12 Furnished Classrooms in Artik Schools

PRESS RELEASE
Hayastan All-Armenian Fund
Governmental Buiding 3, Yerevan, RA
Contact: Lusine Mnatsakanyan
Tel: 3741 56 0106
Fax: 3741 52 15 05
E-mail: [email protected]
Web: www.himnadram. org

23 April, 2007
12 Furnished Classrooms in Artik Schools

Hayastan All Armenian Fund furnished 12 classrooms in 6 schools in
Artik as part of the project called "Let’s give them a classroom"
("Donons-leur un classe"), which was initiated by the Fund’s French
affiliate in 2004.

Furnishing activities of the Artik city have been supported by the
Vaulx en Velin municipality in France.

List of the most necessary furnishing items was agreed upon with
heads of schools and the municipality in advance. The management and
students were very pleased to have the furniture arrive in schools
sooner than expected.

The Hayastan Fund follows the principle of completing all it starts;
according to a prior agreement with the Vaulx en Velin municipality,
the latter will go ahead with the full furnishing of the 6 schools.

Vaulx en Velin (France) and Artik (Armenia) are sister cities; their
cooperation is well established and continuous.

"A Commemorative Evening" to be held in Brussels

"A Commemorative Evening" to be held in Brussels

PanARMENIAN.Net
23.04.2007 14:49 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On the occasion of the 92nd anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide on April 25 in Brussels "A Commemorative Evening"
will be held under the auspices of the Armenian Ambassador to the
European institutions, Viguen Tchitechian. Francois Roelants du Vivier,
President of the Belgian Senate’s Commission on Foreign Relations
and Defense, will present opening remarks.

The evening’s message will be delivered by Armenian FM Vartan Oskanian,
whose talk is entitled, "Remembering a Past and Forging a Future", the
PanARMENIAN.Net journalist was told in FAON (Federation of Armenian
Organizations in Netherlands). He will travel to Brussels after
participating in the traditional April 24 commemoration in Yerevan.

As Of April 18, 2 Mln 318 Thousand Citizens Included In Preliminary

AS OF APRIL 18, 2 MLN 318 THOUSAND CITIZENS INCLUDED IN PRELIMINARY ELECTORAL ROLLS

Noyan Tapan
Apr 19 2007

YEREVAN, APRIL 19, NOYAN TAPAN. As of April 18, 2 mln 318 thousand
493 citizens are included in the preliminary electoral rolls of
parliamentary elections. Reporting this at the April 19 meeting
with journalists, Colonel Alvina Zakarian, Head of Passport and Visa
Department of RA Police, also said that two weaks ago this number was
more by 10 thousand 254 and was reduced as a result of correction of
electoral rolls.

In A. Zakarian’s words, 41 electoral districts, 1916 polling stations
will operate in Armenia.

It was also mentioned that during one weak the hot line operating
in the department in connection with incorrect data in electoral
rolls received 77 signals, due to which they made the necessary
corrections. In A. Zakarian’s words, corrections are also made on
the basis of publications in press.

She said that they also studied and set going the large application
of Orinats Yerkir Party Chairman Artur Baghdasarian. In A. Zakarian’s
words, incorrect data among those mentioned by the applicant were few,
as A. Baghdasarian used not the preliminary electoral rolls published
on April 2, but the lists of electors of referendum on constitutional
amendments. A. Zakarian also said that A. Baghdasarian sent a new
list of incorrect data two days ago.

A. Zakarian also said that the so-called "not existing buildings"
in electoral rolls are indeed mentioned by the old names of renamed
streets. So, the department applied to Yerevan Mayor and RA Territorial
Government Ministry asking to give electoral commissions the old and
new names of renamed streets.

ANKARA: Bekir Coskun: We Need To Ask: Are We The Real Murderers?

BEKIR COSKUN: WE NEED TO ASK: ARE WE THE REAL MURDERERS?

Hurriyet, Turkey
April 20 2007

This is a difficult column for me to write. The Malatya murders are
neither the first nor the last of their type. So maybe someone needs
to look back, and ask: "Is it we who are the murderers?"

It is difficult to recall anything said during our school days by our
Turkish elders about peace and love. But there’s a lot I recall being
said about three pointed javelins. And castles made from skulls. We
were always told about the Ottoman’s state order, and about where the
stability and continuation of the Ottomans derived from: the pasha
would tie his siblings to the caste vaults, and cut off their heads.

These stories were told to us with great pride, and thus we would
repeat them in pride to others…….

*

Pushing aside history for a moment though, we have a culture that
believes in letting blood flow, like when we are born, and when we get
out first diploma. Even people who get their first driving licenses
get told "…..make a sacrifice, at least a rooster if nothing
else." And of course, there was always the greatest show of belief,
the sacrificing of the lamb in the backyard of the house.

*

We all know the three men whose throats were cut in Malatya were
neither the first, nor will they be the last. Because the children of
this society have grown up hearing up the length of swords in schools,
seeing the lambs slaughtered in the backyards, and hearing the stories
of Ottoman skulls.

No one has ever taught them simply: "First, be human." Just as
we saw when the chants of "We are all Armenian" arose after Hrant
Dink’s funeral, those who have try to cry out "First, be human,"
have been labeled as "aetheists and traitors" by others. We need to
ask ourselves then, is it we ourselves who are the murderers, and
not just the handful of youngsters who carried out what they have
been taught in this society?

Tigran Mansurian Digs Deep For His Craft

TIGRAN MANSURIAN DIGS DEEP FOR HIS CRAFT
By Chris Pasles, Times Staff Writer

Los Angeles Times, CA
Calendar Live
April 20 2007

Perhaps Armenia’s top living composer, he says writing music is always
a struggle.

Armenian composer Tigran Mansurian may not be a household name. But
in his homeland, in Armenian diaspora communities and in Europe’s new
music circles, he is regarded as Armenia’s greatest living composer.

Recently, he’s been getting even wider notice.

The taste-making German label ECM has issued four CDs of his music
("Monodia" was nominated for a 2005 Grammy), and a fifth is planned.

Within the last month, New York has heard two U.S. premieres: "Con
Anima" for string sextet at Merkin Concert Hall and an Agnus Dei for
clarinet, violin, cello and piano at Carnegie Hall. And between tonight
and Wednesday night, the Glendale-based Lark Musical Society, which
sponsors the enterprising Dilijan Chamber Music Series, is presenting
"A Mansurian Triptych" – three concerts programmed to commemorate
the 92nd anniversary of the Armenian genocide.

Mansurian’s epic a cappella choral work, "Ars Poetica," will be
performed tonight at the downtown L.A. Colburn School’s Zipper Concert
Hall. Selections from his chamber music, including the Agnus Dei,
will be played Monday at Zipper. And on Wednesday, orchestral works,
including the U.S. premiere of his Violin Concerto No. 2, titled
"Four Serious Songs," and his Viola Concerto, " … and then I was
in time again … ," will be played at the Alex Theatre in Glendale.

What audiences will hear is "very strong emotional music," according
to Anja Lechner, cellist of the Munich, Germany-based Rosamunde String
Quartet, which has recorded three Mansurian works for ECM.

"That’s maybe why it goes directly to people’s hearts."

Mansurian himself believes that music has a spiritual purpose. "There
are two main roots to music," he said in an interview this week. "The
first one is the religious, Christian aspect, the issue of pain and
spirituality, the pain of Christ being crucified and the guilt that
comes from it and our relationship to God. The second one is our
instinctive search for Paradise Lost. That’s what makes music."

Because he shifted between Armenian and Russian, Mansurian was speaking
through several interpreters at the Lark Musical Society offices. A
gentle, elegant man with flowing white hair, he spoke in a light,
precise tenor, often animating his remarks with eloquently shaped
gestures that belied the struggle he said composing has always been
for him.

"Since childhood to now, my fingertips are bleeding from the conflict,"
he said. "It was always my personal fight or mission."

Born Jan. 27, 1939, to Armenian parents in Beirut, he moved with his
family to Soviet Armenia in 1947 and then in 1956 to the capital,
Yerevan, where they settled. He studied at the Yerevan Music Academy
and at the Komitas State Conservatory, where, after earning a
doctorate, he taught and later became rector.

He won two first prizes in the All-Union competition in Moscow in
1966 and 1968 and the Armenian State Prize in 1981.

Armenia is still his home, but his daughter, Nvart Sarkissian, lives
in Glendale, and because his wife, Nora Aharonian, died last year,
he plans to spend more time here.

His early works combined neoclassicism and Armenian folk traditions.

Subsequently, he adopted 12-tone and serial techniques. His more
recent works are a mix of all these influences.

"I have tried to find myself in the old Armenian music," he said. "I
have tried to find myself in Boulez’s serialism. When you go deep
in these traditions, you will find the things that are true to your
individual roots. Generally, I compose what’s been developing and
growing inside me for a long time."

In addition, he said, he has always been drawn to the written word.

"As a musician, the Armenian language was one of my first teachers,"
he said. "One’s childhood tongue and the first impressions of language
are very important for any musician."

"Four Hayrens," for example, is a setting of Armenian poems. "Ars
Poetica" consists of poems by Yeghishe Charents, a victim of Stalin’s
purges. The title of his Viola Concerto, " … and then I was in time
again … " is a line spoken by Quentin Compson, the doomed hero of
Faulkner’s "The Sound and the Fury."

"I have devoted 10 years of my life to Faulkner," he said, before
spontaneously reciting the opening of that novel in Russian.

"He’s difficult, but once you go into Faulkner, there is no higher
joy. If I were to choose the person who was most significant to me,
it would have been Quentin because of his incredible honesty."

Mansurian read the book first in Russian, but upon later reading an
Armenian translation, he said, he discovered that the Soviet version
had been heavily censored.

"Just like the Soviet state got involved in every other aspect of
life, it got involved in translations," he said. "That’s how things
were done."

Living under the Soviet system, he added, was "some sort of different
Faulknerian tale. It was another monumental feeling of loss."

For all his identification with his homeland, Mansurian said he prefers
to regard himself as a composer rather than an Armenian composer.

"To be truthful to myself, I have to rely on my genetic memory and my
way of praying and my whole being, which is of course very Armenian,"
he said. "But not in order to be called Armenian – just in order to
be true to myself."

lassical/cl-et-mansurian20apr20,0,3249433.story

http://www.calendarlive.com/music/c

ANKARA: Deadly Mix Finds Its Prey In Malatya

DEADLY MIX FINDS ITS PREY IN MALATYA

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
April 20 2007

[NEWS ANALYSIS]

The brutal murder of three Christian missionaries in the southeastern
city of Malatya on Wednesday, less than a year after the slaying of
an Italian priest in the Black Sea region and the assassination of
ethnic Armenian journalist Hrant Dink — all by young, unemployed,
lower-class men at a time of increased political tension — are
likely to cause a sober questioning of the process whereby Christian
missionaries were made into objects of hatred, and at the same time,
and an uneasy examination of just where Turkey went wrong with its
young people.

Until just six years ago, Turkey’s Christians drew the ire of small
radical Islamist groups only. However, in 2001, a National Security
Council (MGK) meeting chaired by then-prime minister Bulent Ecevit
included "missionary activity" on its list of national security
threats, making it a widespread concern across the country. A wide
range of ideological groups from nationalist, neo-nationalists
and Islamists, started claiming that missionaries were carrying
out separatist activities and turning millions of Muslims into
Christians. Some even went so far as to suggest that the 2002
killing of a neo-nationalist academic was the doing of Christian
missionaries. All the aggravation directed at missionaries finally
worked, and Christians across the country came to be eyed suspiciously
by all segments of society, sometimes manifesting itself in outright
criminal activity. Attacks against churches became more frequent
and the long process hit its peak when Italian priest Andrea Santoro
was killed in Trabzon last year in February by a 16-year-old whose
mother later commented to the media that her son would "do jail time
for Allah."

In 2005 Rahþan Ecevit, the wife of the late former Prime Minister
Bulent Ecevit, in a statement she made criticizing laws allowing
foreigners to buy land, said, "One way of dividing Turkey is by
encouraging citizens to convert to other religions." Around the same
time, leading historians and researchers Ýlber Ortaylý, Hasan Unal,
Aytunc Altýndal and a senior member of Ecevit’s Democratic Left
Party (DSP) got together in the couple’s house in Ankara to discuss
"missionary activities in Turkey," a meeting that did not go unnoticed
by the media and consequently the public. Rahþan Ecevit reiterated
her concern about missionary activity in June of last year.

Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) leader Devlet Bahceli in a rally
in 2005 in the southern city of Adana also expressed concern about
missionary activities. In an earlier speech in 2002, Bahceli had stated
that "missionary activity in Turkey is on the rise, and evaluating
recent attempts to revive the Pontus ideology from all sides is an
absolute necessity." Neo-nationalist Grand Unity Party’s (BBP) leader
Muhsin Yazýcýoðlu, following the killing of Father Santoro in Trabzon,
claimed that Christian missionaries in Turkey were backed by the US
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).

Saadet (Happiness or Contentment) Party (SP) leader Recai Kutan in a
recent conference had complained that the real extent of missionary
activity was "not adequately being relayed to the public." Another
politician, Haydar Baþ, who heads the Independent Turkey Party (BDP),
claimed only last year that missionaries were trying to "convert
our children."

The case of Malatya

Journalist and Bilgi University instructor Kurþat Bumin points out that
the murders in Malatya have an undeniably political aspect, but he does
not agree that such incidents, obviously devised to take up significant
space in the international media, are necessarily "provocations."

"They say this is a religious attack; this, too, is wrong," Bumin told
Today’s Zaman. Bumin asserts that recent attacks against minorities are
the result of a long process wherein certain segments of society were
gradually turned against missionaries. Bumin underlines that recent
murders are the result of a process and not the doing of organized
provocateurs. A youth group influenced by neo-nationalism with Islamist
overtones gradually emerged. Recalling how someone supposedly on the
left such as Rahþan Ecevit could make remarks about how Islam in Turkey
was in danger posed by missionary, Bumin points out that both the
media and politics are responsible for the fallout from the process.

Bumin gave as a recent example a radical daily reporting the
Malatya incident yesterday that omitted the comments of a foundation
representing Islam which had said the work of Christian missionaries
corresponds to Islam’s "explaining" of itself and that there is
nothing wrong with carrying out missionary activities. "The radical
daily only printed the part that condemned the attack," he observed.

Indeed, the daily entirely ignored the Muslim foundation’s remarks
that there was nothing wrong with Christians trying to spread the
word of their religion.

The right societal infrastructure

Nevzat Tarhan, psychiatrist and the author of numerous publications
on the social psychology regarding various issues in Turkey, points
out that the societal infrastructure of Turkey currently is fertile
ground for such ideological and political murders.

Pointing out that such murders are usually committed by "immature
personalities" who don’t have an ideal in life and who are unable to
make sense of concepts such as religion, are very open to manipulation,
he said, "Anti-EU or anti-US sentiment and paranoid perceptions
related to these are transforming into hostility against Christians,"
underlining that it is almost impossible for the perpetrators to see
the distinction between the two. However, he notes that it is not
very realistic to believe that five such young people, as in the case
of the Malatya Bible publisher murders, are capable of taking such
decisions by themselves. "They can’t do something like this without
relying on some power," he points out.

He notes that part of the problem is the existence of an increasingly
aggressive, disgruntled and unemployed youth. "There is a youth
without any social ideals. These kids usually have problems, and it
is very easy to make them members of a crime organization. In fact,
this is a method of suicide for many."

Tarhan also agrees that politicians are partially guilty. "Ambiguity
in politics such as the recent lack of clarity in the presidential
election adds to this atmosphere."

One important means to fight back would be to "make sure this kind of
behavior is unwanted in society." Tarhan thinks the reaction shown by
the media and the public in the aftermath of the Hrant Dink murder,
when hundreds of thousands gathered at his funeral to protest the
assassination, served that function. "Here, too, at least 100, 000
people in Malatya should march to protest the attack. Civil society
organizations should organize that," Tarhan said.

Sociologist Nilufer Narlý points out that the Italian priest’s murder
and Hrant Dink’s murder, as well as the most recent incident are
unarguably linked to the increasing violence in society.

Indeed, Turkey’s overall crime rate last year went up by a worrisome
61 percent. Parricides, rapes, murders and school violence hit the
newspapers every day. The danger is that the upsurge in the number
of violent incidents desensitizes people. "Widespread violence serves
to normalize violence," Narlý underlines.

In addition, polarization between marginal groups is one of the
factors motivating the incidents. The profile of an uneducated or
poorly educated male going through the tough years of his late teens
from the fringes of the city with little or no hope for a better
future is either too easily manipulated, or young men with this
profile easily commit hate crimes through fanatical interpretation
of what they read in the media.

If some light can be shed on the background of the Malatya murders
as well as other similar incidents, Turkey will be able to access
invaluable information on the situation of its youth. "Extensive
social rehabilitation projects can be started," Narlý says, adding,
"We need a series of policies targeting our youth."

Narlý says that young people in Turkey have been neglected too
long and that the lack of social policies targeting them in the
past decade or so has resulted in a fatal mistake that Turkey is
apparently now paying for dearly. "There is the [political] climate
and political tensions. Young people can readily pay lip service to
extreme political views."

–Boundary_(ID_URAFN3Wu2/3NDsjcrXN1c A)–

South Caucasus: Is Russia Losing Influence?

SOUTH CAUCASUS: IS RUSSIA LOSING INFLUENCE?

Today.Az
19 April 2007 [16:54]

Moscow’s influence in the South Caucasus region has been steadily
waning in recent years.

In a recent commentary in "The Moscow Times," Thomas de Waal, the
Caucasus editor at the London-based Institute for War and Peace
Reporting, argued that the Kremlin — preoccupied with Russia’s
resurgence as a world power — is losing its grip on Georgia, Armenia,
and Azerbaijan.

RFE/RL invited de Waal to participate in a roundtable discussion
on the issue. Also participating in the discussion were Ivliane
Khaindrava, a lawmaker from Georgia’s opposition Republican Party;
Rauf Mirkadyrov, a columnist for Azerbaijan’s "Zerkalo" newspaper;
and Stepan Grigorian, the director of the Center for Globalization
and Regional Cooperation in the Armenian capital, Yerevan.

RFE/RL: To start, let’s have Thomas de Waal explain the premise of
his article.

Thomas de Waal: My thesis is paradoxical. Of course, Russia is
stronger politically and economically than it was 10 years ago. But
as a result of its shortsighted policies, Russia is losing influence
in the Caucasus.

As a result of [Russia’s] blockade [of Georgian wine and agricultural
products], Georgia has opened its economy, its market, to other
countries. In Azerbaijan, Gazprom’s very shortsighted policies pushed
Azerbaijan into a more pro-Western position. This is even happening in
Armenia, whose position about the [Georgian] blockade was not taken
into account, and where Georgians were able to hold a demonstration
in front of the Russian Embassy in Yerevan about xenophobia in Russia.

My thesis is that Russia’s domestic and energy policies are dictating
its foreign policy. And on all fronts, Russia is losing its position
in the Caucasus.

RFE/RL: How much is this thesis justified? Let’s look first at Georgia.

Ivliane Khaindrava: If we look at the way the Russian political
establishment categorizes its priorities, Russia is losing Georgia
and losing it at a very fast pace. If we look at the categories
we’re talking about — military, political, Russian foreign-policy
interests, the rules of the game in economics and energy — then
[Russia] is losing its influence. Accordingly, Georgia is becoming
increasingly liberated [from Russia].

At the same time, if we are operating from a normal understanding
of the 21st century, I don’t think there is a particular
problem. Georgia’s economic space is open to Russian capital, and
in the past years there have been projects with local and Russian
investment. Georgia’s information space is open. At home I can watch 12
Russian channels. On the other hand, there isn’t really any particular
reason why I would want to watch them.

If Russia is prepared for close relations with a smaller and weaker
Georgia, then there’s no problem. But if Russia aspires to be a
hegemon they will not succeed. Because for the Georgian political
establishment, this question has been decided. We’ve decided that
the days of speaking to us as Foreign Minister [Sergei] Lavrov tried
to speak to us — saying that Russia will not allow Georgia to join
NATO — are over. We’ll do everything we can so that you can’t speak
to us this way.

RFE/RL: Is there a general sense that Russia is simply seeking to
fill its pockets, instead of pursuing common interests and sympathetic
ties with neighbors like Azerbaijan?

Rauf Mirkadyrov: I don’t think this is what has determined Russia’s
latest steps toward the countries of the South Caucasus, including
Georgia.

In recent years, there have undoubtedly been serious changes in
Russia. It went from a state that had a financial crisis [in 1998]
to one with the third- or fourth-largest gold and currency reserves
in the world. This influences its policy, which has become more
stringent. There are also other factors.

At the end of the day, Russia could have continued to give favorable
economic treatment to the countries of the South Caucasus. There is
a country in the region that affirms Russian and Kremlin policy —
Armenia.

But this favorable treatment didn’t continue for the simple reason
that one of the South Caucasus countries, Georgia, very quickly
became uncontrollable.

It defined its foreign-policy priorities as joining NATO and
integrating with the European Union, if possible. Maybe some of
Russia’s actions made Georgia and the countries of the North Atlantic
bloc act faster.

It seems to me that Russia, since the end of last year, has sought to
bind Azerbaijan to its side and pull it away from the West once and
for all. To tie them to an anti-Georgian coalition and to themselves
and pull them away from the West once and for all. To tie them to an
anti-Georgian coalition and achieve a revanche. This didn’t happen. Now
I think there is a reevaluation of this policy — particularly with
the events surrounding Iran.

RFE/RL: Russia has a very rich imperial tradition. In the 18th and
19th centuries, Russia didn’t dictate to those on its territories
how to behave. It raised the social standard. It brought the regional
elite into its own. How do you explain the clumsy and insulting way
that Russia is now trying to control the situation?

Stepan Grigorian: I first want to say that, lately, we’re always
talking about Russia’s economic growth, its large budget, its huge
reserves. The question is: what’s the quality of this growth? There
is no quality there. This growth is only the result of rising gas and
oil prices on world markets. Since Russia’s economic growth is only a
result of selling oil and gas, it strengthens corporations. Therefore,
Russian policy today is not just the policy of the state toward the
South Caucasus and the countries of the CIS, but also the policy of
major corporations.

Analogies are difficult to find in the Russian empire or even in the
Soviet Union. Any corporate system works this way. They don’t look
at the political consequences of their actions. Therefore our country
has suffered and is moving away from Russia.

This is not just because of the political problems with Georgia, but
also because Russia’s closure of the [Verkhny Lars] crossing point
between Armenia and Georgia automatically meant — and Russia didn’t
even think about this, and high-ranking officials aren’t interested —
that Armenia’s ground communications were closed off.

What does this mean? In the last half-year to year since that border
crossing point was closed, Armenian businessmen began orienting
themselves toward Western markets. So even in a place where the elite
is not badly disposed toward Russia, they are reorienting themselves
toward the West. The poorly conceived policies of Russia toward the
South Caucasus — including Armenia — are causing the reorientation
of the political elite.

Russia grew a bit stronger financially — not technologically,
economically, or industrially, just financially. And now the Russian
political elite seems to be under the impression that they can compete
with the West and the United States for the South Caucasus. Russia’s
recent actions toward Georgia and Azerbaijan are connected to this
illusion. But I think the movement of NATO, the EU, and the United
States toward the South Caucasus will continue.

RFE/RL: In the early years of Putin’s presidency, a lot of political
observers said his foreign policy appeared to be based on the principle
of self-containment. Russia needed to be strengthened internally and
reject ties with the outside world, including the near abroad. Could
it be that Russia just doesn’t need the South Caucasus, and that’s
why it’s treating it this way?

De Waal: Any politician in Russia who says they need to be friendly
with the South Caucasus, of course, won’t win any political points. I
think the problem is that Russia doesn’t understand the difference
between the near and far abroad.

The countries of the South Caucasus correctly see themselves as
independent countries and are building relationships with the West,
with Washington.

Moscow hasn’t sufficiently understood this yet. They still think: these
are our neighbors, our former republics. They don’t understand the
finer points of the current foreign policies of these countries. Putin
himself doesn’t understand. Does he want [Russia] to be the successor
of the Soviet Union or does he want to liberate [Russia] from the
Soviet Union?

RFE/RL: Thomas de Waal’s commentary also talks about the problem of
a serious cultural divide between Russia and the South Caucasus —
that in 10 or 15 years, the Russian language will no longer be spoken
in the region. Does this seem realistic?

Khaindrava: It’s perfectly obvious that Russian culture — not in terms
of its existence, of course, but in terms of language — is quickly
losing its position in Georgia. It was once the obvious second language
in Georgia, but that has already stopped being the case. The younger
generation, including teenagers, are already going with English.

As far as values go, things have also happened quickly. The Russian
doctrine is an unclear conception of Eurasiaism. It is interesting to
me whether Russian citizens even understand what that is. In Georgia,
the most popular doctrine is Europeanism and the aspiration to affirm
ourselves and our state as a faraway province, but nevertheless a
province, of Europe. Russia is closer to Europe and there was once
a sense that Georgia would get to Europe via Russia.

But the process of disassociation [from Russia] happened very
quickly. When the anti-Georgian campaign began in Russia, it was
also an overall anti-Caucasus campaign, aimed against anyone with
a Caucasian appearance. In Georgia — even when Russia was seen as
Georgia’s biggest headache, even as everybody was saying Russia was
Georgia’s biggest problem — there wasn’t any xenophobia in Georgia.

RFE/RL: Today a lot of people are hoping the Russian regime will change
and become more democratic. If that proves the case, perhaps after the
Russian presidential election in March 2008, could the countries of
the South Caucasus envision Russia as a close political and cultural
partner as they do with the West?

Mirkadyrov: The situation in each country varies. Look at
Azerbaijan. In the beginning of 2006, they were Russia’s strategic
partner. But in the end, Azerbaijan was talking about leaving the
CIS. Russia was not acting like a friend and partner to Azerbaijan.

Armenia has a different situation. It’s more oriented toward its
neighbors because their choices can override Armenia’s choices. Armenia
doesn’t have a border with Russia. The choices of Georgia and
Azerbaijan can override Armenia’s foreign-policy choices.

What about Azerbaijan? I completely agree that recent actions by
Russia have scared away even the elite in Azerbaijan. They have begun
to look at Russia as something dangerous. Its policy is oriented toward
establishing, if not the former Soviet Union, then a of kind of empire
where there is some freedom, but where [Russia] views the territory as
its own. Russia looks at these countries as its own and this feeling
has recently gotten stronger. This tendency isn’t likely to reverse.

Moreover, there’s another strong tendency. That’s the feeling that
these countries need to change their foreign-policy orientations,
work more closely with NATO and the EU, and in the future join these
structures. Under these conditions, and in this political situation —
and also given the situation surrounding Iran — I don’t think the
South Caucasus countries will move closer to Russia.

RFE/RL: There are certain democratic criteria that countries must
meet in order to be close to the West. Armenia and Azerbaijan, while
not very far from this criteria, aren’t very close to it either. If
this doesn’t happen, will these countries move back toward Russia?

Grigorian: Thank you, that is an excellent question. I want to point
out three factors which make it impossible to return to Russia’s
side. One is the quality of Russia’s political elite — and we need
to remember that they are not politicians, but people from the special
services, who have their specific world. Second, the unattractiveness
of Russia — the absence of democracy, the lack of technology and
interesting scientific work.

The third factor is more important as to why the South Caucasus are
going to the West. It is the self-sufficiency of Azerbaijan, Georgia,
and Turkey, which are realizing very serious projects that will enable
us to diversify oil and gas routes, transport, and the like. These
things are pushing us to the side of the West. We have problems with
democracy. Does this disturb things or not? I am certain that our
political elite will change and become more democratic.

RFE/RL: Thomas de Waal, you opened the debate and you should finish it.

De Waal: I’m glad for the words of support from the South Caucasus. I
would like to raise one question that Ivliane also raised, the question
of the Russian language. This is a Russian resource that is dying in
the South Caucasus.

It is a language that unites three countries, that unites Abkhazia with
Russia and Georgia. Russia is not utilizing this resource in the way
that Britain utilizes its resource through the British Council. The
Russian language has a lot of cultural significance and a lot of
possibilities. And with this, Russia could have a very positive
influence on the South Caucasus. RFE/RL

Armenians Call On European Council Re Genocide

ARMENIANS CALL ON EUROPEAN COUNCIL RE GENOCIDE

Financial Mirror, Cyprus
April 19 2007

The European Armenian Federation urges the Ministers of Justice of the
EU member-States not to surrender to the pressure exerted by Turkey in
order to exclude the negation of the Armenian genocide from the scope
of the Framework decision aiming at penalizing denial. In this regard,
the Federation sent a mail to the EU German presidency denouncing the
"immoral and inappropriate interference" of Turkey. It also calls
upon the European policy-makers not to "let a hateful and genocidal
ideology from abroad destroy all that we have built"

According to the media, Ankara exerted heavy pressures on various
member-States, especially on the German presidency, to avoid the
Framework decision "against racism and xenophobia" hindering its
denial propaganda in Europe. Various diplomats from the Council would
have asserted that the text actually exclude this denial, to comply
with the Turkish will. However, the draft law doesn’t contain as such
this provision.

" Actually, this opinion is clearly led by a very biased political
interpretation of a juridical text which basically aims to protect
all the European citizens. However, it would be morally abject that
the EU gives such a support to Ankara’s policy aiming at downgrading
Europeans with Armenian descent into second-class citizens, the only
ones to be out of this legal protection" stated Laurent Leylekian,
the executive director of the European Armenian Federation.

The Federation recalls that Turkey organized several demonstrations
in Europe to incite hatred against Armenians through the genocide
denial. Thanks to the massive police presence, these demonstrations
did not degenerate into actual anti-Armenian violence.

"The ultimate goal of Ankara is that – in Europe as in Turkey – all
Human beings are born equal in dignity and rights but the Armenians.

Facing to this infamy, Europe must remain inflexible and must secure
our penal legislation against the denial-based hatred" concluded
Leylekian.

RA And AR FMs Discussed Unsettled Issues Referring To Karabagh Settl

RA AND AR FMS DISCUSSED UNSETTLED ISSUES REFERRING TO KARABAGH SETTLEMENT’S PRINCIPLES IN BELGRADE

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
April 19 2007

A meeting of RA and AR FMs Vardan Oskanian and Elmar Mammadyarov
was held in Belgrade April 18. The meeting was conducted with the
participation of OSCE Minsk group Co-Chairs and OSCE Chair-in-Office’s
Personal Representative. To note, Vardan Oskanian arrived in Belgrade
to participate in the 16th meeting of FMs of Organization of the
Black Sea Economic Cooperation (OBSEC).

According to the information DE FACTO received at the RA MFA Press
Office, in the course of the talks the parties had focused their
attention on the unsettled issues referring to the Karabagh conflict
settlement’s basic principles. In this connection OSCE MG Co-Chairs
proposed their own ideas for discussion.

As a result of the meeting the parties reached agreement on the
Minsk group’s visit to the region. During the visit the mediators
will get to know the parties’ stands and discuss the possibility of
organization of RA and AR Presidents’ current meeting.

BAKU: Saida Gojamanli: "Azerbaijani Human Rights Defenders Achieved

SAIDA GOJAMANLI: "AZERBAIJANI HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDERS ACHIEVED THEIR GOAL IN COUNCIL OF EUROPE"

Today, Azerbaijan
April 19 2007

Azerbaijani human rights defenders, who attended the debates on
Azerbaijan in the spring session of the Council of Europe Parliamentary
Assembly (PACE), arrived in Baku.

Saida Gojamanli, chief of the bureau of defense of human rights and
legislation told the APA that the rights defenders achieved their goal.

"We told the PACE members that we are satisfied with the
co-rapporteurs’ report and gave our proposals. Our proposals on
formation of election commissions on parity, independent operation
of Public Television, trial of former health minister Ali Insanov,
arrest of parliamentarian Huseyn Abdullaev, release of sick prisoners,
commuting lifers’ sentence to 15-year imprisonment were reflected in
PACE resolution," she said.

Saida Gojamanli said that their lobbyist activity with regard to the
Nagorno Karabakh was also a success.

"The points on Nagorno Karabakh in the resolution adopted about
Azerbaijan remained unchanged despite Armenian delegation. Taking into
account the Karabakh problem, we did not raise the issue on political
prisoners. We consider that the problem can be solved within the
working group on human rights," she said.

Human rights defenders Chingiz Ganizade, Saida Gojamanli, Saadat
Bananyarli, Novella Jafaroglu, Arzu Abdullayeva and Eldar Zeynalov
had meetings with Secretary of the Council of Europe Venice Commission
Giovanni Buquicchio, former PACE co-rapporteur on Azerbaijan Andreas
Gross, co-rapporteurs Andres Herkel and Tony Lloyd.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/39661.html