"It’s High Time For Harsh Restrictions"

"IT’S HIGH TIME FOR HARSH RESTRICTIONS"

A1+
[04:36 pm] 14 February, 2007

Former chief architect of Yerevan Narek Sargsyan thinks that in the
construction sphere it is high time for harsh restrictions. "Today
when we have no problem in the investment field and there are many
investors, we can introduce restrictions. 5-6 years ago there were
no investors. Today we don’t have that problem.

This means that the restrictions must be made stricter", he says.

He is also sure that Yerevan has become the capital of all the
Armenians. "The Diaspora considers Yerevan its capital. In about
25 years Yerevan and its nearby territory will become the greatest
megapolis in the region".

When the journalist of "A1+" mentioned that there are more people
leaving the country than immigrating, Narek Sargsyan said, "Armenians
living in Moscow and the USA buy houses in Yerevan, especially in
the North Avenue. Even if they don’t live there now, they will return
within 20-25 years".

Rambo Der Armenier; Sylvester Stallones Filmplane Sorgen Fur =?unkno

RAMBO DER ARMENIER; SYLVESTER STALLONES FILMPLANE SORGEN FUR ÄRGER IN DER TURKEI
Kai Strittmatter

Suddeutsche Zeitung,
14. Februar 2007

Er hat Rocky wiederbelebt und will dasselbe auch mit Rambo tun,
der in zwei Jahren noch einmal auf der Leinwand zu sehen sein soll,
wenn er sich als Einzelkampfer durch Birma schlagt. Im Dezember aber
verriet Sylvester Stallone einer amerikanischen Lokalzeitung, dass
er in den Jahren, die ihm bleiben, auch noch Literatur verfilmen will.

Nichts weniger als "ein Epos uber die vollige Vernichtung einer
Zivilisation" schwebt ihm vor, und zwar "Die vierzig Tage des Musa
Dagh", der Roman von Franz Werfel, der den ersten Volkermord des 20.

Jahrhunderts zum Thema hat: den an den Armeniern. Er sei sich wohl
bewusst, dass das Vorhaben "politisch eine heißes Eisen" sei, meinte
Stallone: "Die Turken haben das Thema 85 Jahre lang totgeschwiegen."

Wie heiß, zeigte sich sofort. In der Turkei wurde er uber Nacht
zum Feind erklart. Kritiker verrissen seinen "Rocky Balboa" und
Rechtsnationale prophezeiten Stallone solchen Ärger, dass "der Aufruhr
um Mel Gibsons ,The Passion of Christ’ dagegen zahm erscheinen" werde.

Noch ist das Projekt nur ein Traum Stallones, auch wenn er sich
die letzte Einstellung schon ausgemalt hat: "Die franzosischen
Schiffe kommen, sie haben die Leitern herabgelassen, alle sind
hochgeklettert. Das Schiff fahrt davon. Der Held, der die Rettung
organisiert hat, ist eingeschlafen, hinter einem Felsen auf dem Hang.

Die Kamera fahrt zuruck, das Schiff und das Meer sind auf der einen
Seite, und da ist eine einsame Figur oben auf der Spitze des Berges,
wahrend auf der anderen Seite Tausende von Turken den Berg hochkommen."

Nichts ist vergessen

Hollywoodtauglich ist die Vorlage allemal. Da ist die Geschichte im
Buch: auf wahren Ereignissen fußend; ein kleines Happy End inmitten
einer großen Tragodie. Und da ist die Geschichte, deren Teil das
Buch nach Erscheinen wurde: Das Schwanken zwischen Wahrheit und
Luge, zwischen historischen Fakten und nationalen Tabus. Bis heute
ringen Armenier und Turken erbittert; Schauplatz ihrer Gefechte
sind mittlerweile Medien und Parlamentsflure in aller Welt. Nun
auch Hollywood?

Franz Werfel fand den Romanstoff, als er 1929 in Damaskus weilte:
"Das Jammerbild verstummelter und verhungerter Fluchtlingskinder, die
in einer Teppichfabrik arbeiteten, gaben den entscheidenden Anstoß,
das unfassbare Schicksal des armenischen Volkes dem Totenreich alles
Geschehenen zu entreißen." Das Buch spielt im Jahr 1915, als die
Regierung der Jungturken um Kriegsminister Enver und Innenminister
Talat die systematische Vertreibung und Vernichtung der anatolischen
Armenier beginnt. Werfel bedient sich auch der Aufzeichnungen des
deutschen Pastors Johannes Lepsius, der Enver Pascha in Istanbul
besuchte, um bei ihm um Gnade fur die Armenier zu bitten. "Zwischen dem
Menschen und den Pestbazillen gibt es keinen Frieden", sagt Enver. Es
gehe also, erwidert der Pastor resigniert, um nichts anderes als
"um die planvolle Ausrottung einer anderen Nation." "Die vierzig Tage
des Musa Dagh" war in der Turkei lange Zeit verboten.

Die Nazis verboten das Buch des Prager Juden Werfel ubrigens als erste,
zwei Monate nach dem Erscheinen im November 1933.

Helden des Buches sind die 5000 Armenier, die sich auf dem Gipfel des
Berges Musa Dagh, dem 1281 Meter hohen Moseberg nahe der syrischen
Grenze, verschanzen und wochenlang dort turkische Angriffe abwehren,
bis schließlich franzosische Schiffe zur Rettung kommen. Sieben
armenische Dorfer gab es einmal auf dem Berg. Heute gibt es noch eines,
das "Vakifli"-Dorf. Orangen und Granatapfel pflanzen sie dort.

Avedis Demirci ist der Älteste im Dorf. Als sie sich auf dem Berg
verschanzten, vor mehr als neun Jahrzehnten, war er gerade geboren.

Ja, sagte Demirci bei einem Besuch der SZ, er habe gehort, dass es
diesen Roman gebe. Ob man ihm das Buch denn besorgen solle? "Ach,
wozu soll das gut sein", sagt er: "Das ist eh alles vergessen." Das
war Ende vergangenen Jahres.

Nichts ist vergessen. Stallone plant seinen Film und der Belge-Verlag
furs Fruhjahr eine Neuauflage der vergriffenen Ausgabe. Die
Nationalisten schaumen. "Rambo ist ein Asala-Mann", schrieb eine
Zeitung in Anspielung auf die armenische Terrorgruppe Asala, die in
den siebziger und achtziger Jahren turkische Diplomaten umbrachte.

"Das Buch ist voller Lugen, der Autor hat sich seine Informationen
von nationalistischen und radikalen Armeniern geholt", ereifert
sich der Vorsitzender des "Vereins zur Bekampfung der unwahren
Volkermord-Behauptungen" Savas Egilmez, der an der Ataturk-Universitat
in Erzurum Geschichte lehrt. Der Verein will den Film stoppen, Tausende
von wutenden E-Mails haben sie nach Hollywood geschickt. Stallone
solle nach Erzurum kommen, meint Egilmez. Dort kann er sich das
Museum ansehen, in dem die turkische Sicht auf die "Armenier-Massaker"
ausgestellt ist – hier wird der Greueltaten gedacht, die die Armenier
an den Turken begangen haben.

Fur die Turkei kommt die Aufregung um den Film – wie auch die um
den Mord an dem armenischstammigen Journalisten Hrant Dink – zu
einem ungunstigen Zeitpunkt: Im US-Kongress wurde Ende Januar eine
Resolution eingebracht, die den Prasidenten verpflichten soll, den
Begriff "Volkermord" zu verwenden, wenn er uber die Massaker an den
Armeniern spricht. Die turkische Diplomatie arbeitet auf Hochtouren.

Gleichzeitig kursieren Vorschlage fur einen PR-Gegenschlag: Die
armenische Diaspora bezahle Hollywood fur Volkermord-Filme, meinte
der Istanbuler AKP-Abgeordnete Egemen Bagis, warum also tue die Turkei
nicht das Gleiche?

Ein erstes Projekt zur Ehrenrettung wurde diese Woche vorgestellt:
ein Film uber Behic Erkin, den turkischen Botschafter in Paris
zur Nazi-Zeit, der vielen Juden zur Ausreise verhalf – er soll zum
turkischen Oskar Schindler werden: "In einer Zeit, in der Europa
schwieg und teilnahmslos blieb", sagt der Filmagent und Mitinitiator
Mehmet Celebi, "ist dies ein weiterer Beweis fur einen Muslim und
Turken, der nicht stumm blieb angesichts der Inhumanitat, die sich
im Herzen Europas zutrug."

–Boundary_(ID_rgNAFylTX3oqeOKNsngI iw)–

RA Leader Believes In Further Successful Development Of Armenia-Ital

RA LEADER BELIEVES IN FURTHER SUCCESSFUL DEVELOPMENT OF ARMENIA-ITALY RELATIONS

PanARMENIAN.Net
14.02.2007 15:08 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian President Robert Kocharian received today
Italian Ambassador to RA Marco Clemente who is completing his mission
in the republic. The Armenian leader assessed highly the role of the
Ambassador in consolidation of the Armenian-Italian relations and
voiced assurance that they will successfully develop obtaining more
coordinated shape.

The parties also exchanged views on the implemented programs and
bilateral cooperation issues, reported the RA leader’s press office.

My Neighbor Mr. Churchill: A Short Ethnography Of Malcontent Brian H

MY NEIGHBOR MR. CHURCHILL: A SHORT ETHNOGRAPHY OF MALCONTENT BRIAN HOWE
By Kameel Ahmady

KurdishMedia, UK
Feb 14 2007

Not long ago I was at Parliament Square before attending a public
meeting at the House of Commons. The meeting was organised by
Armenia Solidarity and supported by the London Nor Serount Cultural
Association also attended by some Kurdish supporters of Harnt Dink who
was gunned down in Turkey, a Turkish Armenian journalist who worked
courageously and tirelessly for a Turkey where understanding and
acceptance of diverse cultures, and open dialogue between ethnicities
would triumph, instead of the intractability from many sides which
currently reigns. The group aimed to put an end to Britain’s shameful
denial of the Armenian Holocaust by holding such meeting at the
British Parliament. Before the meeting started there was an hour long
open-air tribute to Hrant Dink followed by "Silent Vigil and Prayer
for Armenia", When the meeting ended I crossed over to the other side
of Parliament House to share a cup of tea with Brian Howe. He has
now held a six-year vigil outside Parliament and won numbers of high
court’s permission to remain the only living protester at Parliament
Square, his last victory over the police and removals of his banners
was just less then ten days ago. Today he has been there for 2083
days since he started his protest. He said before the hearing:
"The government clearly does not want me as a constant reminder
of the immense suffering they are causing the people of Iraq and
elsewhere. And not long ago most of his paintings and posters were
removed by the police now an art installation at the Tate gallery.

He remembers me form some time ago when I was among a group of
protesters at Parliament square which was organised by Mark Thomas,
the famous British comedian and good friend of the Kurds.

At fifty-five, Brian feels a little worn by his years on the street.

His wife has divorced him since his protest began, and he’d love
to go back to his town of Redditch, Worcestershire, to see his
seven kids; he’d love to tone down the voice he uses to debate with
tourists, curious onlookers, drunken Australians about why he won’t
be moving anytime soon. Some mornings he squats down, presses his
fingers together and prays to Mr. and Mrs. God, whom as a Christian
he fervently believes in, for a little more of the wiry strength
that, along with cups of coffee doused with packet after packet of
brown sugar, keeps him going. "Do I want somewhere I can talk in a
soft, sweet voice?" Brian says. "I do." But most of all, he says,
he wants to see a stop to the killing of the children he calls them
his "neighbours’ children" like the Iraqi kids with their mangled
bodies portrayed on his display.1 The only real light is the flashes
coming from the camera of two American tourists who stand, in matching
UCLA sweatshirts, before photos of an Iraqi child with half his head
missing.1 (guardian)

I listened closely to his points as he told me about his past, current
life, aims, dreams and why he was there day in and day out for such
a long time. He has been sleeping, living, eating, debating, and
smoking an endless series of hand rolled cigarettes on the pavement
for over six years. Brain leaves only for court cases or emergency
hospital treatments; his nose now has a soft curve in the middle
where it’s been broken twice, first by an American, the second time
by an Israeli. His fingers are embossed with the layer of city dirt
that comes with life on the street. On top, his corduroy hat is held
together almost solely by his vast collection of pins Keep My Muslim
Neighbours Safe, Bush Lies, No War.

Brian still took up his usual position under his blue tarp and fell
asleep for the few hours he gets each night, surrounded by his many
protest banners and buffeted by the horns of early-morning traffic
and the regular toll of Big Ben.

He says I don’t see many Kurds around here to come and speak to me,
why? What I do is partly to show how Kurdish people have suffered in
hands of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey. Then he point his finger at
a large stone of Winston Churchill not far away from him and says:
"well my neighbour Mr. Churchill was the first who used chemical
bombs against Iraqi Kurds in the town of Sulaymaniyah and famously
called the Kurds uncivilized tribes at the time of the Sheik Mahmood
upraising, even before Turks used gas on the Sheik Raza’s Zazaki tribe,
the Kurdish rebel in Dersim in Turkey (north Kurdistan)".

Over there (he points out at the House of Lords, across the road)
still are the people who sold chemicals to Saddam Hussein to kill
thousands of Kurds in the town of halabja and many other Kurdish
villages both in Iran and Iraq Kurdistan. They supplied guns to the
former Iraqi regime that committed the Anfal operation on Kurds killing
over 180,000. He added: Turkey can’t cross borders to Iraqi Kurdistan
now, well not for long he smiles, but there was all this time when
the allies turned blind eyes to turkey’s air force when they crossed
to south Kurdistan and killed many Kurdish villagers. He goes on: The
same with Kurds in Iran and Syria ,as long as the foreign office can
strike a deal with Iranians over oil and security in the Middle East
or with Syria over Lebanon or Palestine they don’t care about Kurds who
are the largest minority in the world with out a state of their own.

While I was amazed with his information on Kurdistan and the politics
involved there, suddenly he looked very sad, saying: "What about
these children?" pointing to his posters of the maimed victims in
Iraq, Africa and what seemed like Latin America. "When are we going
to cry for them?" And then he was back up on his feet, fuelled by
the coffee, the sugar, cigarettes, and the righteous anger. "Stop
sending our kids to kill their kids," he said. "Stop killing kids."

Brian Howe has a regular fixture, part of the landscape of the
Parliament Square, who sleeps, eats and lives only yards away from a
building where hundreds of his opponents want him to leave and have
done a lot to achieve this. Surely this battle will not stop there,
facing the recent public protest by laws, which makes Brian Howe and
his crusade the centre of it all.

Kameel maintains a website at:

www.kameelahmady.com

CIS Interparliamentary Assembly To Open Office In Yerevan, Armenia

CIS INTERPARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY TO OPEN OFFICE IN YEREVAN, ARMENIA

Arka News Agency, Armenia
Feb 14 2007

YEREVAN. February 14. /ARKA/. The CIS Interparliamentary Assembly will
open an observer mission office in Yerevan during the parliamentary
elections, Secretary General of the CIS IPA Mikhail Krotov reported
in Yerevan on Monday at the meeting with Armenian Deputy Foreign
Minister Gegham Garibjanyan.

Krotov also presented the objectives of the observer mission,
mechanisms for its accomplishment. He mentioned the experience obtained
when the similar mission was accomplished in Serbia.

In his turn, Garibjanyan expressed a hope that the upcoming elections
will be held in compliance with the democratic standards. He wished
Krotov success in implementing the observer mission.

The parliamentary elections are scheduled for May 12, 2007.

ANTELIAS: The feast of St. Ghevontiants in Antelias

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Father Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

THE FEAST OF ST. GHEVONTIANTS IS CELEBRATED IN ANTELIAS

The Holiday of Saint Ghevontiants Priests was celebrated by a special
service in Antelias on February 13 with the participation of all the members
of the Cilician Brotherhood. Saint Ghevont was a priest, who in 451 AD gave
fought alongside St. Vartan and became a martyr for his faith and
fatherland. His Holiday is also considered the holiday of the priests of the
Armenian Church.

Following the service, His Holiness held a meeting with the Cilician
Brotherhood members, after which a luncheon was organized.

Holy Services and conferences of priests were held in all the churches of
the dioceses of the Catholicosate of Cilicia on this occasion.

##
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of the
Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

Speakers on Campus: Cutting the Istan-bull

McGill Tribune
Speakers on Campus: Cutting the Istan-bull
Scholar to challenge denial of genocide
Tom Quail
Posted: 2/13/07

Genocide has been at the forefront of the news recently and Taner
Akcam’s book, A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the Question
of Turkish Responsibility, exposes the author’s views on the event
that, according to him, saw the forcible removal, deportatin and
slaughter of roughly 1.5 million Armenians by the Turkish people in
1915.

What he claims to be the first genocide of the twentieth century
continues to rip at the social fabric and pluralism within modern
Turkey. It has been likened to the Holocaust, but Akcam says the
differing factor is the accountability of those involved in the
genocide. Turkey has not accepted blame for the Armenian Genocide and
some Turkish scholars are standing up and calling for the Turkish
government to redeem the past through historical justice.

Akcam, an ethnic Turk, was imprisoned in 1976 for collaborating on a
student journal in Ankara. He escaped to Germany, where he became an
Amnesty International political prisoner of conscience and completed
his studies. He has committed much of his academic energy to
addressing the genocide, publishing two comprehensive pieces of
literature on the topic.

The event is hosted by the Centre for Human Rights and Legal
Pluralism and presented by the Zoryan Institute and the Armenian
Student Association of McGill. The Centre, attached to the faculty of
law, is involved with inter-disciplinary research in human rights law
and feels that Akcam’s book is the most comprehensive within
available literature. Law Professor Frédéric Mégret believes this
event to be of great significance.

"What’s important is that it is coming from within," Mégret said.
"It’s no longer simply Armenian intellectuals or the International
community. It’s not human rights or NGOs, it’s not U.S. scholars.
It’s coming from people who are part of the Turkish establishment."

With an increased global interest in human rights and the European
Union’s decision on Turkey’s potential accession, Turkey might be
forced to deal with these calls for recognition, despite an amendment
to the penal code two years ago and hostility between the Turkish
government and these scholars.

In 2005, the Turkish government implemented a new article into its
penal code known as "Insulting Turkishness." Article 301 has now
placed many of these outspoken scholars, including novelist and Nobel
Laureate Orham Pamuk and Akcam, under investigation.

"These eminent Turks would argue that the greatest insult to
‘Turkishness’ is the continuing denial of this historical tragedy
which brutally ripped Turkey’s multiethnic fibre apart," said Dr.
Payam Akhavan, a former UN War Crimes Prosecutor and McGill professor
of international law.

"The event is being held because recognition of the 1915 Armenian
genocide is a matter of considerable historical and moral
importance," Akhavan said. "Professor Akcam’s book is one of the most
significant scholarly works on the subject."

Akcam will be speaking in the Moot Court in the Chancellor Day Law
building on Feb. 16 at 5:00 p.m. More information can be found
through the Centre for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism at
hrwg.mcgill.ca.
————————————————- ———————

© Copyright 2007 The McGill Tribune

t=displayArticle&ustory_id=d64e48a6-b7b1-4e42- b3dc-2989f877cb88

http://www.mcgilltribune.com/home/index.cfm?even

National Assembly Statement Over Dink’s Killing

NATIONAL ASSEMBLY STATEMENT OVER DINK’S KILLING

Yerkir.am
February 09, 2007

Armenian National Assembly adopted a statement on February 8 in
connection with the assassination of Hrant Dink. The following is
the text of the statement.

National Assembly of the Republic of Armenia strongly condemns the
assassination of Hrant Dink, the editor-in-chief of the Agos weekly,
and considers it a crime against the free speech, human rights and
Armenian minority.

Expressing its outrage, the National Assembly states that this crime
perpetrated by the Turkish nationalistic circles has deep roots because
the hatred and anti-Armenian campaign. The denial of its history and
the campaign against the recognition of the Armenian Genocide of 1915
by the Turkish authorities, as well as the unleashing of criminal
harassment against intellectuals who raise the issue, gave birth to
this crime in an attempt to silence the voice of freedom.

Meanwhile, we voice our concern over the recent developments that
followed this violent crime. The public outrage that followed Dink’s
murder is now replaced with an opposite tendency – the Turkish
nationalism, hatred, the making of a hero from a criminal, resulting
in new wave of threats against Dink’s paper, people with free thinking
and the Armenians in general.

Also, concerning are the revelations that the law enforcement agencies
were informed beforehand about the assassination attempt but had done
nothing to prevent it. It is essential to completely solve this crime,
including finding out those who have ordered the assassination.

The National Assembly states that this assassination indicates that
in order to establish an environement of understanding between the
two nations, the Turkish authorieites should face its history and
recognize the 1915 Armenian Genocide as well as heed the international
community’s calls to remove Article 301 of the Penal Code that violates
free speech and results in crimes like this.

Faction of the Republican Party of Armenia Ardarutyun faction Faction
of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Faction of the National
Unity party Faction of the United Labor Party People’s Deputy group
Businessmen group.

Armenian BSC Company Joined The International "Global Compact" Initi

ARMENIAN BSC COMPANY JOINED THE INTERNATIONAL "GLOBAL COMPACT" INITIATIVE

MediaMax, Armenia
Feb 12 2007

Yerevan, February 12 /Mediamax/. The Armenian BSC Company joint the
international "Global Compact" initiative, which is being realized
within the framework of the UN.

As the Executive Director of BCS Samvel Gevorkian said in an interview
to Mediamax, the participation of the Company in the given initiative
will become an impulse for the progress of the corporate social
responsibility policy in Armenia.

The essence of the policy is to attract private companies to solving
problems, dictated by the challenges of globalization. According to
Samvel Gevorkian, together with other representatives of the social
sphere, the BCS plans to contribute its mite in the stable development
of the Armenian economy.

The main direction of the BSC activities is the assistance to
establishing the sector of small and medium enterprises, the
provision of quality consulting services to the Armenian companies
and enterprises.

According to Samvel Gevorkian, the Company will continue moving by the
chosen path, accentuating its attention to the programs, directed to
the development of corporate social responsibility in various spheres
of the entrepreneurial activities.

BAKU: Soldier Held Captive In Yerevan Wants To Go To Third Country –

SOLDIER HELD CAPTIVE IN YEREVAN WANTS TO GO TO THIRD COUNTRY – AZERI WEBSITE

Day.az website, Baku
8 Feb 07

Armenia has submitted to representatives of the International Committee
of the Red Cross [ICRC] an appeal by Azerbaijani serviceman Samir
Mammadov on handing him over to a third country, Day.az has learnt
from informed sources.

The Azerbaijani POW said that he wanted to be handed over to the
USA or to a European country. The source said that the Azerbaijani
Defence Ministry is trying to influence Samir Mammadov through his
parents into changing the decision. A letter in which the parents
asked him to return to Azerbaijan was already submitted to the ICRC.

The source said that Armenians had negatively influenced the young
man. They intimidated him that he would be arrested on his return to
Azerbaijan, like it happened with another Azerbaijani war prisoner
released from Armenian captivity.

Azerbaijani serviceman Samir Mammadov was taken captive back on 23
December 2006. The junior sergeant served in one of the border units
in Qazax District. He was taken captive on the neutral territory, 15
km away from his military unit, on the border of Azerbaijan’s Qazax
District and Armenia’s Ijevan. He had no weapons or ammunition on him.

It is also known that Samir Mammadov is being held in Yerevan all
this time.