French Minister Of Territorial Development To Visit Armenia Feb 23-2

FRENCH MINISTER OF TERRITORIAL DEVELOPMENT TO VISIT ARMENIA FEB 23-26

Arka News Agency, Armenia
Feb 26 2007

YEREVAN. February 26. /ARKA/. French Minister of Territorial
Development Christian Estrosi is visiting Armenia on February 23-26.

The press service of the French embassy in Armenia reported Thursday
that Estrosi had met with Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan,
Chief of the Police, General Haik Harutunyan. He also laid a wreath
on the memorial of the Armenian Genocide victims in Yerevan.

On the same day, Estrosi met with the students of the University of
France in Armenia, and also held a conference-discussion on the topic
"Economic Competition".

During the visit, on February 25, the French minister and Armenian
Minister of Health Norair Davidyan will participate in the opening
ceremony of the Department of Scanning of the hospital of the town
of Akhuryan.

The members of the French delegation are also MPs Michel Tabarot and
Thierry Marani.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ENP Gives Armenia New Possibilities Chances To Develop Relations Wit

ENP GIVES ARMENIA NEW POSSIBILITIES CHANCES TO DEVELOP RELATIONS WITH EUROPEAN COUNTRIES

Arka News Agency, Armenia
Feb 26 2007

YEREVAN, February 26. /ARKA/. The European New Neighborhood Policy
(ENP) gives Armenia new possibilities to develop cooperation with
European countries, said Armenia’s Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian
during the press conference with Poland’s Foreign Minister Anna Fatyga.

"After adopting the European "New Neighborhood" Policy, new
possibilities of developing cooperation with European countries opened
for Armenia," Oskanian said.

He said that this policy will also stimulate to develop the
Armenian-Polish relations.

Oskanian pointed out that Armenia and Poland established a deep
political dialogue, information cooperation, peacemaking partnership
in Iraq.

"The economic partnership is not on such a high level, but at present
economic projects are being elaborated," he said.

Oskanian said that the agenda of the Armenian-Polish partnership will
constantly enlarge and fill up with new points.

Anna Fotyga arrived to Armenia on February 25 with a two-day visit.

Within the visit Fotyga will meet with Armenia’s President Robert
Kocharyan, Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II, RA Prime Minister
Andranik Margaryan, Speaker of the RA National Assembly Tigran
Torosyan, Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian.

Poland’s delegation headed by Fotyga will visit the depository of
ancient Armenian manuscript Matenadaran, and pay a flower tribute
to the Tsitsernakaberd memorial to victims of the Genocide in the
Ottoman Empire.

The EU General Affairs & External Relations Council made a decision to
apply the "European Neighborhood Initiative" to Armenia, Azerbaijan
and Georgia, Luxembourg, July 14, 2004. The Council called to
the European Commission to report on every country concerning the
political cooperation, foreign policy and security taking into account
the progress of political and economic reforms. Armenia’s Individual
Partnership Action Plan on "New Neighborhood" was signed on November
14, 2006.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Amsterdam: Queen Beatrix Visits Turkey As A Good Friendby Hans Andri

QUEEN BEATRIX VISITS TURKEY AS A GOOD FRIENDBY HANS ANDRINGA

Radio Netherlands, Netherlands
Feb 26 2007

During her state visit to Turkey this week, Queen Beatrix will be
facing several thorny issues. The question is, will the queen choose
the path of least resistance, or will she seize the opportunity
to make some potentially confronting statements as ‘a good friend
of the Turkish people’. Will she dwell, for example, on the need
for democratic reforms, the observation of human rights or on the
Armenian genocide?

Turkey and the Netherlands are old friends. Relations date back to
1612. What brings an added dimension to this week’s state visit by
Queen Beatrix is the large number of people of Turkish descent who
are either now living in the Netherlands or used to live there for
decades before returning to Turkey.

The schedule of Queen Beatrix, who will be accompanied by Crown
Prince Willem-Alexander and his wife Princess Maxima, includes the
usual recreational elements underscoring the long friendship between
the two nations. Visits to museums, palaces and mosques, a boat trip
on the Bosporus, the strait separating the European and Asian parts
of the country, and conversations with Turkish workers who returned
home from the Netherlands.

But the question is, should the queen address the vexed issue of the
Turkey’s drive to become a member of the European Union? Should she
discuss human rights?

Don’t mince your words

Transport Minister Camiel Eurlings, who as an EMP was responsible
for monitoring Turkey’s progress, believes she should:

"I hope the queen will find an opportunity to not only strengthen the
bonds of friendship, but use this friendship to encourage Turkey to
continue introducing democratic reforms and move ever closer to us
(the Dutch, Europeans) in terms of freedom and tolerance."

During earlier state visits to Argentina and Israel, Queen Beatrix
has shown she does not shun difficult subjects. For example, when she
was visiting Israel, she did not keep silent about the painful truth
that many Jews were deported to German destruction camps because few
Dutchmen offered effective resistance.

Be critical for Turkey’s sake

For Turkish citizens, expressing your opinion is not without risk.

Heavy sentences are imposed on those who say that the deaths of
hundreds of thousands of Armenians during World War I constitute
genocide. Conservative VVD MP Hans van Baalen says talking about the
past is what allows you to learn lessons from it. "Which is why the
queen should bring these issues up. It will make Turkey stronger."

However, Turkey expert Professor Erik-Jan Zurcher of the University
of Leiden believes it would better be better if the queen did not
mention this sensitive issue.

"It would only put the small group of Turkish intellectuals that
concern themselves with the issue in a difficult position, enabling
nationalists to portray them as mouthpieces of European interests".

Criticism can be harmful Mr Zurcher also points at the decreasing
support for EU membership among the Turkish population, which he
blames on the continuing European criticism of Turkey.

It is up to the queen to find the right tone which does justice to both
the mutual friendship and to the future interests of both countries.

The first blemish on the queen’s state visit shows how easy it is to
make a mistake. Turkish President Ahmet Sezer will not be able to
attend a concert hosted by Queen Beatrix. The strict separation of
church and state does now allow his presence at a concert that will
also be attended by women wearing headscarves.

ntaffairs/tur070226mc

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.radionetherlands.nl/curre

UCLA: Journalist Gets A Fond, Emotional Memorial

JOURNALIST GETS A FOND, EMOTIONAL MEMORIAL

The UCLA Daily Bruin, CA
Feb 26 2007

Tears flowed from the eyes of both Turkish and Armenian audience
members at a crowded commemoration held at UCLA Sunday afternoon to
remember the death of journalist Hrant Dink.

Dink, the editor in chief of Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos, was
murdered in front of his office on Jan. 19 by teenager Ogun Samsast.

Samsast’s motives for the murder remain unclear, but according to
Hurriyet, a daily Turkish newspaper, Samsast was ordered to kill Dink
by militant nationalist Yasin Hayal.

In the last two years of Dink’s life, he received numerous death
threats for speaking about the Armenian genocide. The Turkish
government denies the deaths constitute genocide because it maintains
they resulted from the effects of World War I and not an extermination
of the Armenians.

Dink was convicted for denigrating the Turkish government under article
301 of the Turkish Penal Code. The article allows journalists to be
prosecuted for any perceived criticism of the Turkish government,
according to the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe.

Many speakers at the event shared fond memories of Dink. One speaker
was Zeynep Turkyilmaz, a UCLA doctoral student in history and a
member of the informal student group Initiative of Turkish Students
to Commemorate "Our Hrant."

Turkyilmaz said she met Dink 11 years ago in Turkey. She said as a
Turkish undergraduate student doing a project on Armenian literature,
she was met by opposition in the course of her research, but Dink
encouraged the Armenian-Turkish relationship and supported the project.

"He was very excited … and he sent a reporter from Agos to cover
(the presentation on Armenian literature). I was in one of the first
issues (of the newspaper)," recalled Turkyilmaz.

Turkyilmaz urged the audience to remember the challenges Dink went
through in his lifetime and to help Dink’s newspaper Agos endure.

"My last memories of Hrant Dink is at Agos. Agos is his legacy. Its
survival is now on our shoulders," Turkyilmaz said.

Speaker Ayse Gul Altinay, a friend of Dink’s, spoke on her feelings
about his death.

"I still find myself waking up (and hoping) it is a terrible dream,"
Altinay said.

Altinay, a professor from Sabanci University in Istanbul, Turkey,
last met Dink for dinner, where Dink mentioned the threats he had
been receiving but said he was only worried about the threats to his
family, she said.

This concern for other people and disregard for himself made him
popular, Altinay said.

"It is amazing how many friends Hrant had. He touched many lives,"
she said.

Altinay also discussed the effect of article 301 and the prosecution
of Dink.

"This decision was used as a mechanism to silence Hrant, and yet we
all know Hrant was not silenced," Altinay said.

David Myers, director of the UCLA Center for Jewish Studies, did not
know Dink but said he could relate to and admired the late journalist.

"(Dink) sought to wage the battle for his people and his culture –
a battle in the name of dialogue and understanding. It is a struggle
that many of us are familiar with," said Myers.

Myers also applauded Dink for acknowledging the Armenian genocide
in 1915.

"I think of him less as a victim and more as a inspiration, a role
model, a teacher," Myers said.

Other speakers included Richard Hovannisian, chairman of modern
Armenian history and host of the event, and Ruben Centinyan, a UCLA
alumnus who spoke about Dink’s beliefs about the government.

The event also had Armenian music: A duduk, a traditional woodwind
instrument, was played.

"Let us cry together, mourn together, so that we can soon laugh
together, love together," Altinay said.

b/26/journalist_gets_fond_emotional_memorial/

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.dailybruin.ucla.edu/news/2007/fe

ANKARA: Turkish Parliamentarians Send Messages Of Warning To Their U

TURKISH PARLIAMENTARIANS SEND MESSAGES OF WARNING TO THEIR US COUNTERPARTS

Turkish Press
Feb 26 2007

BRUSSELS – Turkish parliamentary delegation that is currently in
Brussels to attend NATO Parliamentary Assembly meetings sent messages
of warning to their U.S. counterparts on the draft resolution about
so-called Armenian genocide.

Vahit Erdem, head of the delegation, said in his letter to John
Tanner, head of the U.S. parliamentary delegation, "we attribute
great importance to friendly relations between Turkey and the United
States. Any attempt that may harm those relations in a complicated
period following the Cold War era, should be avoided."

"Approval of the draft resolution by the U.S. Congress will disrupt
the bilateral relations. In that case, Turkey-the United States
relations will seriously damaged. By making such a political judgment,
the U.S. Congress will make a big mistake," he said.

Erdem stressed that Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan had
earlier proposed Armenia to form a committee of historians and open
all archives, but Armenian party did not give a response.

Meanwhile, Turkey-the United States Inter-parliamentary
Friendship Group Chairman Egemen Bagis held a series of talks with
U.S. congressmen on the same issue.

Bagis said that the congressmen understood the importance of the
matter, and pledged to explain it to their colleagues when they return
to Washington D.C.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Lobbying In Turkey – USA Relations

LOBBYING IN TURKEY – USA RELATIONS

Turkish Press
Feb 26 2007

ISTANBUL – "If Turkish lobbying is not conducted properly in the
United States, resolution on the so-called Armenian genocide will be
troubling for us", said Ercument Kilic, president of the Center for
Turkish American Chambers of Commerce, on Tuesday.

Ercument Kilic, who took the floor at a conference titled "Turkey – USA
relations Within the Framework of Lobbying" in Yeditepe University,
Istanbul, pointed out that an Armenian Museum will be opened in
Washington, capital of the USA.

"If Turkey is promoted on a regular basis and under a schedule, this
will have significant results in the U.S. parliament," he stressed.

-RELATIONS WITH JAPANESE LOBBY-

Pointing out that the Japanese have a dominant position in industries
such as insurance and banking, Kilic said relations with the Japanese
lobby must be enhanced.

Kilic, who lived in the USA for over 30 years, made some suggestions
for a better promotion of Turkey in this country.

Establishment of a "Lobbying Ministry" in Turkey, steps regarding
dual citizenship, new promotion campaigns, and establishment of a
legal protection institution to protect Turks in the USA against
unjust situations are some of Kilic`s suggestions.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Turkish-European MPs Warn Gul About Increased Nationalism In

TURKISH-EUROPEAN MPS WARN GUL ABOUT INCREASED NATIONALISM IN TURKEY

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Feb 26 2007

Turkey, which last Saturday brought together in Ankara about 23
European lawmakers of Turkish descent for the first time, heard from
them that the biggest problems that they have been facing in Europe in
explaining Turkey have been the increased nationalism in the country,
as well as Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code, which criminalizes
any insult to state institutions or to ‘Turkishness."

The slain Turkish-Armenian journalist, Hrant Dink, has been the
latest victim of Article 301, which also is seen as paving the way
for violent ultra-nationalism in Turkey.

The lawmakers from the European Union’s parliament, as well as from
regional and national assemblies in Germany, Austria, Belgium,
Denmark and Sweden, were invited to Ankara for discussions over
Turkey’s EU membership bid, and to discuss ways to help Turks in
Europe better integrate into those societies. Gul asked for their
support in overcoming what he described as European prejudices
against Turkey. Having lunch with Gul at the Ankara Sheraton, the
European Parliamentarians of Turkish origin for their part stated,
amongst other things, that they themselves suffered a lot from the
ultra-nationalist trends in Europe.

"Turkey has a similar problem as well. How can we defend Turkey while
nationalism is increasing in the country, which carries the danger
of making Turkey inward-looking," they reportedly told Gul during
the lunch.

Gul, in turn, reportedly told the MPs that they should leave it to
him to tackle Turkish internal politics. "Defend Turkey in accordance
with the conditions that prevail in the countries where you are
represented in their parliaments’," Gul reportedly told the MPs,
which included those like Devrim Baba, a Turk of Kurdish origin.

Despite some earlier press criticism that the Foreign Ministry had
invited such controversial people as Devrim Baba, Ankara did not
refrain from hosting him during the Ankara gathering, said some
government officials.

Hearing complaints from MP’s about Turkey’s Article 301, Foreign
Minister Gul stated that they have an intention to change this article
in a very short time. He reportedly said: "In parallel to the changes
planned to be made to Article 301, the mentality in Turkey should
also change. The judges have a role in implementing Article 301 and
the government can not interfere in the judiciary."

One MP suggested to Gul that the article could be softened, and that
the concept of "Turkishness" could be turned into a more abstract
concept.

Those Turkish officials who attended the meeting shared an observation
of theirs with Today’s Zaman, their admiration for the MP’s, whom
they said speak Turkish better than many Turks, as well the several
other languages that they speak.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

State Department Regular News Briefing

STATE DEPARTMENT REGULAR NEWS BRIEFING

Congressional Quarterly
Feb 26 2007

SPEAKER: ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE FOR PUBLIC AFFAIRS SEAN MCCORMACK

[parts omitted]

QUESTION: Sean, I wanted to ask a question about the letter over the
Hill (ph) on behalf of the Azerbaijani community of the United States
to Secretary Rice. The community commemorates tragic (inaudible)
events, Azerbaijani side calls it a genocide.

I believe the community hopes for more active role of the U.S. in
resolution of Azerbaijani-Armenian conflict.

QUESTION: Do you have response to that letter yet?

MCCORMACK: I understand that there was a letter delivered and that
the United States deeply regrets the tragic events that transpired in
Khojali 15 years ago and condemns all such attacks on civilians. We
send our condolences to the families and friends of the victims of
that tragedy.

In order to prevent any further loss of life, it is vital that a
peaceful and just solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict be found
as soon as possible.

The United States recognizes Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and
remains committed to helping facilitate a negotiated settlement as
one of the three co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group.

QUESTION: On the same subject, the situation on the occupied
territories of Azerbaijan is on the U.N. General Assembly agenda this
year. Do you know what would be the position of the United States
during this discussion?

MCCORMACK: We’ll have to get back to you. I’m not aware off the top
of my head what that would be.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Memorandum On Cooperation In European Integration Issues Signed Betw

MEMORANDUM ON COOPERATION IN EUROPEAN INTEGRATION ISSUES SIGNED BETWEEN ARMENIAN AND POLISH FOREIGN MINISTRIES

Noyan Tapan
Feb 26 2007

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 26, NOYAN TAPAN. The high level of bilateral
political relations, to which absence of disagreements in positions to
many international problems contributes, was mentioned at the February
26 meeting of Armenian and Polish Foreign Ministers, Vartan Oskanian
and Anna Fotyga.

It was also mentioned that Poland is among the countries, with which
Armenia cooperates closely within the framework of New Neighborhood
EU policy. V. Oskanian attached a special importance to exchange of
experience with Poland in the direction of European integration. He
stated that concrete steps are being already taken in this direction,
including within the framework of fulfilment of Armenia-NATO
Individual Partnership Actions Plan (IPAP). A. Fotyga expressed
Poland’s readiness to assist Armenia as far as possible in the issue
of selection of cooperation spheres and further implementation of
cooperation within the framework of EU-Armenia Actions Plan. At the
meeting the interlocutors also discussed regional issues, energy
security problems, relations with neighboring countries, touched
upon the current process of Nagorno Karabakh settlement. As NT was
informed from RA Foreign Ministry Press and Information Department,
after the meeting Memorandum On 2007-2008 Cooperation Between RA and
Polish Foreign Ministries in Issues of European Integration was signed.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

No Application By Proportional System Received By CEC On First Day O

NO APPLICATION BY PROPORTIONAL SYSTEM RECEIVED BY CEC ON FIRST DAY OF NOMINATION OF CANDIDATES FOR RA DEPUTY

Noyan Tapan
Feb 26 2007

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 26, NOYAN TAPAN. In February 26, the first day
of nominating candidates for RA NA elections, the Central Electoral
Commission (CEC) had received no application from parties or party
blocs on nomination by proportional system. NT correspondent was
informed about it by CEC Spokesperson Tsovinar Khachatrian. To recap,
the deadline for candidates’ nomination is March 3, 18:00.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress