there will
be no more discrimination against them.

“The people from minorities who have been neglected after the [30
January] elections are some of the oldest residents in Iraq,” Santa
Mikhail, a member of the Assyrian Women’s Union (AWU), told IRIN.

“We want to have a clear vision through the media and through the
people who believe in our rights as Iraqi citizens and [we want] civil
society foundations that care about minority rights,” al-Azawi added.

Some 12 local NGOs, and many university professors and researchers
participated in the event. “We are part of Iraqi society, we had
original roots and civilisations on this land, but we are afraid that
the winners in the parliament will forget or ignore us,” director
of the Iraqi centre for interlocutions and religion NGO, Khezhal
al-Khalidy, told IRIN.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Cardiff: Armenians mark genocide

Armenians mark genocide

ic Wales, UK
April 21 2005

AN EVENT to commemorate the Armenian Genocide’s 90th anniversary was
held in Cardiff last night.

Members of Cardiff’s Armenian community attended with representatives
from every Christian denomination at the Temple of Peace.

The event marked 90 years since 1.5 million Armenians were killed by
Ottoman Turkey. On Saturday an Armenian music group will perform at
Cardiff’s Reardon Smith Lecture Hall and on Sunday prayers will be
said in churches throughout Wales in memory of the victims.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

L’Association Internationale Des Chercheurs Sur Les Genocides Refute

FEDERATION EURO-ARMENIENNE
pour la Justice et la Démocratie
Avenue de la Renaissance 10
B-1000 Bruxelles
Tel: +32 2 732 70 26
Tel/Fax: +32 2 732 70 27
Email : [email protected]

COMMUNIQUE DE PRESSE
pour diffusion immédiate
21 avril 2005
Contact :Talline Tachdjian
Tel/Fax :+32 2 732 70 27

L’ASSOCIATION INTERNATIONALE DES CHERCHEURS SUR LES GENOCIDES REFUTE LA
NECESSITE D’UNE COMMISSION D’HISTORIENS SUR LE GENOCIDE DES ARMENIENS

L’association a envoyé une lettre ouverte en ce sens au Premier ministre turc
– soulignant l’importance et l’impartialité des preuves déjà accumulées
– réaffirmant l’applicabilité de la Convention de 1948 au Génocide des Arméniens
– condamnant les tentatives de négation comme propagande visant à absoudre les coupables

L’association internationale des chercheurs sur les génocides (AICG) a
envoyé une lettre ouverte au Premier ministre turc, M. Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
le 6 avril dernier, suite à l’annonce faite par le gouvernement turc de
vouloir créer une « commission d’historiens » sur le Génocide des Arméniens.

Cette lettre, cosignée par le président et le vice-président de cette
prestigieuse association, MM. Robert Melson et Israël Charny, ainsi que par
M. Peter Balakian, l’auteur du récent best-seller « le Tigre en flamme », se
présente comme une réponse à l’appel lancé par M. Erdogan en faveur « d’
études impartiales par des historiens » sur le Génocide des Arméniens.

Dans ce courrier, l’association, qui regroupe la majorité des chercheurs
américains et européens sur les questions de génocide souligne que « ce ne
sont pas que les Arméniens qui affirment le Génocide des Arméniens mais des
centaines de chercheurs indépendants, libres de toute affiliation
gouvernementale ». Elle rappelle également « les nombreux travaux
académiques sur le Génocide des Arméniens ».

Citant les principales preuves et les principaux travaux concernant ce
génocide, et notamment les travaux de Raphaël Lemkin et les déclarations d’
Elie Wiesel et de Yehuda Bauer, les signataires insistent sur le fait que
« l’extermination des Arméniens constitue un génocide tel que défini par la
Convention de 1948 des Nations Unies sur la Prévention et la Répression du
Crime de Génocide ».

Reconnaissant qu’on peut admettre différentes interprétations sur le «
comment et le pourquoi » du Génocide des Arméniens, le courrier stipule
néanmoins que « nier sa réalité factuelle et morale n’est pas une démarche
académique mais une propagande visant à absoudre les exécuteurs, condamner
les victimes et effacer le sens éthique de cette histoire ».
Le courrier conclut qu’il est « clairement dans l’intérêt du peuple turc et
de son futur de reconnaître la responsabilité des gouvernements précédents
dans le génocide du peuple arménien, comme le peuple et le gouvernement
allemands l’ont fait pour l’Holocauste ».

La lettre ouverte intégrale est disponible sur le site de la Fédération
Euro-Arménienne
« Cette lettre ouverte, émanant de hautes autorités morales et
scientifiques, recadre clairement le débat, la réalité du Génocide des
Arméniens n’est plus à remettre en question et toute initiative en ce sens
est inutile sinon malsaine » a déclaré Hilda Tchoboian, présidente de la
Fédération Euro-Arménienne.

« Le problème relève maintenant exclusivement du champ politique et non plus
du champ des études historiques et c’est d’abord le problème de la Turquie
qui doit regarder en face son histoire. C’est aussi le problème de l’Union
européenne qui ne saurait admettre en son sein un Etat incapable d’une telle
introspection. » a conclu Hilda Tchoboian.

####

–Boundary_(ID_Adyl+xxCGHf6jxZqVb1RUA)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.eafjd.org

Walesa says Turkey should admit to genocide to join EU

Walesa says Turkey should admit to genocide to join

Agence France Presse
April 21 2005

Polish Nobel laureate and former president Lech Walesa on Thursday
said Armenians had the right to demand that the European Union bar
Turkey from joining the bloc until it admits to committing genocide
against Armenians during World War I.

“It is a just claim of the Armenians that Turkey’s entrance into the
European Union should come after admitting genocide,” the former trade
union leader credited with helping trigger the fall of communism in
Eastern Europe said.

Armenia marks on Sunday the 90th anniversary of mass killings in
Ottoman Turkey which Armenia and many other countries consider to
have been genocide but which Turkey denies ever took place.

Walesa’s comments come at a key time for Turkey as it prepares to
launch membership negotiations with the European Union in October.
Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen perished in
orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire,
the predecessor of modern Turkey, was falling apart.

“The slaughter in Turkey was the first genocide of the 20th century,”
Walesa said.

Ankara counters that 300,000 Armenians and thousands of Turks were
killed in “civil strife” during World War I when the Armenians rose
against their Ottoman rulers and sided with invading Russian troops.
The Armenian claims have been damaging to Turkey’s EU bid as it now
faces growing pressure from within the bloc to address the genocide
allegations in what Ankara sees as a politically motivated campaign
to damage its reputation ahead of talks.

On Tuesday Poland joined a list of 15 countries that have officially
acknowledged the killings as genocide when its parliament passed a
resolution condemning the Armenian massacres.

The decision has already drawn protest form Ankara where officials
called it “irresponsible,” and said it would hurt relations.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian Church Delegation to Depart for Inauguration of Pope

PRESS RELEASE
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Information Services
Address: Vagharshapat, Republic of Armenia
Contact: Rev. Fr. Ktrij Devejian
Tel: (374 1) 517 163
Fax: (374 1) 517 301
E-Mail: [email protected]
April 21, 2005

Armenian Church Delegation to Depart for Inauguration of Pope

On April 23, a high-ranking delegation of the Armenian Church
representing the Catholicosate of All Armenians will depart for Vatican
City to participate in the inauguration festivities of His Holiness
Pope Benedict XVI, scheduled to take place on Sunday, April 24.

The delegation will consist of His Beatitude Archbishop Mesrob
Mutafian, Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople; His Eminence
Archbishop Nerses Bozabalian from the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin;
and Rev. Fr. Drtad Ouzounian, Staff-Bearer for the Patriarch.

##

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

International community against genocide

International community against genocide

A1plus

| 13:21:45 | 21-04-2005 | Politics |

April 20 the UN Commission on Human Rights unanimously passed
Armenia’s resolution to the Convention on Genocide Prevention and
Condemnation. Though the Convention was adopted in 1984 the mankind
has not been freed from the evil yet. Thus, the resolution submitted
by Armenia is directed to unification of efforts of the international
community and development of mechanisms of genocide prevention.

Last year the UN Secretary General appointed Argentinean human rights
advocate Juan Mendes the Special Adviser on Genocide Prevention. To
date the Commission stresses the necessity of propaganda of genocide
prevention in accord with the Convention principles and notes that
the impunity threats with the repetition of the crime.

The main objective of the resolution is the genocide prevention as
a key instrument for regional and international peace and stability
as well as establishment of friendly relations between states.

To note, 52 countries, including the EU states are the co-authors of
the resolution.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Karabakh problem cannot be solved without Karabakh partifipation

Karabakh problem cannot be solved without Karabakh partifipation

Pan Armenian News
21.04.2005 04:38

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ «I have always stated that the Karabakh problem
cannot be solved without the participation of Nagorno Karabakh,»
President of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic Arkady Ghukasian stated
at a briefing today. «My stand is: if Azerbaijan comes against
NK participation in the conflict settlement, it means Baku is not
interested in solving it,» he added. Speaking of compromises,
Mr. Ghukasian noted one should not confuse concessions with mutual
concessions. Mutual concessions provide for compromises by Armenia,
Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan. However, as Azerbaijan is not going
to make concessions, speaking of compromises is meaningless. «I
do not think Azerbaijan has nothing to yield. It is necessary to
persuade it that it has something to yield and it has to resort to
that step. Baku considers that the international community should
present Nagorno Karabakh to it on a platter. It is not frivolous,»
the NKR President accentuated. In his words, the security of Nagorno
Karabakh is first of all the determination of its status. The question
of security cannot be solved without the solution of the issue of the
status. «We have stated many times we come for the package option
of settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. All issues should
be solved simultaneously,» he said. «Today Azerbaijan speaks of
restoration of the status quo of 1988, however it is senseless,
as the USSR does not exist any more,» Arkady Ghukasian summed up.

–Boundary_(ID_iOpBtR5gbTj7TU+imzIi3w)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Independent, democratic and strong Armenian and NKR….

Independent, democratic and strong Armenian and NKR….

Pan Armenian News
21.04.2005 04:02

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ “The brutal murder by an Azeri serviceman of his
Armenian colleague in Budapest that shook the whole of the civilized
world, was just the result of the Baku criminal policy,” Nagorno
Karabakh Republic President Arkady Ghukasian stated when addressing
Ultimate Crime, Ultimate Challenge: Human Rights and Genocide
international conference. The statement of the NKR President notes,
“The response to this outrageous crime of the Azeri society, which
took the murderer as a national hero, demonstrated the grievous fruits
of the Armenian-hatred policy of the Baku authorities. That is why
until people directly responsible for organizing mass slaughter of
ethnic Armenians in their republic as well as in Nagorno Karabakh
hold power in Azerbaijan, it will be difficult to believe that a
mutually acceptable and civilized settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict, subsequent peaceful coexistence and mutually favorable
cooperation of our peoples and states are possible. Where is the
way out? Which lesson we have learned from the tragic events taken
place 90 years ago and the relatively near past? How can we resist to
criminal intentions of our neighbors in the future and not admit the
repetition of the past? Unfortunately the contemporary practice of
international relations has not worked out efficient mechanisms for
preventing or at least operative suppression of mass annihilation
of people based on the national, racial or religious criteria. The
national liberation movement of the people of Artsakh has illustrated
that the most efficient way to counteract genocide threats is not
endlessly appealing to international institutions and expecting
their intervention, but the self-organization of the society, ready
to armed resistance to defend the right to live on the earth granted
to him by God. The highest form of self-organization of the Artsakh
people was the Karabakh statehood, which succeeded in fulfilling
the vital task of neutralization of external military threats to the
security of the Nagorno Karabakh people with the assistance of the
Armenians of the world. Independent, democratic and strong Armenia,
the independent, democratic and strong Nagorno Karabakh Republic –
these are the guarantors of the security of our nation.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russia welcomes UN resolution on hostage taking

Russia welcomes UN resolution on hostage taking
By Tamara Frolkina

ITAR-TASS News Agency
April 20, 2005 Wednesday 1:59 PM Eastern Time

MOSCOW, April 20 — The Russian Foreign Ministry said the resolution
on hostage taking approved by the U.N. Commission on Human Rights will
“facilitate international efforts for the eradication of terrorism”.

“The adoption of this resolution sends a clear signal to terrorists
and condemns hostage taking” because “this type of terrorist acts
targets innocent people,” the ministry said on Wednesday.

The resolution “condemns hostage taking in the strongest possible terms
and points to the inadmissibility of using human rights rhetoric in
order to justify this phenomenon”.

“The memory of last year’s events in Beslan is still fresh. Those
tragic events clearly showed that terrorists recognise no moral or
ethical principles,” the ministry said.

Initiated by Russia, the resolution has 14 co-authors, including
Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, and Ukraine.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Glendale: College board shifts positions

College board shifts positions

Glendale News Press
April 19 2005

Gabrielian is named president, and new vice president says replacing Najarian, Davitt will be tough.
By Rima Shah, News-Press and Leader

GLENDALE — There were no surprises at Glendale Community College’s
reorganization of the board Monday night when Anita Gabrielian was
unanimously appointed president.

Gabrielian, SBC’s executive director of external affairs, public
policy and community affairs, was the third-highest vote-getter in
the April 5 municipal election.

She replaces Victor King, the outgoing president who was also reelected
to the board.

Board Clerk Kathleen Burke-Kelly was appointed as vice president
and Armine Hacopian, reelected to the board with the most votes,
was named the new clerk.

“The challenges that lie ahead for the board are replacing [Ara]
Najarian and [John] Davitt,” Burke-Kelley said. “I am happy to be in
a position to be able to do that.”

Gabrielian has many challenges ahead as president, Hacopian said.

“The biggest challenge is to appoint a consulting team and to interview
for the post of the superintendent,” Hacopian said.

The consulting team will help conduct a nationwide search and
interviews to replace Davitt, the superintendent president who will
retire in 2006.

The new board must also select a replacement for Najarian, who won
a seat on the City Council in the April 5 election.

“We will be conducting interviews within the next 60 days,” Hacopian
said. “We have a choice of having an election, but we probably are
going to appoint someone.”

Academically, Hacopian said she hopes the board will look into ways
to increase the transfer rate to four-year colleges.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress