Turkish MPs Withdraw From Israel Friendship Society

TURKISH MPS WITHDRAW FROM ISRAEL FRIENDSHIP SOCIETY

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 5, 2010 – 16:58 AMT 11:58 GMT

Most of the Turkish MPs, who were members of the Turkish-Israeli
friendship society, withdrew from the society in protest over Israeli
practices against the Palestinians, Israeli parliamentary sources
revealed.

Robert Tibayev, a member of the Israeli Knesset (parliament) who
heads the Israeli side in that society, said that the majority of
the Turkish members withdrew from the society following the tension
in relations between the two governments in the wake of the Israel’s
Operation Cast Lead.

He told the Hebrew radio on Tuesday night that only four Turkish
opposition lawmakers were now present in the society, Palestinian
Information Center reported.

Works On Sterilizing And Rendering Harmless Of Stray Animals To Be I

WORKS ON STERILIZING AND RENDERING HARMLESS OF STRAY ANIMALS TO BE IMPLEMENTED IN YEREVAN

ARMENPRESS
MAY 5, 2010
YEREVAN

YEREVAN, MAY 5, ARMENPRESS: "Unigraph X" LLC has partook in a contest
on purchase of sterilization services of stray animals declared by
the Yerevan municipality and has been recognized a winner. This year,
too, the company will implement works on sterilization and making
harmless the stray animals of Yerevan administrative unit.

World Community Realizes Necessity Of Move: Zohrabyan

WORLD COMMUNITY REALIZES NECESSITY OF MOVE: ZOHRABYAN

news.am
May 4 2010
Armenia

The world community realizes the need in suspension of Protocols’
ratification due to Turkey’s inconsistent policy, the head of standing
committee on European integration Naira Zohrabyan said at the meeting
with Czech Ambassador to Armenia Ivan Yestrab.

The officials discussed further actions on implementation of European
Partnership project, Armenia’s European integration and issues
related to intensification of Armenian-Czech relations, RA NA press
service informed NEWS.am. The sides also expressed concern over the
protraction of Euronest launch.

Yestrab informed Armenian MP about the pre-election situation in
Czech Republic.

Armenian Young Tennis Players Win The International Competition

ARMENIAN YOUNG TENNIS PLAYERS WIN THE INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION

Tert.am
04.05.10

>From April 30 to May 3 Armenia’s team of table tennis participated
in the Table Tennis International Youth Competition that took place
in the Georgian resort town of Batumi, according to the website of
the Ministry of Sports and Youth Affairs of the Republic of Armenia.

The Armenian team competed with representatives of Turkey, Cyprus
and Georgia beating the first team representing Georgia at a 3:1 score.

With the Turks our young tennis players scored 3:0 while beating also
Georgia’s second team by 3:1 at the final.

Champion of the Armenian youth at the private competition Harutyun
Harutyunyan was declared as the champion of the Table Tennis
International Youth Competition after he defeated the representatives
of Turkey, Cyprus and Georgia at a private competition.

Totally, the Armenian table tennis team won one gold and one bronze
medal in the private competition, while at the team competition it
was declared champion.

The Armenian team is expected home today, on May 4.

Armenian, Chinese Leaders Discuss China’s Participation In Armenia-I

ARMENIAN, CHINESE LEADERS DISCUSS CHINA’S PARTICIPATION IN ARMENIA-IRAN RAILWAY

Yerkir
03.05.2010 12:33
Yerevan

Yerevan (Yerkir) – Chinese leader Hu Jintao and Armenian President
Serzh Sargsyan have discussed China’s participation in a construction
of a railway between Armenia and Iran.

Last year, the Armenian and Iranian transport ministers signed an
agreement to build a railway linking Armenia with Iran’s Persian
Gulf ports. The construction of the 470-kilometer long railway,
with 410 kilometers passing through Armenian territory, is expected
to last for at least five years and to cost $1.5-$1.8 billion.

"Sargsyan said that a development of the relations with China is a
priority of Yerevan foreign policy, and noted that bilateral relations
do already have a good dynamic of their development," the statement
by the president’s office said.

The sides also noted with satisfaction the successful implementation
of various joint projects in energy, chemical industry, agriculture,
science and technology, defense, culture and education, stressing
that an exploitation of the Shanxi-Nairit joint Armenian-Chinese
chloroprene rubber production plant is an important evidence of the
development of Armenian-Chinese economic cooperation.

A.Shakaryan: "Nakhijevan Is Factually A Turkish Region"

A.SHAKARYAN: "NAKHIJEVAN IS FACTUALLY A TURKISH REGION"

Aysor
May 3 2010
Armenia

"The de-facto entrance of the Turkish people into Nakhijevan is now
being affirmed de-jure," Turkologist Artak Shakaryan thinks.

"During the last 10 years Nakhijevan has become the economic adjunct
of the Turkey, Nakhijevan is factually a Turkish region, as more than
90% of the economy of that region is fed by the Turkish economy. 90%
of transportation is being done through Turkey too, more than 90%
of the contributions are Turkish," he said during the press conference.

According to the speaker in some sense the freezing of the Turkish –
Azerbaijani relations of last year was conditioned by this thing.

"Even if Azerbaijan is happy that Nakhijevan is being saved by the
help of Turkey it realizes that Turkey has plans connected with it,"
he said.

A. Shakaryan thinks that in South Caucasus the active policy of Turkey
to the direction of Nakhijevan and the interference of Karabakh
conflict settlement process Armenia should accept as a serious
strategic challenge and should concentrate all his efforts against it.

Book Review: Rebel Land: Unraveling The Riddle Of History In A Turki

REBEL LAND UNRAVELING THE RIDDLE OF HISTORY IN A TURKISH TOWN
by: Jay Winter, The Weekly Standard
BOOKS & ARTS Vol. 15 No. 31
by Christopher de Bellaigue
Penguin, 288 pp., $25.95

The Weekly Standard
May 3, 2010 Monday

Land of Secrets; A visitor to Turkey discovers the truth beneath
the stories.

The east of Turkey is home to a multitude of people whose history
rivals any in the world in terms of brutality, hostility, and
endurance. A river of blood has flowed through this area for over a
century, with Kurdish, Armenian, Alevi, and Turkish tributaries of
suffering and embittered memories living in vigorous incompatibility
alongside one another.Christopher de Bellaigue is a British journalist
who has found both the linguistic skills and the human sympathy to
tell the story of these people, and to do justice to their competing
narratives and distortions. He started as a lover of Turkey and of
a Turkish woman, an excellent reason for developing an affection
for the people and language of Istanbul. That relationship gave way
to one bringing him together with an Iranian woman, and naturally,
his affections moved east.

Not to Iran itself, but to the part of Turkey contiguous with it. He
settled on a small town named Varto which, in microcosm, showed
him the full richness, complexity, and tragedy of contemporary
Turkish history.De Bellaigue is a fine observer, and is in the
long and distinguished British tradition of debunking national
myths. First came the Turkish national myth: The Armenian genocide
never happened; the West was then and is now preparing to carve
up Turkey, whose territorial integrity must be defended to the
last. Lies and geopolitical blackmail have worked for generations to
keep under covers the nasty secretââ~B¬"which never was a secret at
allââ~B¬"that the ruling triumvirate of Turkey in the First World
War ordered the elimination of the Armenian community in the east and
southeast of Turkey. This was not collateral damage or deaths lost in
the fog of war; this was cold-blooded murder on an artisanal scale,
but still tantamount to genocide. Killing the children; converting
the women; murdering the men: That is what it amounted to, and, by
and large, Kurdish gangs carried it out.That story is one the author
progressively uncovered, and by doing so, he began to lose his sense
of ease within Turkish society. Then, when he changed women and moved
east, both physically and linguistically, he began to confront other
national myths, which he takes apart in this book. In particular, the
Kurdistan Workers’ party and its leader Apo, now permanently a guest
of the Turkish prison system, are taken apart, and in traditional
British fashion, the big words are brought down to sadder and more
tragic realities. The Kurdish struggle for liberation has come down
to a confidence trickster like Apo doing a volte face in prison to
save his neck.Political leaders of all colors are given short shrift
in this book; it is the ordinary people who arrest de Bellaigue’s
attention and fire his imagination. He digs into his adopted home in
eastern Turkey and learns, as he says in a borrowed phrase, to smell
of skunk. But this is one travel writer who never looks down on his
subjects, or their predicament. He therefore abjures stylistic irony
in a place abounding in it. The result is a finely observed portrait
of a very mixed population, whose stories cannot be tied up in little
boxes fashioned by "the planckton of state historians or the advocates
of one diaspora or another." To be sure, de Bellaigue does not hide
his contempt for Turkey’s paid hacks, but he is not above wondering
whether Armenians can see any shade of gray in their story of real
persecution. Do they have a genocide fixation, he asks? I am less
critical than he is about this subject: A people whose population
was reduced by at least 50 percent in a few short years have a right
to dwell on the matter, and we have a duty to listen to them. But on
balance, de Bellaigue keeps his sanity and his balance while living
in a part of the world which will turn anyone, as Amos Oz once said
about Jerusalem, into an authority on comparative fanaticism. Varto is
no different. Indeed there are similarities with the occupied east of
Jerusalem, in that the presence of informers and highly visible police
and army units reminds inhabitants of who is running the show. They
tolerate de Bellaigue, but remind him, at times in a desultory manner,
that they are watching him. He returns the gaze and the contempt of
some of the more unsavory Turks located in this ethnic patchwork of a
place, and seems more interested in probing the messy ethnic interface
of this part of the world. He is never the superior outsider coming
to look at "primitive" peoples, nor did he "go native," as the French
writer Pierre Loti did a century and more ago. His view, in sum, is
that of a talented linguist and traveler, a populist conservative,
attuned to the voices of those who have to pick up the body parts
and corpses after the latest installment of intercommunal violence,
or the latest case of torture or assassination on the orders of what
he terms the secret state, the Turkish security apparatus. He speaks of
admiring "feats of loyalty and self-sacrifice, poppies amid the refuse,
and the pleasing symmetrical propensity of those who hate with passion,
to love, disinterestedly, with passion also." He tasted these passions,
by getting to feel them ripple through this rough landscape, and has
left us a fine, brooding portrait of a part of the world which has had
more than its share of suffering. Jay Winter, professor of history at
Yale, is the author, most recently, of Capital Cities at War: Paris,
London, Berlin 1914-1919.

BAKU: Ankara Keen To See Azerbaijani-Armenian Border Open

ANKARA KEEN TO SEE AZERBAIJANI-ARMENIAN BORDER OPEN

news.az
May 3 2010
Azerbaijan

Ahmet Davutoglu The Turkish foreign minister has delivered a keynote
lecture in Britain on Ankara’s foreign policy in a changing world.

Ahmet Davutoglu outlined Turkey’s foreign policy in terms of old
alignments and new neighbourhoods at an international conference at
the University of Oxford on 1 May.

Delivering the keynote lecture at the conference which had the theme
‘Turkey’s foreign policy in a changing world’, Davutoglu said that
Ankara wanted to open the border with Armenia and reiterated that
the Armenian-Azerbaijani dispute must be settled for stability in
the region.

‘…Of course we want to open our border because we want full
integration with our neighbours. However, it would not be enough to
open the Turkish-Armenian border. We also want the Armenian-Azerbaijani
border to be opened so that regional stability can be restored,’
Davutoglu said.

Commenting on Middle East developments, Davutoglu said that incidents
in Gaza could not be tolerated.

The foreign minister also recalled that Turkey had cancelled military
exercises previously planned with Israel and said that war games
would not be conducted if military tension persisted.

Catholicos Did Not Visit The Park Of Shaheeds In Baku: Says Holly Se

CATHOLICOS DID NOT VISIT THE PARK OF SHAHEEDS IN BAKU: SAYS HOLLY SEE OF ETCHMIADZIN

Tert.am
03.05.10

His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All
Armenians did not visit the Park of Shaheeds during his visit to Baku
where he participated in the Second World Summit of Spiritual Leaders
attended also by Patriarch Kiril A of Moscow and all Russians and
the Spiritual Leader of Muslims in the Caucasus, Sheikh-ul-Islam
Allahshukur Pasha-Zade, according to a statement released by the
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin press office said.

Earlier today some Azerbaijani news sources, citing their spirituatl
leader, reported that His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and
Catholicos of All Armenians visited during his stay in Baku the Park
of Sheeds in Baku, built in the memory of the Azerbaijani and Turkish
soldiers killed in a fight for Karabakh in 1918.

Al Pacino to Play Poker With Dr. Jack Kevorkian

Cake Poker News
April 19 2010

Al Pacino to Play Poker With Dr. Jack Kevorkian
by Taylor Kent

Can Dr. Kevorkian read Al Pacino’s poker face?

His resume peppered with memorable roles in films like The Godfather,
Scarface, Glengarry Glen Ross and Donnie Brasco, Al Pacino is widely
recognized as one of the greatest living American film actors. But his
latest role, playing Dr. Jack Kevorkian in the new HBO film You Don’t
Know Jack, has earned him a unique honor: he’ll be traveling to
Michigan to play poker with the man he portrays in the film.

Despite transforming himself for a convincing portrayal of Kevorkian,
before this weekend Pacino had never actually met the doctor famous
for championing the cause of doctor-assisted suicide beginning back in
the 1980s. Kevorkian righted that wrong at the film’s premiere, but he
also extended a special invitation to the legendary actor for a more
intimate gathering. `He’s invited me to Detroit to play poker,’ Pacino
said at the premiere. `For Jack, I think I’ll go do it.’

Jack Kevorkian himself is a big fan of the game – and he says that Al
Pacino is, too. `Anybody who plays poker can’t be all bad,’ he said of
the actor. And that right there is reason enough for us to be fans of
both men.

You Don’t Know Jack will have its television premiere on HBO this
coming Saturday, April 24th. As for the big poker game with Kevorkian
and Pacino, there’s no date set just yet – but hopefully the Hollywood
media will keep an ear to the ground so we can learn a little more
about their game.

-to-Play-Poker-With-Dr-Jack-Kevorkian-559.aspx

http://cakepoker.com/blog/En/post/Al-Pacino