Diplomatic Relations Established Between Armenia And Republic OfSeyc

DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS ESTABLISHED BETWEEN ARMENIA AND REPUBLIC OF SEYCHELLE

Noyan Tapan
Apr 26 2006

YEREVAN, APRIL 26, NOYAN TAPAN. On April 19, Resident Representative of
RA to UN Armen Martirosian and Resident Representative of the Republic
of Seychelle Jeremie Bonnelame signed a protocol on establishment of
diplomatic relations between the two countries. As Noyan Tapan was
informed from RA Foreign Ministry Press and Information Department,
signing this protocol, Armenia and Seychelle assume a commitment to
promote mutual understanding and to strengthen the friendly relations
and cooperation between the two peoples.

Azerbaijan Leader Says He Won’t Allow His Country To Be Used ForOper

AZERBAIJAN LEADER SAYS HE WON’T ALLOW HIS COUNTRY TO BE USED FOR OPERATIONS AGAINST IRAN
Barry Schweid
Associated Press writer Aida Sultanova contributed to this report

AP Worldstream
Apr 26, 2006

President Ilham Aliev of Azerbaijan opened a three-day visit to the
United States on Wednesday by saying he would not allow his country
to be used by the U.S. for any operations against neighboring Iran.

Aliev, scheduled to meet with President George W. Bush on Friday,
cited a “very clear” agreement with Iran that the two countries would
not permit their territory to be used for operations against the other.

His visit comes at a time of rising U.S. tensions with Iran over its
nuclear program, and Aliev said he would remain at arms’ length from
that conflict.

“Azerbaijan will not be engaged in any kind of potential operation
against Iran,” he said in remarks at the private Council on Foreign
Relations.

The Caspian Sea nation, which shares a border with Iran and Russia,
is strategically important to the U.S. because of its location and
its role in supplying the West with oil.

Azerbaijan wants to remain an “island of stability” in the region,
Aliev said. At the same time, he said Azerbaijan had sent troops
to Iraq, Afghanistan and Kosovo, and would “do its best to stand
shoulder-to-shoulder” with the United States on security.

The president, who took office in October 2003, has the potential to
be an intermediary between the Bush administration and Iran. Iranian
Defense Minister Mustafa Mohammad Najjar, on a visit to Baku last
week, said Aliev could use his talks in Washington to “explain”
Iran’s views to the United States.

Aliev said he did not think Iran would be a “major aspect” of his
talks in Washington, which are due to include a meeting with Vice
President Dick Cheney. But he said “if the question of regional
security arises we will discuss it.”

Azerbaijan is committed to peace in the region, he said. “We need to
try to provide peace and stability.”

“At this time,” he said, “it is best to concentrate on a peaceful
resolution” of the dispute over Iran’s nuclear programs, which the
United States and European allies say seek development of a nuclear
bomb.

On another issue, Aliev conceded there was need for political reform
in his country, a former Soviet republic of 7.9 million that became
independent 16 years ago. Referring to Azerbaijan’s energy boom, Aliev
said “economic reform without political reform will lead to severe
problems.” He said his country was moving forward on both fronts.

Human rights groups have criticized the nation for restricting
political and human rights and questioned whether U.S. criticism
would be muted due to Azerbaijan’s role in supplying the West with oil.

Freedom House on Tuesday said Azerbaijan restricts political and human
rights and is among the lowest-ranked countries in the private rights
group’s annual surveys.

“President Bush has made democracy promotion a priority of his
presidency,” Freedom House executive director Jennifer Windsor said
in a statement. “His upcoming meeting with President Aliev presents
an important opportunity for him to discuss Azerbaijan’s democracy
deficit.”

Aliev, in response to questions Wednesday, rejected the description
of his government as a “regime” and said, “We have all the major
freedoms.”

In his remarks, Aliev spoke most about a dispute with Armenia over the
Nagorno-Karabakh enclave of Azerbaijian. Ethnic Armenian forces hold
the region, in what Aliev called an occupation. He said Azerbaijan’s
recovery of the territory was not subject to negotiations.

Armenian And Lithuanian Presidents Discuss Issues Regarding Relation

ARMENIAN AND LITHUANIAN PRESIDENTS DISCUSS ISSUES REGARDING RELATIONS BETWEEN TWO COUNTRIES AND REGIONAL PROBLEMS

Noyan Tapan
Apr 25 2006

YEREVAN, APRIL 25, NOYAN TAPAN. At RA President Robert Kocharian’s
invitation, President of Lithuania Valdas Adamkus and his spouse Mrs
Alma Adamkie arrived in Armenia on April 25 on a two-day official
visit. The official meeting ceremony of the Lithuanian President
took place at the Armenian President’s residence. The ceremony was
followed by the tete-a-tete conversation between Presidents Robert
Kocharian and Valdas Adamkus. The leaders of the two countries
discussed issues regarding Armenian-Lithuanian bilateral relations,
European Union-Armenia cooperation, regional problems, as well
as exchanged opinions about urgent international issues. Then,
as Noyan Tapan was informed from RA President’s Press Service, the
Armenian-Lithuanian negotiations in an extended staff took place with
Robert Kocharian’s and Valdas Adamkus’ participation. The priority
directions of economic cooperation and the possibilities of their
activization were discussed. At the end of the meeting an agreement on
promotion of investments and on mutual protection was signed between
the governments of the two countries. The Armenian and Lithuanian
Presidents also had a joint press conference.

“I’ll Visit Tsitsernakaberd As Long As I’m Alive”

I’LL VISIT THE TSITSERNAKABERD AS LONG AS I’M ALIVE”

Panorama.am
15:57 24/04/06

“The world must no longer remain silent. Near is the day when
the Genocide will be recognized, our land will be returned and we
shall come back to our fatherland so that our children should grow
Armenians and live as Armenians,” the representative of the Armenian
community in the Ukraine Moushegh Tartikyan says. The latter has come
to Tsitsernakaberd along with 9 representatives of the community
today. They have also brought the Ukrainian flag with them which
aims at showing the many Ukrainians and 100.000s of Armenian living
in the Ukraine recognize the Genocide although the country they live
in hasn’t yet admitted the fact of the criminal action.

Member of Union of Choreography, choreograph Vanoush Khanamiryan
mentions that he has been coming to Tsitsernakaberd from the year
the complex exists and he is going to come as long as he is alive as
it is his debt of honor. “I want to appeal to the world that it’s
high time the world recognized the reality. It’s a shame that many
countries haven’t still recognized the Armenian Genocide, yet I am
thankful to all those countries that have recognized the cruel fact
of the Great Armenian Genocide,” he says.

“Jugha Cemetery”

“JUGHA CEMETERY”

Open Democracy, UK
April 24 2006

Photographs of the Armenian medieval cemetery at Jugha, the largest and
most precious of its kind, before and after its systematic destruction.

gha_3470.jsp

“It has become one of the most bitterly divisive issues in the
Caucasus – but up until now no one has been able to clear up the
mystery surrounding the fate of the famous medieval Christian cemetery
of Jugha in Azerbaijan.

The cemetery was regarded by Armenians as the biggest and most
precious repository of medieval headstones marked with crosses –
the Armenians call them “khachkars” – of which more than 2,000 were
still there in the late Eighties. Each elaborately carved tombstone
was a masterpiece of carving.

Armenians have said that the cemetery has been razed, comparing its
destruction to the demolition of two giant Buddha figures by the
Taliban in Afghanistan. Azerbaijan has hit back by accusing Armenia
of scaremongering, and of destroying Azerbaijani monuments on its
own territory.

Now an IWPR contributor has become the first journalist to visit
the site of the cemetery on Azerbaijan’s border with Iran – and has
confirmed that the graveyard has completely vanished…”

See

pc_state=henpcrs&s=o&o=caucasus_jugha.html

and

,,135 09-2144112,00.html .

http://www.opendemocracy.net/arts/ju
http://www.iwpr.net/index.php?a
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0

Armenian Genocide Victims to Be Commemorated in Tbilisi

PanARMENIAN.Net

Armenian Genocide Victims to Be Commemorated in Tbilisi

21.04.2006 23:26 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On the initiative of the Armenian Center of
Cooperation of Georgia (ACCG) and `Nor Serund’, the Union of Armenians
of Georgia a protest action in view of the 91st anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide will be held at the Turkish Embassy in Tbilisi on
April 24, ACCG told PanARMENIAN.Net. Representatives of diasporas of
Georgia and Georgian NGOs are expected to attend the event. On the
same say a liturgy will be chanted in the Armenian Cathedral of Surb
Gevorg and a photo exhibition will be organized in the churchyard. The
events will finish with a march from Surb Gevorg towards Nor
Echmiadzin Church. Candles will be lit around the church.

Armenian-Georgian-Ajarian Business Forum to Be Held in Ajaria in May

PanARMENIAN.Net

Armenian-Georgian-Ajarian Business Forum to Be Held in Ajaria in May

22.04.2006 00:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ An Armenian-Georgian-Ajarian business forum will be
held in Ajaria late May. The forum will be followed by an
Armenian-Georgian intergovernmental sitting. According to chairman of
the Armenian-Georgian and Armenian-Ajarian associations Vladimir
Badalyan, the Armenian-Georgian association has been successfully
functioning for two years already.

`One of the tasks of the Armenian-Georgian association is the
organization of summer vacations in foreign states for the middle
section of the Armenian population. 12 thousand Armenian citizens took
a vacation to Ajaria in 2005. This figure can double if the transport
problem is solved,’ Badalyan said.

Badalyan noted that presently the journey from Armenia to Batumi takes
16 hours, meanwhile the construction of a road through Javakhk will
shorten the way with 6 hours. `It will contribute to the development
of Javakhk and attract investments to the Ajarian economy,’ he said.

PBS effort to bridge controversy creates more

Standard-Speaker, PA
April 21 2006

PBS effort to bridge controversy creates more

Presented with programs on Armenian genocide, stations react
differently

Armenian refugees in Ottoman Turkey are shown in a picture featured
in the recent documentary “The Armenian Genocide.”

Public television’s attempt to illuminate a dark period of European
history is demonstrating that in the world of documentaries, few
topics are black and white.

`The Armenian Genocide’ began airing this week on dozens of PBS
stations, including nine in the nation’s top TV markets. Through
tattered photos, letters and celebrity voiceovers, the documentary
created by New York-based filmmaker Andrew Goldberg depicts a Turkish
campaign of expulsion, rape, and murder that led to the deaths of an
estimated 1.5 million ethnic Armenians between 1915 and 1920.

To the filmmaker and most historians, the documentary covers settled
history, although Turkey continues to deny that it committed what
many consider the first genocide of the 20th century.

PBS said it accepted Goldberg’s film based on the `recognition that
the overwhelming majority of historians have concluded that a
genocide took place.’ But to appease a small contingent of critics,
the network commissioned Oregon Public Broadcasting, a partner on the
film, to produce a panel discussion comprising two historians who
back the film’s premise and two who dispute it.

Three stations, three approaches
PBS affiliates, which make their own programming decisions, took
different approaches with the programs, in some cases creating even
more unhappiness on both sides.

One of the nation’s premier PBS stations, WGBH in Boston, aired
Goldberg’s film but declined to show the panel.

`We chose to air `The Armenian Genocide’ based on its merits and
because we felt it was balanced and presented both sides of the
story,’ said Lucy Sholley, the station’s director of media relations.
`We felt the documentary stood on its own.’

KCTS in Seattle aired the film and the panel discussion. Program
manager Eric Maki said in a statement that the station wanted to give
viewers as much information as possible to `make an informed
decision’ and `better understand the world around them.’

KCET in Los Angeles, home to about two-thirds of the country’s 1.5
million Armenian Americans, declined to show both programs. A
spokeswoman said the station is airing programs on Armenian issues
throughout April and had earlier decided to show a French documentary
called `Le Génocide Arménien.’

On Monday, the day the French film aired, Goldberg screened his
documentary at Hollywood’s Egyptian Theatre before an audience
estimated at 1,000.

`I didn’t want this story to not have a chance to be shown to the
Armenians in Los Angeles,’ he said. `It’s a story that many of them
had taken part in, through their involvement or just being connected
with it.’

Panel adds to controversy
The PBS decision to host a panel featuring genocide skeptics has
angered Armenian activists.

`We commend PBS for airing the Goldberg piece. It’s a good
opportunity to educate their viewers with regards to the Armenian
genocide. But we felt that the panel that followed it in some areas
was completely unnecessary,’ said Elizabeth Chouldjian, spokeswoman
for the Armenian National Committee of America. `It was misleading.
Essentially, it presented the issue of the genocide not as a fact,
but as a debate.’

Chouldjian’s organization and others waged a letter-writing campaign
that flooded PBS and congressional offices with requests that the
network drop the panel.

The network stood its ground, however, saying the program’s `intent
is to examine the question of how historians can come to such
radically divergent conclusions about these events. An important part
of the mission of public television is to engender responsible
discussion and illuminate complex issues.’

More to the story?
The Turkish government and some historians maintain that Armenians
who died during the violent last throes of the Ottoman Empire where
victims of a civil war, not genocide.

Goldberg’s film presents a slanted historical account, according to
some viewers who wrote into PBS stations and a scholar who
participated in the panel discussion.

`If you only take one side and report their deaths, it seems like
genocide. But of course it wasn’t that,’ said Justin McCarthy, a
professor of history at the University of Louisville.

McCarthy, who acknowledges holding a minority view, believes
Goldberg’s film takes a selective snapshot of history and fails to
address the deaths of many Turks at the hands of Armenian militants.

“It was an inhuman, bestial time,’ he said. `There were wide-scale,
mutual massacres across eastern and other areas of (the Ottoman
Empire) – a mutual-extermination kind of war.’

PBS said it accepted Goldberg’s film based on the `recognition that
the overwhelming majority of historians have concluded that a
genocide took place.’ But to appease a small contingent of critics,
the network commissioned Oregon Public Broadcasting, a partner on the
film, to produce a panel discussion comprising two historians who
back the film’s premise and two who dispute it.

Three stations, three approaches
PBS affiliates, which make their own programming decisions, took
different approaches with the programs, in some cases creating even
more unhappiness on both sides.

One of the nation’s premier PBS stations, WGBH in Boston, aired
Goldberg’s film but declined to show the panel.

`We chose to air `The Armenian Genocide’ based on its merits and
because we felt it was balanced and presented both sides of the
story,’ said Lucy Sholley, the station’s director of media relations.
`We felt the documentary stood on its own.’

KCTS in Seattle aired the film and the panel discussion. Program
manager Eric Maki said in a statement that the station wanted to give
viewers as much information as possible to `make an informed
decision’ and `better understand the world around them.’

KCET in Los Angeles, home to about two-thirds of the country’s 1.5
million Armenian Americans, declined to show both programs. A
spokeswoman said the station is airing programs on Armenian issues
throughout April and had earlier decided to show a French documentary
called `Le Génocide Arménien.’

On Monday, the day the French film aired, Goldberg screened his
documentary at Hollywood’s Egyptian Theatre before an audience
estimated at 1,000.

`I didn’t want this story to not have a chance to be shown to the
Armenians in Los Angeles,’ he said. `It’s a story that many of them
had taken part in, through their involvement or just being connected
with it.’

Panel adds to controversy
The PBS decision to host a panel featuring genocide skeptics has
angered Armenian activists.

`We commend PBS for airing the Goldberg piece. It’s a good
opportunity to educate their viewers with regards to the Armenian
genocide. But we felt that the panel that followed it in some areas
was completely unnecessary,’ said Elizabeth Chouldjian, spokeswoman
for the Armenian National Committee of America. `It was misleading.
Essentially, it presented the issue of the genocide not as a fact,
but as a debate.’

Chouldjian’s organization and others waged a letter-writing campaign
that flooded PBS and congressional offices with requests that the
network drop the panel.

The network stood its ground, however, saying the program’s `intent
is to examine the question of how historians can come to such
radically divergent conclusions about these events. An important part
of the mission of public television is to engender responsible
discussion and illuminate complex issues.’

More to the story?
The Turkish government and some historians maintain that Armenians
who died during the violent last throes of the Ottoman Empire where
victims of a civil war, not genocide.

Goldberg’s film presents a slanted historical account, according to
some viewers who wrote into PBS stations and a scholar who
participated in the panel discussion.

`If you only take one side and report their deaths, it seems like
genocide. But of course it wasn’t that,’ said Justin McCarthy, a
professor of history at the University of Louisville.

McCarthy, who acknowledges holding a minority view, believes
Goldberg’s film takes a selective snapshot of history and fails to
address the deaths of many Turks at the hands of Armenian militants.

“It was an inhuman, bestial time,’ he said. `There were wide-scale,
mutual massacres across eastern and other areas of (the Ottoman
Empire) – a mutual-extermination kind of war.’

But among the holdouts for Turkey today are the U.S. and U.K., which
have strong economic and military ties to the nation.

Under recent Republican and Democratic administrations, the U.S. has
avoided using the `G-word,’ instead calling the Armenian deaths a
`tragedy’ or `atrocity.’

As they come of age, a growing number of Armenian Americans are
demanding the government recognize their ancestors’ deaths as
genocide. Filmmakers and Grammy-nominated bands with Armenian roots,
such as System of a Down, have staged benefits calling attention to
the issue. The band and other activists are scheduled to meet with
members of Congress next week to again press their case.

Is change near? Another look at history casts doubt: Nearly every
year federal legislation is introduced. All of the measures have
either died in committees or languished in the Senate.

© 2006 MSNBC Interactive

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/12397821/

BAKU: Armenian FM: Arbitrators might offer new formulations,not the

Today, Azerbaijan
April 20 2006

Armenian FM: Arbitrators might offer new formulations, not the
resolution principles

20 April 2006 [16:29] – Today.Az

Vardan Oskanyan, Armenian Foreign Minister, said in Yerevan today:
“If Azerbaijan recognizes Nagorno-Karabakh people’s right for
independent identification of their future status, Armenia is ready
to make serious conversations on resolution of war consequences.”

As Trend reports, Armenian Minister of Exterior said today on
news conference ion Yerevan that this was Armenia’s position for
conversation process.

Commenting on the last news about arbitrators'”new offers”, Oskanyan
said this notion’s “right and wrong at the same time”.

“The document that states resolutions principles is on the table.

Some principles have led to mutual agreement and some have not. I guess
when arbitrators say “new offers” they actually mean new formulations
for the principles we did not agree on. The principles as such do
not change,” – Minister explained.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/25359.html

BAKU: EU rep confirms Armenian occupation

EU rep confirms Armenian occupation

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
April 20 2006

Baku, April 19, AssA-Irada — “Armenia has indeed occupied Azerbaijan’s
territories,” a European Union representative told a meeting of the
Armenia-EU inter-parliamentary cooperation commission on Wednesday.

Mary Ann Ishler said the most appropriate option at this point is
the one outlined in the document prepared by the OSCE Minsk Group
mediating settlement to the Upper (Nagorno) Garabagh conflict. She
said this plan envisions the return of five districts around Upper
Garabagh to Azerbaijan, adding that only after this Garabagh Armenians
could take part in peace talks.

“We are expecting the Azeri and Armenian presidents to sign a relevant
accord,” Ishler said.

Armenians aired their discontent over the statement, claiming that
the Azeri side is ignoring the interests of Upper Garabagh Armenians
and is unwilling to negotiate with them.*