Film On Genocide Wins "Audience Sympathy" Award

FILM ON GENOCIDE WINS "AUDIENCE SYMPATHY" AWARD

Panorama.am
19:45 10/01/2007

The premier of documentary "Screamers" dedicated to 1915 genocide
took place in Capitolium recently. The event was organized by Adam
Shif, a congressman, American Office of the Armenian Cause and Raffi
Manukyan benevolent foundation.

"System of a down" rock group participated in the creation of the
film. The film tells about their advocacy efforts aimed at fight
against genocide. The film won "Audience Sympathy" award at Film
Festival 2006 conducted at the American Cinema Institute.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Polish Priest Leads Push To Expose Clergy Who Cooperated With Secret

POLISH PRIEST LEADS PUSH TO EXPOSE CLERGY WHO COOPERATED WITH SECRET POLICE

International Herald Tribune, France
Jan 11 2007

KRAKOW, Poland: The Rev. Tadeusz Isakowicz-Zaleski was twice brutally
beaten by Poland’s communist-era secret police. Now, he’s leading
the drive to expose clergy who cooperated with the secret services,
saying the church must confess and repent to heal wounds caused by
the misdeeds of compromised priests.

Poland’s powerful Roman Catholic Church is still reeling after Warsaw
Archbishop Stanislaw Wielgus’s abrupt resignation Sunday at what was
to have been his opulent installation Mass.

Wielgus’ dramatic downfall, triggered by his admitted cooperation
with the hated communist-era secret police in the 1970s, has rattled
deeply Catholic Poland, the homeland of the late Pope John Paul II.

"The whole tragedy is that the church had 16 years to take care of
the problem, and it didn’t do a thing," said Isakowicz-Zaleski, 50,
over coffee in a brick-vaulted cellar restaurant in Krakow.

"For many faithful the problem is not that a priest collaborated. If he
were to admit it and ask for forgiveness the issue would be closed,"
he said. "The problem is that there is a conviction that the church
is hiding a difficult problem, and the hiding is the worst part."

Now, church leaders are bracing for Isakowicz-Zaleski’s book – due out
soon – about the secret police’s penetration of the church in Krakow.

Dressed in a black robe and sporting a thick beard, Isakowicz-Zaleski
says he discovered in the archives 39 priests in the Krakow church
who cooperated with the secret police. Four of them, he says, are
now bishops.

The widening scandal threatens to tarnish the Polish church, whose
resistance to the Communist leadership was perhaps best personified
by John Paul II – the former archbishop of Krakow. His encouragement
of peaceful challenge to the regime is credited by many with hastening
its demise in 1989.

But part of the church’s reluctance to tackle the issue loops back
to the Polish-born pontiff, Isakowicz-Zaleski says.

"Some said that as long as the pope is alive, you can’t smear him.

They said the Holy Father did so much for Poland, and so you
shouldn’t reveal agents so as not to cause any unpleasantness,"
Isakowicz-Zaleski said.

He points to the fact that the first allegations of collaboration
against a Polish priest surface in late April 2005 – three weeks
after John Paul’s death.

Historians with the Institute of National Remembrance, or IPN, which
holds the secret police archives, say priests were the most persecuted
group in communist Poland. Of the some 25,000 clergy in the country,
10-15 percent are commonly estimated by church officials and historians
to have cooperated with the security agencies.

Secret police agents not only spied on the church, they also murdered
a charismatic Warsaw priest tied to Solidarity, the Rev. Jerzy
Popieluszko, in 1984.

A year later, Isakowicz-Zaleski himself was twice beaten – once in
April, once in December – by "unknown assailants … but it was a
known fact they were secret police agents," he said.

Isakowicz-Zaleski bushes aside questions on the two incidents –
saying they were rather a warning to the main priest at Nowa Huta,
the communist-utopian industrial community near Krakow, where
Isakowicz-Zaleski was helping out. In one case the culprits burned
his chest with cigarettes.

Since 1987, he has run a foundation for handicapped people outside
Krakow. On the weekends, Isakowicz-Zaleski, whose mother was of
Armenian background, performs Mass for Armenian Catholics in several
cities in southern Poland.

Two years ago, on a train to the Baltic port city of Gdansk for a
gathering of former activists of the Solidarity trade union, a friend
told Isakowicz-Zaleski the IPN in Krakow had secret police files on
him from the 1980s.

He went to take a look.

"I was shocked," he said. "There were 500 pages of documents.

Everything – passport applications, informant reports on me, secret
police reports."

For many years, church leaders underestimated the problem, believing
the assurances they received from Gen. Czeslaw Kiszczak, an interior
minister in the communist regime, that the secret police had destroyed
all the files on the church. Microfilm copies survived, however –
and later helped bring down Wielgus.

Isakowicz-Zaleski says he told his superiors of what he found in his
file, but "nobody wanted to listen."

"When the bomb exploded Jan. 7 with Wielgus, it turned out I was
right," he said.

He has clashed with the church hierarchy over his upcoming book,
which looks set to be the next major revelation of compromised clergy.

Last year, Cardinal Stanislaw Dziwisz temporarily ordered
Isakowicz-Zaleski not to speak with the press; Poland’s primate,
Cardinal Jozef Glemp, publicly criticized him, accusing him of
"sniffing around and tracking down priests to add to his book."

"The church leaders have treated it like it was written by the devil
himself," Isakowicz-Zaleski said. "I wanted the good of the church,
and they’ve made me into an enemy of the church."

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

While US Ex-Ambassador In Armenia "Calls A Spade A Spade," Candidatu

WHILE US EX-AMBASSADOR IN ARMENIA "CALLS A SPADE A SPADE," CANDIDATURE OF NEW AMBASSADOR IS BLOCKED BY SENATE

Regnum, Russia
Jan 11 2007

Statement of US ex-ambassador to Armenia John Evans on the Armenian
Genocide "was not a slip of the tongue." He said that in an interview
to Los Angeles Times. "I knew it was not the policy of the United
States" to use the word "genocide," Evans said. "Ninety years is a long
time. At some point you have to call a spade a spade," John Evans said.

It worth mentioning, at a meeting with members of the Armenian
community in San Francisco on February 19, 2005, John Evans said:
"I will today call it the Armenian genocide." Later, on February 28,
2005, speaking at the US embassy to Armenia, John Evans elaborated
on his idea of February 19. The diplomat is quoted as saying by
PanArmenian.Net that he used the word "genocide" and it was his
personal point of view not as of a governmental official.

It is worth mentioning that after John Evans was recalled from the
post of the US ambassador to Armenia, no new ambassador has been
announced yet. The candidature of Richard Hoagland introduced by the
president was turned down by Senator Robert Menendez after Hoagland
made statements denying the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire
in 1915 that stirred negative reaction from public in Armenia as well
as in the Armenian Diaspora particularly in the United States.

Independent Agency Required For Management Of Science Field

INDEPENDENT AGENCY REQUIRED FOR MANAGEMENT OF SCIENCE FIELD

Arka News Agency, Armenia
Jan 10 2007

YEREVAN, January 10. /ARKA/. An independent agency or a separate
ministry needs to be established in Armenia for management of the
science field, Chairman of the RA Fund for Science and Advanced
Technologies Harutiun Karapetyan reported.

According to him, the new body is to organize and carry out independent
research, elaborate policy and manage day-to-day operations.

To ensure the independence of the new structure, all the institutions
of the RA Academy of Sciences will be placed under the jurisdiction
of Armenia’s Ministry of Science and Education, Karapetyan said. The
Academy of Sciences will automatically become a specialized
association, like Artists’ Union, Architects’ Union or Writers’
Union, Karapetyan said. Then, the Academy can be of certain use for
Armenia’s scientific field, particularly in establishing ties with
international scientific circles.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANCA Opposes President’s Re-Nomination Of Hoagland

ANCA OPPOSES PRESIDENT’S RE-NOMINATION OF HOAGLAND

ArmRadio.am
11.01.2007 10:19

The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) voiced its opposition
to President Bush’s re-nomination of Richard Hoagland – a controversial
diplomat whose denial of the Armenian Genocide generated widespread
Congressional and Armenian American community opposition culminating
in a Senatorial "hold" of his previous nomination in the recently
concluded 109th Congress.

In a letter circulated on Capitol Hill, ANCA Chairman Ken Hachikian
called on US Senators to prevent Hoagland’s approval – stressing that,
" A genocide denier must not – and should never – represent America
in Armenia, a nation that rose from the ashes of genocide."

The Hoagland nomination faced bipartisan opposition in the 109th
Congress – and was ultimately blocked by a parliamentary "hold" placed
by Senator Bob Menendez (D-NJ) – after he disqualified himself as
an acceptable choice by denying the Armenian Genocide. In written
statements, offered in response to questions posed to him during
his confirmation hearing, he went far beyond the bounds of the
Administration’s already deeply flawed policy, actually calling into
question the Armenian Genocide as a historical fact.

A recent poll of Armenian Americans found that 97% opposed the
Hoagland nomination. Ninety-four percent of the respondents said
that they "strongly agreed" with the Senate’s opposition to his
nomination. An additional 3% noted that they "somewhat agreed" with
this opposition. One percent reported that they "somewhat disagreed"
with opposing Hoagland, and 2% indicated that they "strongly disagreed"
with the opposition to his confirmation.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Georgia Has Not Confirmed Its Application To Buy Energy From Armenia

GEORGIA HAS NOT CONFIRMED ITS APPLICATION TO BUY ENERGY FROM ARMENIA

ArmRadio.am
11.01.2007 13:31

Georgia has not confirme dthe application to buy energy from Armenia,
although at teh end of 2006 it had submitted an application on
purchasing 200MW energy from Armenia. Head of the press Service of the
Energy Ministry Lusine Harutyunyan told "Armenpress" that this year
Georgia refused to sign a corresponding agreement without providing
any explanation.

In her words, currently the quantity of energy produced in Armenia
is completely consumed in the country. The volume of production will
grow in case there is demand.

Lusine Harutyunyan informed also that the Georgian side has already
announced a tender to chose a company to construct a new high-tension
transmission line. In the future a corresponding tender will be
announced in Armenia.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

"Frozen Conflict" In Georgia, Moldova And Karabakh Among OSCE Priori

"FROZEN CONFLICT" IN GEORGIA, MOLDOVA AND KARABAKH AMONG OSCE PRIORITIES IN 2007

ArmRadio.am
11.01.2007 17:17

Among the urgent challenges for the OSCE are the "frozen conflicts"
in Georgia, Moldova and Nagorno Karabakh, Miguel Angel Moratinos, the
new OSCE Chairman-in-Office, said at the sitting of the OSCE Permanent
Council. During Spanish Chairmanship the OSCE will apply efforts in
the direction of establishing relations between societies of all the
parties. "These conflicts have built walls between people, separating
them from each other, and these walls should be destroyed. For reaching
a stable solution we must interfere to guarantee a starting point
for progress, said the OSCE Chairman-in-Office.

He noted also that the rise of OSCE’s role in the fight against
corruption, environmental protection and establishment of cooperation
and dialogue will become priorities of the organizaion in 2007.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Turkish Opinion Poll Shows Trust In European Human Rights Co

TURKISH OPINION POLL SHOWS TRUST IN EUROPEAN HUMAN RIGHTS COURT

Hurriyet, Turkey
Jan 3 2007

Text of second of the three instalments of a report on an opinion poll
conducted by Odak Polling Company: "Seventeen point two per cent of
the public believe that the United States and Israel govern us"

The results of the survey also revealed a drastic change in society.

For example, people believe that they could rely on the court in
Strasbourg if they have no other remedy.

It is a significant sign indicating that people have replaced the
concept of "State" which they regarded as a sacred cow in the past
with the notion of "law." Meanwhile, they also have clear ideas about
the Armenian allegations of genocide and they do not give credence
to those allegations. But, they cannot easily disregard conspiracy
theories. According to the survey, 17.2 per cent of the public believe
that the country is actually controlled by a power called the United
States/Israel.

Agar has affected his party’s grass roots

Recent statements made by DTP [True Path Party] leader Mehmet Agar who
said that armed Kurdish insurgents should be encouraged to lay down
their arms and to participate in the political process seem to have
affected the party’s grass roots. The most liberal interpretation of
his remark which drew attention to the possibility of being involved in
politics independent of the PKK was made by voters supporting the DTP
[Democratic Society Party] who were followed by DYP sympathizers. The
public is less tolerant when it comes to people’s right to learn and
broadcast television and radio programmes in their native tongue. But,
around 90 per cent of the respondents sympathizing with the DTP gave
positive answers to both questions.

The public does not lend credence to Armenian allegations of genocide

Only 13 per cent of the public share Armenian allegations of genocide
while 72.7 per cent categorically deny them. Interestingly, only 19.4
per cent of the respondents intending to vote for the DTP, which
targets Kurdish voters, said that they were not supporting those
allegations. One of the arguments supporting allegations of genocide
is that Hamidiye Regiments consisting of troops from Kurdish tribes
were used to attack Armenians during the Ottoman era.

Affects of conspiracy theories

A comparison of the responses to the questionnaire indicates that
this question elicited probably the most interesting answers. A part
of the respondents selected one of the options including the United
States and Israel and another one referring to the deep state and
expressed the opinion that they were playing an influential role in the
administration of the country. It was a very important indicator that
could be used for understanding the effects of conspiracy theories
on the public. Furthermore, those two answers were mostly preferred
by well educated people who can access such conspiracy theories in
books and newspapers. There is a consensus among the supporters
of all political members who agree that the media are the most
influential power.

The public is more enthusiastic about freedoms

The results of the survey show that the public has more liberal
opinions than the political parties, politicians, and opinion leaders
about almost every issue. This finding clearly explains why many
politicians are no longer popular and demonstrates the shortcomings
in the political system.

I would apply to the ECHR if necessary

An overwhelming majority of the public (61 per cent) regard the
European Court of Human Rights [ECHR] as a personal guarantee.

Seventy-three point nine per cent of the respondents who do not believe
that there is a fair legal and judicial system in Turkey said that
they trusted the ECHR.

Well-trained people want a fairer system

The interviewers did not inform the respondents about the source of
the slogans mentioned in this question or when they were used. Most
of the people interviewed chose two slogans, including "There will no
oppressed or oppressor; there will be a fair system upholding human
dignity" which was used by Bulent Ecevit’s Republican People’s Party
in the 1970s and "Enough is enough; let people speak up now!"

highlighted by Adnan Menderes’s Democrat Party in the 1940s. The first
one was preferred by university graduates sharing the opinion that
"there is not full democracy in Turkey" while others who believe that
there is full democracy said that they liked the second one more than
others. Meanwhile, Suleyman Demirel’s slogan that goes "Roads would
not be damaged if protestors walk on them" was more popular among a
majority of literate people without a diploma.

We are divided on the death penalty

The majority of the public is against torture whatever its reasons
may be. But, the grass roots of the Motherland Party [ANAP] and the
Nationalist Action Party are not so clear about this issue. The public
is split down the middle over the death penalty. The grass roots of
the ANAP seem to be in favour of capital punishment and the effects of
the PKK’s terror campaign are clearly visible in this approach. This
outcome may also be ascribed to rising tide of violence as a result
of press reports.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Draft Resolution On Recognition Of Armenian Genocide In Ottoman Turk

DRAFT RESOLUTION ON RECOGNITION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN OTTOMAN TURKEY TO BE PRESENTED IN US CONGRESS NEXT WEEK

Yerevan, January 11. ArmInfo. A group of US Congressmen, including
Adam Schiff, George Radanovich, Frank Pallone, Joe Knollenberg,
addressed a letter to the members of the US House of Representatives,
informing about their intention to present the draft resolution on
recognition of the Armenian Genocide in the Ottoman Empire in the US
Congress next week.

According to the "Zaman> Turkish newspaper, in the letter the
Congressmen appeal to their colleagues to support this initiative.

The source reminds that the voting on a similar resolution was
rejected at the last minute in 2002 when Republican Dennis Hastert,
the former Speaker of the House of Representatives decided to leave
it for the consideration of the White House’s administration.

Meanwhile, during the last parliamentary elections, Democrat Nancy
Pelosi, the present Speaker of the House of Representatives, promised
her voters to support this resolution.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Serbian Weapons Get Green Light For Export To Armenia

SERBIAN WEAPONS GET GREEN LIGHT FOR EXPORT TO ARMENIA

Agence France Presse — English
January 10, 2007 Wednesday 6:04 PM GMT

The Serbian government on Wednesday approved a deal enabling the
republic’s main arms factory to export weapons to Armenia, following
a green light from Russia.

"The ministry of international economic relations issued a licence
to the Zastava Weapons factory for exports of arms to Armenia,"
the government said in a statement.

The licence was given after a weeks-long dispute between the factory
and the government over the 2.5-million-dollar (1.9-million-euros)
deal to sell guns and rifles to Armenia.

Serbia’s foreign ministry initially refused to agree to the exports,
quoting a possible dispute with Russia over its tense relations
with Armenia.

Following a protest by the Serbian manufacturer, President Boris
Tadic had held talks with Russian diplomats and secured a green light.

Serbia considers Russia a traditional ally and relies on Moscow’s
support in solving the status issue of the disputed UN-run province
of Kosovo, later this year.

Zastava, based in the central Serbian city of Kragujevac, some 120
kilometers (70 miles) south from Belgrade, is a state-owned factory
and needs a government clearance for exports deals.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress