Cypriot Armenians demonstrate

Cyprus News Agency
Jan 29 2007

Cypriot Armenians demonstrate

Armenian organisations in Cyprus staged a demonstration on Sunday at
the Armenian Nareg church in Nicosia to deplore the assassination of
Turkish journalist of Armenian origin Hrant Dink in Turkey.
Armenian Archbishop Varoujian said Hrant Dink was the most recent
martyr of the Armenian genocide, adding that “many Hrants will
follow but the guilt will continue to rest with Turkey until it
decides to wash it off with its own hands.“

Brief Summary of Violations and Obstacles Against the Heritage Party

PRESS RELEASE
The Heritage Party
7 Vazgen Sargsian Street
Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (+374 – 10) 27.00.03, 27.16.00 (temporary)
Fax: (+374 – 10) 52.48.46 (temporary)
Email: [email protected]; [email protected]
Website:

January 29, 2007

Brief Summary of Violations and Obstacles Against the Heritage Party in 2005
and 2006

Yerevan–Since the Heritage Party redefined its engagement in Armenia’s
civic life and political arena in the fall of 2005, the incumbent regime has
carried out campaigns of repression against party members in general and its
founder Raffi K. Hovannisian in particular.

In the lead-up to the constitutional referendum held on November 27, 2005,
the Heritage Party–which had prepared its own draft of constitutional
changes in May and opposed the version that was introduced by the ruling
powers–convened from November 25 to 27 a series of open public meetings at
Yerevan’s Liberty Square. The meetings were joined and endorsed by several
broad-based citizens’ groups and assemblies. To sabotage these efforts, the
administration imposed a variety of measures to block to their free and just
expression. Electronic media were ordered not to cover the event, and vans
and cars carrying participants from the country’s outlying regions were
stopped and turned away en route by the police. During the day, the local
authorities were commanded to organize concerts and other conflicting
activities at the same location. At night, they prevented participants from
accessing heating sources of any kind. On November 27 and 28, Heritage led
the opposition alliance in establishing at the Armenia Marriott Hotel an
unprecedented alternative information center regarding the referendum. Every
three hours, the center disseminated data on the latest election violations
and commissions of fraud, which were documented in polling stations across
the Republic.

Thereafter, on November 30, 2005, Raffi Hovannisian was detained at Yerevan’s
international airport for detailed questioning and inspection before heading
for Kiev, where he would attend the International Public Forum of the
Community for Democratic Choice. Awaited and confronted at the airport by
national security (formerly KGB) agents, Hovannisian was interrogated about
the purpose of his trip, the Armenian constitution, and other matters
unrelated to airport security. Hovannisian’s personal effects and papers
were individually examined on the pretext of a search for possible "state
secrets." Since that day, Hovannisian receives the same "special treatment"
upon each Yerevan departure.

The spiral of repression took a turn for the worse right after the massive
demonstration held on December 9, 2005, as Raffi Hovannisian read out the
"Citizens’ Demand for A Public Accounting"–a list of 21 questions addressed
to acting president R. Kocharian. In the days that followed, more than 3,000
citizens, including 72 intellectuals, joined this first-ever call for a
national audit of conduct of Armenia’s governors and governance system.

Since then, a black list wholly forbids Heritage and its founder from access
to all television media, which are all controlled and supervised by the
authorities. No television cameras or reporters are allowed to cover
Heritage’s news conferences, and all television companies–both state-run
and private–refuse to provide either free or paid airtime to Raffi
Hovannisian. Even the Press Club Plus program–which receives subsidies from
the Open Society Institute and is broadcast by the Yerevan Press Club on the
Yerkir Media television channel–invited Hovannisian and two other Heritage
members to appear in studio in the summer of 2006. In characteristic
application of the blacklist, just a few days before the program was to be
televised, the creators rescinded the invitation under the pretext of
technical difficulties. As even private advertising companies refuse
Heritage’s requests to place billboard advertisements, the official media
blockade is virtually total.

The mainstay of these repressions was achieved on March 4, 2006, when the
authorities instructed the Paronian State Theater to breach the law in the
form of the lease it had signed with Raffi Hovannisian (which was in effect
until 2007) and without judicial sanction to fasten an illegal lock on the
party’s central headquarters. To this day, Hovannisian continues to be
deprived of his property rights, and the party’s normal operations have been
paralyzed with the executive board and staff members being denied access to
their office space, necessary documents, and the party seal. Heritage’s
subsequent attempts to restore its rights by meticulous recourse and appeal
to law enforcement and the judicial system–the police, the prosecutor’s
office, and the courts–were met at all levels with unlawful rejections
issued by those "tribunes of justice" at the behest of the highest echelons
of power.

Moreover, in the late hours of March 8, exactly four days after party
headquarters had been forcibly shut down without a legal warrant,
unidentified individuals entered in clandestine fashion the already-locked
and sealed premises and, after circumventing the main computer’s password,
gained illegal entry into the party’s database which contains
constitutionally-protected information regarding the party, its membership
rolls, and its activities. After having examined the computer, experts from
the National Bureau of Investigation confirmed in their report to the police
department that the computer had been put in operational mode for 22-24
minutes, hooked up to an external monitor, and connected to a USB-type
memory-bearing flashcard of an unknown brand. The results of the
investigation demanded, therefore, that a criminal case be launched. In a
flagrant disregard of law and justice, however, the police department and
the prosecutor’s office refused to authorize such a probe, making dubious
references to the absence of corpus delicti. In effect, this
Watergate-inspired scandal in Armenia was neither investigated nor exposed.
The authors and beneficiaries of that inaction were the authorities and
their security apparatus which, having forced their way to the information
stored in the computer, then fine-tuned their fear-mongering political
persecution of Heritage’s regional office managers and rank-and-file members
alike. This methodology of threat and intimidation continues to this day.

Meanwhile, the president’s office piloted a negative media campaign–by
means of newspapers and television–against Raffi Hovannisian. The start of
this project of slander was announced by the presidential spokesperson who,
on December 12, 2005, declared that Hovannisian’s "Citizens’ Demand for A
Public Accounting"–which was joined by 3,000 citizens–"might be a secret
code written by a professional spy." In the months to follow, this
self-serving, hypocritical theme and corollary deflective tactic were
parroted by Hayots Ashkharh, Golos Armenii, Iravunk, and 168 Zham
newspapers. What is more, even the benevolent activities of Armenouhi
Hovannisian, Raffi Hovannisian’s wife, were not spared this ruthless
defamation. The media shamelessly accused Mrs. Hovannisian of diverting
funds provided by international organizations and donations made by Armenian
benefactors to her husband’s political agenda.

As the surveillance and smears got worse, Raffi Hovannisian sent a formal
letter of regret, dated April 21, 2006, to the head of the National Security
Service, General Gorik Hakobian. "I am saddened by the fact that limited
state resources are being wasted on individual manhunts which have no
connection whatsoever with national security," he noted.

Over the past months, Raffi Hovannisian and the Heritage Party have, under
varying pretexts, been deprived by national and municipal authorities of
renting both public and private halls for the exercise of their
constitutional right of peaceful assembly in Giumri, Vanadzor, Armavir,
Etchmiadzin, Yegheknadzor, Sisian, Kapan, and elsewhere. In Yerevan, the
authorities have denied Heritage’s request to rent the halls of the
Government Conference Facility, the Union of Architects, the Demirjian
Sports and Cultural Complex, the American University of Armenia, the
National Academy of Sciences, the Sundukian and Moscow Theaters, and so on.
Other political organizations have freely used, and even broadcasted from,
the very premises in question. All written applications by the party with
respect to renting meeting space have either received outlandish responses
or no answers at all from the persons in charge of the petitioned
institutions. The foregoing continues to reflect, among other things, a
long-standing policy to forbid, cancel, or otherwise prevent any meeting
between Raffi Hovannisian, the nation’s first foreign minister, and students
and faculty at Yerevan State University, Yerevan Engineering University,
Yerevan Agricultural Institute, Yerevan Institute of Economics, and other
academic establishments.

In addition, most of Heritage’s logos and office signs have been removed
from its regional offices. The same goes for small posters and flyers that
have sought to inform people about the dates and places of scheduled public
gatherings with Raffi Hovannisian and the Heritage Party.

Even internal party happenings are permanently monitored and obstructed. On
May 20, 2006, for instance, Raffi Hovannisian and a delegation of party
officials paid a visit to the village of Miasnikian in the Armavir region.
This meeting was still in progress when word came from the town of Armavir
that the party’s local office manager Levon Margarian had been arrested.
Before being released, he was told that the region’s law enforcement agency
knew about the forthcoming visit of Raffi Hovannisian and the other senior
party members. The police demanded that Margarian ensure that the meeting
did not take place; otherwise they would use force to disrupt it. Upon
arrival at Armavir, the Heritage Party leadership witnessed local police
units standing on the sidewalk across from the party’s regional
headquarters. It was apparent that they had been called in to intimidate
their fellow citizens and to ensure the prevention of the meeting. This
outrage notwithstanding, an open discussion between the party officials and
local residents took place as scheduled. Afterwards, Hovannisian walked to
the local police precinct and asked to meet with the district chief, Colonel
Gevorgian. Initially he was told that this would be arranged in 15 minutes,
but was then informed that Gevorgian had convened an urgent consultation and
could not receive him.

On May 22, the executive board of the Heritage Party sent a letter to police
chief General Haik Harutiunian demanding a full explanation and assessment
of these unlawful and unconstitutional acts. On July 17, head of the police
headquarters, Edward Ghazarian, forwarded a reply that reads: "The
examinations have shown that the arguments made in the letter, with respect
to unlawful police actions, are unsubstantiated."

In a separate development on May 24, Heritage forwarded a formal letter to
Yegheknadzor mayor Sirak Babayan requesting an explanation for his refusal
to lease a standard meeting hall for a public assembly on May 6. The letter
was sent after the party’s logo mysteriously disappeared from office walls,
event flyers were confiscated, and threat-implying "explanatory" visits were
made by state security agents to the homes and workplaces of active
citizens. Heritage has yet to receive a reply.
These are but a few exemplary links in a calculated and long-standing
program of fear-driven intimidation and fear-creating persecution.

On the eve of parliamentary elections, it is manifest that the Heritage
Party is (a) locked out of its central offices and denied access to its
office documents and computer system, (b) refused any and all access to
television, (c) deprived of its right to hold normal public gatherings, (d)
in a markedly uneven financial-material playing field that precludes a fair
competition with pro-establishment parties, and (e) endeavoring to function
while its members are constantly pursued and harassed, and with its database
broken into and compromised.

In this light, Heritage:
— states that this situation cannot, under any circumstance, be considered
congruent with the constitutional terms for respect of equal political and
civil rights;
— accordingly affirms that it finds itself, and now enters the
pre-election season, in patently unequal conditions;
— asserts that, because of these unequal conditions maintained in every
way by the incumbent authorities against their opponents, the organization
and conduct of free, fair, and transparent parliamentary and presidential
elections are now in real jeopardy; and
— therefore expects that the international community and Armenian civil
society will exert every effort to ensure, as quickly and effectively as
possible, that the nation’s current rulers abstain from unconstitutional and
unlawful measures and instead guarantee equal access, healthy competition,
and complete freedom for all participants in the political process.

www.heritage.am

Levon Aronian Wins at Last Stage of Chess Super Tournament

LEVON ARONIAN WINS AT LAST STAGE OF CHESS SUPER TOURNAMENT

YEREVAN, JANUARY 29, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The international
super tournament of chess finished in the city of Wijk Aan Zee,
Holland, on January 28. Leader of Armenia Levon Aronian won Sergey
Tivyakov (Holland) at the last 13th stage, got 8.5 points and shared
the 1st-3rd places with Vesselin Topalov (Bulgaria), Teymur Rajabov
(Azerbaijan). In the second tournament Gabriel Sargsian got 8 points
from the 13 possible ones and shared the 2nd-5th places with 4 chess
players.

TBILISI: Bleak Prospects for Armenia’s Involvement in KAB Rail Proj.

The Georgian Times, Georgia
Jan 27 2007

Bleak Prospects for Armenia’s Involvement in Karsi-Akhalkalaki-Baku
Railway Project

As Georgia and Azerbaijan are pushing ahead with
Karsi-Akhalkalaki-Baku railway, Armenia has raised its voice for its
involvement in already third big regional project.

Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister said Thursday Armenia is ready to
open the border with Turkey and give a kick to
Kars-Guimri-Akhalkalaki railway which has been idle since 1992.

Although Armenia’s inclusion in the railway project would be a real
bonanza to the regional cooperation in South Caucasus, it seems too
implausible with the presence of the Nagorno-Karabgah conflict.

On January 15, Minister of Economic Development of Georgia Giorgi
Arveladze and Azerbaijan’s Transport Minister Zia Mamedov signed an
agreement in Tbilisi to provide much-needed funding for
Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku railway. Georgia will receive 220m USD
loan from Azerbaijan for a maturity of 25 years at a 1-percent annual
interest rate.

The Kars-Akhalkalaki-Tbilisi-Baku railway will run for 258kms
crossing the three countries. Georgia needs 200 M USD to rebuild
Marabda-Akhalkalaki and Kartsakhi-Akhalkalaki railway link and
construct running gears shop in Akhalkalaki.

The signing comes less than a week after Matthew Bryza reiterated the
US support to Armenia’s involvement in the project.

PanARMENIAN.Net quoted him as saying: `We would like the railway,
which connects Turkey with Baku, to pass through Armenia, since it
reflects our policy. Second, from economic point of view it is more
expedient to connect Turkey and Georgia through Armenian territory.
But we cannot make decisions on that issue. Investors themselves push
forward investment plans, which are more profitable for them. If
Azerbaijan, Turkey and Georgia want to construct a railway, of
course, we cannot object. But we do not particularly support that
project. We hope that in near future we will see such a
transportation scheme, which includes all the countries of the
region,’ said Bryza.

The Armenian-American lobbies successfully lobbied the US Senate last
year to ban funding Turkey-Georgia-Azerbaijan rail link which would
bypass Armenia. The amendments approved by the Senate Banking,
Housing and Urban Affairs Committee to the Export-Import Bank
Reauthorization Act, states that `The Bank shall not guarantee,
ensure or extend (or participate in the extension of) of credit in
connection with the export of any good or service relating to the
development or promotion any railway connection that does not
traverse or connect with Armenia and does not traverse or connect
with Baku, Azerbaijan, Tbilisi, Georgia and Kars, Turkey.’

Turkey thus fur has snubbed calls by the US and Europe to reopen the
border with Armenia, including Kars-Gyumri railway which was
predominantly used for passenger transportation in the Soviet times
and was the only railway immediately connecting the USSR with Turkey.

Although Turkey was one of the first countries to recognize Armenia’s
independence from the USSR, it has seen its relations with Yerevan
marred by 1915 genocide allegations. Yerevan asserts that some 1.5m
Armenians were killed in 1915 in Turkey and seeks international
recognition of the genocide.

Yet another motivation for Turkey to keep the border closed is its
solidarity with Azerbaijan, which came to war with Armenia over
Nagorno-Karabagh region. Turkey imposed a blockade on Armenia in 1993
during the armed conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

The Nagorno-Karabagh conflict remains the main glitch not only in the
relations between Ankara and Yerevan but more importantly in the
regional cooperation between the three South Caucasus countries and
the reason for increasing isolation of Armenia.

The world politics has witnessed a resurgence of regionalism since
the late 1980s and there are calls for strengthened regionalist
arrangements. The South Caucasus emerged as a single region in 1990s
with the collapse of the USSR, as it detached itself from the
dominant power Russia in the north, and from Turkey and Iran in the
south. There is certain cultural proximity between the three
countries, the presence of the common Soviet legacy; geographical
settings bind Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia in a single region. The
international community would like to see a tighter regional
association and the EU’s decision to include Azerbaijan and Armenia
into the European Neighbourhood Policy due to Georgia’s Rose
Revolution can be cited as an example.

No wonder there is a strong desire from the West to see enhanced
cooperation, trade and prosperity in the region. The World Bank even
commissioned a research to identify the `peace dividends’, examine
the likely- short-term impacts of the lifting of blockades. The
report called `Changing Trade Patterns after Conflict Resolution in
South Caucasus’ says: `Potential peace benefits are highest for
Armenia, the country that suffers most from the blockades. Armenia
would annually save 6-8m dollars on the transport costs of non-energy
imports and 45m dollars on switching the flows of natural gas and
petroleum to new sources. The increase in experts may lead to up to
30-38 percent of GDP growth. Azerbaijan could increase its exports
by 100m dollars, or 11 percent of current level, slashing the trade
deficit by a quarter. As a result GDP would increase up to five
percent… Georgia might face a reduction of transit through its
territory. Nevertheless, it is unlikely to exceed a quarter of the
freight service surplus in the bop, or 1.5 percent of trade deficit.’

By Keti Khachidze,

ANKARA: Businessmen & EC urge amendment to anti-free speech article

Turkish Daily News , Turkey
Jan 26 2007

Businessmen and EC urge amendment to anti-free speech article

Turkey’s most influential businessmen’s association TÜSİAD and
the European Council have expressed concern over Article 301

ANKARA – Turkish Daily News

The discussion on how to treat infamous Article 301 of the Turkish
Penal Code (TCK) has heated up again following the assassination of
journalist Hrant Dink last week.

Turkish-Armenian journalist Dink was gunned down last week by a
Turkish youth who said Dink had insulted Turks.

Foreign Minister Abdullah Gül said on Wednesday "the door for
changes to 301 is open." The European Union has also called on
Turkey, an EU candidate, to abrogate the law.

Dink, like dozens of other Turkish intellectuals, had been
prosecuted under Article 301 for his writings on the massacres of
Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War I, a highly sensitive
issue in Turkey.

His death has put the article and possible amendments to it under
the spotlight.

Civil society leaders, businessmen and politicians continued to
declare their stance on Article 301 on Thursday.

In its 37th General Assembly convention on Thursday, senior members
of Turkey’s most influential businessmen’s association, the Turkish
Industrialists and Businessmen’s Association (TÜSİAD), expressed
concern over the article in political statements.

TÜSİAD’s Higher Advisory Council President Mustafa Koç
expressed his opinion that Article 301 was one of the elements to lay
the fertile ground for Dink’s assassination. "Certain political
movements and pro-status quo sections of society are attempting to
block transformation and development. These groups resisting change
instead of calling for democratic initiatives, as in the case of
Article 301, cause growing pessimism."

Another statement on 301 was made by Social Democratic People’s
Party (SHP) Secretary-General Ahmet Güryüz Ketenci.

"The CHP and the AKP should stop being twofaced and launch the
initiatives to amend Article 301," Ketenci said in a written
statement.

Meanwhile, nationalist circles also made their stance clear on the
article on Sunday. Ankara Chamber of Commerce (ATO) President Sinan
Aygün spoke at an ATO convention on Thursday saying that linking the
assassination of Dink to Article 301 was unacceptable.

Aygün said the article should be preserved as is, adding that ATO
supported both the article and the government. "We are on the side of
everything that is good," he added.

Council of Europe urges change to 301:

The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe said Turkey
should scrap Article 301 from its penal code, Reuters reported on
Thursday afternoon.

"The existence of this measure, which judicially limits the freedom
of expression, only validates legal and other attacks against
journalists," a resolution passed by the assembly said.

Kasparov Has Left for Iran

KASPAROV HAS LEFT FOR IRAN

A1+
[01:09 pm] 25 January, 2007

Gevorg Kasparov, the goal-keeper of Yerevan "Pyunik" and Armenian
football team, has left for Iran, where he will sign a two-year
contract with the team of "Pas".

"Pas" has a high reputation among the Iranian teams and has got
professional football players, among them Hamlet Mkhitaryan, one of
the half-backs of the Armenian team.

It is already a year Gevorg Kasparov has played in the
Armenian football team as a goal-keeper. He displayed excellent
participation mainly in the qualifying phase of "Euro-2008" during
the Armenia-Belgium, Armenia-Finland meetings. 26-year-old goal-keeper
formerly played in the Armenian Youth and Juvinile teams, as well as
in the club "Zvartnots".

Currently Edgar Gasparyan is the goal-keeper of "Pyunik" but the
heads of the team intend to sign a contract with some skilled foreign
goal-keeper in the nearest future.

Film Review: Screamers

Newsday, NY
Jan 25 2007

SCREAMERS
Rafer GuzmÁn

January 26, 2007

SCREAMERS (R).

With Angelina visiting Africa and Bono battling AIDS, you might think
the rock band System of a Down is hopping on the charity bandwagon
with "Screamers," a documentary that uses concert footage to draw
attention to genocide around the world. But the band’s four members,
all Armenian-Americans, have long been pushing for a very specific
and personal goal: to persuade the U.S. government to officially
recognize the 1915 Armenian massacre, at the hands of Ottoman Turks,
as genocide.

That semantic nicety – was it genocide, or mere slaughter? – is a
major issue for modern-day Turkey, which basically denies the 1915
atrocities and occasionally persecutes those who beg to differ. (Last
week a Turkish newspaper editor who challenged the official position
was shot dead outside his office.) Those who raise their voices about
genocide are nicknamed "screamers" in this movie, and the term could
also apply to the wild-eyed members of System of a Down. Singer Serj
Tankian, however, is refreshingly soft-spoken offstage: He’s as
gentle with his 96-year-old grandfather (a 1915 survivor) as he is
with former House Speaker Dennis Hastert.

The film operates at a high-school reading level: Whenever
discussions get too deep, director Carla Garapedian quickly switches
to System of a Down thundering away before a sea of fists. But if
"Screamers" can turn a few head-bangers into brain users, it will
have achieved a noble goal.

–Boundary_(ID_djTi8xsfS9kFWGe9pPhsqg)–

Burbank: Making another try

Burbank Leader, CA
Jan 24 2007

Making another try

Figuring that a fourth try will be the charm, this candidate says
he’ll make traffic and congestion his issues.
By Chris Wiebe

Burbank City Council candidate Vahe Hovanessian.

GLENDALE – City Council candidate Vahe Hovanessian was born in
Tehran, Iran, but Burbank quickly became his home when his
Armenian-Christian family relocated to the United States in 1979,
fleeing the Islamic-driven Iranian revolution.

He attended Burbank public schools – from Ralph Emerson Elementary
and Burbank High School – leaving Burbank for college and graduate
school.

When he returned to Burbank, he purchased a small home where he found
congestion and increased population density was rampant.

"I noticed that Burbank has significantly changed over my time here,"
he said. "I was looking at overdevelopment of certain areas and,
unfortunately, I was right in the middle of it."

Observing first-hand the changing city demographics led him to
explore the particulars of municipal zoning and what residential
upgrades would mean for how Burbank appeared in the future.

"All of a sudden every development we make is bigger and grander," he
said. "I’m not saying that’s bad – that’s a very good thing – but
overall we need to plan more carefully over the long run…. The people
before us did a good job; now we just have to do a better job."

Hovanessian initially became involved with the city as a certified
law student in the city attorney’s office. Representing, among
others, Burbank Police officers, he provided assistance in trials and
appeals, often working with other departments in the process.

"It really gave me first-hand experience of what’s going on," he
said. "The mechanism of the city is spectacular. I’m very confident
about the staff and the people who work here." advertisement

The current race marks his fourth bid for a council seat. In 2003 he
lost in the primary, but in 2005 he broke into the general election.
He tried his hand again in the 2006 special election.

"I’ve run against all the current incumbents and the two that are
leaving," he said.

"My message hasn’t changed – traffic and congestion. There’s a lot of
top-priority issues, but traffic and congestion are definitely at the
top…. The reason I continue to run is because I believe that we can
actually make a difference."

Hovanessian has already turned what began as a curiosity in civic
affairs to proactive city involvement, participating in several
service groups and gaining an appointment as chairman of the Burbank
Water and Power Board more than three years ago.

The utility has made recent strides in water conservation, renewable
power and green energy, he said.

Hovanessian’s long-time involvement in the community would serve him
well as a council member, supporter Nat Rubinfeld said.

"I see him as a quick thinker and he has the ability to analyze the
issues before making a decision," he said.

"Secondly, he’s a local product of the Burbank school systems – and
he’s definitely been a part of the community."

As a council member, Hovanessian would carefully weigh all sides of
an issue based on available information before making any decisions,
he said. And future development is a matter deserving of close
attention, he said.

"If I’m going to be approving any development I want to see an
affordable housing component," he said.

Declining enrollment numbers in the Burbank Unified School District
are symptomatic of a lack of young families moving to Burbank because
they are simply priced out of the market, Hovanessian said.

"Affordable housing is something I think is very necessary," he said.

VAHE HOVANESSIAN: ON THE ISSUES

What type of role should local government play in monitoring the pace
of land development in Burbank?

Burbank should carefully and strategically control the pace of all
land development and redevelopment. We should promote a balance and
functional mix of land uses consistent with our community values. We
should provide for growth of housing and employment opportunities in
conjunction with community goals and consistent with planned
infrastructure and service capabilities. We must foresee potential
natural hazards and plan development to reduce loss of life,
injuries, damages and other dislocations resulting. Zoning ordinances
must be consistent to ensure that property owners and residents have
a clear understanding as to the use and intensity allowed on their
properties.

Has the city’s almost two-year-old development agreement with the
airport authority provided an adequate balance between interests of
airport officials versus the concerns Burbank residents?

An adequate balance can not yet be determined. The concerns of
Burbank residents were not thoroughly addressed in the development
agreement. The delay of an expanded airport was the final result. But
who initially agreed to an expansion? It appears that the interests
of airport officials will differ significantly from the concerns of
Burbank residents, to the detriment of the residents. It was said
that the agreement brought peace; however, were we at war? It appears
that the battle has yet to begin. As such, I anticipate that no
adequate balance of interests will have resulted once the agreement
timeframes pass.

What types of things should be done to address traffic congestion on
Burbank streets and freeways?

Traffic in Burbank is increasing as a result of natural population
growth and increase of business activity in our community. Traffic
increases must be addressed through traffic-control modernization and
strategic planning. In addition, synchronization of lights at some
intersections will lead to more efficiency, smarter intersections
will result in smoother flow and stronger enforcement of traffic laws
will maintain a steady flow of traffic. Our freeways require
attention with respect to on- and off-ramps and plans exist, however
funding on the state level has not been adequate. Further, our
streets should be more pedestrian- and disabled-friendly.

BIO BOX
Name: Vahe Hovanessian
Age: 32
Family: Wife, Anne Hovanessian, 32
Occupation: Attorney
Education: Juris doctor, San Fernando Valley College; bachelor of
arts, University of California at Los Angeles

Kars-Akhalqalaki Technical Plans Specified

AZG Armenian Daily #013, 25/01/2007

Regional

KARS-AKHALQALAKI TECHNICAL PLANS SPECIFIED

Republic of Armenia Defence Ministry National Startegic Research
Institute is to be opened in Yrevan, January 24. On January 22 in
Baku were discussed the dechnica details of construction of the
Kars-Akhalqalaq-Tbilisi-Baku railroad. It is said that the details
will be finally agreed in February.

By Aghavni Haroutiunian

NYT: Armenian Editor’s Death Leads to Conciliation

New York Times, NY
Jan 23 2007

Armenian Editor’s Death Leads to Conciliation
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By SUSANNE FOWLER and SEBNEM ARSU

Published: January 23, 2007

ISTANBUL, Jan. 22 – The killing of an Armenian-Turkish editor in
Istanbul last week and the sorrow it has generated within Turkey are
leading to rare conciliatory gestures between Turkey and Armenia,
historic enemies, and to calls for changes in laws here defending
Turkish identity.

On Monday, Armenian political and spiritual figures accepted an
invitation from the Turkish government to attend the funeral of Hrant
Dink, the founder of an Armenian-Turkish newspaper, who was killed
outside his office on Friday, apparently by a young nationalist
fanatic.

The suspect in the slaying, Ogun Samast, 17, was escorted back to
the scene of the crime Sunday night by law enforcement authorities.

The head of the Istanbul security forces said that Mr. Samast "was
driven to commit the crime by his nationalistic feelings" and had no
ties to any group.

Mr. Dink was a staunch defender of free speech and like other
intellectuals was prosecuted for insulting "Turkishness" and sentenced
to six months in jail, though his term was suspended.

Bulent Arinc, the parliamentary chairman from the ruling Justice and
Development Party, said he would back efforts to abolish the measure
under which Mr. Dink was prosecuted, known as Article 301.

"It can be discussed to totally abolish or completely revise the
Article 301," Mr. Arinc said, adding that members of Parliament
"are open to this."

Despite the fact that the Armenian-Turkish border has been sealed
since 1993 and diplomatic relations severed, Armenia is sending
a deputy foreign minister, Arman Kirakossian, to the funeral, and
the archbishop of the Armenian Church of America, Khajag Barsamian,
also accepted the government’s invitation to the ceremony.

Earlier, the Armenian defense minister, Serzh Sarkisyan, called for
improved relations so that Armenia could "establish ties with Turkey
with no preconditions," the Turkish news channel NTV reported.

High-level Turkish government officials are expected to attend the
funeral.

Turkey and Armenia have long been at odds over Turkey’s refusal
to use the term "genocide" to describe the deaths of Armenians
beginning in 1915. Many scholars and most Western governments say
more than a million Armenians were killed in a campaign they describe
as genocide. Turkey calls the loss of life a consequence of a war
in which both sides suffered casualties, and has suggested that a
group of envoys from each country analyze the history. Armenia has
expressed a willingness to participate but insists that the border
must first be reopened to trade.

But many Armenians living abroad hold a much harder line and are
lobbying the United States and European governments to deny Turkey
entrance into the European Union until Ankara recognizes the killings
as genocide.

Norman Stone, professor of history at Koc University in Istanbul, said
Mr. Dink was killed at a time when Turkey was reacting to pressure
to respond to the Armenian issue.

"There are a lot of balanced people here who say, ‘Look, the genocide
issue is unclear, but if you just leave it as a matter of massacres,
then we can start making progress,’ " Mr. Stone said.

The funeral is shaping up to be far more than a farewell to a popular
though controversial figure. The fact that the government is permitting
it to take place on a grand scale is another sign of a change.

A wide boulevard in the heart of Istanbul’s main commercial district
will be closed to traffic as the funeral cortege gathers outside the
offices of the newspaper where Mr. Dink was shot.

The mayor of the district, Mustafa Sarigul, said the local government
will hand out carnations and release hundreds of pigeons as a symbol
of peace. Mr. Dink once said, "I may see myself as frightened as a
pigeon, but I know that in this country people do not touch pigeons."

The procession is expected to advance for about a mile before the
body is driven across the Golden Horn to the Kumkapi district for a
Christian funeral Mass at the Church of the Virgin Mary. Among the
Turkish government officials expected to attend the Mass are the
interior minister, Abdulkadir Aksu, and the deputy prime minister,
Mehmet Ali Sahin. Burial is to follow at the Balikli Armenian Cemetery.

Most Armenian Turks live in Istanbul, the diverse and cosmopolitan
center of Turkey. But the antinationalist demonstrations that followed
Mr. Dink’s killing also surfaced in places as diverse as Izmir, the
Aegean coastal city that is Turkey’s third largest, and in Sanliurfa
and Hatay, which are close to Turkey’s eastern border with Syria.

"Public opinion in both countries, weary of the years-long conflict,
had reached a point of explosion," said Kaan Soyak, a director of the
Turkish-Armenian Business Development Commission, the only bilateral
trade council of Turkish and Armenian executives. "That’s what lies
behind the massive outpouring for Mr. Dink."

Ethnic Armenian Turks, like Jewish and Greek Turks, are an officially
recognized minority group and as such are allowed to operate their
own schools. Mr. Dink, for example, attended Armenian schools in
Istanbul until entering a state-run university.

Mr. Dink was labeled as a target among nationalist groups on their
Web sites. Mr. Samast, the suspect, read and was influenced by those
postings, according to the Anatolian news agency.

Seven other suspects were also being detained over the weekend,
including Yasin Hayal, who served 11 months in jail for the bombing
of a McDonald’s restaurant in Trabzon in 2004.

Mr. Hayal, a known nationalist, is suspected of having a history of
Islamic militant activity. He attempted to join the rebels in Chechnya
but was turned away at the border, his former lawyer, Fatih Cakir,
said by telephone on Sunday.

Havva Samast, Mr. Samast’s mother, knew that her son and Mr. Hayal
were friends.

"I couldn’t believe my eyes when I saw him on television and had a
shock," she said during a televised interview with the Dogan News
Agency from her and her son’s home city of Trabzon. "He couldn’t have
done this on his own. I know that he was friends with" Mr. Hayal.

But many here still blame Article 301 for Mr. Dink’s death and see
it as an obstacle to freedom of speech in Turkey.