Minister Oskanian Meets with UK Foreign Secretary Jack Straw

PRESS RELEASE
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia
Contact: Information Desk
Tel: (374-1) 52-35-31
Email: [email protected]
Web:
Minister Oskanian Meets with UK Foreign Secretary Jack Straw
Minister Oskanian paid a working visit to the United Kingdom of Great
Britain and Northern Ireland on April 21 – 22. He held a series of official
meetings, spoke to a group of experts and academics, and met with
representatives of the Armenian community.

On Thursday, April 22, Minister Oskanian met with Foreign Secretary Jack
Straw and Parliamentary Undersecretary Bill Rammell. The Minister briefed
them on Armenia’s domestic situation and progress in economic development.
They also spoke about Armenia’s relations with its neighbors, regional
developments, including the Nagorno Karabakh negotiations process, and the
situation in Iraq and Afghanistan. The Secretary indicated their support for
Caucasus inclusion in the European Union’s Wider Europe New Neighborhood
Initiative. Minister Oskanian extended an invitation to Secretary Straw to
visit Armenia.

Earlier in the day, the Minister had a working lunch with Sir Brian Fall,
Special Envoy to the Caucasus, Terry Davis, Member of Parliament and the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe’s Rapporteur on Nagorno
Karabakh, as well as Simon Butt, Head of the UK Foreign Office Eastern
Department. They discussed Armenia’s engagement in European structures, as
well as prospects for the resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict.

The Minister also held a morning meeting with Angus Robertson, member of
Parliament, and head of the Parliament’s South Caucasus group.

On Wednesday, the Minister made a presentation at the Royal Institute of
International Studies (Chatham House) on The New Caucasus in a Rapidly
Changing Geopolitical Context. The Minister addressed an invited group of
academics, regional experts, journalists and members of the international
community. The Minister talked about four major challenges facing Armenia in
the region: security, development, Eurointegration and the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict. This was a return visit. Minister Oskanian last held such a talk
at the highly respected Chatham House in March 1999.

Questions covered relations with Turkey, prospects for resolution of the
Karabakh conflict, Armenia’s domestic situation, and Armenia’s expectations
of European integration.

The Minister also met with a group of community youth leaders and
representatives about Armenia’s foreign and domestic situation, economic
development. He welcomed the interest of the youth in Armenia’s and
Diaspora’s development and encouraged their continuing involvement. He also
invited them to Armenia to participate in a variety of projects in order to
become more closely engaged and informed.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Another Statement Condemning Assault on Ashot Manucharyan

A1 Plus | 18:42:34 | 23-04-2004 | Politics |
ANOTHER STATEMENT CONDEMNING ASSAULT ON ASHOT MANUCHARYAN
Homeland Popular Front came up with a statement on Friday condemning assault
on Socialist Forces leader Ashot Manucharyan.
“Armenian President is fully responsible for such a terror. We demand to
stop man-hunting and to release political prisoners”, the statement says.
It is also said in the statement that illegitimate authorities’ attempts to
intimidate citizens are doomed to failure, as they are only strengthening
people’s unity and determination to achieve the goal.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Beirut: Hogasapian requests change in date for Industry Day

The Daily Star, Lebanon
April 23 2004
Hogasapian requests change in date for Industry Day
Beirut MP Jean Hogasapian urged the Lebanese Industrialists’
Association to change the date of the Industry Day from April 24 to
another date as it coincides with the commemoration day of the
Armenian genocide.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Overlooking the present

The South End, MI
April 24 2004
Overlooking the present
Ali Moossavi
Vibe Editor
I have absolutely no problem with Holocaust Remembrance Day. This
may come as a shock to those who confuse my anti-Zionist views for
anti-Semitism, but my hatred for an apartheid state’s settler
colonial policies does not equate to respect for racist mass murder.
Logic states that if I’m offended by one form of dehumanizing
violence, then others will offend me equally. And I’m a logical
person, or at least that’s what the voices in my head tell me.
What I do have a problem with is the use of one people’s horror to
justify another. The use of the Holocaust as a propaganda tool to
justify the conquest and ethnic cleansing of Palestine is not only
tired in its repetition or immoral as a phenomenon; it’s also an easy
target. There are other important topics to deal with, so I’ll leave
this one alone.
Another aspect of Holocaust Remembrance Day that does annoy me,
however, is the fact that only the Holocaust is noted. Some
commentators in the Israeli press have noted this and suggest that
steps should be made toward helping Armenians gain recognition for
their 1915 genocide that claimed 1.5 million people by the Ottoman
empire, now modern day Turkey.
While well intentioned, it completely misses the point. Despite
the necessity of studying and remembering past genocides, it doesn’t
do any good to sit back and self-righteously condemn other societies
for their sins while ignoring one’s own.
This seems to be the case with the United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum. On their Web site, they have something called
“Genocide Watch,” which currently includes Chechnya and Sudan. This
may seem noble, and in fact it is, the problem with it is that the
United States has little or nothing to do with these atrocities,
either directly or indirectly.
Considering that the museum documents a 65-year-old genocide under
a country we were at war with, while pointing a human rights
microscope away from our allies and ourselves and onto others, smells
of moral dishonesty serving political interests. That’s not what
“never again” was supposed to mean.
It would be braver – and more pertinent – to extract the universal
lesson that the Holocaust teaches, which is that mass murder – in any
form and for any reason – is universal.
After all, unlike the Germans during World War II who for the most
part didn’t know what was going on in the east, mass murder has been
with American politics since this country’s founding and has been
well-documented. Yet, despite its relatively well-known existence,
Americans have sat idly by, with some celebrating it, while others
pretend to know nothing.
Take the genocide against Native Americans, for example. It is now
widely known that millions of indigenous people were killed over a
period of almost two centuries, either through conventional or
biological warfare (remember those smallpox-infected blankets?) for
the purpose of stealing their land.
It was an American Lebensraum, genocide and expansion, much like
Hitler’s conquest of Eastern Europe. Yet no museum exists to
commemorate it, or anything that happened since then, including
Vietnam.
No one ever thinks of the Vietnam War as mass murder. Yet that’s
exactly what it was. The United States and its South Vietnamese
allies killed at least two million Vietnamese during the war, which
lasted from 1965-1973, when the direct American role ended, followed
by the fall of Saigon in 1975. Many of those deaths resulted from the
enormous aerial bombardment, but a significant proportion also
occurred from rampaging American soldiers.
This isn’t to say that all American GIs were rampaging killing
machines. Many of them became outspoken critics of the war and their
efforts led to the Winter Soldier hearings in Detroit, where
testimonies regarding the many massacres that made up the war were
heard.
An elite Army unit called, “Tiger Force,” carried out one such
massacre, which lasted over a period of seven months in South
Vietnam’s Central Highlands, in 1967. Hundreds of villagers were
killed, by being blown up with grenades or shot execution style. Then
their bodies were mutilated by having their ears cut off to make
necklaces.
Worst of all, commanders knew that these things were going on, yet
did nothing. In fact, a four-year investigation by the Army, which
went all the way to the Pentagon and the White House, was kept secret
and no charges were filed when it was dropped in 1975. The only
reason anybody knows about this is because of an investigation
conducted by the Toledo Blade newspaper.
Incidentally, the Secretary of Defense in 1975 is also the Defense
Secretary now – Donald Rumsfeld. Mass murder of the kind that
occurred in 1967 is probably happening in Iraq now, and remembering
the Holocaust isn’t going to stop it unless immediate action is
taken.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

HH Aram I urges international action to prevent future genocide

Associated Press Worldstream
April 23, 2004 Friday 7:06 AM Eastern Time
Armenian spiritual leader urges international action to prevent
future genocide
by JOSEPH PANOSSIAN; Associated Press Writer
ANTELIAS, Lebanon
Commemorating the early 20th century death of hundreds of thousands
of Armenians in Ottoman Turkey, the spiritual leader of about 2
million survivors and their descendants on Friday urged international
action to prevent future genocide.
Aram I, head of the Armenian Orthodox Church in the diaspora, said
the world should impose economic sanctions, “and in extreme
situations, engage in humanitarian intervention” to stop mass
killings.
“These are the most efficient ways of preventing genocide,” he told a
two-day conference organized by his church.
Speaking at the opening session of the conference on Thursday, Aram I
also announced the establishment of an International Center for
Dialogue, Peace and Human Rights, to be based at his seat in the
northern Beirut suburb of Antelias.
The International Conference on Genocide, Impunity and Justice
brought together Lebanese Cabinet ministers, lawmakers, religious
leaders from other sects and foreign scholars and diplomats.
Speakers focused on the inadequacy of existing international criminal
laws in dealing with mass killings, which mostly go unpunished. The
speakers included U.N. human rights and world court officials, as
well as a presidential representative from Rwanda, where the world’s
latest genocide a decade ago killed nearly 800,000 people.
Armenians say they lost 1.5 million people in 1915-23 as Ottoman
Turkish authorities deported entire communities from various
provinces. Turkey says the number of deaths was fewer, and that they
resulted from civil unrest.
Starting Friday, Armenians around the globe mark the anniversary of
the start of the killings with marches, torch parades, sit-ins,
lectures and vigils.
But in Lebanon for the second consecutive year, such public
manifestations by the vibrant Armenian community of nearly 100,000
were canceled because of the conflict in Iraq and the Palestinian
territories. Only a candlelit vigil will be held Friday at the seat
of the Armenian Orthodox Catholicosate in Antelias.
Armenians have been trying for decades to gain recognition of the
mass killings in Turkey as the 20th century’s first genocide. Turkey
has repeatedly opposed the measure.
Canada on Wednesday became the 16th country to label the killings as
genocide when its parliament backed a resolution 153-68 condemning
the actions of the Ottoman Turkish forces as a “crime against
humanity.” Turkey protested the Canadian vote.
Switzerland, France, Argentina and Russia – as well as 11 U.S. state
governments – have also called the killings genocide, and Armenians
are lobbying for similar action from the U.S. government.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

US envoy tries to be impartial in assessment of situation in Armenia

US envoy tries to be impartial in assessment of situation in Armenia – paper
Haykakan Zhamanak, Yerevan
23 Apr 04
Text of Hayk Gevorkyan report by Armenian newspaper Haykakan Zhamanak
on 23 April headlined “The ambassador tried to seem neutral”
US Ambassador to Armenia John Ordway held a regular news conference
yesterday. Naturally, its main theme was the domestic political
situation in Armenia after the 13 April events [opposition rally].
The keynote of the ambassador’s answers was that the events should
develop in a way that would rule out violence and ensure a
constructive dialogue between the authorities and the opposition.
“It is obvious that there are many different views regarding Armenia’s
future and those differences should be resolved only in a democratic
and civilized way, exclusively by means of political dialogue,” the
ambassador said.
However, his words concerning the dialogue were more directed to the
authorities: “It is very important that the authorities create a basis
for political discussions and the opposition takes part in these
discussions.” It was evident that it was a principled task for US
Ambassador to Armenia John Ordway not to make any statements
expressing a preference for either party. So, he noted several times
that actions of the authorities did not promote dialogue. The
ambassador asked a rhetorical question: is it realistic to wait for
the opposition to enter the dialogue when, for example, police starts
acting in front of their parties’ offices?
According to Ordway, it is no good if the parties think that they are
in a deadlock. He especially stressed that all the actions aimed at
coming out of the current situation should be decided “in Armenia and
by Armenians”.
He said that in the last 10 days he had had numerous meetings and
telephone talks with party leaders, including [Armenian President
Robert] Kocharyan. But he declined to specify the details of the
meeting with Kocharyan.
As for the recognition of the Armenian genocide by the USA, the
ambassador believes that the USA has not changed its position
regarding this issue. “But I am expecting that in two days we shall
have the US president’s statement dedicated to 24 April [marked in
Armenia as “genocide day”] and it will then be clear how he decides to
form our policy,” John Ordway said.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Oil interests hang in the balance in Karabakh conflict

The Georgian Messenger
23 April 2004
Prepared by Anna Arzanova
Oil interests hang in the balance in Karabakh conflict
According to the newspaper Nezavisimaya Gazeta, the aggravation of
Armenian-Azeri conflict may interfere in the construction of the pipeline
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan. For the first time after ten years of peace, there has
been talk in Baku and in Yerevan about the possibility of the renewal of
military actions in the zone of the Nagorno-Karabakh con-flict.
Last week, the Minister of Defense of Azerbaijan stated that a war between
Armenia and Azerbaijan may start at any moment and specified that it can
take place given that Armenian authorities are loosing control over the
situation in the country, where the political crisis is aggravating.
The United States is concerned that armed forces may act independent of
politicians and provoke armed conflict themselves. The clearest sign of
Washington’s concern regarding the development of events in the zone of
Armenian-Azeri conflict is the appointment of Steven Mann as the American
co-chair of the Minsk Group of the OSCE.
This diplomat managed to solve the most important problem for the United
States to direct the transportation of energy resources from the Caspian Sea
region to the West, which is needed by Washingon. Steven Mann has close
relations not only with the leadership of one of the countries involved in
the conflict Azerbaijan, but also with Western oil companies, which have
interests in this region.
It is possible that Washington really intends to stimulate the process of
regulating the conflict. Though, probably, the task before Steven Mann is to
postpone armed conflict until 2005. By this time, the BTC pipeline will be
set in motion. After this, the insuring of the pipeline’s security will
become an international problem.
The West will at any price not allow the renewal of hostilities, though, as
the former co-chairman of the Minsk Group of OSCE of Russia Vladimer
Kazimirov said, the experience gained by Steven Mann at the position of
president’s special representative of the United States in Caspian region,
will not help him in this new field. “There are lots of ways to exert
pressure to avoid armed actions and the smell of oil is not necessary for
this,” states the expert.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Isolated: A visit to a forgotten village

ArmeniaNow.com
23 April 2004
Isolated: A visit to a forgotten village
By Vahan Ishkhanyan ArmeniaNow reporter
When the snow melts, the village of Geghakar restores its connection with
the world.
Geghakar comes out when the snow goes away.
A nearly impassable road is the only link with the outside, and when nature
closes it, Geghakar about 75 miles northeast of Yerevan hibernates until
spring.
Until 1989, the village – formerly called Yenikend – was one of the richest
cattle breeding areas of the Gegharkunik region. It was an Azeri settlement
until then. But its population and its livestock industry and a lot of other
things changed when Azeris were no longer welcomed across the nearby border,
and vice versa.
Today Geghakar, like many villages around this part of Lake Sevan, is
populated by refugees from Azerbaijan.
Ruben Karapetyan is 25. In 1990, when he was 11, his family escaped from the
big-city (but dangerous for Armenians) life in Baku, and became villagers.
Other refugees came for Kirovabad, and the former Azeri village became home
to families like Ruben’s.
“It’s very strange how this village was put on a map,” Ruben says.
Ten years ago there was a telephone line connecting Geghakar. But residents
of the village remember that one day someone came to the village from
Vardenis and cut all telephone lines taking them away saying that nobody can
lay a complaint against him. Refugees, who had no support, couldn’t save
their telephone lines.
“Those days they lied to us,” says refugee from Kirovabad Roman Karapetyan.
“They said they would develop the village, install a gas line . . . And then
they put us into an Ikarus (model of bus) and brought us here.”
It is a far measure from life as it was known in Kirovabad or Baku.
Villagers mainly live by growing potatoes and wheat, a task made more
difficult because the village has no irrigation system. They say they cannot
work their croplands because they have no machinery. And even if there were
machinery, they couldn’t afford to buy fuel.
Thirteen families live in Geghakar, about 50 residents. Three times that
many are registered here. Two-thirds of the official population actually
live seven kilometers away in Lusakunk. They come to the village to graze
cattle and to vote. The head of the village also lives in Lusakunk, and
rarely visits his “constituency”. (In general, almost all refugee villages
in the region have heads who are non-refugees.)
The poorest villagers are refugees from Baku, Boris and Irina Kulikyan, who
have seven children.
“We had been living in the city for 35 years. What can we do now? This is
our reality. We have no place to go,” says Boris, who is seriously ill and
cannot do physical work anymore. Their eldest son, who is the main
breadwinner in their family, was called up for military service.
“In summer we can do something, but in winter it is very hard. We can hardly
sell 500-600 kilograms of potatoes and buy firewood. However, I cannot work
the land anymore. In addition, there was terrible heavy rain, which killed
all potatoes.” (In early March a storm and flood caused severe damage to the
region. Many roofs in Geghakar were damaged).
In general, Geghakar has rich resources including wide meadows, croplands
and a quarry. However, villagers insist they don’t make use of them as
quarries belong to a businessman from Vardenis, where only residents from
Vardenis work. And majority of croplands is granted on lease.
“All hayfields belong to head of the village. He thinks only about his
pocket,” says one of the villagers. (ArmeniaNow tried to reach the village
head, but he was not in Geghakar nor in his permanent residence in
Lusakunk.)
There is a medical station in the village, but it is always closed. A nurse
from Lusakunk visits every two months, according to villagers.
Emma Tsaturyan, 62, a refugee from Baku, is the villagers’ means of health
care. Emma gives injections, and, since 1992, has delivered 11 babies. She
is not paid. Neither by the government, nor by the villagers, from whom she
will not even allow a small gift.
“I used to work as a midwife in Baku,” Emma says. “When we were escaping
from Baku I couldn’t take my medical school diploma. Head of the village
didn’t allow me to become a nurse. He said I had no diploma (medical
association of the region appoints nurses, however, head of the village can
offer his candidature).”
There is only one car in the village but it is very old and hardly works.
When somebody is seriously sick, the car becomes an ambulance. But if the
road is closed by snow, or if there is no petrol, patients are taken by
horse. Roman remembers when his daughter was seriously ill he took her to
the city, carrying her along in a sled.
But when a villager is too sick to be moved, he is at the mercy of fate
because it is impossible to call an ambulance. One villager died this winter
as a result.
Geghakar has little to show as improvement since it became this involuntary
home. It has, however, built a school with money given by Diaspora. Twelve
students attend the eight-grade school. Those who wish to study beyond
eighth grade must go to Lusakunk. Few, however, are likely to do so, as it
would require walking 14 kilometers a day on a desolate road. Roman says his
daughter is an excellent pupil, however, after finishing eight years in
school she will not continue her study.
A month ago a bus to Vardenis began operating once every two weeks. However,
it is not clear how long that route will be in use.
At least there was a shop here those days (when the refugees first
settled),” Roman Karapetyan says. “But now even if you die nobody will know
about it. I have arms and legs. I can do everything. We are specialized in
different professions but we sit here and have nothing to do. We can hardly
keep a couple of sheep and cows to be able to exist. How could they bring
citizens to these mountains?
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian opposition leader says ready for dialogue with president

Armenian opposition leader says ready for dialogue with president
Arminfo
21 Apr 04

YEREVAN
The leader of the National Unity Party and MP of the National
Assembly, Artashes Gegamyan, said today that he is ready for dialogue
with Armenian President Robert Kocharyan, but only in the presence of
Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II in the Holy See of Echmiadzin.
Speaking at a rally organized by the united opposition, he talked
about a meeting he had with Garegin II. The latter expressed his
concern about the domestic political situation and called for
dialogue. “I am ready for a dialogue with Kocharyan, but let him talk
in the presence of Garegin II about his orders to beat up his own
people and his other sins,” Gegamyan said.
Gegamyan said he was outraged by yesterday’s [20 April] speech of
Kocharyan. “How dare he to insult the great poetess Silva Kaputikyan
[for turning down the Order of Mesrop Mashtots awarded on her 80th
anniversary]. He said that we are fighting for
leadership. Intellectuals, like Silva Kaputikyan, are our leaders. Our
leaders are the people,” Gegamyan said.
[Passage omitted: Minor details]
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian GDP 7.5 per cent up in first quarter of 2004

Armenian GDP 7.5 per cent up in first quarter of 2004
Arminfo
21 Apr 04

YEREVAN
Armenia’s GDP grew by 7.5 per cent in January-March 2004 in comparison
with the same period of 2003 and totalled 223bn drams (about 400 US
dollars).
In the same period, the volume of industrial production in Armenia
increased by 2.8 per cent, agricultural production by 6.2 per cent and
retail turnover by 9.5 per cent.
The GDP deflator index totalled 109.9 per cent, and consumer prices
increased by 2.2 per cent in comparison with last December.
The population’s income grew by 21.2 per cent and spending by 19 per
cent, according to the National Statistics Service. At the end of
March, there were 118,000 officially registered unemployed in Armenia.
In this period, the volume of Armenia’s foreign trade turnover
totalled 433.11m dollars, of which imports amounted to 281.25m and
exports to 151.86m dollars.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress