ANKARA: Turkey Disagrees With US President’s Remarks On "Armenian Ge

TURKEY DISAGREES WITH US PRESIDENT’S REMARKS ON "ARMENIAN GENOCIDE"

Anatolia News Agency, Turkey
April 25 2007

Ankara, 25 April: "It is impossible for us to share some expressions
in US President George W. Bush’s remarks on 24 April. Turkish nation
is extremely sensitive about Armenian allegations which are lack of
historical, scientific and legal ground," Levent Bilman, spokesman for
the Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, said on Wednesday [25 April].

President Bush released a written statement on 24 April, anniversary
of so-called Armenian genocide.

"Turkish government’s attitude regarding the issue is based on a moral
point of view on the ground of historical and legal facts. The duty
of writing and commenting about the historical events should belong
to only historians. The controversial periods of the history can be
understood by carrying out scientific researches in relevant archives
and historical records without prejudices and censoring," Bilman said.

He noted, "Turkey, as a sign of good will, proposed Armenia on 10
April 2005 to establish a joint commission of historians to research
the 1915 events and to share their findings with the world public
opinion. Our propose also welcomes participation of third parties.

Turkey opened its all archives to researches to enable them to carry
out their work freely."

"President Bush underlined in his remarks that an open historical
examination of the facts was essential for normalizing relations
between Turkey and Armenia. We agree with President Bush and expect
him to maintain his efforts to encourage Armenia to give a positive
response to our historical proposal," Bilman added.

Christian Converts Live In Fear In Intolerant Turkey

CHRISTIAN CONVERTS LIVE IN FEAR IN INTOLERANT TURKEY
By Annette Grossbongardt in Istanbul
Translated from the German by Christopher Sultan

Spiegel Online, Germany
April 23 2007

Turkish converts to Christianity fear for their lives after the
brutal murder of three people at a Christian publisher. Angela Merkel
has called for Ankara to promote religious tolerance, while secular
intellectuals ask why the 99-percent Muslim country can’t put up with
a few Christians.

Family members and friends of Tilman Geske gather at an Armenian
cemetery for his funeral in Malatya on Friday April 20.

Tilman Geske, 46, had a dream when he moved to Turkey. As a practicing
Christian, he wanted to live in peace among Muslims in a country that
was a cradle of early Christianity. The German immigrant gave language
instruction, established a consulting firm and translated Christian
literature. "He was a likeable man," says a Turkish accountant who
worked in the office next to Geske’s.

"Whenever I asked him how he was doing, he responded in traditional
Turkish: ‘Cok seker — very sweet.’"

His sweet dream came to an abrupt end last Wednesday, when five
Turkish fanatics armed with bread knives stormed into the office
of the Christian Zirve publishing house in the south-eastern city
of Malatya, tied up Geske and two other employees, before torturing
them and finally killing them by slitting their throats. One of the
victims was stabbed 150 times in a particularly brutal attack. A note
left at the scene read: "This should serve as a lesson to the enemies
of our religion. We did it for our country."

But the attack undoubtedly did their country more harm than good. The
damage the murders have caused could hardly be more devastating. The
"missionary massacre," as Turkey’s papers have called the unusually
brutal crime, has plunged Turkey into new turmoil. It has also shone
an uncomfortable spotlight on the question of whether the country
will succeed in its bid to join the European Union.

FROM THE MAGAZINE Find out how you can reprint this DER SPIEGEL article
in your publication. For critics of Turkey, including some in German
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s conservative Christian Democratic Union
(CDU) party, the incident merely confirms their warnings that the
country simply doesn’t belong to Europe. Italian Prime Minister Romano
Prodi said the crime "certainly does not help" the country’s bid for
EU membership.

Merkel, who currently holds the EU’s rotating presidency, said Sunday
that she expected Turkey to take action to show it was tolerant of
Christianity after the murders. "This episode has no influence on the
accession negotiations, which will continue with the result open. But
the episode is a cause for concern," she told the Munchner Merkur
newspaper in an interview for its Monday edition. "Everything must be
done to inhibit a climate that makes such appalling deaths possible,"
she told the paper. "I expect clear action from the government in
Ankara (to show) that intolerance of Christianity and other religions
has no chance."

Optimists, on the other hand, hope the murder was merely a provocation
by opponents of democracy intent on steering Turkey away from
its westward course. "Just as one cannot claim, in the wake of the
killings in Virginia, that all Americans are serial killers, it would
be wrong to hold the entire country responsible for this crime,"
warns sociologist Dogu Ergil.

Nevertheless, there is no longer any doubt that Turkey has run into
serious difficulties as far as the development of its civil society is
concerned. The murder of the Turkish Protestants exposes a deep-seated
problem: Turkey is at a standstill — or even regressing — when it
comes to key issues like tolerance and pluralism.

"In Germany, Turks residing there have opened up more than 3,000
mosques. If in our country we cannot abide even by a few churches, or
a handful of missionaries, where is our civilization?" wrote Ertugrul
Ozkok, editor-in-chief of leading secular Turkish daily Hurriyet,
in a hard-hitting editorial on the murders. "Where is our humanity,
our freedom of belief, our beautiful religion?" he asks.

Part 2: An Unholy Alliance of Left and Right

AP Orthodox worshippers attend a morning mass at the Patriarchal
Cathedral of St. George in Istanbul.

The danger does not come — as one might expect — from the usual
fundamentalist Muslims. Instead, it is an unholy alliance of
nationalists ranging from the left to the Islamic right that is
inciting hatred against free thinkers and those of other faiths.

According to Ergil, there is a "mixture of fanatical nationalism and
militant religious fervor" that prepared the ground for the Malatya
massacre — and that also appears to have been behind the murders
of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink and Roman Catholic priest
Andrea Santoro last year. Experts like Ergil see the murders as part
of an unsettling new trend, in which fanatical nationalist-religious
groups see violence as a "cleansing force" and themselves as supposed
"saviors of the nation" — like the 19- and 20-year-old attackers
in Malatya, who were students and all lived in the same conservative
Islamic dormitory.

The hate speech comes from both the left and the right. Rahsan
Ecevit, the widow of popular former Prime Minister Bulent Ecevit and a
supposed leftist, routinely launches into tirades against foreigners
who buy land in Turkey. She claims that those who encourage citizens
to convert to another religion want to divide Turkey.

Christianity is gaining ground in Turkey, especially in the southeast,
the chairman of the far-right nationalist Great Union Party (BBP)
recently warned, even going so far as to accuse Christian missionaries
of being "supported by the CIA." The bolder such conspiracy theories
are, the more popular they seem to be.

And yet, all nationalist sentiment aside, Turks were shocked by the
brutal murders, which the government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan was quick to condemn. Erdogan wants to bring Turkey into the
European fold. But to do so, says Joost Lagendijk, a Dutch member
of the European parliament for the GreenLeft party who is himself
married to a Turkish woman, it must "actively appeal to its citizens
to accept people of other religions and ethnic origins."

In some cases state institutions even help to promote the hostile
mood. As far back as 2001, the country’s National Security Council,
under then Prime Minister Ecevit, classified "missionary activities" as
a threat to national security. The government office of religion has in
the past distributed sample sermons targeted against missionaries. In
addition, Erdogan’s government, which is dominated by his right-wing
Justice and Development Party (AKP), undermines its credibility when,
for example, an official like Minister of State Mehmet Aydin claims
that missionary activities are not "innocent declaration of religious
beliefs, but rather a planned movement with political goals."

With politicians stirring up public anger, some segments of the
population seem all too willing to fall in line. The more aggressive
forms of Christianity, such as that espoused by free evangelical
churches, are especially suspect to many Turks.

Even the friendly Muslim who worked in the office next door to
Tilman Geske became skeptical when he heard that the German was
"proselytizing." To ease his doubts, he took a look around Geske’s
office to see if there were Bibles lying around, but he found
nothing. "This terrible murder brings shame upon us," says the
horrified accountant, who prefers to remain anonymous. And yet,
he says, he is not pleased about some of the things he hears, such
as the rumor that missionaries "place money in the Bibles that they
hand out in front of our schools."

For the beleaguered Christians, it is sometimes better not to be
noticed at all. There was no sign on the door of the Zirve publishing
company’s office in Malatya — a deliveryman was attacked there two
years ago and nationalists later staged angry protests in front of
the building.

Part 3: ‘We Are Experiencing a Witch Hunt’

AP Tilmann Geske’s wife Susanne, shown here with the couple’s three
children, says she will pray for her husband’s killers.

"We are experiencing a witch hunt straight out of the Middle Ages,
and the Malatya victims were certainly not the last," complains Ihsan
Ozbek, the chairman of the Salvation Church, a union of Protestant
groups which claims to have 5,000 members throughout Turkey. "We are
portrayed as traitors and potential criminals," he says. Tensions
are so high that Ozbek warns that it has become very dangerous to be
called a missionary. "That would be the equivalent of a death sentence
these days," he says.

Christians are reporting efforts to file lawsuits against supposed
missionaries, even though proselytizing is not officially against
the law in Turkey. In fact, the opposite is true. It is against the
law in Turkey — theoretically, at least — to prevent anyone from
practicing or disseminating his faith. But creative approaches are
sometimes taken to prosecuting unpopular infidels, says attorney Orhan
Cengiz. In Silivri, a town west of Istanbul, two converts are currently
on trial for the uniquely Turkish offense of "insulting Turkishness"
and for "incitement of religious hatred," both considered crimes
under the notorious Article 301 of the country’s penal code.

Necati Aydin, a local pastor and one of the publishing company
employees murdered in the Malatya killings, had already been arrested
once before for distributing Bibles and religious pamphlets.

"Villagers claimed that Aydin and his colleagues had insulted Islam,"
says his attorney. They were charged with distributing "propaganda
against religious freedom."

One of the most difficult positions is that of Turkish converts who
turn their backs on the "true faith." Sociologist Behnan Konutgan, 54,
converted to Christianity while still a student. "While all my fellow
students were constantly reading the Koran, I had a Bible sent to me,"
he recalls. "I read the New Testament with excitement."

Konutgan now works as a pastor and is translating the Bible. "Society
is our problem, not the laws," he says, describing his own
experiences. "The church is perceived as an enemy."

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The murdered Christians were members of Malatya’s small Protestant
community, which included a few foreigners like Tilman Geske and
15 Turks who have converted from Islam to Christianity. The liberal
newspaper Radikal estimates that there are about 10,000 converts in
Turkey, expressing surprise that they could be seen as a "threat"
in a country of 73 million people, 99 percent of whom are Muslim.

But it seems that this is exactly the case. According to an
opinion poll, 59 percent of Turks favor taking legal action against
missionaries, and more than 40 percent said they would not want
Christian Armenians or Greeks as neighbors.

Tilman Geske was buried last Friday in his adopted Turkish home of
Malatya. In an interview on Turkish television, his wife Susanne
said that he was a "martyr for Jesus" and that she would pray for
forgiveness for his killers.

Ugur Yuksel, one of the two Turkish Christian employees murdered with
Geske, had already been interred. Unlike Geske, though, he had been
given a Muslim burial, admitted a spokesman from the local Protestant
community: "His family insisted on it."

ld/0,1518,478955,00.html

http://www.spiegel.de/international/wor

RA NA Speaker’s Address On Occasion Of Day Of Memory Of Armenian Gen

RA NA SPEAKER’S ADDRESS ON OCCASION OF DAY OF MEMORY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE VICTIMS

Noyan Tapan
Apr 23 2007

YEREVAN, APRIL 23, NOYAN TAPAN. RA National Assembly Speaker Tigran
Torosian addressed to the Armenian people on the occasion of the day
of memory of the Armenian Genocide victims. The message, the text
of which was submitted to Noyan Tapan by the RA NA Public Relations
Department, says:

"Dear compatriots,

Our people today again pays tribute of its respect to memory of the
victims of the Armenian Genocide planned and committed in the early
20th century by Ottaman Turkey. The number of those countries which,
recognizing and condemning that terrible crime, not only express their
moral assistance to our people, but also affirm their responsibility
for civilization and human fate, and assure that moral values are
for them higher than different political and group interests and
small-minded accountings.

Bowing our heads in memory of the Armenian Genocide martyrs, we must
not only chase with firm succession the unreserved recognition of
one of the most violent events of the human history but we are also
obliged to strengthen with our unity and work the two Armenian states
as the best monument in memory of the victims and the most important
quarantee of safe and honourable life of our compatriots living in
the Fatherland and Diaspora."

All Congressmen Elected From Colorado Assist Armenian Genocide Resol

ALL CONGRESSMEN ELECTED FROM COLORADO ASSIST ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Apr 23 2007

WASHINGTON, APRIL 23, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The congressmen
elected from the state of Colorado unanimously spoke on April 18 for
adoption of the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate resolutions
concerning the Armenian Genocide.

As the Armenian Assembly of America (AAA) states, Congressman Mark
Udall (democrate) from Colorado was the first congressman who spoke
for that resolution.

AAA Colorado Armenian American Action Committee (ARAMAC) State Chair
Pamela Barsam Brown closely cooperated with the state legislators’
office.

"Colorado senators and representatives showed great assistance in
the issue of re-affirming the U.S. position in the Armenian Genocide
issue," Barsam Brown said, expressing a hope that senators of other
states will follow their example.

In addition to the Congress assistance, the Armenian Genocide was
recognized in Colorado at the state and city councils’ level. Governor
Bill Ritter and Mayor John Hickenlooper made a statement concerning
the Armenian Genocide.

The Colorado legislative body also proposed a joint resolution by which
April 24 is from now on announced in Colorado as the day of memory of
the Armenian Genocide. "We appreciate the active assistance of the
Colorado delegation in the issue of affirmation of the indisputable
fact of the Armenian Genocide," Bryan Ardouny, the Executive Director
of the Armenian Assembly of America said. "We welcome devotion and
activeness of Pamela Barsam Brown and the Armenian community of
Colorado in the affair of this success."

NKR Foreign Minister Georgy Petrossian’s Commentary

NKR FOREIGN MINISTER GEORGY PETROSSIAN’S COMMENTARY

KarabakhOpen
23-04-2007 18:02:41

NKR Foreign Minister Georgy Petrossian’s commentary on mass media’s
question concerning the statement of the Chairman of the CE Committee
of Ministers Fiorenzo Stolfi on the forthcoming presidential elections
in the NKR

Question: Mr. Minister, how will you comment the statement of the
CE Committee of Ministers, Foreign Minister of San Marino Fiorenzo
Stolfi concerning the information that the forthcoming elections in
Nagorno Karabakh cannot create favorable conditions for the conflict
settlement since they predetermine the region’s status?

Commentary: The statement of the Chairman of the CE Committee of
Ministers denotes once more that the European officials of even
such high level are poorly aware of the Karabakh conflict’s essence
and process. Representatives of different European structures try to
compensate this gap by using stereotyped answers, as Foreign Minister
of San Marino Fiorenzo Stolfi did. However, similar standard approach
to the Karabakh problem as a whole, and the process of civil society
building in the Nagorno Karabakh Republic in particular, which has
recently become established in the international structures is
counterproductive and dangerous. The indulgence to the caprices
of the Azerbaijani side, which is more often demonstrated by the
European officials, can be perceived as an attempt to bring Nagorno
Karabakh back to the past. In connection with this, I would like to
remind Mr. Fiorenzo Stolfi that any attempts to deprive the people
of Nagorno Karabakh of the right to democratic development and civil
society strengthening are condemned to failure.

Under the conditions of democracy the elections are crucial institute
of demonstrating political role of the people as the source of
power. The forthcoming presidential elections in the NKR are not
an exception. They cannot impact the Karabakh conflict settlement
process and cannot predetermine Nagorno Karabakh’s status, as their
main function is to form power through democratic mechanisms. The
NKR’s status was determined by the will of people of Nagorno Karabakh
at December 10, 1991 referendum in conformity with the norms of the
international law and the national legislation which was in force
during that period.

It should be noted that we have repeatedly invited the representatives
of various European structures to visit Nagorno Karabakh and get
acquainted with the situation on-site to overcome the stereotypes
and clichés, which have become established among European officials
regarding Nagorno Karabakh.

–Boundary_(ID_9JznwB1kvoZZzum+BA7+iw)- –

US State Department Changes Wrong Expression Considering Nagorno Kar

US STATE DEPARTMENT CHANGES WRONG EXPRESSION CONSIDERING NAGORNO
KARABAKH AS OCCUPIED AZERBAIJANI TERRITORY

WASHINGTOM, APRIL 21, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The US State
Department has changed the expression in its annual report on human
rights, according to which "Armenia continues the occupation of
the Azerbaijani territory of Nagorno Karabakh and seven surrounding
Azerbaijani territories."

The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) Washington Office
reported that a changed text was put on the State Department’s website
this week.

According to the new text, the Armenian forces have occupied large
sections of the Azerbaijani territory adjacent to Nagorno Karabakh;
Armenian officials claim that they have not "occupied" Nagorno
Karabakh proper.

At the same time, the report’s part on Azerbaijan, which contains a
similar expression, has not been revised yet.

World Opposed To U.S. As Global Cop

WORLD OPPOSED TO U.S. AS GLOBAL COP
by Eli Clifton

Inter Press Service
Thursday, April 19, 2007

WASHINGTON – The world public rejects the U.S. role as a world leader,
but still wants the United States to do its share in multilateral
efforts and does not support a U.S. withdrawal from international
affairs, says a poll released Wednesday.The survey respondents see the
United States as an unreliable "world policeman", but views are split
on whether the superpower should reduce its overseas military bases.

The people of the United States generally agreed with the rest of the
world that their country should not remain the world’s pre-eminent
leader or global cop, and prefer that it play a more cooperative role
in multilateral efforts to address world problems.

The poll, the fourth in a series released by the Chicago Council
on Global Affairs and WorldPublicOpinion.org since the latter half
of 2006, was conducted in China, India, United States, Indonesia,
Russia, France, Thailand, Ukraine, Poland, Iran, Mexico, South Korea,
Philippines, Australia, Argentina, Peru, Israel, Armenia and the
Palestinian territories.

The three previous reports covered attitudes toward humanitarian
military intervention, labour and environmental standards in
international trade, and global warming. Those surveys found that the
international public generally favoured more multilateral efforts
to curb genocides and more far-reaching measures to protect labour
rights and combat climate change than their governments have supported
to date.

Steven Kull, editor of WorldPublicOpinion.org, notes that this
report confirms other polls which have shown that world opinion of
the United States is bad and getting worse, however this survey more
closely examines the way the world public would want to see Washington
playing a positive role in the international community.

Although all 15 of the countries polled rejected the idea that,
"the U.S. should continue to be the pre-eminent world leader in
solving international problems," only Argentina and the Palestinian
territories say it "should withdraw from most efforts to solve
international problems."

The respondents tend to agree that the US should do "its share in
efforts to solve international problems together with other countries"
in: South Korea (79 percent), United States (75 percent), France (75
percent), China (68 percent), Israel (62 percent), Peru (61 percent),
Mexico (59 percent), Armenia (58 percent), Philippines (55 percent),
Ukraine (52 percent), Thailand (47 percent), India (42 percent)
and Russia (42 percent).

In a majority of countries — 13 out of 15 — publics believe
Washington is "playing the role of world policeman more than it
should," including France (89 percent), Australia (80 percent), China
(77 percent), Russia (76 percent), Peru (76 percent), Palestinian
territories (74 percent) and South Korea (73 percent).

Seventy-six percent of those polled in the United States also agree
that their country plays too big a role as a global cop, but 57 percent
of Filipinos disagreed with the statement, and Israelis were evenly
split on the issue.

Majorities think that the United States cannot be trusted to
"act responsibly in the world" in: Argentina (84 percent), Peru
(80 percent), Russia (73 percent), France (72 percent) and Indonesia
(64 percent). But majorities or large percentages in the Philippines
(85 percent), Israel (81 percent), Poland (51 percent), and Ukraine
(49 percent) say the superpower can be at least "somewhat" trusted
to act responsibly.

Although most of the countries involved in the poll had majorities who
believe the U.S. was too involved in policing issues of international
concern, there were mixed views about whether it should reduce its
military presence around the world. Only five out of 12 publics
favoured decreasing the number of overseas U.S. military bases:
Argentina (75 percent), Palestinian territories (70 percent), France
(69 percent), China (63 percent) and Ukraine (62 percent).

Majorities in the Philippines (78 percent), United States (68 percent),
Israel (59 percent) and Poland (54 percent) favour maintaining or
increasing the current levels of U.S. military bases.

Armenia and Thailand lean in favour of maintaining current levels
or reducing base locations, while India was divided. No country
favoured increases.

The survey clearly shows that the perception of the U.S. role in
the world is negative and getting worse, but some publics did have
significant numbers who felt relations between their country and the
United States are getting better.

Most of the respondents in India (58 percent) and China (53 percent)
felt relations were improving, while pluralities agree in Australia (50
percent), Armenia (48 percent), Indonesia (46 percent), and Thailand
(37 percent). Majorities or pluralities in Poland (60 percent),
South Korea (56 percent), Israel (52 percent), Ukraine (52 percent)
and Russia (45 percent) say relations with the U.S. are about the same.

No countries had majorities or pluralities who say relations with
the United States are getting worse.

If Kosovo Is Granted Independence, Karabakh Will Get Additional Trum

IF KOSOVO IS GRANTED INDEPENDENCE, KARABAKH WILL GET ADDITIONAL TRUMP CARDS

Yerkir
20.04.2007 13:03

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – The issue of Kosovo conflict settlement and
recognition of its independence is a political, and not legal one,
political scientist Alexander Iskandarian told PanARMENIAN.Net. He
said, the question is very serious and critical especially for Europe,
more serious, than the Nagorno Karabakh problem.

"There are 2 million Albanians residing in Kosovo, refugees from the
region live in Europe, and it is already a headache for Europeans. And
then we should not forget that Serbia has rather complicated relations
with Europe and something needs to be done." Iskandarian also noted,
from the other side experience shows that no settlement of conflicts
leaves any direct influence on other conflicts.

"But there exist indirect influence. In any cases, if Kosovo is
granted independence, Nagorno Karabakh, Abkhazia, South Ossetia and
Transdnistria will get additional trump cards. Alongside he said,
currently the international law is under the process of washing
out. "It’s clear, that recognition of independence may be stretched
in the course of the time, but if it takes place politically, legal
registration will result in changes in international law," Alexander
Iskandarian said.

U.S. Undersecretary Nicholas Burns stated "the United States together
with other countries plans to cosponsor a new resolution in the United
Nations, which will allow the Provisional Government of Kosovo to
declare independence.

We think after the adoption of this draft resolution Kosovar leaders
will declare independence. Right after it the United States and other
countries will recognize that independence. We are now engaged in a
period of intense diplomacy to bring about Kosovo’s independence as
soon as possible."

Raffi Hovannisian: Everybody To Win On May 12: Heritage That Elders

RAFFI HOVANNISIAN: EVERYBODY TO WIN ON MAY 12: HERITAGE THAT ELDERS PASSED TO US TO WIN

Noyan Tapan
Apr 20 2007

KAPAN, APRIL 20, NOYAN TAPAN. Raffi Hovannisian, the Chairman
of the "Zharangutiun" (Heritage) party met with voters on April
19 in Kapan. The latter presented the 12 main directions of the
"Zharangutiun" parliamentary activity: free expression and free person,
free country, establishment of legality, anti-corruption struggle,
etc. According to the characteristics of the first Foreign Minister of
Armenia, the power of law will win on May 12 as well as the "heritage"
"which elders passed to us" will win. "And we are obliged to pass to
our heirs such a country that is the country of our dreams, Raffi
Hovannisian stated. "Republicans, "Bargavach Hayastan" (Prosperous
Armenia), ARF, everybody will win on May 12. It will be not a victory
of a person, but we do all these for the holy tricolour and in front
of the obedient God, and we are the masters in our own country. All
fragmentary party lists which are for serving us, but not for ruling,
will get down after these elections," Raffi Hovannisian stated.

The latter inspired the Kapan population, mentioning that the people,
standing in the square, in front of the mountain of Khustup are heirs
of Nzhdeh and nobody "can and has a right to speak on behalf of the
Great Sparapet." "Let nobody humble Nzhdeh and his ideology. Let
them prove it on May 12 and say that "We are masters of our belief
and Fatherland," Raffi Hovannisian concluded his idea.

5th Sitting Of Armenian-Chinese Intergovernmental Commission To Be H

5TH SITTING OF ARMENIAN-CHINESE INTERGOVERNMENTAL COMMISSION TO BE HELD IN YEREVAN ON APRIL 20

Noyan Tapan
Apr 19 2007

YEREVAN, APRIL 19, NOYAN TAPAN. The 5th joint sitting of the
Armenian-Chinese intergovernmental commission will be held in Yerevan
on April 20. The delegation headed by Syu Tunka, Head of the European
Department of China’s ministry of trade, Chinese Co-Chairman of the
Armenian-Chinese intergovernmental commission, will arrive in Armenia
in order to participate in the sitting.

The Chinese ambassador to Armenia Tso Syuelian will take part in
the sitting. The RA Deputy Foreign Minister, Co-Chairman of the
Armenian-Chinese intergovernmental commission Armen Bayburdian will
chair the sitting from the Armenian side.

According to the RA MFA Press and Information Department, a round
table dedicated to the 15th anniversary of establishment of diplomatic
relations between Armenia and China will also take place on April 21
in the hall of sittings of the RA National Academy of Sciences.