Turkey’s Erdogan dismisses foreign ‘lobbying efforts’ on Armeniankil

Turkey’s Erdogan dismisses foreign ‘lobbying efforts’ on Armenian killings

AP Worldstream
May 17, 2005

Turkey’s prime minister said Tuesday that his country rejects
outsiders’ “lobbying efforts” on last century’s mass killing of
Armenians by Ottoman Turks, and said other countries should open
their archives on the period.

Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s comments at a summit of the 46-nation Council of
Europe came after Armenia’s president, speaking at the same gathering
Monday, underlined his country’s call for the killings to be recognized
as genocide.

Erdogan, whose country is under pressure to address the issue as it
prepares to open membership talks with the European Union, referred to
“the issue of the so-called genocide.”

“We say that we do not appreciate any lobbying efforts that do
not find their basis in documents,” he said, speaking through an
interpreter. “By taking action in other parliaments, this will not
have positive effects on the issue.”

Several countries, including Argentina, Canada, France and Russia,
have declared the killings a genocide, and there is strong pressure
from Armenians worldwide for the U.S. Congress to recognize the
killings as genocide as well.

Armenians say some 1.5 million of their people were killed as the
Ottoman Empire forced them from eastern Turkey between 1915 and 1923
in a deliberate campaign of genocide. Turkey says the death count is
inflated and insists that Armenians were killed or displaced in the
civil unrest during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire.

Erdogan recently sent a letter to Armenian President Robert Kocharian
inviting Armenia to set up a committee of historians to jointly
research the killings.

“We are opening up our military archives and we ask for Armenia to do
the same _ open their archives,” he said Tuesday. “If other countries
have pertinent information, let them open their archives.”

Iran and Armenia agreed on construction of two electric power….

IRAN AND ARMENIA AGREED ON CONSTRUCTION OF TWO ELECTRIC POWER STATIONS ON RIVER ARAKS

Pan Armenian News
16.05.2005 03:22

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Representatives of Iran and Armenia achieved
agreement on construction of two electric power stations on River Araks
at the common border of the two states. As the Iranian Company of Hydro
Resource Development informed, the appropriate decision was taken in
Tehran during the Seventh Sitting of the Joint Technical Committee
of Iran and Armenia held with the participation of Company’s Project
Assistant Naser Nemati and Armenian Deputy Energy Minister Karen
Sargsian. “As the common water border of Armenia and Iran stretches for
40 kilometers the parties decided to use the potential of the ricer”,
Nemati said. “In accord with the agreement the first plant with the
capacity of 130 Megawatt and an 18.3-kilometer tunnel will be built
at the Armenian territory while the second plant with the capacity
of 140 Megawatt and 17.5- kilometer tunnel will be built in Iran.
Presently the preparatory works are being carried out. By to date five
projects have been already approved and the essential consultations
on the soonest elimination of the problems available have been held”,
he added, Irna agency reports.

Close, but ‘not America’

Close, but ‘not America’
By Joan Dupont

International Herald Tribune
Tuesday, MAY 17, 2005

CANNES — For the first time in decades, Canada has two films in
competition here. David Cronenberg and Atom Egoyan, directors of the
extreme, from a place – Toronto – known as tame, make imaginative
and, some say, weird films, investigations into dark zones. But these
offerings look like sheer entertainment.

Cronenberg’s U.S.-produced “A History of Violence” depicts an
American family living in a Garden of Eden that turns into a snake
pit, and stars Viggo Mortensen, Maria Bello, William Hurt, and Ed
Harris. Egoyan’s Canadian-produced “Where the Truth Lies,” shot in
London studios, is about a Jerry Lewis/Dean Martin-style comedy team
that breaks up mysteriously. The story, told from different points
of view over three time periods, stars Kevin Bacon, Colin Firth and
Alison Lohman.

Their new films are adapted from American novels. “This was a world
where these men had access to whatever they desired,” Egoyan said. “I
wanted to show them as unbridled – drugs, sex, almost a narcoticized
feeling of sexuality, in scenes about power and control, shown from
different points of view.” He described his movie as a film noir.

Cronenberg said his film was not a realistic movie: “It’s about
creating another identity. We make choices. An identity isn’t given to
us, we create it. Everyday you wake up and assemble that person. It’s
possible to become somebody else.”

Both are champions of the competition and have been on the jury,
Cronenberg as president. He is excited to be back in competition, and
alongside Egoyan: “We’re close friends and support each other. We’re
comrades in arms rather than competitors.”

At the festival, their ventures are being looked upon as UFOs. The
trade magazines hail them as sleek and sexy, while the cinephile
press sniffs suspiciously, although “A History of Violence” was well
received Monday. Even if the films bear the imprint of the directors –
obsessions with truth, identity, violence and sexuality – both seem
to take place in a magnificently decorated but anonymous country,
and are also moral tales.

Since the 1970s, when French-language filmmakers such as Gilles Carle,
Jean-Pierre Le- febvre and Claude Jutra made their mark here, Cannes
has been supportive of Canadian cinema. These films spoke French
with a Canadian accent; they charmed, but were perceived abroad as
provincial. At home, this cinema is popular at the local box office.

Denys Arcand is an exception. His brilliant scripts and worldly
characters in films like “The Decline of the American Empire” and
“The Barbarian Invasions” speak a more universal language, win prizes
and are popular at movie houses. “The very first film I worked on,
a student film, went to Cannes at the Semaine de la Critique in
1962,” he said, referring to “Seul ou avec d’autres” (“Alone or With
Others”). “Most of my other films were screened at Cannes, and Cannes
has always been very good to me.”

Yet some Canadians, French- or English-speaking, feel they are
sometimes treated like poor relatives here, less glamorous and
important than their American cousins. Over the years, the Toronto
festival, which while noncompetitive is now ranked by many observers
as third after Cannes and Berlin, has changed that. The festival
boosts emerging directors from English-speaking Canada.

Piers Handling, who programmed at Toronto before becoming its director
10 years ago, has championed Cronenberg and Egoyan since the 1980s. “We
ran the first North American retrospective of David’s work in 1983,
when he was something of a pariah, a genre filmmaker on a scene where
Canadians looked for realism.” The festival also launched Egoyan with
“Next of Kin” in 1984. “Atom and David made the breakthrough for
Canadian art cinema,” Handling said. “Their new films became fixtures
at festivals.”

Handling finds “Where the Truth Lies” to be genuine Egoyan despite
the material. “There’s Atom’s interest in storytelling. Where does the
truth lie with characters who are chameleon-like? That’s part of Atom,
his obsessions. He’s an immigrant, born in Cairo of Armenian parents,
and he had to adapt a whole series of personas and masks.

“With both directors, their Canadianness is very much part of their
work. Look at Fritz Lang or Lubitsch, who came to America; did they
lose themselves or their talent? Yet French-Canadian films are truly
rooted in the land. Denys Arcand sets his films on the streets of
Montreal, the hospitals, the universities, whereas Atom and David
are like aliens traveling through their own cities.”

Robert Lantos, a Canadian whose career as a producer began with Gilles
Carle in 1976, was also behind Arcand, Cronenberg and Egoyan. He
will produce Cronenberg’s next film, “Painkillers,” and he produced
“Where the Truth Lies.” He finds it interesting that both directors
have chosen themes more accessible to bigger audiences.

In this film, Cronenberg says, his characters are mainstream. “Normally
I’m attracted to bizarre people, outcasts. This time, I thought it
would be interesting to see what happens when the characters start
out normal and slide into abnormality. In this film, the violence is
specifically American, but there is universal violence – the violence
in one person, the violence in movies.”

He observes that Marshall McLuhan felt he could comment on America
in a way that Americans couldn’t. “Canada is so close to America,
but it’s not America. Our movie is set in America with major American
actors, but not a foot was shot in America. Our cultures are very
different. We didn’t have a revolution or a civil war.”

Cronenberg added: “Violence is universal. We can’t eliminate it. Humans
are unique on earth as creatures that can imagine a world without
violence, where everybody is fed, and lives in peace. We can imagine
this, and not accomplish it.”

http://www.iht.com/articles/2005/05/16/news/canada.php

NK Diplomacy Charged w/task to transform armistice to lasting peace

Pan Armenian News

KARABAKH DIPLOMACY CHARGED WITH TASK TO TRANSFORM ARMISTICE IN LASTING PEACE

13.05.2005 03:02

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ `One of the tasks the Karabakh diplomacy is charged with
is the transformation of the armistice into final and stable peace’, NKR
Deputy Foreign Minister Masis Mayilian stated on occasion of the 11-th
anniversary of the armistice established in Nagorno Karabakh conflict zone
on May 12, 1994 under Russia’s mediation, De-Facto agency reports. In his
words, the cease-fire became the only considerable achievement in the
peaceful settlement process. According Masis Mayilian, `the maintenance of
the cease-fire in spite of separate cases of its violation is for most part
conditioned by the fact that all the three parties to conflict put
signatures to the agreement.’ Masis Mayilian expressed satisfaction with the
stabilization of the situation on the Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan armed
forces’ contact-line for the recent period. According to him, `considerable
role in this played the firm position of international mediators, who stated
on the inadmissibility of aggravating the situation, as well as the regular
monitoring of the demarcation line conducted by the OSCE Mission’.

Armenia’s ethnic minorities use state-allocated funds ineffectively

Armenia’s ethnic minorities use state-allocated funds ineffectively – official

Arminfo
10 May 05

YEREVAN

The public organizations of Armenia’s ethnic minorities are using
ineffectively the Armenian government’s annual grants to the tune of
10m drams [22,000 dollars], the head of the religious and ethnic
minorities department under the Armenian government, Granush
Kharatyan, has told an Arminfo correspondent.

She said that the money is distributed via the coordinating council
for fighting corruption under the Armenian president. For its part,
the council transfers the money equally into the account of an
individual from each of these ethnic groups who distributes the money
in the community.

Meanwhile, Kharatyan noted that this method of money transfers had
been ineffective since all the grants are spent on peoples’ daily
living needs rather than on resolving major problems connected with
preserving and developing cultural and ethnic values via specific
projects.

In particular, she noted that the problem of preserving the languages
of many ethnic minorities in the republic. At the same time, she said
that this issue is to be solved by other means.

“It would have been more effective if this small grant was distributed
via a special commission which would allocate it to the ethnic
minorities’ projects,” Kharatyan noted.

The grant is distributed among 11 ethnic groups of Armenia, which
number 200 to 40,000 people.

Meanwhile, there are more than 50 ethnic groups in Armenia. Yezids are
considered to be the largest ethnic group among them and number 40,000
people. Most of them live in the countryside and are engaged in
farming.

The Russian community, 16,000 people, is the second largest and
includes Molokans. They mainly live in Yerevan, Abovyan, Vanadzor,
Gyumri and Charentsavan.

Part of the ethnic minorities devoted themselves to intellectual
activities. Others, mainly Molokans, live in the villages of
Lermontovo and Fioletovo and are engaged in farming.

There are also Assyrians and Greeks. According to official data,
ethnic minorities constitute 2.2 per cent of Armenia’s
population. There are about 60 public organizations set up by 11
ethnic minority groups.

MOSCOW: Senior Russian MP accuses Georgia of “blackmail” over bases

Senior Russian MP accuses Georgia of “blackmail” over bases

Interfax-AVN military news agency web site
12 May 05

MOSCOW

The chairman of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs,
Konstantin Kosachev, described today’s statement by Georgian
parliamentary speaker Nino Burjanadze that Georgia is determined to
unilaterally declare Russian military bases on its territory closed on
15 May as “blackmail and unfriendly attitude to Russia”. [Russian
Interfax-AVN news agency said at 0858 today, quoting Burjanadze, that
“Georgia is ready to unilaterally declare the transfer of Russian
military bases to withdrawal procedure on 15 May”.]

“This is unquestionably blackmail and the expression of unfriendly
attitude towards Russia, and if this decision is made, it will strike
a discordant note with the negotiating process and the position that
Russia is assuming at the negotiations on the dates for the bases’
withdrawal,” Kosachev said at a news conference at the Interfax main
office today.

“Setting deadlines is impossible in any negotiations in principle:
when one of the parties sets these terms, it drives negotiations into
a deadlock,” he said.

Russia has made a number of concessions on the dates for the
withdrawal, Kosachev said. In particular, Russia “has revised the
original dates for the withdrawal to 4 from 11 years, and reconsidered
plans for the further settlement of units to be pulled out of
Georgia. Many of them will be transferred not to infrastructure built
from scratch, but to that which already exists in Russia and Armenia,”
he said.

“Ms Burjanadze’s statement puts Russia into a position in which it
would have either to agree with this demand and hastily withdraw the
troops, or not agree and face sanctions,” Kosachev said.

Bush praises Georgia for blazing a trail to liberty

Sydney Morning Herald , Australia
May 10 2005

Bush praises Georgia for blazing a trail to liberty
By Caren Bohan in Tbilisi
May 11, 2005

The Bush democracy wagon has trundled into the new republic of
Georgia, which the White House described as a “beacon of liberty for
the region and for the world”.

President George Bush was expected to show Washington’s support for
democratic freedoms in Russia’s backyard yesterday.

The first US leader to visit the ancient Christian nation in the
Caucasus mountains was scheduled to speak in the capital’s Freedom
Square, rallying point for a 2003 “Rose Revolution” that installed a
reforming, Western-looking government.

Georgia’s US-educated President Mikhail Saakashvili is hoping Mr
Bush’s visit will strengthen his hand in a dispute with the Kremlin
over the presence of two Russian military bases in Georgia, which he
has likened to an occupation force.

“By coming here he sends such a strong message of supporting
democracy and independence … it’s like encouragement for democracy in
the whole region,” he told reporters.

Mr Bush arrived yesterday morning at Georgia’s parliament building
which was decked with the stars and stripes and the country’s red and
white flag. The President shook hands with ministers before entering
the Soviet-style columned building.

Advertisement
AdvertisementWhite House spokesman Scott McClellan said Mr Bush would
tell the expected crowd of at least 50,000 that Georgia’s revolution
blazed a trail for Iraq, Lebanon and ex-Soviet Ukraine.

While Mr Bush would publicly congratulate the people of Georgia on
their peaceful revolution, his private message to Mr Saakashvili is
likely to be more nuanced. He will remind the Georgian leader that
democracy means more than elections, and further reforms are
essential if the former Soviet republic is to fulfil its European
Union and NATO membership ambitions.

The US National Security Adviser, Stephen Hadley, highlighted
Washington’s concerns about simmering disputes in the separatist
regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Georgia’s attitude to its
Russophile, Azeri and Armenian minorities and the rule of law were
also seen as key tests of future progress, he suggested.

The US is anxious that an argument with Russia over closing two
Soviet-era military bases in Georgia, with 3000 troops, should not
rekindle broader tensions with the Kremlin. Despite continuing talks,
Mr Saakashvili cited this as his reason for boycotting Monday’s VE
Day celebrations in Moscow.

Mr Bush arrived from Moscow on Monday night after taking part in the
celebrations to mark the 60th anniversary of the defeat of Nazi
Germany, and sidestepping Washington’s political differences with
Russia. Mr Bush has criticised what he sees as backsliding in Russia
over democratic reform.

In contrast to the solemnity in Moscow, Mr Bush and his wife Laura
looked relaxed as they mingled with performers at a outdoor concert
of Georgian folk dancing on Monday.

Mr Bush bobbed his head in time to the music and, as he left, swung
his hips. His moves impressed Mr Saakashvili, 37. “Some dancers told
me they like his rhythm. He captured the whole thing immediately.”

The Bushes also dined in a nearby restaurant with Mr Saakashvili, a
fluent English speaker with whom, White House officials say, Mr Bush
has found a strong rapport.

Ponte CTO; Dr. Ara Markosian to detail design-for-yield requirements

Ponte CTO to Present at DFM Symposium
Dr. Ara Markosian to detail design-for-yield requirements.

BUSINESS WIRE
Monday May 9, 2005

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif. — (BUSINESS WIRE) — May 9,
2005 — Ponte Solutions(TM), Inc., the
design-for-yield company, today announced that Ara
Markosian, Ponte chief technical officer, will present
at the Electronic Journal Design for Manufacturing
(DFM) Symposium at Sohyo Kaikan at Ochano-mizu, Tokyo,
Japan on May 12, 2005. In his presentation titled,
“Model-based Yield Analysis: An effective approach to
design stage yield management”, Dr. Markosian will
highlight Ponte’s approach to bridge the “yield gap”
between design and manufacturing, including a
comprehensive unified yield modeling platform,
high-capacity data processing, and robust yield
analysis.

“At 90nm and below, achieving steady and high yield is
becoming a major issue,” commented Dr. Markosian.
“Model-based yield analysis enables designers to
predict yield before tapeout and enables them to
enhance it – thereby reducing the cost of working
silicon and accelerating time-to-volume production,”
he added.

Dr. Markosian’s presentation will give the audience
deeper understanding of yield issues, yield modeling
platform and model-based comprehensive yield analysis.
For more information, go to
— under
seminar/symposium.

About Ponte

Ponte Solutions, Inc., the design-for-yield company,
manufactures and delivers unique full-chip,
model-based software products that are used to predict
and optimize semiconductor yields at the design stage.
Ponte customers include leading semiconductor
manufacturers, foundries and design houses worldwide.
Founded in 2002, the company has received funding from
Telos Venture Partners, US Venture Partners, Incubic
LLC, Silicom Ventures LLC and private individuals. The
company has offices in Mountain View, California,
Grenoble, France, Tokyo, Japan, and Yerevan, Armenia.
More information about the company can be found at

Ponte Solutions is a trademark of Ponte Solutions,
Inc. All other trademarks are properties of their
respective owners.

Contact:
Susan Mack Marketing
Susan Lippincott Mack, 650-743-7506
[email protected]

Source: Ponte Solutions, Inc.

http://www.electronicjournal.co.jp
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/050509/95429.html?.v=1
www.pontesolutions.com.

UAF’s 133rd Airlift Delivers $5.2 Million of Aid to Armenia

UNITED ARMENIAN FUND
1101 N. Pacific Avenue # 301
Glendale, CA 91202
Tel: 818.241.8900
Fax: 818.241.6900

25 April 2005

UAF’s 133rd Airlift Delivers $5.2 Million of Aid to Armenia

Glendale, CA – The United Armenian Fund’s 133rd airlift arrived in
Yerevan on April 23, delivering $5.2 million of humanitarian
assistance.

The UAF itself collected $4.8 million of medicines and medical
supplies for this flight, most of which were donated by AmeriCares
($2.3 million), the Catholic Medical Mission Board ($1.7 million) and
Eli Lilly ($788,000).

Other organizations which contributed goods for this airlift were:
Nork Marash Medical Center ($111,000); Armenian Missionary Association
of America ($47,000); American University of Armenia ($34,000); Howard
Karagheusian Commemorative Corp. ($29,000); and Accuware Consultants
($22,000).

Also contributing to this airlift were: Srbouhi Hairapetian ($17,000);
Shushi Music School Society ($16,000); and California State
University, Northridge ($10,000).

Since its inception in 1989, the UAF has sent $408 million of
humanitarian assistance to Armenia on board 133 airlifts and 1,172 sea
containers.

The UAF is the collective effort of the Armenian Assembly of America,
the Armenian General Benevolent Union, the Armenian Missionary
Association of America, the Armenian Relief Society, the Diocese of
the Armenian Church of America, the Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic
Church of America and the Lincy Foundation.

For more information, contact the UAF office at 1101 North Pacific
Avenue, Suite 301, Glendale, CA 91202 or call (818) 241-8900.

ANKARA: Czech president says Turkey most important EU candidate

Czech president says Turkey most important EU candidate

Anatolia news agency, Ankara
5 May 05

Istanbul, 5 May: Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Thursday
[5 May] that the tendency of inwardness in Europe was very detrimental,
adding that this could harm the long-term EU perspective.

Erdogan met with Czech President Vaclav Klaus, Dutch Deputy Foreign
Minister and Finance Minister Gerrit Zalm and IMF first managing
director Anne Krueger in Istanbul the same day.

Prime Ministry high ranking officials said that in Erdogan-Klaus
meeting, Klaus said Czech Republic was the country which supported
Turkey’s EU bid the most. Klaus stressed that he favoured EU
enlargement and Turkey was the most important candidate of such
an enlargement.

Regarding Armenian claims, Klaus said that there was a general lack
of information and ignorance in the world about Armenian issue.

Issues of Cyprus, Iraq, and developments in Afghanistan were also
taken up in Erdogan-Klaus meeting.

[Passage omitted]