Erdogan Called For Speedy Settlement Of NKR Conflict

ERDOGAN CALLED FOR SPEEDY SETTLEMENT OF NKR CONFLICT

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
01.06.2009 19:01 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Time has come to put an end to Karabakh conflict,
a factor that impedes regional development. I have optimistic
attitude towards Armenian and Azeri Presidents’ upcoming meeting in
St. Petersburg. Everything depends on Armenia and OSCE MG Co-Chairs
who have committed themselves to conflict settlement," Turkish Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced on public TV.

Karabakh conflict, according to the Turkish official, is Turkey’s
problem as well. "We directly announced it to our Russian,
American and European partners, calling on them to settle the
conflict within shortest time-limits. It’s the main problem impeding
regional development. Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan, Baku-Tbilisi-Erzrum and
Baku-Tbilisi-Kars pipelines, as well as Nabucco project testify to
our close ties with Azerbaijan. Good circulation between our states
has already exceeded the sum of USD 2 billion. Turkish investments
in Azerbaijan’s oil sector comprise USD 3 billion. The only problem
we have is Karabakh issue; its solution requires international
community’s firm position. We want Co-Chairs to realize their share
of responsibility," Erdogan stressed.

Turkish Prime Minister also emphasized army’s role in Turkish
society’s life, reminding one’s again that his country was an
energy corridor between Middle East, the Caspian Sea and the West

Pontos World – An open letter to the public by Behzad Bilek

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Pontos World

An open letter to the public

May 20, 2009 at 09:04 PM

On October 6, 2008, in the 8th Notary Public’s Office in the Mersin
province of Turkey, I have officially transferred my house/land title
located in the village of Cimencik (read as Chimenjick) to the Seyfo
Center in Holland, nominating it to its director Mr Sabri Atman. The
Cimencik village is part of the sub-division of Eruh district of the
Siirt province in the South-East of Turkey. In my letter below, I
would like to share with you, the international public, the reasons
why I have transferred my land to Seyfo Center.
Published: 2009-05-19
Courtesy of the Seyfo Center Website

by Behzat Bilek

World War I is a well known event by the international public. This
event took place in the late Ottoman Empire in 1915 – genocide was
carried against all Christian minorities living there. My village
Cimencik, of Eruh district, was another place where these unfortunate
events occurred. I have personally researched this event from many
different aspects. Today in Turkey this subject is still, not only
denied and distorted for over 93 years, but to speak about it or
mention it is considered taboo. I did not just rely on what historians
wrote or documented – I have also witnessed the confessions of the
live witnesses who not only witnessed this tragic genocide, but who
took part in the killing role in these mass massacres – where these
individuals can be described as the `guilty party’. I have met these
people face to face and listened to them just before their
deaths. During the genocide years, the murdered Assyrians in my
village had their lands confiscated and the little number of them who
survived was Islamized. The grand children of those who were Islamized
are still living in our village.

I found out that the land which was inherited by me and my brothers
and sisters from my father actually was the land of the people
(Assyrians) who were massacred in 1915. It does not belong to us. I
now cannot find the right words that describe the shame, guilt, qualm
and the pangs of conscience state I live in. Before taking my decision
of transfer, for many years I have thought about it and have placed
myself in the shoes of those people who became victims of the
genocide. Despite me personally apologising to many Assyrian and
Armenian individuals that I came across with and said `sorry’ to, I
could not leave the moral pressure of conscience I inherited
behind. Even though today I do not have a direct connection with the
then genocide – I came to the conclusion that I have to do something
beyond apology. That is why the estate I have inherited from my
forefathers, I am returning it to its actual owners, the Assyrians, to
one of their organizations, the Seyfo Center which sacrifices altruism
in recognition of the genocide.

This deed of mine is actioned into reality with my own free will and
feelings. It has not been influenced upon me by any group or
organization, nor is there any financial gain, family and personal
intent or reason which lies behind it.

The 1915 genocide was directed towards non-Muslims living in the
former Ottoman Empire territories during World War I. It is denied
firmly in an insensitive manner by the Turkish Republic State for over
85 years. The victims of this genocide the Armenians, Assyrians and
other Christian minorities are forced to live in anguish for many
years to come. The lands they lived on for many millennia as well as
their living and non-living possessions were confiscated. Many of them
were forced into exile. All of their estates were seized – houses and
churches were occupied and many of them were forcibly Islamized
(against their own will). The shivering/horrifying sides of the
genocide are detailed in many books and documented in historic
documents. As a Kurdish person, I do not wish to enter the discussion
of the genocide as someone has to make a decision to form one’s
judgement. Purely the responsibility for the genocide, due to its
nature, being an organized political activity, undoubtedly lies upon
the Ottoman state, being the then most authoritative political
organization at the time. However, having said that primary
responsibility lies upon the authoritative state, this does not leave
out those who carried it out as irresponsible nor removes their
guilt. Just like some Kurdish tribes who acted with the state in
carrying it out won’t remove their guilt and responsibility in the
action. In this genocide the ones who carried it out are guilty of
their actions as much as those who took the decision to implement
it. Even though many decades have passed since, to remain silent about
this genocide consciously, I feel as guilty as if I were openly
denying it.

Against this historical guilt, as a human being or in the humanitarian
sense I could not let the feelings of shame continue. I came to the
conclusion that it is our conscience duty to not be delayed in
apologising to the victims of the genocide and to return anything we
have confiscated from them. Because, to live with historical guilt,
even though you have no direct connection with it, while not taking a
stand and remaining silent about it is like to continue in identifying
with that guilt. The Turkish Republic State keeps denying the 1915
Genocide and states that: "we have no pebble to give in nor we owe any
apology". However I, not only am apologizing for them, I’m returning
to the Assyrians the estates that were confiscated from them.

With this deed of mine, I wanted to place a stop to a historical guilt
that occurred many years ago and was kept denied. On behalf of my
grandfathers, I apologize and ask forgiveness! My decision to
apologise is to make a real peace with the people that were victims of
the genocide. I am a human being! I do not want to loose my
humanitarian values!

Within my letter I wanted to explain the reasons for my deed to Turkey
(Turkish Government) and to whole world. You won’t find a similar deed
actioned by any individual in Turkey that is directed as an apology
for the genocide. It is time to apologise to Assyrians, Armenians and
the Greeks who have been condemned to anguish, sorrow and grief for
many years. Anyone individually can make an apology without awaiting
the State’s attitude in this case. It is the only condition to bring
an end to this historical guilt and finally live in peace.

With my genuine respect,

Behzat Bilek

http://pontosworld.com/index.php?option=com_conten

International Children’s Day Celebrated June 1

INTERNATIONAL CHILDREN’S DAY CELEBRATED JUNE 1

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
01.06.2009 12:40 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The International Children’s Day is celebrated
throughout the globe on June 1.

The Day had its origin in Turkey in 1920 (April 23, 1920) and later
in the World Conference for the Well-being of Children in Geneva,
Switzerland in 1925. It is not clear as to why June 1 was chosen as
the International Children’s Day: one theory has it that the Chinese
consul-general in San Francisco (USA) gathered a number of Chinese
orphans to celebrate the Dragon Boat Festival in 1925, which happened
to be on June 1 that year, and also coincided with the conference
in Geneva.

Children’s Day was first celebrated worldwide in October 1955, under
the sponsorship of International Union for Child Welfare in Geneva. The
idea of a Universal Children’s Day was mooted by Rubab Mansoor grade 8
and adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 1954. Moazzem and
Abass helped and contributed a lot in this. Universal Children’s Day
takes place on November 20 annually. First proclaimed by the United
Nations General Assembly in 1954, it was established to encourage
all countries to institute a day, firstly to promote mutual exchange
and understanding among children and secondly to initiate action to
benefit and promote the welfare of the world’s children. It was also
chosen as the day to celebrate childhood.

November 20 is also the anniversary of the day when the United Nations
General Assembly adopted the Declaration of the Rights of the Child
in 1959. The Convention on the Rights of the Child was then signed
on the same day in 1989, which has since been ratified by 191 states.

Children’s Day is celebrated on 1 June each year. It is usually marked
with speeches on children’s rights and wellbeing, children TV programs,
parties, various actions involving or dedicated to children, families
going out etc.

Armenia Presses Ahead with Nuclear Power Plant Construction

Jamestown Foundation
May 29 2009

Armenia Presses Ahead with Nuclear Power Plant Construction

Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 6 Issue: 103
May 29, 2009 05:21 PM
By: Emil Danielyan

Armenia is pressing ahead with its ambitious plans to build a new
nuclear power station to replace the aging Soviet-era facility at
Metsamor slated for decommissioning by 2017. The Armenian government
has commissioned an Australian engineering company to manage the
project. However, the key question of who will provide the funding
needed for the plant’s construction remains unanswered.

The authorities in Yerevan formally agreed in 2007 to close the
Metsamor plant after several years of pressure from the United States
and the European Union, which considered it to be inherently
unsafe. The E.U. in particular, had classified the VVER 440 Model V230
light water-cooled reactors as the "oldest and least reliable"
category of all the 66 Soviet reactors built in Eastern Europe and the
former Soviet Union.

Metsamor had two such reactors when it began operating at full
capacity in 1980. They both were brought to a halt shortly after the
1988 catastrophic earthquake that devastated much of northwestern
Armenia. Dismissing the Western concerns and those of local
environmentalists, the country’s first post-communist government
reactivated one of the reactors in 1995 to end a severe energy crisis
caused by the war with Azerbaijan and broader turmoil within the
region. The U.S. and the E.U. have since spent substantial sums on
upgrading the facility’s equipment and financing other safety
measures.

Successive Armenian governments have maintained that Metsamor, which
generates over 40 percent of the country’s electricity, will be
decommissioned only when they find an alternative source of
inexpensive energy. For the administration of former President Robert
Kocharian, a new nuclear plant meeting modern safety standards was
considered as the most viable alternative. Kocharian’s successor,
Serzh Sargsyan, strongly supports the idea, having declared its
realization as a top economic priority after taking office in April
2008. Significantly, the U.S. also supports it in principle. The first
$2 million feasibility study on the project conducted last year was
also financed by the U.S. government.

In December 2008, Yerevan tendered for the right to design the new
atomic reactor and oversee its construction. The Sydney-based company
WorleyParsons, one of the world’s largest providers of engineering
services to the energy sector, was declared as its winner on May 12
(Statement by the Armenian State Procurements Agency, May
12). WorleyParsons and the Armenian government are currently working
out the precise details of the project management and will shortly
sign a relevant agreement. In early April, the Armenian parliament
passed a bill regulating the various aspects of the plant’s
construction.

On May 18 the Armenian Energy Minister Armen Movsisian said, "The next
step will be to design the future block, after which we will enlist
and select potential investors." He further explained: "That will be
followed by the design work and the construction process itself."
According to Movsisian the construction will start "at the end of next
year or at the beginning of 2011" and take at least five years (RFE/RL
Armenia Report, May 18).

The estimated cost of the project, approximately $5 billion, is
equivalent to 40 percent of Armenia’s GDP in 2008 and twice the volume
of its 2009 state budget, meaning that foreign investment is the only
realistic source of funding. Attracting such investment during the
current global economic crisis will be an extremely difficult
task. Thus far, only the Russian Federal Agency on Atomic Energy
(Rosatom) and its state-owned Atomstroyexport company have publicly
expressed interest in the large-scale project. The Armenian and
Russian governments formed a joint task force in 2007 to examine the
issue. The results of its work have still not been publicly disclosed.

With a projected capacity of 1,000-1,200 megawatts, the new nuclear
plant will be more than twice as powerful as Metsamor’s functioning
reactor, leaving Armenia with a potentially massive electricity
surplus which energy officials hope to export to neighboring
countries. On May 7 the Yerevan business daily Kapital quoted the
chairman of the ArmRosGazprom national gas distribution company, Karen
Karapetian, as saying that Georgia, Turkey and Iran will increasingly
face electricity shortages in the coming years and that Armenia is in
a position to alleviate the deficit. Karapetian said Armenian energy
exports to these countries might eventually exceed 6 billion kilowatt
hours annually, a figure equaling the total Armenian electricity
output in 2008.

Armenia is already scheduled to supply Iran with large quantities of
electricity to be generated using Iranian natural gas. It began
importing that gas on May 14, around six months after the official
inauguration of the second and final Armenian section of a gas
pipeline connecting the two nations (Arminfo, May 14). Speaking to the
Armenpress news agency on May 21, Movsisian reasserted that Armenia
will soon start selling electricity to Turkey, despite the absence of
diplomatic relations. He said the Turkish government is currently
making the final technical preparations for the electricity supply,
which will initially involve 1.5 billion kilowatt hours annually.

The Armenian energy minister has repeatedly stated in recent months
that domestic and Turkish utility firms signed an agreement to that
effect during President Abdullah Gul’s historic visit to Yerevan in
September 2008. Turkish government officials have pointedly refused to
offer any public confirmation of that deal. Nonetheless, the current
uncertain prospects surrounding the normalization of Turkish-Armenian
relations hardly bode well for any energy cooperation between Ankara
and Yerevan.

e=1&tx_ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=35055&tx_ttnews %5BbackPid%5D=7&cHash=8109360d01

http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cach

BAKU: Azerbaijan Is Opposed To Armenia’s Participation In Single Ene

AZERBAIJAN IS OPPOSED TO ARMENIA’S PARTICIPATION IN SINGLE ENERGY SYSTEM RUSSIA-AZERBAIJAN-IRAN FOR ECOLOGY REASONS

Azerbaijan Business Center
May 29 2009

Baku, Fineko/abc.az. Azerbaijan demands to exclude Armenia from a
project of parallel operation of energy systems of Russia, Azerbaijan
and Iran for reasons of ecological safety.

Marlen Askerov, vice president of Azerenerji OJSC (Azerbaijan’s energy
operator), says that last year Russia and Iran agreed on a scheme of
this project but the Azerbaijan party has some remarks to this work.

"They included Armenia in this scheme. But by signing the environment
route map we have obliged not to pass non-eco-friendly product through
our country. Armenian nuclear power plant, the major power producer
in this country, was built in the 80s and designed in the late 70s –
early 80s. Then a norm for engineering was 8-grade seismicity of the
region and today this level was increased up to 9 grades. Thus, the
Armenian plant does not conform to ecological requirements on seismic
activity. It is potentially ecologically dangerous for Azerbaijan,
Iran, Turkey and Georgia. We offer not to include Armenia in the
project until operation of this plant is stopped," Askerov said.

Armenian, Israeli MFAs Hold Consultations

ARMENIAN, ISRAELI MFAS HOLD CONSULTATIONS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
29.05.2009 13:11 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian Foreign Ministry delegation led by
Arman Kirakossian is in Tel Aviv to hold consultations with Israeli
counterparts.

Armenian officials met with members of Israel-Armenia friendship
group and attended Jerusalem Patriarchate of the Armenian Apostolic
Church, where they met with Archbishop Togrom Manukian, RA MFA press
office reported.

Armenians Of Sweden Consider Groundless Swedish Foreign Minister’s A

ARMENIANS OF SWEDEN CONSIDER GROUNDLESS SWEDISH FOREIGN MINISTER’S ASSERTION THAT BY RECOGNITION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE SWEDEN WILL DAMAGE ARMENIAN-TURKISH DIALOGUE

NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY
MAY 28, 2009
STOCKHOLM

The Swedish press touched upon the recent statement of Swedish
Foreign Minister in connection with denial of the Armenian Genocide
and the strict counteraction of the Union of Armenian Associations
in Sweden. Marmara reported this referring to the Asbarez newspaper
of Los Angeles.

It is known that Foreign Minister of Sweden Carl Bildt answering
questions had stated that examining political issues is not the duty
of political figures.

Condemning that passive position, the Union of Armenian Associations
in Sweden stressed that political figures do not need to discuss
this issue, as the International Association of Genocide Scholars has
already confirmed the fact of Armenian Genocide and added that besides
being a historic issue the Armenian Genocide is rather an international
crime that should be punished in accordance with the UN agreements,
under which, by the way, the government of Sweden has also signed.

The Union also considered groundless Minister’s assertion that
recognition of the Armenian Genocide by Sweden can damage the
Armenian-Turkish efforts of launching negotiations.

ArmenTel Expands The Range And Geography Of Its Roaming Services

ARMENTEL EXPANDS THE RANGE AND GEOGRAPHY OF ITS ROAMING SERVICES

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
27.05.2009 16:57 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today ArmenTel (brand Beeline) announced of expanding
the geography of its international roaming services. Now subscribers
of the mobile communication of Beeline can use international GPRS
roaming in Portugal, Serbia and Bangladesh and 3G roaming in Egypt,
ArmenTel’s press office reports.

"We are constantly expanding the geography and the range of roaming
services. Today our customers can be constantly connected not only
while travelling but also use the whole range of Beeline, being out
of Armenia. Modern technologies unite the world and our company is
proud for its contribution in that process," said Anush Begloyan,
head of public relation division of the CJSC ArmenTel.

GPRS-roaming of ArmenTel is accessible in 50 countries and 3G roaming
in 16. Currently, the total number of roaming partners of ArmenTel,
including global roaming services, is 440 operators in 210 countries,
PR office of ArmenTel reports.

And Again About Dashnaktsutyun

AND AGAIN ABOUT DASHNAKTSUTYUN

LRAGIR.AM
13:38:16 – 27/05/2009

Reporters again asked Armen Martirosyan, who is the head of the
Heritage parliamentary faction, if he considers the ARF Dashnaktsutyun
opposition. Armen Martirosyan answered that the Dashnaktsutyun will
show it with its actions.

According to Armen Martirosyan, it is not real to consider or
not to consider the ARF Dashnaktsutyun opposition for the time
being. Martirosyan thinks that much more time is need for oppositional
activities. He did not rule out that the Dashnaktsutyun may really
become opposition, saying that their work will show it.

Armen Martirosyan evaluated the chances of the ARF Dashnaktsutyun at
the Yerevan Mayor election with one word: "normal", adding that the
Dashnaktsutyun made a right selection by making Artsvik Minasyan the
fist number on their ticket.

Hrant Bagratyan: We Are In The Second Stage Of The Global Crisis

HRANT BAGRATYAN: WE ARE IN THE SECOND STAGE OF THE GLOBAL CRISIS
Hasmik Dilanyan

"Radiolur"
26.05.2009 15:15

Ex-Prime Minister of Armenia Hrant Bagratyan predicts a 6.5-7% fall
in the Armenian economy. According to the economist, the situation
is completely different in the Russian Federation. In this country
the economic success depends on oil prices in the world market.

Hrant Bagratyan says that we are in the second stage of the global
crisis and suggests his own economic policy. He considers that it is
necessary to apply a progressive income policy.

Why don’t the current authorities apply the progressive income policy?

Chairman of the National Assembly’s Standing Committee on
Finance-Credit and Budgeting Gagik Minasyan told "Radiolur" that the
progressive income policy is useful, but it requires rather complex
administration.

"I’m not sure we are ready to apply that administration today,"
he said.

Speaking about the state guarantees to enterprises within the framework
of the anti-crisis program, Hrant Bagratyan said: "If the state gives
or takes loans, why doesn’t the parliament approve it?" According to
Gagik Minasyan, the Armenian legislation does not provide for it.