Prominent Oppositionists Accused Of ‘Money Laundering’

PROMINENT OPPOSITIONISTS ACCUSED OF ‘MONEY LAUNDERING’
By Astghik Bedevian

Radio Liberty, Czech Republic
May 7 2007

Armenia law-enforcement authorities accused on Monday two former
government ministers staunchly opposed to the country’s leadership of
illegally receiving and "laundering" money from Russia for subversive
political purposes.

The accusations came after officers of the National Security Service
(NSS) searched and confiscated large amounts of cash from the Yerevan
apartments of former Foreign Minister Aleksandr Arzumanian and former
Industrial Infrastructures Minister Vahan Shirkhanian on Saturday.

In an ensued statement, the NSS said the sums were sent to them by
Levon Markos, a Russian businessman of Armenian descent who fled
Armenia in 2005 to avoid prosecution on fraud charges and, according
to the security agency, is "pursuing some goals" in the run-up to
the forthcoming parliamentary elections.

The statement said Arzumanian and Shirkhanian met Markos during an
April 24-26 visit to Moscow and received a total of $180,000 upon
their return to Yerevan. The money was wired in several installments
in the name of nine different individuals acting as "figureheads"
for the two oppositionists, it added. The NSS did not specify how
they were supposed to use the alleged financial aid, saying only
that its officers found $55,400 in Arzumanian’s apartment and $28,000
in Shirkhanian.

Both men admitted on Monday visiting Moscow late last month but
strongly denied receiving any financial aid from the fugitive
businessman. They told RFE/RL that the NSS claims are aimed at
suppressing an opposition movement which they launched last year to
strive for regime change in Armenia. The small group called the Civic
Resistance Movement is boycotting the elections.

Arzumanian, who had served as foreign minister from 1996-1998, claimed
that he visited the Russian capital to attend the funeral of Russia’s
former President Boris Yeltsin and did not meet Markos. "I have known
Levon Markos since 1977 but have not met in the last several years,"
he said.

"Serzh Sarkisian considers Levon Markos his number one enemy and is
persecuting that man, having already seized his assets by fraudulent
means," added Arzumanian. "He is simply trying to extend that animosity
to his political opponents in Armenia … I have not engaged and will
not engage in any illegal activity."

Shirkhanian likewise denied meeting Markos or getting any money from
the latter. "I have known Levon for 20 years," he said. "That person
provided huge assistance to Armenia during the Karabakh war. But I
didn’t see him during my last trip to Moscow."

Shirkhanian also said he has received a lump sum from other
Moscow-based individuals. "I asked my friends and they sent $80,000
for my daughter’s wedding party and for renting office space for my
[pro-Russian] non-governmental organization Shanghai Club of Armenia,"
he said.

Both Arzumanian and Shirkhanian were summoned to the NSS
headquarters in Yerevan for questioning on Saturday. The latter was
also interrogated by the former KGB on Monday. "The whole thing is
designed to intimidate the opposition," he charged afterwards.

Neither man has been formally charged under an article of the Armenian
Criminal Code that deals with attempts to "legalize revenues obtained
by criminal means."

Heartfelt Message Lost In All The Noise: ‘Screamers’ Tackles Genocid

HEARTFELT MESSAGE LOST IN ALL THE NOISE ‘SCREAMERS’ TACKLES GENOCIDE
By John Monaghan

Detroit Free Press, MI
May 4 2007

Head banging and finger wagging share the stage in "Screamers,"
a rock documentary of sorts featuring metal band System of a Down.

Lead singer Serj Tankian is just one of the Armenian-American band
members raised on tales of Turkish atrocities against the Armenian
populace around 1915. Though an estimated 1.5 million Armenians
died, some countries — including the United States and Britain —
are reluctant to officially call it genocide for fear of tangling
with Turkey.

The goal of the band, and Carla Garapedian’s film, is to educate
the world about the links between the Armenian situation and the
Holocaust and to more recent examples of ethnic cleansing in Rwanda
and Darfur. Meanwhile, Turkish authorities remain fiercely unrepentant.

The talking heads fit clumsily with high-decibel System of a Down
concert footage, where the band rocks and roils while news reports
or photos of slaughtered children flash on screen.

Many of the songs deal with human rights issues, and though some fans
obviously get the message, at least two female audience members just
want an excuse to remove their tops.

Though Tankian and company obviously have their hearts in the right
place, the movie gets mired in a mosh pit of noise, silly facial hair
and awkward encounters with uptight politicians who have honestly
never heard of them.

Despite the noble effort, the medium and the message just don’t mix.

Armenian Church To Conduct Special Service In Memory Of Airbus Passe

ARMENIAN CHURCH TO CONDUCT SPECIAL SERVICE IN MEMORY OF AIRBUS PASSENGERS KILLED ONE YEAR AGO

ARMENPRESS
May 03 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 3, ARMENPRESS: Catholicos Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch
of the Apostolic Armenian Church, will preside over a special liturgy
of repose of souls to be served on May 6 at the Holy Mother See
Etchmiadzin in memory of 113 people who were killed in an aircraft
crash on May 3, 2006.

The Armenian Airbus A-320 airliner crashed into the Black Sea off the
Russian coast near the resort town of Sochi in heavy rain on May 3,
2006 and all 113 passengers and crew on board were killed.

The plane operated by Armavia, Armenia’s largest carrier, had been
making a short flight of about an hour from the Armenian capital
Yerevan. Most of the passengers were Armenian nationals.

He Shared Others’ Pain

HE SHARED OTHERS’ PAIN
by Vahan Arzumanyan

KarabakhOpen
03-05-2007 10:37:14

The Armenian community of Kaunas district (Lithuania) decided to
erect a monument to the famous explorer and humanist Fridtiof Nansen
in gratitude for his aid to the Armenians saved from the Genocide in
1915-1922 in Turkey. In 1925 the League of Nations instructed Nansen
to study the possibilities of the problem of Armenians who ran from
Turkey after the Genocide. Thanks to him several dozens of thousands
of Armenians settled down in East Armenia and Syria.

In July 2006 in the town of Bergen Vahan Arzumanyan, the head of the
community, and the director of the Rekstensamlingene museum Espen
Selvik signed an agreement on placing a monumental khachkar to Nansen
in the yard of the museum. The museum is located in a picturesque
district of Bergen, opposite the residence of the royal family of
Norway. The sponsors of this project were Spartak Ter-Avetisyan, the
head of the Armenian community Havatk in Lithuania, and the head of
the Armenian community Garun in Vilnius Oleg Isayev.

In January 2007 in Kaunas the Lithuanian sculptor Gvidas Shvenchenis
started the creation of the monument designed by Vahan Arzumanyan. The
monument carved of light green Swedish granite was opened on April
21 in the framework of the Norwegian-Russian-Armenian celebrations
in Bergen dedicated to Nansen.

Representatives of Norwegian NGOs, the Russian delegation, the
representatives of the Armenian Diaspora to Norway took part in the
opening ceremony.

Professor Arnljot Strømme Svendsen, Rekstensamlingene museum,
addressed the opening ceremony. The grandson of Fridtiof Nansen Eigil
Nansen said Nansen condemned the European policy of the declarative
condemnation of the Genocide.

Addressing the League of Nations, he called for placing universal
values at the basis of the policy.

He dedicated the monument after the address. Then the children’s
choir of Bergen sang the anthems of Armenia, Russia and Norway.

The president of the Nansen Foundation, Vahan Arzumanyan, Spartak
Ter-Avetisyan, and Oleg Isayev also addressed the ceremony. The
director of the museum Espen Selvik said in an interview with the
correspondent of the Public TV of Armenia in Karabakh Narine Aghabalyan
although Norway, the homeland of the great humanist, has not recognized
the genocide, the monument will mark the start of this process.

Three days later on April 24 the corner of Armenia was opened
at the museum and an evening of remembrance of the victims of
the Armenian Genocide in Turkey was held. The photographs of the
Canadian photographer were displayed, a film on Armenia was shown. The
participants got acquainted with the documentary film on the events
of 1992 in the village of Maragha, Karabakh, when within 4 hours the
Azerbaijani OMON slaughtered almost the entire population of the
village of Maragha. The film was created by the Tsir Katin Studio
(director Narine Aghabalyan). All the four families of Bergen were
present in the evening.

–Boundary_(ID_UOG3K+JUqa5WL6/8FPmQOg)–

Heritage Campaign Reaches Tavush and Gegharkunik

PRESS RELEASE
The Heritage Party
31 Moscovian Street
Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (+374 – 10) 53.69.13
Fax: (+374 – 10) 53.26.97
Email: [email protected]; [email protected]
Website:

May 2, 2007

Heritage Campaign Reaches Tavush and Gegharkunik

Yerevan–Today, May 2, Heritage Party candidates and volunteers took the
campaign bus "Toward Victory" on a journey to Ijevan, Berd, Paravakar, and
other towns in the marzes of Gegharkunik and Tavush. During various public
gatherings, Raffi K. Hovannisian and other Heritage candidates exchanged
ideas and opinions with their fellow citizens, and presented the party’s
platform.

Meanwhile in Yerevan, Heritage volunteers continued their grassroots effort
to distribute party newspapers, brochures, and other campaign material.

Also today, Heritage representatives attended the launch of "Political
Parties of the Republic of Armenia Participating in the National Assembly
Elections 2007–Voter’s Guidebook." The event, which took place at the
Tekeyan Cultural Center, was organized by the Foundation for Civil and
Social Development, and sponsored by the OSCE, USAID, Counterpart
International, and Civic Advocacy Support Program Armenia. The guidebook,
with a press run of 9,000 copies, summarizes and compares the programs of
the political parties–including Heritage–that are participating in the
forthcoming parliamentary elections.

Tomorrow, May 3, Heritage will travel to the marz of Lori, where town hall
meetings are scheduled in Aleverdi at 11am, Tumanian at 1pm, Vanadzor’s
Artsakh Park at 3pm, Stepanavan at 4:50pm, Tashir at 6pm, and Spitak at
8:30pm.

Founded in 2002, Heritage has regional divisions throughout the land. Its
central office is located at 31 Moscovian Street, Yerevan 0002, Armenia,
with telephone contact at (374-10) 536.913, fax at (374-10) 532.697, email
at [email protected] or [email protected], and website at

www.heritage.am
www.heritage.am

U.S. In War Of Words With Turkey

U.S. IN WAR OF WORDS WITH TURKEY
By Kenneth R. Bazinet

Assyrian International News Agency
April 30 2007

WASHINGTON — Turkish lawmakers are threatening to cut off essential
supply lines to U.S. forces in Iraq if Congress officially blames
Turkey for the Armenian genocide of 1915, Turkish and U.S. officials
tell the Daily News.

"It’s not subtle. They outright threaten to do it, and even have
soldiers calling congressmen saying, ‘You’re going to cut us off if
you do that,’" said Rep. Frank Pallone (D-N.J.), co-chairman of the
bipartisan Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues.

Armenian-Americans have long lobbied for official recognition of the
atrocities committed in Turkish Armenia during World War I, but it’s
likely the resolution may finally come up for a House vote because
of the backing of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

"It would be an insult to Turkey, and it would not be helpful,"
warned Egeman Bagis, a member of the Turkish parliament and foreign
policy adviser to Prime Minister Recep Erdogan.

Egeman pointed out that "at least 60% of the supplies that go to U.S.
forces in Iraq now pass through Turkey." Asked whether NATO member
Turkey would actually cut off those supply lines, he said, "It could
happen."

But the Armenian movement is growing. California Gov. Arnold
Schwarzenegger didn’t wait for Congress, proclaiming last week "Days
of Remembrance of the Armenian Genocide."

Egeman insists Turkey will open its archives to show it was not
genocide, but scholars and many European nations agree that a
half-million Armenians perished under orders from the Ottoman Empire.

About two dozen countries recognize the Armenian genocide, according
to the Armenian National Institute. Every time the issue comes up,
Turkey threatens to cut off relations or trade. It made similar threats
to Canada and France when they officially recognized the genocide,
but relations have since normalized.

"Genocide is a universal problem that is not going away. If you don’t
remember genocide, it emboldens the perpetrators, and it occurs again
and again," said George Shirinian, director of the Zoryan Institute
for Contemporary Armenian Research and Documentation.

www.nydailynews.com

BAKU: Co-Operation With NGOs Operating In Nagorno-Karabakh Possible

CO-OPERATION WITH NGOS OPERATING IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH POSSIBLE

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
May 1 2007

Azerbaijan, Baku / Ò corr I. Alizadeh / MP Azay Guliyev, the chairman
of the National Forum of NGOs, stated on 1 May during the sitting of
the Milli Majlis (Azerbaijani Parliament) that the parliament should
pass a special law to prevent the co-operation of Azerbaijani NGOs
with Armenia.

Guliyev noted that the relations between Azerbaijani NGOs and Armenian
organizations were expanding with every passing day. They organize
regular bilateral visits. "In a month, a group representing Azerbaijani
NGOs will visit Armenia in order to organize special summer camps to
extend its co-operation. However, Azerbaijani legislation does not
have the corresponding laws to prevent this process," Guliyev added.

The MP stressed the Armenian government is interested in this type
of co-operation. Therefore, Armenia displays the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict as an inter-governmental problem, not as a conflict between
the nations. Guliyev regards the co-operation with the NGOs operating
in Nagorno-Karabakh as a permissible fact, as the Armenians residing
there are the citizens of Azerbaijan.

–Boundary_(ID_4dVJrCbw3v43zZDGTKBgiw )–

Adolf Hitler: "Who today remembers the extermination of the Armenian

Adolf Hitler: "Who today remembers the extermination of the Armenians?"

April 26th, 2007 – 11:43 PM by Eric Black
Staff Writer and Big Question blogger
Star Tribune [Minneapolis]

gquestion/?p=686

Good Friday morning Fellow Seekers,

(Apologies for being three days late with this post. April 24 is the day
usually designated to mark the anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.
That was the date in 1915 when about 300 Armenian intellectual and
professional leaders in the Ottoman Empire’s capital of Constantinople
were rounded up, beginning a three-year killing spree.)

During the period 1915-1918, the Ottoman Turks murdered between 1.2 and
1.3 million Armenians out of a pre-World War I population of about 4
million Armenians within the Ottoman Empire.

Seven Aprils back, I interviewed Vahakn Dadrian, a leading historian of
the genocide, and I’ve never forgotten the effect he produced in me. The
full story is on this attached page:
/?page_id=687

For reasons that I take to be a mixture of legal worries and national
pride, the modern nation of Turkey refuses to acknowledge that the
Ottomans perpetrated an intentional mass killing. And they apply
significant pressure on other nations not to officially recognize the
slaughter as a genocide.

A perpetual campaign is waged within the U.S. Congress to officially
call this genocide a genocide. Presidential candidates cultivating votes
among Armenian-Americans – including the current incumbent when running
for president in 2000 – have indicated support for this idea but, for
fear of offending the important Turkish ally, have disappointed the
Armenians.

Turkey claims that the number of deaths has been overstated, and that
they occurred more or less accidentally when the Ottomans were trying to
move a potentially troublesome Armenian population out of the war zone.
(Like other ethnic groups that lived within the empire, some Armenian
intellectuals and political leaders were agitating for independence.)

For those who don’t click through to the full story, here’s the section
explaining how so many accidental deaths occurred:

"The way the Armenians were killed are staggeringly grisly and provide a
macabre contrast to the relatively bureaucratic and hi-tech methods that
the Nazis would employ 25 years later.

In a policy that Dadrian said was ‘unparalleled in the annals of human
history,’ the Turks ‘decided to rely not on soldiers but on bloodthirsty
criminals.’ Dadrian said 30,000 to 35,000 convicts were released from
prison to participate in the slaughter.

With a world war raging, Dadrian said, Ottoman officials were anxious
not to waste bullets or powder on the Armenians, so they employed four
main methods to kill the Armenians:

Many were beaten to death or killed with daggers, swords and axes.
Massive drowning operations were conducted in the tributaries of the
Euphrates River and the Black Sea. Bargeloads of Armenians were
intentionally sunk. Dadrian, quoting [Henry]Morganthau [who was U.S.
ambassador to the Ottoman court at the time], said that in places the
Armenian corpses became so numerous that the rivers were forced out of
their beds, in one case changing the course of a river for a 100-meter
stretch.
The method that Dadrian called "the most fiendish" was to pack Armenian
women and children into stables or haylofts and then set them ablaze,
burning the victims alive. Dadrian estimated that about 150,000 were
killed by this method.
Hundreds of thousands more died of hunger, thirst or exposure during
forced marches in the desert. Dadrian said the Armenians were told they
were being relocated but were marched along routes chosen to maximize
the chances that none of the marchers would survive.
What difference does it make now, whether the genocide is recognized as
a genocide?

I led off that story with the Hitler remark quoted in the headline of
this post. The top went like this:

"Who today remembers the extermination of the Armenians?"

That remark was uttered by Adolf Hitler a few days before Germany’s 1939
invasion of Poland, which started World War II.

Hitler said he had ordered death squads to ‘exterminate without mercy or
pity, Polish men, women and children’ who got in the way of Germany’s
aims. They needn’t worry about history’s judgment, he said, because
history had already forgotten the massacre of more than a million
Armenians by the Ottoman Empire just 25 years earlier."

After the Holocaust that Hitler subsequently organized against the Jews,
Roma, homosexuals and other undesireables that fell into his clutches,
the world pledged that it would "never again" allow such a thing to
occur. It has failed in that pledge a few times. It’s not completely
clear how the world could arrange to keep the pledge.

And it’s not at all clear that Hitler, or some future sociopath, would
be dissuaded from going down the path of mass murder if they understood
that the crime would come to dominate their historical reputation.

But it has to be considered at least a disincentive. And when a people
has been more than decimated by such a crime, don’t they at least
deserve to have the crime called by its real name?

***
[responses omitted]

Two Star Tribune journalists raise the big questions of the day
(sometimes of the ages) in a collaborative search for the most useful
facts and a fuller understanding of the different ways they can be
viewed.

This is a place where open-minded critical thinkers of all political
persuasions encounter information and arguments that both support and
challenge their preconceptions. The goal is not to eliminate differences
but to narrow and clarify them. We begin with a bedrock agreement that
the search for insight and clarity is important, serious – and fun.

We ask commenters to be civil and substantive and, if possible, good
humored. We reserve the right to delete comments that disregard this
request.

[…]

About Eric Black

Eric Black writes about national and world news for the Star Tribune. He
specializes in pieces that try to put the news into historical
perspective. He has been a journalist since 1973, with the Star Tribune
since 1977, and is the author of 1.74 million newspaper articles and
five books.

Black launched the Big Q in December 2005 to see if he could save the
world from ignorance and error. Ignorance and error are still running
slightly ahead in the polls, so, in February 2007, Black recruited the
lovely D.J. Tice as a co-blogger.

About D.J. Tice
D.J. Tice has been Politics and Government Team Leader at the Star
Tribune since 2003, supervising coverage of Minnesota political news.
Earlier, Tice was a columnist and editorial writer at the St. Paul
Pioneer Press for 12 years.

He’s also earned a paycheck as publisher of the since-vanished Twin
Cities Reader, as an inflight magazine editor for the since-vanished
TWA, and as a writer/editor for several additional enterprises that have
perished from the earth. Tice has written two hard-to-find books and
joins the Big Q in hopes of enlightening a benighted world or at least
learning to set up a hyperlink.

http://www.startribune.com/blogs/bi
http://www.startribune.com/blogs/bigquestion

Armenia Not To Change Internal And Foreign Policy Lines After Electi

ARMENIA NOT TO CHANGE INTERNAL AND FOREIGN POLICY LINES AFTER ELECTIONS, JUSTICE MINISTER PREDICTS

Panorama.am
19:57 26/04/2007

After May 12 elections the internal and foreign policy of Armenia
will not change, Davit Harutunyan, minister of justice and member
of the Armenian Republican Party (HHK), told Ria Novosty in an
interview. "One can be 100% sure that the external policy of Armenia
will undergo no serious changes after the elections. My suggestions
are based on forecasts of which political party will appear in
the parliament," he said. The minister believes HHK will have the
most seats in the parliament, followed by Prosperous Armenia (BHK)
and Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnakcutiun). Assessing
Republicans as neoconservative party, Harutunyan said HHK has assumed
responsibilities "to raise the salary, reduce unemployment and increase
social allowances." Unlike other parties, HHK figures are based on
methodology, which has be at the bark of the state budget for years,
the minister said.

Declaration On Recognizing Armenian Genocide Introduced To Bulgarian

DECLARATION ON RECOGNIZING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE INTRODUCED TO BULGARIAN PARLIAMENT

PanARMENIAN.Net
26.04.2007 14:29 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ By Speaker Georgi Pirinski’s offer the April 25
session of the National Assembly (parliament) of Bulgaria opened with
a minute of silence in the memory of the Armenian Genocide victims
in the Ottoman Empire.

MP Boyko Vatev from "Bulgarian National Front" introduced a
declaration, which recognizes and condemns the Armenian Genocide. He
demanded to adopt the document by the parliament. Other MPs too
condemned the Armenian and Bulgarian Genocides. Currently initiators
are collecting signatures for including the issue of adopting
declaration of the Armenian and Bulgarian genocide in the agenda.

>From April 22 till 22 a number of events dedicated to the 92nd
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide were held in various Bulgarian
cities – Sofia, Plovdiv and Varne. They were organized by the Armenian
community of Bulgaria, the RA MFA Press Office reports.