Appointments For US Visa Interviews Now Made By Phone

APPOINTMENTS FOR US VISA INTERVIEWS NOW MADE BY PHONE

ArmRadio.am
13.04.2006 14:03

Applicants for non-immigrant visas to the United States may now
save time by scheduling their non-immigrant visa interviews by
telephone, instead of making a trip to the Consular Section of the
US Embassy. Visa applicants may call (374-10) 49-46-86 any workday
between the hours of 3:00 and 5:00 pm to schedule their non-immigrant
visa interview, effective immediately. Applicants do not have to
make the call personally, but the person calling must have all needed
information available.

When scheduling an interview appointment by phone, callers should
have the applicant’s passport in hand and be ready to provide
the applicant’s name, passport number and passport expiration
date. Interview appointments will not be given to those whose passports
will not be valid for a minimum of six months from the date they
plan to enter the United States. Likewise, applicants must have
an Armenian exit permit valid for three months in order to receive
an interview time. Applicants must present a completed application
form at the time of their interview Beginning May 1, interviews can
be scheduled only by telephone, and it will no longer be possible to
make an appointment in person at the embassy. No visa applicants will
be interviewed without appointments.

Bill Envisaging To Erect Monument To Enver-Pasha In Baku SquareSubmi

BILL ENVISAGING TO ERECT MONUMENT TO ENVER-PASHA IN BAKU SQUARE SUBMITTED TO AZERBAIJANI PARLIAMENT

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Apr 11 2006

ISTANBUL, APRIL 11, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Kudret
Hasankuliyev, one of the leaders of the People’s Front opposition
party of Azerbaijan, submitted a bill to the country’s parliament
demanding that a monument to one of the chief organizers of the
Armenian Genocide, Enver-pasha be erected in Baku square. According
to the “Marmara” daily of Istanbul, the Azeri parliamentary deputy
“motivated” his proposal saying that it was Enver-pasha who saved
the Azeri people “from the genocide committed by the Armenians”. The
Azerbaijani parliamentarian demanded that the country’s government
remove the monuments to Lenin and other Soviet leaders in Baku and
erect a monument to Dede Korkut in their place. Oktay Asadov, Speaker
of the Azerbaijani parliament, submitted the proposals for discussion
to the respective parliamentary commission.

Parliament Hearings On Karabakh Conflict Planned In Stepanakert

PARLIAMENT HEARINGS ON KARABAKH CONFLICT PLANNED IN STEPANAKERT

PanARMENIAN.Net
12.04.2006 00:53 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Hearings on the Karabakh Issue: Prospects of
Settlement will be held at the National Assembly (NA) of the Nagorno
Karabakh Republic (NKR) on April 21, reported Chair of the NKR NA
Standing Commission on External Relations Vahram Atanesyan. In
his words, the parliamentary hearings are due to the latest
activation of international mediators on settlement of the Nagorno
Karabakh issue. Under the current conditions all political forces
that are represented in the NKR Parliament need to present their
clear stand over the matter of resolution of the issue, Atanesyan
remarked. Invitations to take part in the session are sent to Chair
of the Armenian NA Standing Commission on External Relations Armen
Rustamyan, a number of political scientists and experts of Armenia,
reports De Facto.

The AKP and Other Turkish Islamists Attempt to Block

The AKP and Other Turkish Islamists Attempt to Block Secular General
From Top Military Post

MIDDLE EAST MEDIA RESEARCH INSTITUTE (MEMRI)
April 11, 2006
Special Dispatch Series – No. 1136

Despite three military coups in the past decades, the Turkish military
is the most respected and trusted institution in the country, as the
guardian and guarantor of the legacy of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk – a
pro-Western, secular Turkish republic.

But in the view of Turkey’s Islamists, a strong and hawkish chief of
general staff would pose a threat to their efforts to move Turkey from
secularism to Islamism.

Turkish military commander Gen. Mehmet Yasar Buyukanit, an outspoken and
tough-on-terrorism anti-Islamist, is expected to become the next chief
of general staff in August 2006. Since last year, a campaign has been
waged to tarnish Gen. Buyukanit’s reputation, in order to block him from
this post.

First in this campaign were allegations, spread through various
websites, that Gen. Buyukanit was not a “pureblood” Turk, but had
Sabbatean Jewish elements in his family tree. It was claimed on these
websites that, in accordance with the traditions of Sabbateans, he had
wed his daughter to a “certified” Sabbatean. One Islamist website posted
a long list of names and citizenship identification numbers of members
of Gen. Buyukanit’s family tree, to “prove” that he was not a “real”
Turk. [1] The site’s homepage heading challenged Gen. Buyukanit: “If you
have any courage, prove to us that you are not a Jewish donme [i.e. a
crypto-Jew; Sabbatean convert to Islam]!” [2]

Then, in early March 2006 came an indictment against him in the matter
of the November 9, 2005 bombing of a bookshop in the mainly Kurdish town
of Semdinli, owned by a former Kurdish member of the PKK. [3]

The charges against Gen. Buyukanit were prepared by the assistant
district attorney for the city of Van, prosecutor Ferhat Sarikaya who in
October 2005 had charged and incarcerated Professor Yucel Askin,
president of Yuzuncu Yil University (YYU) in Van [4] who was known for
stopping the Islamist activities in the university.

The charges against Gen. Buyukanit created a political storm in Turkey.
The military called the charges an assault by a certain sect of
Islamists on the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK), and hinted that the
followers of Turkish Islamist leader Fethullah Gulen [5] and some AKP
members were involved.

Subsequently, on March 23, the Turkish media reported on the removal of
Turkish Security Directorate intelligence chief Sabri Uzun for
statements inferring that the military was behind the Semdinli events.
Then, a Justice Ministry investigation of Prosecutor Sarikaya found that
the charges against Gen. Buyukanit did not have “the required basis” for
prosecution.

The following are excerpts from the Turkish press’ coverage of the crisis:
“First the Rector, Now the General”

Columnist Bekir Coskun of the secular mainstream Turkish daily Hurriyet
wrote: [6] “The rift is deepening between the [AKP] government and all
the concepts and institutions that are defending the secular republic.
Now the lines are clearer, the attitudes are stronger, [and] the attacks
are more frequent. The religionist [i.e. the Islamist] has abandoned his
calm, softer attitude. The game is over. […] ‘First the rector, now the
general…’ Accusations directed at Gen. Yasar Buyukanit – who is expected
to become chief of general staff in the coming period – is where we have
got to, following the [AKP government’s] purge of thousands of secular
Ataturk followers from government positions. It seems that the armed
forces commanders are next in line.”

In an op-ed titled “The Goal is to Wear Gen. Buyukanit Down,” columnist
Mehmet Y. Yilmaz of Hurriyet wrote: [7] “[…] First they spread lies
about the ethnic origins of Gen. Buyukanit’s family [alleging
Sabbatean/Jewish ancestry]. […] Now on the agenda is the Van
prosecutor’s charge that ‘Buyukanit attempted to influence the
judiciary.’ They base their accusation on what Gen. Buyukanit said about
a soldier allegedly involved in the Semdinli incident: ‘I know him, he
is a good guy.’ The rest of Buyukanit’s statement, ‘Whether he is guilty
or not will be determined by the investigation,’ has been omitted for
some reason. […]”

Columnist Meric Koyatasi of the secular, mainstream daily Aksam wrote:
[8] “[…] Even if it was not heard directly from the mouth of the
government, it is known that circles close to the [AKP] government are
trying to block Gen. Buyukanit. […] The prosecutor is famous for his
previous indictment of the rector of the university at Van [YYU
Professor] Yucel Askin, who had not permitted shari’a [advocates] to
organize on campus. […]

“Everybody already knows that certain circles want to peck at and erode
our military. These [circles] have worked and organized, secretly and
tirelessly, since the [1923] founding of the Republic [of Turkey] […]
Prejudice [in the judiciary] based on ideologies, beliefs, culture, and
form of education is very, very dangerous. […]”

In an article titled “Politics Meddle with the Military,” columnist Ali
Sirmen of the center-left, secular daily Cumhuriyet wrote: [9] “[…] It
is well known that in the process of re-shaping Turkey according to its
own ideology, the AKP government is targeting the military […] Gen.
Kemal Yavuz once clearly said, ‘The military has always been the
ultimate target of any government that based its existence on religion.’
[…]

“Let me underline some strange coincidences. It is well known that the
AKP government is not pleased with universities, especially Yuzuncu Yil
University at Van and its rector, Yucel Askin. Therefore, Van prosecutor
Ferhat Sarikaya appears onstage and prepares the indictment [against
Askin], which was rejected by most legal authorities. […] Everybody also
knows that some circles close to AKP feel uncomfortable with [future
chief of general staff] Gen. Buyukanit […]. [So, again, prosecutor]
Sarikaya prepares a terrible indictment against Buyukanit […]”
The Behind-the-Scenes Role of the AKP and Islamists

The question of who is behind the efforts to block Gen. Buyukanit from
the top military post has been on the Turkish media agenda since the
Semdinli indictment became public in early March 2006. The following are
excerpts from articles by Turkish columnists on this question:

“AKP Members are Overjoyed”

“Some AKP members were overjoyed with the Van prosecutor’s indictment
[of Gen. Buyukanit], which he [i.e. the prosecutor] sent to the military
prosecutor of the Office of General Staff for examination and investigation.
“The AKP MP from Adiyaman, Faruk Unsal, said: ‘[…] The indictment
prepared by the office of the Van prosecutor has done what we were
unable to do.’
“The AKP MP from Manisa, Hakan Tasci, said: ‘What we left unfinished is
now completed by the Van prosecutor.[…] He is right.” [10]
“The AKP and the Turkish Military”

“[…] Prime Minister Erdogan says, ‘This is a matter between the military
and the judiciary, to which the AKP is not a party in any way.’ […] In
reality, statements by AKP MPs show that AKP sides with the indictment
and with the prosecutor [who prepared it], and that they are happy about
the charges [against Gen. Buyukanit]. It would seem that anything that
wears down the armed forces makes the AKP happy. […] The reason the Land
Forces commander’s name appears in the indictment is the testimony
before the parliamentary investigation commission [investigating the
Semdinli incidents] by Diyarbakir businessman Mehmet Ali Altindag. [11]
Altindag was invited to testify before the commission by AKP MP Cavit
Torun of Diyarbakir. Cavit Torun was also formerly Altindag’s attorney
[when Altindag was accused of affiliation with Hizbullah].

“When the [Van] prosecutor demanded [only] the records of Altindag’s
testimony before the commission [out of the testimony of some 40
witnesses], it was again an AKP MP, Musa Savcioglu – chairman of the
Semdinli Commission – who [secretly] sent the confidential records to
the Van prosecutor [without informing the rest of the commission].[…]” [12]

Is the Investigation Against Gen. Buyukanit an AKP Retaliation for His
1983 Action [Against Islamist Leader Fethullah Gulen]?

“In 1983, [then-] Colonel Yasar Buyukanit was commander of the Kuleli
Military High School. [At that time] the newly organized community of
[Turkish Islamist sect leader] Fethullah [Gulen] – which is now very
widespread – managed to infiltrate [the Kuleli School, enrolling] 80 of
their students in it. These students would have become future
commanders! […] A disciplinary committee, of five officers headed by
Buyukanit, expelled all 80. […]

“Now, after the Van indictment, one cannot help asking: ‘Is this
retaliation [for Gen. Buyukanit’s 1983 action], by some Fethullah
followers who have been placed in high public positions by the AKP?'” [13]
“Fethullah Followers Who Targeted Gen. Buyukanit are Under AKP Umbrella”

“What could be the aim of the circles that want to wear down Gen. Yasar
Buyukanit? To create confusion in public opinion about Buyukanit, who is
a follower of [the principles of] Ataturk and a patriotic soldier…[…]

“The plot was led by Fethullah’s daily newspaper Zaman, and religionist
[i.e. Islamist] and divisive [separatist] websites… […] Some years ago,
Fethullah Gulen targeted [another military leader,] Air Force commander
Gen. Ahmet Corekci – because Gen. Corekci had identified, one by one,
Fethullah’s officers and NCOs in the Air Force… […]

“In those days in the residences of the Air Force base at Eskisehir, NCO
wives were wearing black burkahs, and a lieutenant colonel was kissing
the hands of his NCO because of the latter’s high position within the
[Fethullah] sect… Later it was Maltepe Armored Corps commander Gen.
Silahcioglu’s turn to be targeted.; Fethullah’s Zaman had reported
[falsely] that ‘Commander [Silahcioglu] destroyed the minarets of the
mosque…’ Gen. Silahcioglu was a follower of Ataturk, and a patriotic
soldier… Therefore, Fethullah [followers] were uncomfortable with him.

“Aren’t all the followers of the religionist baron [i.e. Fethullah
Gulen] who targeted Land Forces Commander Gen. Buyukanit – with no
evidence – under the umbrella of the AKP government? The Fethullahists
have the political power to influence the judiciary, direct the media,
and even intimidate bank owners by threatening that their followers
might withdraw all their funds from their banks… It is a fact that
Fethullahists know how to use their political and economic power very
well. They are experts in inserting their influence into the judiciary,
the police, politics and the economy [of the country] […]” [14]
Opposition Leader Baykal: “This Operation [Against the Military] was
Planned at the PM’s Office by his Staff Director”

“At a press conference, CHP (Republican People’s Party) Chairman Deniz
Baykal was asked to evaluate rumors that Omer Dincer, the staff director
of the office of Prime Minister Erdogan, was behind the Semdinli
indictment [i.e. of Gen. Buyukanit]. Baykal said: ‘The mentality of the
staff director of the Prime Minister’s Office is not one that respects
Turkey’s secular, democratic republic – as evidenced by his own
publications and acknowledgement. For some time in Turkey, there has
been an intentional and ongoing assault against the Republic’s
institutions and achievements. This operation is being planned at the
offices of the prime minister and his staff director.’ [15]
Justice Ministry for Disciplinary Action Against Prosecutor

“Justice Ministry inspectors sent to investigate Van prosecutor Ferhat
Sarikaya following his allegations against Gen. Yasar Buyukanit have
completed their report. The inspectors have called for disciplinary
action against Sarikaya, noting that his charges against Buyukanit ‘did
not have the required basis.'” [16]

NOTES

[1] (meaning in Turkish: nationaltreason.com).

[2] In Turkey, no member of a non-Muslim minority serves in uniform,
either in the military (beyond compulsory military service) or in any
security or police force. No non-Muslim is a member of the judiciary
(such as prosecutors, judges etc.) or holds any high-ranking position in
any government ministry (Eg. there is not a single non-Muslim Turkish
diplomat).

[3] PKK (Kurdistan Workers Party), a separatist Kurdish organization
which is listed in the U.S. list of terrorist organizations. Turkey’s
fight against PKK terrorism during the last three decades has resulted
in the death of over 30,000 Turkish citizens. Recently the PKK violence
has escalated in many towns in the mainly Kurdish Southeast of Turkey
and in Istanbul resulting in daily casualties.

[4] See MEMRI Special Dispatch No. 1014, “The AKP Government’s Attempt
to Move Turkey From Secularism to Islamism (Part I): The Clash With
Turkey’s Universities,” November 1, 2005,
amp;Area=turkey&ID=SP101405 .

[5] Fethullah Gulen is known to be a sworn proponent of shari’a and a
caliphate in Turkey, but has in recent years been a relatively moderate
voice advocating for interfaith dialogue (which is regarded as taqiyyah
by Turkey’s secularists and by many Western experts on Islam). Following
his indictment in Turkey for Islamist activity against the secular
regime, he fled to the U.S., where he has lived since 1999. His sect
owns many media organs in Turkey, including Zaman, Samanyolu TV, many
magazines, and radio stations. Many of his followers occupy positions in
Turkish government ministries, police, and military. There are thousands
of Islamic-Turkish Fethullah Gulen schools in Turkey and hundreds more
in over 70 countries worldwide, including Ukraine, Indonasia, South
Africa, Sudan, Australia, Afghanistan, Central Asia, Europe, Russia, and
the U.S.; the schools are built by his many foundations and the source
of their funding is unknown. In March 2006, two additional schools were
opened, one in Argentina and the other in Sudan; AKP Cabinet Minister
Kursad Tuzmen attended the inaugural ceremony in Sudan. It is believed
that during the last years of the communist Soviet Union, Fethullah
Gulen supporters created unrest in the Muslim communities in the north
of the Black Sea, against the Soviets.

[6] Hurriyet (Turkey), March 7, 2006.

[7] Hurriyet (Turkey), March 6, 2006.

[8] Aksam (Turkey) March 6, 2006.

[9] Cumhuriyet (Turkey), March 7, 2006.

[10] Hurriyet (Turkey), Mehmet Yilmaz, March 7, 2006.

[11] According to the Turkish media, the charges against Gen. Buyukanit
were based solely on Mehmet Ali Altindag’s testimony for the
parliamentary probe of the Semdinli events. Altindag (AKA “Hadji”), a
businessman from Diyarbakir owns a local newspaper and a local TV
channel, and has many times been charged for his alleged ties first with
the terrorist organization PKK and then with the Islamist Hizbullah. He
has been called Hizbullah’s “financier.” He has also won many government
tenders for multi-million government projects (see reports in Hurriyet,
March 20, 2006; Cumhuriyet, March 7, 2006).

[12] Yenicag (Turkey), Umit Ozdag, March 11, 2006.

[13] Hurriyet (Turkey) Emin Colasan, March 12, 2006. The article also
said: “Their investigation revealed that all these students had been
educated in Fethullah’s ‘houses of light,’ and while the brightest were
directed to universities to study law and political sciences to become
future judges, prosecutors, and bureaucrats, others were sent to
military high schools with the goal of [eventually] holding positions in
the Turkish Armed Forces. The Kuleli [School] then determined the
addresses of the said ‘houses of light’ and informed the police; the
police took no action. (Today, there are tens of thousands of such
houses of light all over Turkey. They house and feed their students,
[and] assign them ‘mentor brothers’ to educate them. All for free. Their
source of funding is unknown!)

“Then the investigation also showed that the students whom they [i.e.
the Fethullah followers] sent to [entrance] exams at Kuleli had each
been instructed to memorize five questions to be added to a question
bank, for future use by student candidates [taking entrance exams for
military schools ].”

[14] Cumhuriyet (Turkey), Hikmet Cetinkaya, March 7, 2006.

[15] Hurriyet (Turkey), March 25, 2006.

[16] Hurriyet (Turkey), March 29, 2006.

http://memri.org/bin/articles.cgi?Page=countries&
www.ulusalihanet.com

No One Wanted To Buy The 5th Block

NO ONE WANTED TO BUY THE 5TH BLOCK

A1+
[04:43 pm] 10 April, 2006

The sale of the 5th block of the Hrazdan heat-electric generating
plant has nothing to do with the reduction of the gas price: at least
this is what RA Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan claims.

“We sold the 5th block not in order to reduce the price of gas as it
remains the same – 110USD. The sale has nothing to do with the price”,
the Prime Minister says.

According to him, this is a successful deal. “Years ago we wanted
to give the plant to them by the program “Property for Debt”. One
of the conditions was that they must reconstruct the plant. They did
not agree.

We put it up to auction but no one wanted to buy it”, Andranik
Margaryan informed. He claimed that Iran has never been a potential
buyer. They just wanted to give loans for 20-25 years after which
Armenia would have to return the sum.

According to the Prime Minister, the plant was sold for 250 million
USD. “One of the conditions was that they must invest 140 million USD
within two years. And this is not a threat to our energy security,
but vice versa”.

Book Review: Ethereal Yet Rooted In Reality

ETHEREAL YET ROOTED IN REALITY
Review By Anu Nathan

Malaysia Star, Malaysia
April 9 2006

SNOW
By: Orhan Pamuk
Publisher: Vintage, 426 pages
(ISBN: 0-3775-70686-0)

THIS is the longest it has taken me to read a book and review – almost
six months. I had to keep putting it down because Snow is not easily
digested. Pamuk is more than a novelist; he is a reporter first and
foremost, and this political novel charts the tumult within modern-day
Turkey. Every time I put down the book because it was threatening
to overwhelm me, I was forced to pick it up again, not just because
Pamuk’s name and face jumped out of newspapers and magazines, but
because I was compelled to read on till the end.

Cliched as it may sound, Pamuk is no stranger to controversy.

Recently, Turkish authorities had charged him with “insulting
Turkishness” for talking about the Armenian Genocide of 1915 and the
massacre of 30,000 Kurds in Anatolia. Much earlier, in 1995, he was
among a group of authors tried for writing essays that criticised
Turkey’s treatment of the Kurdish minority.

Until I visited Turkey last year, I had no idea who Pamuk was, despite
the fact that he is a prolific writer and has been a regular in the
Bosphorus literary scene since the late 1970s. I was strolling in the
Beyoglu district and ventured into a bookstore, hoping to pick up a
book by a Turkish writer. The bookstore owner/manager recommended
Pamuk, who by then had achieved international fame with his book
My Name is Red (about a murderous Ottoman miniaturist), which could
almost be a parallel novel to Umberto Eco’s The Name of the Rose.

Two days after coming home, I found Snow on the review shelf. The
next week a colleague passed me My Name is Red, which only succeeded
in derailing the review of Snow. It seemed there was no escaping Pamuk.

As a novelist Pamuk belongs to that special breed of crossover authors
who manage to sell and achieve critical acclaim – think Gabriel Garcia
Marquez, Milan Kundera, Paulo Coelho.

Snow (Kar in Turkish) is a highly-charged political novel that
explores the conflict between Islamism and Westernisation in modern
Turkey and tackles head-on the delicate headscarf issue.

In Kars (the poetic transition of Ka to Kar to Kars is almost a
sublime touch, like the snowflake which the poet clings to), heavy
snow cuts off the Anatolian town from the rest of Turkey just after a
poet called Ka arrives, a pointed reference to the desolate remoteness
of Kars in vivid contrast to forward-looking Istanbul.

Ka, who has for years been living in Frankfurt, futilely trying to
create poetry amid odd jobs to sustain his departure from Turkey, has
been assigned by an Istanbul newspaper to investigate a chain of young
girls committing suicide because, as the local police chief explains,
“they were not allowed to wear headscarves in school.”

Tracing almost lovingly from Dostoevsky (even Kafka comes to mind),
the characters in Snow are all flawed, with some juggling dual
identities. Among them are the Islamist who has no qualms about
keeping a mistress, a former Istanbul socialite who champions the
headscarf cause with idealistic zeal, and the Communist democrat.

Most ruptured is Ka who, in Malaysian parlance would best be described
as a lalang, swaying in whichever direction the wind blows, unsure
of his convictions.

Ka, as we soon find out, is not in Kars to uncover the mystery of the
virgin suicides, but to woo his elusive classmate Ipek, now happily
divorced. Ipek is the only cause he fervently pursues, even as a
flood of poetic inspiration turns on the creative switch which this
washed-out poet had considered dead.

Ka’s footsteps in Kars, Istanbul and Frankfurt are later retraced
by his novelist friend Orhan (Pamuk also includes himself in My
Name is Red), who is determined to detail Ka’s life, understand the
overpowering love he had for Ipek amid troubled times, and his final
days before succumbing to a hail of bullets.

In this didactic treatise, displacement, blind devotion, love and
alienation all jostle to take prime place against a backdrop of the
fleeting, ethereal promise of peace and unity amid differences.

Pamuk is an inveterate storyteller and here, he has woven a magical
tale, sometimes superfluous, but always engaging, about ordinary
Turks affected by decisions beyond their control and how Turkey,
being both blue-eyed blonde and swarthy tries to strike a balance
between Islamism and secularism/modernism.

Panorama City fugitive arrested in Armenia

Los Angeles Daily News
April 7 2006

Panorama City fugitive arrested in Armenia

LOS ANGELES (AP) — A former Panorama City man accused of killing two
gang rivals more than a decade ago was arrested in Armenia, the FBI
announced.
Vahagn Akopyan, 33, was arrested by Armenian authorities in the
capital of Yerevan on Wednesday, said J. Stephen Tidwell, assistant
director in charge of the FBI office in Los Angeles.

Akopyan was being held until it was determined whether he will be
deported to the United States or charged in Armenia, Tidwell
announced Thursday.

Akopyan had been sought in connection

with the May 1994 murder of two reputed gang rivals and the attempted
murder of a third on Hollywood Boulevard.

He was believed to have returned to his native Armenian shortly after
the killings. A state arrest warrant was issued in 1994 and a federal
warrant accusing him of unlawful flight to avoid prosecution was
issued in 2002.

Toronto: The Armenian Genocide makes world TV premiere on TVO

Canada NewsWire (press release), Canada
April 7 2006

Attention News Editors:

Media Advisory – The Armenian Genocide makes world television premiere
on TVO’S Human Edge

TORONTO, April 7 /CNW/ – On Wednesday April 12 at 10 pm, TVO’s
acclaimed Human Edge will present the world premiere of The Armenian
Genocide. Written, produced, and directed by Emmy Award-winning
filmmaker Andrew Goldberg, this fascinating point-of-view documentary
explores what many believe to be the first genocide of the 20th
century. Between 1915 and 1923 over a million Armenians perished under
the rule of the Ottoman Empire. In the hour-long film, Goldberg speaks
with Armenian, Turkish, and American scholars and historians to shed
light on the historical events that precipitated the genocide, and why
the Turkish government of today continues to deny such events ever
occurred. The film also features Kurdish and Turkish citizens in
present-day Turkey who openly share stories told to them by their
parents and grandparents.

To facilitate further understanding of this hotly-debated subject,
the documentary will be preceded at 8 pm on the night of broadcast by
a panel discussion on TVO’s Studio 2. The current affairs show’s
regular international affairs panel of Janice Stein, director of the
Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto; Globe
and Mail editor, Patrick Martin; and Toronto Star columnist Richard
Gwyn will help to place the Armenian genocide into context. Viewers
will also be able to follow the Studio 2 discussion online at

As of April 7, viewers will also be able to register in our online
discussion board at to express their views, as
well as access links to other relevant websites.

Now in its 17th successful season, Human Edge is TVO’s acclaimed
series of challenging, provocative, point-of-view documentaries from
around the world. Hosted by award-winning writer and broadcaster Ian
Brown, Human Edge provides viewers with windows into complex or touchy
subjects that make up the human experience to expand their horizons
and foster healthy debate. Executive producer is Rudy Buttignol.

For further information: Media contact: Rosanne Meandro, TVO,
Marketing and Communications, (416) 484-2600, ext. 2389,
[email protected]

www.tvo.org/humanedge.
www.tvo.org/humanedge

Armenia’s Monetary Base Reduces By 6.74% And Makes AMD 187,1 Bln InJ

ARMENIA’S MONETARY BASE REDUCES BY 6,74% AND MAKES AMD 187,1 BLN IN JANUARY-FEBRUARY 2006

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
April 6 2006

YEREVAN, April 6. /ARKA/. Armenia’s monetary base reduced by 6,74%
or AMD 13,5 bln and made AMD 187,1 bln in January-February 2006.

According to the information of the RA National Statistic Service
(NSS) based on the preliminary data of the CBA, in February the
monetary base reduced by AMD 330 mln or 0,18%.

According to the NSS, by the end of 2006, cash money out of CBA
amounted to AMD143,1 bln, against AMD 155,3 bln at the beginning of
the year.

Required reserves amounted to AMD 22,7 bln, against AMD 22,3 bln at
the beginning of the year.

At the beginning of February net eternal assets (privatization
receipts exclusive) reduced by 0,89% or 1,9 AMD bln. and made AMD
212,7 bln. Net internal assets amounted to minus AMD 25,7 bln,
against minus AMD 14,1 bln at the beginning of the year.

In accordance with the program of the RA monetary-credit policy,
in 2006, the CBA forecasts 17,3% growth of the monetary base up to
AMD 219,6 bln by the end of the year. ($1 – AMD 450,78).

Georgian-Armenian Aviation Partnership

GEORGIAN-ARMENIAN AVIATION PARTNERSHIP

Lragir.am
03 April 06

In May Armavia will start scheduled flights Yerevan-Tbilisi-Amsterdam
and Yerevan-Tbilisi-London. The owner of Armavia Mikhail Baghdasarov
says they had reached an arrangement with Georgian airlines.

“When the flights to these European cities are from Armenia or Georgia,
passengers are few, but together flights become profitable,” says
Mikhail Baghdasarov. Armavia will also have scheduled flights together
with a more authoritative company, Air France. Three times a week,
Yerevan-Paris-Yerevan and Paris-Yerevan-Paris.

“Partnership with an authoritative company improves our image.

Air France is not our rival, it is our partner,” says the owner of
Armavia. In the nearest future he plans to have scheduled flights to
Beijing, Delhi, Los Angeles. Baghdasarov is hopeful that the first
flight to Los Angeles will be in 2006. Armavia is now looking for a
new aircraft for the transatlantic flight.

“We have opened an office in America. We have negotiated and everything
is alright. With regard to flights to America, you know, the most
complicated problem is safety. Our company was checked for safety,
and we have complied with all the standards of security,” says Mikhail
Baghdasarov. According to him, the only problem is profitability of
the scheduled flight.

“I would prefer a Yerevan-New York-Los Angeles scheduled flight.

But there is a problem of profitability. Therefore, the scheduled
flight Yerevan-Amsterdam-Los Angeles is preferable, because in
Amsterdam there will be a number of passengers leaving for Los
Angeles,” says Mikhail Baghdasarov. According to him, only in the
month of February Armavia suffered losses of 600 thousand dollars.

Mikhail Baghdasarov says, however, that the reason is the season,
which is the problem of all the airlines. “The best time for airlines
is summer,” says Baghdasarov. He mentions that Armavia suffers
losses in all European directions, but the other scheduled flights
are profitable.

“Usually, airlines in the world receive state subsidies. Such as,
Lufthansa, Air France and other famous airlines. An airline is the
so-called continuation of the foreign ministry. When the plane lands
in a country, it is like an ambassador. Its condition creates an
impression of the country,” says Mikhail Baghdasarov.

THE STORY OF AN AIRCRAFT

The negotiations between Armavia and the Armenian International
Airlines were fruitless. And the talks were for an aircraft, the Airbus
of the Armenian International Airlines. The Armenian International
Airlines is not carrying out flights, and Airbus is idle, whereas
for the owner of the Armenian International Airlines Versand Hakobyan
the Airbus is even a burden.

“We want to offer help to Versand and rent the Airbus,” says Mikhail
Baghdasarov. But Versand does not seem to have appreciated our help. He
demanded too high a price for a 10-year-old aircraft than Armavia pays
for the new Airbus. “The price offered by Versand is much higher than
the aircrafts we are renting now, more by 600 dollars per an hour of
flight,” says Mikhail Baghdasarov.

PILOTS AGAINST FOG

They offer a salary of 10 thousand dollars to Armenian pilots in
Dubai. In Kazakhstan they are offered 7 thousand dollars. The owner
of Armavia Mikhail Baghdasarov says they intend to raise the salary
of the pilots of the company to prevent them from leaving abroad.

“We want to pay a higher salary to our pilots, to prevent them from
leaving the company for they receive good offers from abroad,” says
Mikhail Baghdasarov. According to him, Armenian pilots are demanded
abroad, because conducting an Airbus is requires great skills, and
top-level Airbus pilots are highly demanded. Our pilots not only
have high skills but they are improving. Armavia is going to send
its pilots abroad for qualification and get the second degree. Such
a pilot can land in the thickest fog, says Mikhail Baghdasarov.