MOSCOW: Russian paper says Islamic groups pose “serious” problems fo

Russian paper says Islamic groups pose “serious” problems for Azerbaijan

Nezavisimaya Gazeta, Moscow
25 Apr 05

A Russian newspaper has said that various religious missionaries
have stepped up their activities in Azerbaijan which poses “serious
problems” for the country. Nezavisimaya Gazeta said that Azerbaijan
might turn into “an arena for struggle between various models and
movements of Islam – Arab, Turkish and Iranian” religious groups. It
said that the most radical of all is Wahhabism which could turn
into “a force capable of influencing the socio-political life of
the country”. The following is the text of Sohbat Mammadov’s article
headlined “Into the Mosque out of Hopelessness” report by the Russian
newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta on 25 April; subheadings have been
inserted editorially:

The National Security Ministry [NSM] of Azerbaijan recently made a
statement that a criminal group had been neutralized, which had been
preparing terrorist acts against areas where many foreigners live and
work. In the apartments of group participants the ministry discovered
a great quantity of dynamite charges, grenades, detonators, explosives,
and literature and audiocassettes promoting terrorism and jihad.

Local analysts are certain that Azerbaijan will become an arena for
struggle between various models and movements of Islam – Arab, Turkish
and Iranian ones, and this will quickly develop into serious problems.

The religious boom in Azerbaijan began almost immediately after
the fall of the USSR. First of all Islamic ritual and educational
activity started. After long years of ban in the republic, the Koran
was translated and published in Azerbaijani. Within a short time a
madras, a department of Islamic theology, was opened at Baku State
University, a Caucasian Islamic university. They began to construct
and to reconstruct mosques, which according to certain information,
now exceed 1,400 in number. The appearance on the streets of Baku of
women wearing the hijab, which was a rarity 10 years ago, is a sign
of the new times.

Wahhabism

The greatest danger today is posed by forces, which are attempting
to spread Islam in its worst form in the republic. “Benefactors”
from Arab countries, in particular from Saudi Arabia, as well as
from Iran and Turkey, have been particularly active in this. Under
the guise of philanthropic activity they have been carrying out
active work in refugee camps and among the part of the population
living in poverty. In addition they offer free education in their
countries. After having received a religious education there, the
Azerbaijani graduate imports the knowledge and views received to his
homeland. All of this plus unlimited financial inflows contributes
to the spread of radical Islamic movements in the republic.

Out of all this, the Wahhabis are especially radical. Skilled at
being secretive, they operate under the aegis of various philanthropic
organizations and religious movements and press organs. According to
certain information, today the number of followers of this movement
in the republic has reached 15,000. The Wahhabis are mainly found in
northern districts of the republic, especially in those bordering on
Russia, with a predominately Sunni population.

Local newspapers claim that the Baku center of Wahhabism is the
Abu Bakr mosque, built with petrodollars from Saudi Arabia. It is
curious that a considerable portion of members of this mosque is
made up of Russian citizens – ethnic Chechens temporarily living
in Azerbaijan. In the opinion of political analyst Rafael Hasanov,
“today Wahhabism is turning into a force capable of influencing the
socio-political life of the country.”

Other religious movements

Religious movements like “Nurculuq,” whose founder is considered
to be Academic theologian Said Nursi, are also gaining ground. The
followers of the Nur leader Fetulah Gulen, whose stated goal is
the establishment of a single Islamic Shari’ah state in the region,
have imported his teachings into Azerbaijan from Turkey. According
to Nezavisimaya Gazeta information, Nur today is a very strong and
secretive organization, having branches in Russia, Kosovo, Macedonia,
Albania and the Central Asian countries.

Teachers of Nurculuq [Nursism] appeared in Azerbaijan in 1992. One
of the reasons for the heightened interest in Azerbaijan may be
their striving to counterbalance the increasing activity of radical
Iranian Shi’i organizations. In contrast to Wahhabism, Nur ideology
prefers a peaceful assumption of power, therefore they actively push
their people into government structures. In addition, according to
information from the Baku mass media, almost half of the Turkish
business in the Azerbaijan market in concentrated in the hands of
this religious movement. They have already opened more than a dozen
educational schools and higher schools here.

Islamic radicals

Openly Islamic radicals have also become active in Azerbaijan, in
particular the Iranian Shi’i organization Jayshallah and the terrorist
group Hezbollah. Several years ago the Azerbaijani intelligence
services exposed their activity. In the course of the investigation
they learned that Jayshallah had operated illegally on Azerbaijani
territory since 1995 and it was led from Iran.

The Hezbollah group in its 12 years of secret existence in the republic
had succeeded in recruiting many young Azerbaijanis into its ranks,
who had gone for training in terrorist preparation camps in Iran. This
organization had many prominent killings to its credit, including
that of the well-known academic and orientalist, Ziya Bunyadov.

Christian missionaries

Against the background of the struggle of radical Islamic organizations
for Azerbaijan the activation of various Christian missionary
communities has also been observed. The religious sects Life-giving
Grace, Living Stones, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Church of Praise,
Seventh Day Adventists and others have been the most active. Many
of them distribute books that they have published themselves, are
proselytizing Christianity and are calling on Muslims to accept the
Christian faith. Material considerations here play far from the least
role here. Some Azerbaijanis living in poverty willingly agreed to
accept Christianity for 200-250 dollars.

By the way, sources in the force structures of the republic believe
that the danger of sectarianism at the present time is obvious. Even
more because missionaries do not conceal plans for transforming
Azerbaijan into a kind of beachhead for large scale sectarianism. By
the way, no one today can guarantee that tomorrow one of the Islamic
fanatics won’t attempt to even scores with missionaries who are
feeling free and easy in Azerbaijan.

Studying the tendency for a growing portion of the republic’s
population, especially young people, to be religious, analyst Sultan
Cavansir believes that the main reason for this phenomenon is an
increase in the portion of uneducated and despairing young people
who do not have any possibility for realizing themselves, and the
poverty and social discontent of a major portion of society, of the
refugee camps, where under the guise of humanitarian assistance,
various foreign forces are operating.

Turks’ patriotism raises flags as EU talks near

The Houston Chronicle
May 01, 2005, Sunday 2 STAR EDITION

Turks’ patriotism raises flags as EU talks near;
The country’s sacred symbol is cropping up as nationalism rises

by GARETH JONES

ANKARA, TURKEY – Anyone visiting Turkey in recent weeks might be
forgiven for thinking the country had just gone to war or at the very
least won a major soccer tournament.

Public buildings, homes, buses, taxis and private cars have been
festooned with the national flag, which bears a white Islamic crescent
moon and star on a red background.

Rallies and protests featuring the flag have been held across Turkey.
In the eastern city of Erzurum, the German ambassador was prevented
from cutting a cake decorated with the Turkish flag on the grounds
it could signify disrespect.

This outpouring of patriotic fervor was sparked by an incident last
month in which youths tried unsuccessfully to set fire to a Turkish
flag during a pro-Kurdish demonstration in the port city of Mersin.

An overreaction? Turkey’s military General Staff did not think so. It
issued a statement vowing to defend the nation to its “last drop of
blood.” Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan announced sternly that the flag
was a sacred symbol for Turks.

Security officers detained the 13- and 14-year-old boys accused of
setting fire to the flag, along with nine others.

‘Feeling cornered’

The flag-waving has raised some questions about Turks’ state of mind
as they prepare for the start of talks in October to join the European
Union, a club founded on the rejection of nationalism that enjoins
its members to share sovereignty and focus on common values.

“Turks are feeling cornered, besieged from outside and betrayed from
within,” said Dogu Ergil, head of the liberal think-tank TOSAM. “The
explosion was waiting to happen. In Mersin, somebody simply lit
the match.”

The perceived threats from outside include EU pressure on a range of
sensitive issues including Cyprus, as well as the presence of U.S.
troops in neighboring Iraq. Inside Turkey, he said, people fear
“betrayal” by Kurds and other ethnic or religious minorities.

The reaction to the Mersin incident is just one of a number of signals
troubling advocates of Turkey’s EU membership.

Adolf Hitler’s anti-Semitic tract Mein Kampf has shot onto the
best-seller lists. Turkey’s best-known novelist Orhan Pamuk has
received death threats for backing Armenian claims of genocide at
Turkish hands in World War I. A government minister said Christian
missionaries threaten national unity, even though only a handful of
Turks have converted.

Perception gap widens

The Constitutional Court struck down a law allowing foreigners to buy
real estate, and the president threw out a bill ending restrictions
on foreign ownership of national broadcasters, saying it would harm
national interests.

The ruling Justice and Development Party, the AKP, has vowed to press
ahead with those two laws. But the impression from these incidents
is of a country succumbing to paranoia and trying to retreat into
its shell, diplomats say.

“The perception gap between Turkey and the EU is wider than at any time
since the AKP came to power” in November 2002, said one Ankara-based
European diplomat.

The diplomat noted that nationalism is a founding principle of
the Turkish Republic and is viewed as a very positive force, while
Europeans are far more mindful of its destructive power, which led
to the decision to set up the EU.

“Turkey did not go through the catharsis of World War II. To
reject nationalism here is to reject the republic and (its founder
Kemal) Ataturk. This difference in experience can feed a sense of
incompatibility between Turkey and Europe,” he said.

Emin Sirin, an independent member of the Turkish Parliament, said
the Turks’ “pressure cooker” discontent stemmed mainly from a sense
of hurt pride over the EU’s treatment of their country.

The Constitutional Court struck down a law allowing foreigners to buy
real estate, and the president threw out a bill ending restrictions
on foreign ownership of national broadcasters, saying it would harm
national interests.

ANKARA: US State Dept’s Kennedy to arrive in Ankara today

Turkish Press
May 2 2005

Press Review

Cumhuriyet

US STATE DEPARTMENT’S KENNEDY TO ARRIVE IN ANKARA TODAY

US State Department Undersecretary Laura Kennedy is due today to
arrive in Ankara to meet with Turkish officials to discuss a number
of matters, including the so-called Armenian genocide issue, Cyprus,
and the Caucasus. During her two-day stay in Turkey, she is expected
to urge Ankara to open its borders with Armenia and to stress that
closed borders aren’t useful for either side. However, Turkey doesn’t
want to open its borders to Armenia before it takes concrete steps
for the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabagh dispute. The US sources
said that the genocide issue was up to the historians, but that the
issue also had a political dimension. Recently the US administration
urged Armenia to recognize its borders with Turkey. /Cumhuriyet/

Bigger than life: Cartoon draws in a Rockefeller

MSNBC
May 2 2005

Bigger than life: Cartoon draws in a Rockefeller

By David Mildenberg
Charlotte Business Journal

Updated: 8:00 p.m. ET May 1, 2005A Rockefeller heir is now president
of a little-known Charlotte film production company that thinks Burt,
Sully, Squeeky and other animated Danger Rangers characters have a
monster future.

Steve Rockefeller says he took the job because of Educational
Adventures Inc.’s opportunity to excel financially while also doing
good. “It’s very difficult to find a for-profit venture that has both
a great mission and great potential for business success,” says
Rockefeller, who lives in a New York City suburb. “This is the best
opportunity I’ve seen.”

A former managing director in private banking at Deutsche Bank,
Rockefeller will help Chief Executive Michael Moore develop the
company. A key task will be working with New York investment bank
DeSilva & Phillips, which specializes in media, to raise $19 million.

Educational Adventures produces an animated TV program, books and
other media featuring characters called the Danger Rangers that show
kids how to avoid accidents.

Public TV stations in Charlotte, Los Angeles, Atlanta and other
cities ran the program’s pilot. Because of positive viewer feedback,
they plan five additional episodes that are in production.

Moore is lining up airtime on other public TV affiliates such as a
Honolulu station he visited this week. Having a Rockefeller on board
should help, given that his cousin, Susan Percy Rockefeller, is chief
executive of Washington’s WETA station and a longtime director of the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

“We were really amazed at how well it did,” says Elsie Garner, chief
executive of WTVI in Charlotte. “I can’t wait to see the entire
series.”

Moore and Doug Smith started the company in 1999. Neither had any TV
or film industry experience, but both spotted an opportunity to use
entertainment to reduce the 20,000 annual children’s deaths due to
preventable accidents.

Over the past six years, the duo has made contacts in the film and
educational media markets.

They’ve also raised about $5 million from several dozen angel
investors, including retired Charlotte insurance executive Leonard
Bullock and Charlotte ophthalmologist Galen Grayson.

They’ve received at least as much in in-kind contributions from
various advisers with major entertainment and children’s media
credentials, says Moore, who is no relation to the famous documentary
maker with the same name.

Advisory board members include Hollywood producer Howard Kazanjian,
whose films include Star Wars, Return of the Jedi and Raiders of the
Lost Ark; Larry Huber, formerly executive producer of The Flintstones
and creator of Nickelodeon’s The Chalkzone; and Dr. Alvin Poussaint,
a Harvard Medical School psychiatrist.

A key force for the company, Moore says, is Ilie Agopian, who runs
Central Piedmont Community College’s TV station. He introduced Moore
to Kazanjian, a fellow Armenian-American.

“Obviously our calling is humanitarian,” Grayson says. “But as a
byproduct, we’re going to be a very, very successful business.”

Rockefeller’s wife, Kim, met Moore three years ago and was intrigued
by his passion for children’s safety issues, Steve Rockefeller says.
She runs an affiliated nonprofit foundation that will distribute the
company’s products to low-income families.

But Educational Adventures, which has eight employees, is very much a
for-profit, Moore emphasizes. The business plan projects revenue
topping $100 million within five years,

“The problem with most educational programs is that they are so
boring that most kids won’t watch them,” Moore says. “But our
business model calls for our productions to have the entertainment
values of a Disney film along with the educational value of the very
best on the market today.”

KidsFirst, a Santa Fe, N.M.-based nonprofit group that rates
children’s programming, gave its highest rating to the Danger
Rangers’ first episode.

“The Danger Rangers is a unique and delightfully animated show that
uses action-adventure, comedy and lively songs to impart safety tips
that entertain, educate and save lives,” KidsFirst reported.

KidsFirst President Ranny Levy predicts Danger Rangers will become
nationally popular, though not to the level of Nickelodeon’s popular
Blue’s Clues or Dora The Explorer.

“It is more of a niche market because of its focus on safety,” she
says.

For Moore and Smith, getting this far is no small feat.

“I’ve come within 24 hours of losing my home, and there’ve been
extended periods of time in which we literally had no food in the
refrigerator and all of our utilities have been turned off,” Moore
says.

Another hurdle came in 2000-01, when Educational Adventures lost
$750,000 in a fraudulent investment banking scam. But the firm’s
investors have stuck with the founders. “They’ve given new meaning to
the term ‘angel investors,'” Moore says.

“Michael really has made the supreme sacrifice and it’s been tough
for him, but he knew what he wanted and he’s stuck with it,” Bullock
says.

Kaiser Wilhelm II. und die Geschehnisse am Bosporus

Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
29. April 2005

Kaiser Wilhelm II. und die Geschehnisse am Bosporus

Zu Ihrer ausführlichen Berichterstattung über die Greuel an den
Armeniern seitens des Osmanischen Reiches im Jahre 1915 (F.A.Z. vom
23. April) erlaube ich mir anzumerken: In Ihren zahlreichen Artikeln
zum Völkermord in Kleinasien im zweiten Kriegsjahr 1915 suggerieren
Sie, die Armeniergreuel seien eine tragische Folgeerscheinung des
Ersten Weltkrieges.

Der osmanische Sultan Abd ül-Hamid II. (gestorben 1918), ein
Bewunderer Wilhelms II., hatte bereits in den frühen 1890er Jahren
mehrere hunderttausend Armenier ermorden lassen. 1909, im Gefolge der
jungtürkischen Revolution, hoben die blutigen Verfolgungen gegen die
christliche Minderheit von neuem an, als Nonkonformisten des neuen
jungtürkischen Regimes die Armenier der “Unterstützung der
Revolution” bezichtigten und etwa 20000 Armenier in Südostkleinasien
mit Zentrum in Adana niedermetzelten. Die politische Führung um den
deutschen Kaiser Wilhelm II., der sich 1898 in seiner berühmten
Damaskusrede zum “Schutzherrn” der Mohammedaner erklärt hatte, als
auch die deutsche Öffentlichkeit waren explizit über die grausamen
Geschehnisse am Bosporus unterrichtet. Berichteten doch die deutschen
Zeitungen, unter anderen die renommierte Gazette “Frankfurter Zeitung
und Handelsblatt”, in ihren Aufmachern in aller Ausführlichkeit von
den Greueltaten der Hohen Pforte. Obwohl vertragspolitisch kein
Bündnis zwischen dem vom Norden vom Zarenreich bedrohten Osmanischen
Reich und Berlin bestand, versuchte die Reichsleitung seit 1912, den
“sterbenden Mann am Bosporus” näher an den Dreibund zu binden.
Wilhelm II. hat aber wohl wissend die unglaublichen Massaker an den
Armeniern militärischen wie politischen Interessen nachgeordnet.

Im Juli 1915 endlich berichtete die deutsche diplomatische Vertretung
in Istanbul nach Berlin, die Zwangsmaßnahmen gegen die Armenier in
Kleinasien machten deutlich, daß die türkische “Regierung tatsächlich
den Zweck verfolgt, die armenische Rasse im türkischen Reiche zu
vernichten”.

Dr. phil. Michael Peters, Erlangen

ANKARA: Response to Kocharian is moderate

Turkish Press
April 30 2005

Press Scan

RESPONSE TO KOCHARIAN IS MODERATE

RADIKAL- Turkey sent positive signal to Armenian President Robert
Kocharian who asked to have, first of all, diplomatic relations with
Turkey. Foreign Ministry announced that Kocharian’s letter was
assessed under a positive point of view. This statement showed that
Turkey wouldn’t say ‘definite no’ to the proposal of Yerevan.

Viaje a NK, una tierra olvidada y siempre en estado de guerra

Clarin, Argentina
29/04/2005

UN PEQUEÑO ESTADO TECNICAMENTE INEXISTENTE CON UN INGRESO ANUAL PER
CAPITA DE 310 DOLARES

Viaje a Nagorno Karabaj, una tierra olvidada y siempre en estado de
guerra

En 1993 se declaró independiente. Armenia la protege y Azerbaiján la
reclama. Se lo disputaron en una guerra. Hoy rige una tregua. Pero el
peligro persiste.

Marcelo Cantelmi. STEPANAKERT ENVIADO ESPECIAL
[email protected]

Estamos del otro lado del espejo, donde la irrealidad es no sólo
posible sino a veces, necesaria. Nagorno Karabaj es una no-república,
un no-Estado miniatura de 4.800 kilómetros cuadrados y 140.000
habitantes, que se declaró independiente en 1993, pero que,
técnicamente, no existe. Nadie en el mundo lo reconoce, ni siquiera
su protectora Armenia.

Esta acrobacia fascinante de política ficción tiene una razón que la
hace posible. Sirve, por el momento, para mantener vivo un frágil
cese del fuego con la vecina Azerbaiján, declarado en 1994 pero por
cuyo futuro nadie se anima a hacer apuestas.

La clave de ese cese es un enorme oleoducto que petroleras de EE.UU.
y Gran Bretaña construyen para unir el sur azerí con Georgia y un
puerto turco: demasiada inversión para aceptar que continúe una pelea
no terminada. Nagorno Karabaj está a unos 350 kilómetros de Erevan,
la capital de Armenia. Para llegar aquí hay que viajar unas siete
horas por un dificultoso camino internacional, parte de la legendaria
ruta de la seda que hoy conecta el comercio en camiones entre Irán y
el flamante capitalismo armenio.

En una parte del camino se alza un magro puesto policial que es la
aduana del novísimo Estado. Desde allí, una autovía en perfecto
estado lleva hasta la capital, Stepanakert. Esa ruta es una especie
de práctico monumento elevado al esfuerzo de la diáspora armenia que
en un solo día de setiembre pasado reunió 12 millones de dólares para
abastecer de infraestructura y esfuerzo militar a este país
inverosímil también llamado Montañosa República de Karabaj.

La ciudad, que alberga a unas 40.000 personas, como el resto del país
con un ingreso anual de apenas 310 dólares per cápita, es una
auténtica mezcla de culturas. En 1920, la URSS de Joseph Stalin,
dueña por entonces de toda la región, entregó Nagorno Karabaj a la
musulmana Azerbaiján. Los armenios, católicos pero a su vez
obedientes obligados comunistas, aguardaron hasta 1988, cuando el
bloque soviético comenzó a desplomarse, para retomar su demanda por
este histórico territorio. El forcejeo acabó en una guerra abierta en
1992, deto nada por un plebiscito que llevó a la declaración de
independencia de Nagorno un año después.

Desde el inicio de las hostilidades y hasta el cese del fuego, en
1994, murieron más de 20.000 personas y medio millón sufrió heridas o
fue desplazado, de uno y otro lado. La guerra tuvo características
únicas. Como ambos países en conflicto utilizaban similares uniformes
y hasta peleaban con tanques de igual origen, soviético, el gran
problema era, en medio del tiroteo, cómo distinguirse entre buenos y
malos para no matarse equivocadamente. Los armenios decidieron
pintarse cruces en los uniformes y los blindados. No se trató de una
solución ausente de riesgos, pero ayudó a aclarar el juego.

Hoy en Stepanakert se puede ver parte de la arquitectura soviética
junto a tonos de la antigua presencia azerí y los estilos
medianamente modernos de la reconstrucción de posguerra.

Nagorno Karabaj es por muchas de estas razones la Esparta de este
Cáucaso oriental. La guerra, en absoluto, se ha ido. “Hay mucha
tensión. Tenemos que vigilar las fronteras, porque ellos pueden
atacar, tienen cómo”, dice a Clarín Gresha Hayrapetyan, miembro del
Comité Central de la Federación Revolucionaria Armenia de Nagorno. El
general y veterano de la guerra Vitali Balsanian concuerda. “Hay
peligro. Ellos – Azerbaiján – rompen (el algo el fuego) constantemente
cruzando las fronteras. Y lo hacen y el mundo está en silencio”,
dice.

Camino a la frontera azerí es posible observar las consecuencias
desastrosas de la guerra y confirmar el peligro que sobrevuela el
statu quo de calma.

En lo alto de las montañas se balancean cables inmensos, unidos de
una cima a la otra, con largas tiras de alambre colgando, formando
cortinas invisibles para que allí se enreden los helicópteros azeríes
que se atrevan a ingresar alguna noche en el espacio aéreo de
Karabaj.

El último poblado antes de la frontera binacional se llama Aghtam,
está prácticamente deshabitado y allí la escena es dantesca. Aldeas
enteras destruidas, casas que apenas se sostienen en pie debido a los
bombardeos y la metralla, alguna puerta que resistió milagrosamente
sin paredes alrededor. Mientras avanzamos por un camino en pésimo
estado, lo que hay a un lado y otro está arrasado, salvo alguna base
militar del gobierno de Nagorno Karabaj con soldados armenios dentro.

A siete kilómetros de la frontera con Azerbaiján, Any, la traductora
y guía de Clarín, le pide al chofer que baje la velocidad. Nada ha
sucedido, pero el todo terreno se va deteniendo. Le digo que
continuemos unos kilómetros hasta que el otro lado sea visible. Any
accede, pero está nerviosa. Dos kilómetros más adelante finalmente
dice señalando hacia adelante: “Ok, no more, snipers over there.”

Los snipers, francotiradores, están en las montañas, me muestra. No
los veo; ella los presume. “Quizá nada suceda, pero nunca se sabe.
Aquí siempre hay incidentes, disparan todo el tiempo”, dice y me pide
que no salgamos del automóvil.

La zona es un campo minado, puestas las bombas por uno y otro lado,
pero sin carteles que digan dónde. El camino es seguro, también las
banquinas, pero a los pocos metros, donde se desparraman los
esqueletos de los edificios bombardeados, nadie se atreve a andar
salvo algunas vacas, que posiblemente mueran sin saber en su
atrevimiento qué les pegó.

Armenian Genocide issue – possible lever for pressure upon Turkey

Pan Armenian News

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ISSUE – POSSIBLE LEVER FOR PRESSURE UPON TURKEY

28.04.2005 05:49

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Director of Russian Center for Strategic Research Andrey
Piontkovski believes that under the joint Armenia and EU pressure the
Turkish authorities will try to find a way to censure the Armenian Genocide.
Piontkovski noted that many EU countries are skeptical toward Turkey’s
accession to the Union, considering a non-Christian country joining the
European structure will change its way of thinking. «They will use the fact
of Ankara relation to the Armenian Genocide issue with pleasure and it can
hamper Turkey’s accession to the EU,» noted Andrey Piontkovski. «However, on
the other hand, I am surprised at Turkey’s readiness to refuse many
prejudices for accession to the EU.» In his turn, expert of the Center for
Political Technologies Sergey Mikheev noted that the EU demand to
acknowledge the Armenian Genocide can turn out to be merely a veil. «One
should understand that interests are a priority,» he noted. In his words,
all the rest is a technological «game» at the most. It the accession of
Turkey is favorable to the EU, irrespective of whether it acknowledges the
Genocide or not, it will be admitted to the EU. If continued pressure is in
the interest of the EU, the Genocide issue will be used as a lever to put
pressure upon Turkey for a period of time, the expert added.

Concert marking Armenian Genocide in Tobolsk

Pan Armenian News

CONCERT MARKING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN TOBOLSK

28.04.2005 04:51

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Dialogue of Cultures concert marking the 90-th anniversary
of the Armenian Genocide in Turkey was held in Tobolsk, reported the
Yerkramas, the newspaper of Armenians of Russia. Newspaper representative in
the Tumen District, Chairman of the Youth parliament of Tobolsk Hakob
Asloyan has organized the event. Bands of diverse nationalities living in
the city took part in the concert, remarkable for the participants
performing items in Armenian. Thus, well-known Tatar singers and composers
brother Hasan and Husain Arangulovs sang Manushak (Violet) song and Shape
Ballet Russian ethnographic group professionally performed an Armenian folk
dance.

NKR GDP 18 per cent up in 2004

The NKR [Nagornyy Karabakh Republic]GDP 18 per cent up in 2004

Artsakh Public TV, Stepanakert
26 Apr 05

Text of report by Nagornyy Karabakh’s Artsakh Public TV on 26 April

The NKR [Nagornyy Karabakh Republic] Cabinet of Ministers held a
plenary meeting on 26 April.

The Cabinet adopted over 40 decisions, draft laws, changes and
amendments to some laws. The adopted decisions covered economic issues
in general, agriculture, health care, social security, taxation,
education, sports, finance and so on.

The Cabinet also adopted a report on the 2004 state budget. GDP in
2004 increased by 18.2 per cent, budget revenue being 48 per cent more
than in 2003, the NKR prime minister, Anushavan Daniyelyan, said. In
2005, GDP will reach 48bn drams [109m dollars], and thus, the NKR’s
GDP will double compared to 2001, Anushavan Daniyelyan noted.