MOSCOW: Azeri parliament urges Armenia to take constructive stance o

Azeri parliament urges Armenia to take constructive stance on Karabakh

Interfax news agency, Moscow
6 May 05

Baku, 6 May, Interfax-Azerbaijan: The Azerbaijani parliament adopted a
statement on Friday [6 May] on the 13th anniversary of the “occupation
of Susa [town in Karabakh] by the Armenian military”.

“Armenia’s position on the peace talks, its refusal to recognize the
territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, modern weapons supplies to the
Armenian army and cease-fire violations increase the danger of the
war resuming,” the statement reads.

[Passage omitted: background details]

The statement said that “the Azerbaijani parliament calls on Armenia
to take a constructive position on the peace process and give up its
actions impeding the negotiations within the OSCE Minsk Group”.

The parliament proposed that the UN General Assembly discuss the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict and the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe, the Black Sea Economic Cooperation Organization,
the Organization of the Islamic Conference, NATO and the European
Parliament deal with the problem.

Killer wife jailed for four years

KILLER WIFE JAILED FOR FOUR YEARS

The Express, UK
May 6, 2005

A MOTHER-of-three who killed her brutal husband after 13 years of
violence and sexual abuse began a four-year jail sentence yesterday.

Devout Christian Lana Yadgari, 32, admitted manslaughter after stabbing
her Muslim husband Sameh, 35, 19 times and then dousing his body with
petrol and setting it on fire.

Pressure group Justice For Women branded the sentence unduly harsh.

Weeks before the killing last year Yadgari was beaten so badly by
her husband she spent nine days in hospital.

Jailing her at Manchester Crown Court, Mr Justice Jeremy Cooke said:
“You were subjected to physical and sexual violence, coupled with
constant humiliation and abuse. The suffering did impair your
judgment.”

Yadgari and her husband, who was born in Afghanistan, married in 1990
after meeting at college in her native Armenia. The beatings began
when she gave birth to a girl instead of a son and would not convert
to Islam.

The couple came to England in 2002.

Yadgari, of Blackley, Manchester, killed her husband after she had
moved out with the children. He called round, threatened to rape her
and then drove her to a lonely spot. She thought he wanted to kill
her and stabbed him with a knife she found in the car.

Border observation

A1plus

| 13:49:17 | 06-05-2005 | Politics |

BORDER OBSERVATION

Tomorrow in the contact line of the Armenian and Azerbaijani armed
forces the OSCE will organize the following observation. From the
Armenian side OSCE head special representative Anjey Kasprshik together
with commanders Pete Kean, Alexander Samarsky and a high-ranked
representative of the working group will take part in the observation.

>>From the Azerbaijani side of the OSCE head special representative
commanders Miroslav Vimetal, Torsten Ahren and a high-ranked
representative of the working group will take part in the observation.

Aspiring surgeon knew the way to his dreams

Times Picayune, LA
May 5 2005

Aspiring surgeon knew the way to his dreams
Tulane standout was on eve of graduating

By Keith O’Brien
Staff writer

John Berberian was close — so close — to finishing a long, hard
journey that began at the Tulane University School of Medicine four
years ago.

His course work was done. Graduation was just three weeks away. And
his departure, even closer. Berberian, 29, was two days away from
leaving New Orleans. He had a neurosurgery residency awaiting him at
Georgetown University. And while his time in New Orleans had been
great, it was over. He told the school to mail him his diploma. As
always, he had dreamed up bigger and better plans. He was going to
Italy with his family.

And then, in a freakishly cruel caprice of fate, Berberian’s life
was snuffed out, his body and bicycle mangled by an 18-wheeler as he
pedaled along St. Claude Avenue last Thursday afternoon.

On Wednesday, friends and family buried the young man in Fresno,
Calif., and began packing for a trip to New Orleans rather than
Italy. Richard Berberian, John’s father, said Wednesday that he and
his wife, Barbara, will attend a May 19 memorial service Tulane has
scheduled in Berberian’s honor as well as the May 21 graduation
ceremony their son planned to skip. The grieving father wants to
meet the classmates who loved his son so much and be there to hear
him called doctor.

“His spirit,” he said, “will be graduating.”

Berberian was riding his bicycle west on St. Claude when the 18-wheeler
traveling in the same direction veered right onto Elysian Fields
Avenue, cutting him off, police said.

Berberian died at the scene. His father forswore vengeful thoughts
and instead expressed pity for the driver, who was not charged.

On the day he died Berberian was coming from the Navy office on Poland
Avenue, freshly promoted from ensign to lieutenant by the service
that had financed his medical education in exchange for a four-year
hitch upon its completion. In quiet testimony to that milestone — and
to Berberian’s humility about his many accomplishments — a friend,
Dr. Lori Summers, found three photos in the dead man’s pockets when
she retrieved his clothing from the coroner’s office Wednesday.

They documented the oath he had taken at his naval commissioning: a big
moment, one that comes with graduation, but that he had never mentioned
to Summers, even though she, too, is in the Navy. It was classic
“Johnny B,” his friends agreed, the mark of a humble and unassuming
man who in many ways was still just a kid who grew up on a California
citrus farm, even as he spun wild stories or crafted grand theories.

“I remember,” classmate Ron Shatzmiller recalled Wednesday, “that
I really wanted to be friends with him. Because when we went out to
parties with the class — when we were first-year students — he was
the most entertaining, the most well-spoken.”

Berberian was smart. He had three degrees from Stanford University:
a bachelor’s and two master’s, one of them in political science. He
juggled dreams, Shatzmiller said, of becoming, at times, an astronaut,
a CIA agent and even president. According to Summers, he was “the
best medical student I ever had.”

But it wasn’t until July 2003, when Berberian began a surgery rotation
and met Summers, that he finally stopped juggling dreams and decided
he wanted to become a neurosurgeon. It’s one of the most challenging
and competitive medical specialties. Tulane, for example, accepts
only one neurosurgery resident a year, Dr. Miguel Melgar said. But
Melgar thought Berberian was perfect for the job.

“He told me, ‘This is what I want to do,’ ” recalled Melgar, a skull
base and cerebral vascular surgeon at Tulane and the training director
at Charity Hospital. “I said, ‘Listen. You’re from California. You
guys have a nice lifestyle. Remember, you’ve got to be a commando
here. You can probably do something less demanding.’ .
. He said, ‘No, Dr. Melgar. This is what I want to do.’ ” .

Focused, Berberian was soon outpacing some first- and second-year
residents, Melgar and Summers said. He worked with patients suffering
from brain tumors, aneurysms and trauma injuries, and he did so well
treating them that Melgar said he would have given Tulane’s sole
neurosurgery residency spot to Berberian if he had asked for it.

Instead Berberian decided he wanted to go somewhere new. He matched
at Georgetown University in the winter, traveled to Armenia, where
his ancestors had once lived, and returned last month for his final
weeks in New Orleans.

It was nice, Shatzmiller said Wednesday, to finally just hang out
with his friend with no worries about school weighing on them, to
listen to his stories and laugh at his theories: on everything from
whom his friends should date to the logistics of commuting to med
school from a house on the beach. Now it is his classmates who are
telling stories about him.

“The thing that kills us,” Shatzmiller said, “is that he was the best
of us.”

BAKU: Turkish PM may meet Armenian leader

Turkish PM may meet Armenian leader

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
May 3 2005

Baku, May 2, AssA-Irada – Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyib Erdogan
may propose a tete-a-tete meeting with Armenian President Robert
Kocharian at one of the future international events, Turkish ‘Zaman’
(Time) newspaper quoted the country’s diplomatic sources as saying.

Erdogan earlier proposed to set up a joint commission to look into
the historic developments in the Ottoman Empire in 1915-1918, falsely
referred by Armenians as ‘genocide’. Such a group comprising Turkish
and Armenian historians would study archives of Turkey, Armenia
and other countries and make the research results available to the
international community. The Armenian President rejected the proposal,
suggesting that the relations between the two countries be normalized
‘without any pre-conditions’.

Kocharian and the Turkish premier are due to attend the events
in Moscow dedicated to the 60 anniversary of Victory in World War
II on May 9 and a summit of the Council of Europe in Warsaw on May
15-16. A source from the Turkish premier’s administration said that the
Kocharian-Erdogan meeting may be held within the CE summit. However,
no agreement has been reached on the date and venue of the meeting yet,
the newspaper reported.

The Armenian administration said they are unaware of the planned
meeting.*

Pilgrims Mark Orthodox Easter in Jerusalem

Pilgrims Mark Orthodox Easter in Jerusalem

By IAN DEITCH
.c The Associated Press

JERUSALEM (AP) – A sea of flames illuminated Christianity’s holiest
shrine, the Church of the Holy Sepulcher, as thousands of pilgrims
took part Saturday in the holy fire ceremony, a key event in the
Orthodox Easter rituals.

The event passed peacefully despite plans by protesters to block the
participation of the Greek Orthodox Patriarch, Irineos
I. Demonstrators, who object to the Patriarch’s alleged role in a
controversial land deal, were kept away by the hundreds of Israeli
police who set up barricades throughout the alleys leading to the
Jerusalem holy site.

The shrine, marking the site where tradition says Jesus was crucified
and buried, was filled with thousands of pilgrims. Hundreds more
waited outside.

At the start of the ceremony, church leaders descended into the
underground burial area. The faithful clutched their bundles of unlit
candles and torches while waiting in the darkened church for a flame
to emerge from the tomb.

Some Christians believe the flame appears spontaneously, as a message
from Jesus that he has not forgotten his followers.

When church leaders, including Irineos, emerged with a lighted torch,
a cheer arose, and the flames were passed around, illuminating the
church within seconds.

Tensions were high ahead of the ceremony.

The Greek Orthodox Church is in turmoil over a deal in which the
church reportedly leased prime property in disputed east Jerusalem to
Jewish investors.

The alleged land deal is politically explosive because Israel claims
all of Jerusalem, while Palestinians claim east Jerusalem as the
capital of a future state. Jewish land purchases in east Jerusalem are
seen as bolstering Israel’s claim to that section of the city.

In the past the ceremony has also been a flashpoint between different
Orthodox denominations, who have argued over protocol at the ceremony.

About a dozen Greek and Armenian clergymen briefly scuffled over who
would be first to emerge with the flames, but they were quickly pulled
apart by Israeli police stationed inside the church.

Custody of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher is shared by a number of
denominations that jealously guard their responsibilities under a
fragile network of agreements hammered out over the last millennia.

“Every year there is always tight security, but maybe this year it is
even tighter because of the land deal,” said Matthew Doll, 30, a
pilgrim who waited outside the church.

Protesters had vowed to bar Irineos from the ceremony, but were kept
away by the police, said Dimitri Diliani, the head of a Palestinian
Christian coalition who have been spearheading the protests.

The reported deal has stirred anger among Palestinians who feel
betrayed by the church.

At a rare news conference last month, Irineos told reporters he was
unaware of the alleged transactions, and that he was not involved in
any deal which was reportedly signed by Nikos Papadimas, the church
financial officer who vanished three months ago.

Papadimas is wanted in Greece after Greek Orthodox Church officials in
Athens accused him of absconding with $800,000 in church funds. His
wife is wanted on separate charges of money laundering. Separately, a
European arrest warrant has been issued against Papadimas, Greek
officials said.

But as the flames emerged from the tomb, church bells pealed and
tensions melted away.

“This is one of the most beautiful and spiritual experience of my
life,” said Jonathan Parish, 42, of Boston. “I have dreamt of being
in the presence of the holy fire for a long time.”

04/30/05 17:51 EDT

ANKARA: Tuzmen: If Armenia ends its occupation and Genocide claim…

Turkish Press
April 29 2005

Press Review
AKSAM

TUZMEN: `IF ARMENIA ENDS ITS AZERBAIJAN OCCUPATION AND GENOCIDE
CLAIMS, THEN WE CAN TRADE WITH IT’

State Minister Kursat Tuzmen and Turkish Union of Chambers and
Commodities Exchanges (TOBB) Chairman Rifat Hisarciklioglu said
yesterday that if Armenia wants to establish trade ties, then first
it should end its occupation in Azerbaijan and its genocide claims.
Speaking at a ceremony for the modernization of the Cilvegozu Border
Gate into Syria, Tuzmen said that if Armenia pulls its troops out of
Azerbaijan then the border gate between Turkey and Armenia could be
opened. /Aksam/

Turkey Renews Offer to Armenia for Joint Study of Genocide Claims

Turkey Renews Offer to Armenia for Joint Study of Genocide Claims

By VOA News
29 April 2005

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan says his country is ready
to build ties with neighboring Armenia, despite disagreements over
decades-old allegations of Turkish genocide against Armenians.

In an interview with the newspaper Milliyet, Mr. Erdogan renewed his
call for creation of a joint Turkish-Armenian commission to study the
disputed genocide issue. He said this could coincide with the
establishment of political relations between the two neighbors. The
countries share a border, but have no diplomatic ties.

Tuesday, Armenian President Robert Kocharian said his country could
take part in a commission, but he first called for improved ties.

Armenia says 1.5 million of its nationals were slaughtered by the
Turks during the final years of the Ottoman Empire 90 years ago,
characterizing this as genocide. Turkey says 300,000 Armenians and
thousands of Turks were killed during a Russia-backed Armenian
uprising against Ottoman rule.

Some information for this report provided by Reuters, and AP.

Elections are to come and the law is full of shortcomings

A1plus

| 16:40:06 | 27-04-2005 | Politics |

ELECTIONS ARE TO COME AND THE LAW IS FULL OF SHORTCOMINGS

`The changes in the part about the Local self-governing bodies in the
Constitutional amendments show us clearly that they are inferior to the
present Constitution in many points and they have lost many important
things.’ This was the opinion of Sos Gimishyan, member of the Community
Financier Union Administration. According to him, the shortcomings are more
in the offered variant.

For example, non-confidence can be voiced not only to the community head but
also to the alderman. By the way, in 1995 when the Constitution was being
processed, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation criticized most the point
where the appointed government can voice non-confidence to the elected
people.

Another point: according to the present order community heads are elected
within a month. Now it is suggested that the elections should take 3 months.

Sos Gimishyan considers the changes about Yerevan inaccurate too. `Today’s
shortcoming is that Yerevan is a region and is governed by the appointed
governor. It is not ideal but at least it is accurate. Now they say it is a
community but the head is appointed. This is complete illiteracy. What
exists now is at least juridically correct.’ By the way Mr. Gimishyan notes
that both the present and the previous authorities were afraid of the
Yerevan elected mayor.

By the way, the point in the law adopted in 2002 according to which
check-ups are ceased in the communities a month before the elections is
offered to be excluded.

BAKU: Bush shatters Armenians’ `genocide’ hopes

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
April 26 2005

Bush shatters Armenians’ `genocide’ hopes

Baku, April 25, AssA-Irada

US President George Bush on Sunday expressed condolences to Armenians
living in the United States and other world countries over the day
they mark as `persecution and mass killings of up to 1.5 million
Armenians in the last days of the Ottoman Empire’.
Bush pointed out the importance of the future and not past, called on
the Armenian government to develop freedoms in the country.
With regard to the Upper Garabagh conflict, the US president said `we
support a peaceful conflict resolution’.
Bush welcomed the initiatives of Turkey and Armenia in conducting
research on the historic developments of the 20th century. He
approved of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s proposal to
establish the Turkish-Armenian joint commission, voicing a hope that
this will facilitate solving the problem.
Thus, Armenians’ hopes were shattered again. On the same day, the
National Armenian Committee on the US criticised Bush’s statement.
`The statement which did not term these historic developments as
genocide shows that the US President is participating in the
disgraceful campaign denying the crimes committed against humanity,
pursued the Turkish government’, its executive director Aram
Khamparian said.
Following active efforts of the Armenian lobby, several members of
the US Senate and House of Representatives sent a letter to President
Bush calling on him to recognize the killings of Armenians as the
so-called `genocide’. However, the US administration has never used
the term `genocide’ with regard to these historic events.*