GEP’s Lobbying was a turkey

New York post
Oct 13 2007

GEP’S LOBBYING WAS A TURKEY

October 13, 2007 — FORMER Majority Leader Dick Gephardt, a
registered lobbyist for Turkey, failed sev eral months ago to get his
successor as top House Democrat, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, to withdraw
her support from a long-pending resolution condemning alleged Turkish
genocide of Armenians in 1915.

The Bush administration had urged Congress not to offend Turkey, a
U.S. ally, but the measure passed the House Foreign Affairs Committee
Wednesday. Pelosi has pledged House action this year on the genocide
resolution that in the past was blocked by Dennis Hastert, her
Republican predecessor as speaker.

In addition to Gephardt, the Turkish government also hired a top
Republican lobbyist: Bob Livingston, former chairman of the House
Appropriations Committee.

*
PROMINENT Democrats, while minimizing the revelation that Sandy
Berger is advising Sen. Hillary Clinton on foreign affairs, stress
that the disgraced former national-security adviser would have no
role in her presidency.

Clinton says Berger is strictly an unofficial adviser. Berger avoided
a prison sentence for illegally removing classified documents from
the National Archives, agreeing to a $50,000 fine, 100 hours’
community service and two years’ probation, along with losing his
security clearance.

Berger’s role in the Clinton campaign is explained by the senator’s
supporters as stemming from close family ties forged when he was a
senior official in President Bill Clinton’s White House.

*
MITT Romney, who tries to come over as a picture-perfect candidate,
committed his second off-the-cuff blunder at Tuesday’s Republican
presidential debate in Dearborn, Mich.

Asked whether he would go to Congress for authorization to take
military action against Iran’s nuclear facilities, the former
Massachusetts governor said: "You sit down with your attorneys, and
[they] tell you what you have to do." He added that "we’re going to
let the lawyers sort out" the problem.

Two months earlier in a town hall event at Bettendorf, Iowa, Romney
was asked whether any of his five sons were serving in the military
and, if not, how they supported the war against terrorism. He
replied: "One of the ways my sons are showing support for our nation
is helping to get me elected."

*
Sen. Charles Schumer, the Senate Democratic campaign chairman, is
pressing New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson to give up his presidential
bid and run for his state’s Senate seat held by retiring Republican
Sen. Pete Domenici.

Republicans hope to hold the New Mexico seat with Rep. Heather
Wilson, since the most popular Democratic prospect, Rep. Tom Udall,
has decided not to run. Richardson, a former congressman and Clinton
administration Cabinet member, has been a popular governor and would
be heavily favored for the Senate.

However, friends of Richardson predict he will resist the pressure to
be the Senate candidate. Although he’s given no chance to win the
presidential nomination, Richardson has broken through to the top of
the second-tier candidates and is a serious prospect to become Sen.
Hillary Clinton’s vice-presidential running-mate. Party strategists
see Richardson, a Mexican- American, appealing to Latino votes in
four Western states that could swing the 2008 presidential election:
Colorado, Arizona, Nevada and New Mexico.

opinion/opedcolumnists/geps_lobbying_was_a_turkey. htm

http://www.nypost.com/seven/10132007/post

Rock band documentary shines light on Armenian genocide

Raw Story, MA
Oct 12 2007

Rock band documentary shines light on Armenian genocide

David Edwards and Muriel Kane
Published: Friday October 12, 2007

CBS News reported Wednesday on a documentary called Screamers which
follows the Grammy-award winning band System of a Down in its
campaign to raise awareness of the Armenian genocide.

As many as 1.5 million Armenians were said to be massacred in Turkey
during World War I. The band members are all grandchildren of
survivors of the massacres and would like to see them acknowledged as
genocide by the Turkish government, which has consistently downplayed
them as merely the result of ethnic violence.

A committee in the House of Representatives has just voted to declare
the killings genocide, but President Bush has promised to veto the
measure for fear of losing access to Turkish military bases. Similar
resolutions have been introduced roughly every ten years, with the
most recent having been withdrawn in 2000 at the urging of President
Clinton.

Serj Tankian, lead singer of System of a Down told CBS about how his
grandfather’s father and uncles were taken away to labor camps and
never seen again. "We’re all lucky to be here," he said of the band.
"We all know the truth of what it means to feel genocide on your
skin. … It makes it easier for us to empathize with other injustice
around the world."

Earlier this year, New York Post film reviewer Kyle Smith slammed the
band for calling attention to a "nonissue," but the House
resolution’s backers warned the issue could not be ignored as they
drew parallels to the Holocaust and the present-day bloodshed in the
Sudanese region of Darfur.

The following video is from CBS’s Early Show, broadcast on October
10, 2007
entary_to_shine_light_1011.html

http://rawstory.com/news/2007/Rock_band_docum

Boston faith leaders honor Armenian catholicos

The Pilot, MA
Oct 12 2007

Boston faith leaders honor Armenian catholicos
By Neil W. McCabe Pilot Correspondent
Posted: 10/12/2007

NEWTON — Joining leaders of the Massachusetts Council of Churches
and the Greek Orthodox Metropolis in Boston, this week Cardinal Seán
P. O’Malley welcomed His Holiness Karekin II, the supreme patriarch
and catholicos of the Armenian Church and affirmed his recognition of
the Armenia Genocide of 1915.

`Certainly, we realize how important the theme of the genocide is to
the Armenian people and we want to go on record as supporting your
efforts to memorialize this and we hope that this will bring the
healing and the strength to your people that is necessary,’ the
cardinal said is his remarks at the Oct. 8 ecumenical prayer
breakfast held in honor of the visit of the catholicos.

Also at the breakfast, Catholicos Karekin was presented a copy of
resolution passed by the Massachusetts Council of Churches
unequivocally recognizing the reality of the genocide of the Armenian
people waged by the Ottoman Turks from 1915 to 1923. The resolution
was passed by the council’s board of directors earlier in the week
and publicly released to coincide with the catholicos’s visit to
Boston, said Rev. Jack Johnson, the council’s executive director.

The resolution has three clauses. The first rebukes and rebuts those
who deny the genocide, regardless of their motivation, because
denials of the certain truth of the genocide make future instances of
genocide more likely. The second clause remembers those who perished,
the survivors and prays for the end to all genocides. The third
clause calls on all member communions of the council and their
faithful to make special prayers for the Armenian people as the first
Christian nation in the spirit of Christian fellowship and common
witness to human suffering as exemplified by our risen Lord.

Johnson told the patriarch, `We express profound prayers of
thanksgiving for you, your Holiness, for your visit among us and your
leadership in rebuilding your country and the Armenian Church
worldwide.’

In his own remarks, the catholicos thanked the cardinal and Rev.
Johnson. `We extend our thanks for this event. We pray that God will
keep our churches unified in this matter.’

Unity is an important theme in the Armenian Church, he said. `We
believe in unity in the essentials and freedom in the
non-essentials.’

Above all there must be unity with the Gospel and man must never
disunite from the Word of God, he said. `As a nation and people we
have witnessed the evils of this disunity.’

That the Armenian Church could survive the 20th century at all, after
first the genocide and then 70 years of communism is a miracle, he
said.

At the conclusion of his remarks, Catholicos Karekin presented
Cardinal O’Malley with a large gold pectoral cross with purple
stones.

Clutching the cross, the cardinal told the catholicos, `Thank you for
this lovely gift, I will treasure it.’

The catholicos presents the pectoral cross as an honor to those who
are friends of the Armenian Church or have been of special service to
the church, said Father Ktrij Devejian, his foreign secretary.

Catholicos Karekin II is in the midst of a 33-day, 8-city tour of
Armenian communities in the United States, he said.

Father Devejian said His Holiness is seeking to strengthen the bonds
of the Armenian people with their motherland and their mother church.

`It is a pastoral journey bringing the faith home,’ he said.

In addition to Armenian events and gatherings, the patriarch will be
visiting memorials to the Jewish Genocide, such as Boston’s Holocaust
Memorial near Fanueil Hall and the Holocaust Museum in Washington,
said Father Devejian.

.asp?ID=5306

http://www.thebostonpilot.com/article

ANKARA: Armenian FM: "Article 301 Is A Barrier To Debate On Genocide

ARMENIAN FM: "ARTICLE 301 IS A BARRIER TO DEBATE ON GENOCIDE ALLEGATIONS"

Turkish Press
Milliyet
Oct 11 2007

Press Review

Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian yesterday called on Turkey
to abolish controversial Turkish Penal Code (TCK) Article 301.

Speaking to the European Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee,
Oskanian said the article is a barrier to open debate on the so-called
Armenian genocide issue. Referring to Turkey ‘s proposal to set up
a commission of historians to discuss the events of 1915, Oskanian
said this offer has been used by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan to put Armenia in a difficult position.

Oskanyan Gives Speech In European Parliament

OSKANYAN GIVES SPEECH IN EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

Panorama.am
21:32 09/10/2007

Today Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan participated in a session of
the European Parliament’s committee on foreign affairs.

According to the foreign ministry’s press service, the minister gave
a presentation about relations between Armenia and the European Union,
as well as progress in Armenia’s external affairs.

After the speech, a question and answer period took place, with
questions centering around Armenia’s relations with the European Union,
Armenian-Turkish relations, regional issues, and Karabakh conflict
negotiations. Taking part in the question and answer session were
Mari Begenr, from France, Lidia Polfer, who had reported on South
Caucasus issues, parliamentarian Charles Manok, from Great Britain,
and Hans Sloboda, from Austria.

AP: Funeral For 2 Armenians Slain In Security Shooting

FUNERAL FOR 2 SLAIN IN SECURITY SHOOTING
By Qassim Abdul-Zahra

Associated Press
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Oct 10 2007

BAGHDAD (AP) – Weeping mourners called for justice Wednesday at a
funeral for two Armenian Christian women killed while driving in
Baghdad – the second shooting of civilians involving a security firm
linked to U.S. government-financed work in Iraq in less than a month.

The funeral Mass for Marou Awanis and Geneva Jalal, who died in
Tuesday’s shooting, was held at the Virgin Mary Church. Awanis’ three
daughters cried and other female relatives wailed over the caskets,
adorned only with a golden cross.

Iraqi authorities blamed the deaths on guards working for Unity
Resources Group, a security company owned by Australian partners but
with headquarters in the United Arab Emirates.

Unity, which provides protection for USAID contractor RTI
International, said an investigation was under way, but initial
findings showed its security team fired after a car failed to stop
despite "an escalation of warnings which included hand signals and
a signal flare."

Statements from both Unity and RTI have made clear the guards were
not escorting RTI clients when the shooting occurred.

Witnesses and police said it appeared that Awanis, who was driving,
was trying to stop when the shooting began.

The Rev. Kivork Arshlian urged the government to punish those
responsible despite the immunity that has generally been enjoyed by
foreign security contractors in Iraq.

"This is a crime against humanity in general and against Iraqis in
particular. Many other people were killed in a similar way," he said.

"We call upon the government to put an end to these killings."

He demanded that those responsible be held accountable in Iraq.

"This security company should leave the country. Those who committed
this crime should be punished because they claimed the lives of two
people," he said. "We do not want a trial in Australia, which we
would know nothing about."

His comments reflected the growing anger against the private security
companies – nearly all based in the United States, Britain and other
Western countries – as symbols of the lawlessness in Iraq since the
U.S.-led ouster of Saddam Hussein in 2003.

"What is the use of the word ‘sorry?’" screamed Nora Jalal, Awanis’
daughter and a student at Baghdad’s Technology University.

Government spokesman Ali al-Dabbagh said the shooting was "part of
a series of reckless actions by some security companies."

The deaths of the two women – including one who used the white car
as a taxi to raise money for her family – came a day after the Iraqi
government gave U.S. officials a report demanding hefty payments and
the ouster from Iraq of embattled Moyock, N.C.-based Blackwater USA
for a shooting last month that left at least 17 civilians dead.

The Blackwater guards implicated in the Sept. 16 shooting also were
protecting American specialists working under USAID contracts on
development projects in Iraq, highlighting the difficult balance
facing Western agencies trying to help rebuild Iraq while keeping
their own staff safe.

Tuesday’s killings were certain to sharpen government demands to curb
the expanding array of security firms in Iraq watching over diplomats,
aid groups and others.

Unity provides security services to RTI International, a group based
in Research Triangle Park, N.C., that promotes governance projects
in Iraq for the U.S. Agency for International Development.

Both Unity and RTI acknowledged a security contract between them
but said RTI staffers were not present at the shooting in Baghdad’s
Karradah district.

A U.S. Embassy spokeswoman said RTI was under contract by USAID but
was responsible for its own security. "USAID does not direct the
security arrangements of contractors," Mirembe Nantongo said.

According to the USAID Web site, RTI has about $450 million in U.S.

government contracts to work on governance projects in Iraq. USAID
is a semiautonomous arm of the State Department that manages U.S. aid
programs.

Michael Priddin, chief operating officer of Unity, told The Associated
Press the firm was working with Iraqi authorities "to find out the
results of the shooting incident. … We are trying to work out a
true picture of what happened."

In a statement Tuesday night, Priddin said, "We deeply regret this
incident."

Iraqi government officials, police and witnesses said guards working
for Unity fired on a white Oldsmobile as it approached their convoy,
killing the two women before speeding away. The incident occurred
near a Unity facility in Karradah.

Four armored SUVs – three white and one gray – were about 100 yards
from a main intersection in the Shiite-controlled district, according
to Iraqi accounts. As the car moved into the crossroads, the Unity
guards threw a smoke bomb in an apparent bid to warn the driver not
to come closer, said policeman Riyadh Majid, who saw the shooting.

Two of the Unity guards then opened fire. The driver tried to stop,
but was killed along with her passenger. Two of three people in the
back seat were wounded.

Police said they collected 19 spent 5.56 mm shell casings, ammunition
commonly used by U.S. and NATO forces and most Western security
organizations. The pavement was stained with blood and covered with
shattered glass.

Majid said the convoy raced away after the shooting. Iraqi police
collected the bodies and towed the car.

A second policeman, who spoke on condition of anonymity because
he feared retribution, said the guards were masked and wore khaki
uniforms. He said one left the vehicle and started to shoot at the car,
while another opened fire from the open back door of an SUV.

Awanis’ sister-in-law, Anahet Bougous, said the woman had been using
her car to drive government employees to work to raise money for her
three daughters after her husband died during heart surgery last year.

An Iraqi investigation of the Blackwater shooting on Sept. 16 was
ordered by Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and called for the company
to pay $8 million in compensation to the families of each of the 17
victims. The commission also said Blackwater guards had killed 21
other Iraqis since it began protecting American diplomats.

Unity also has come under scrutiny before.

In March 2006, the company issued an statement of sympathy after
one of its guards was blamed for shooting a 72-year-old Iraqi-born
Australian, Kays Juma, at a Baghdad checkpoint.

Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said Juma was killed
because he was in a car that failed to stop. Unity said multinational
forces and Iraqi police also were present at the checkpoint at
the time.

Unity provides armed guards and security training throughout Iraq.

Its heavily armed teams are Special Forces veterans from Australia,
the United States, New Zealand and Britain – as well as former law
enforcement officers from those countries.

In other violence Wednesday, a roadside bomb targeted a U.S. military
convoy in Baghdad, killing an Iraqi bystander and wounding three
others, police said.

The explosion in the predominantly Shiite neighborhood of Karradah
also damaged a Humvee, a police officer said. The U.S. military had
no immediate comment and no American casualties were reported.

U.S. soldiers quickly sealed off the area and U.S. Apache helicopters
circled to provide support.

Another roadside bomb targeted a U.S. convoy in eastern Baghdad,
police said, but no casualties were reported.

In northern Iraq, a suicide bomber slammed his minibus into blast
walls at the offices of a key Kurdish political party, killing a party
official and a guard, and wounding five other guards, the party said.

The attack targeted a regional office of the Kurdish Democratic Party,
or KDP, some 13 miles outside the northern Iraqi city of Mosul,
according to party spokesman Ahmed Tawfiq. KDP is led by Massoud
Barzani, president of the Kurdish region in northern Iraq.

Mosul, 225 miles northwest of Baghdad, has been a hotbed of guerrilla
activity, and the scene of many bombings, drive-by shootings and
assassination attempts.

Also Wednesday, a parked car bomb exploded near a market in Saddam’s
hometown of Tikrit, 80 miles north of Baghdad, killing a policeman
and a civilian, and wounding another policeman and three civilians.

___

Associated Press writers Katarina Kratovac, Sinan Salaheddin and
Sameer N. Yacoub contributed to this story.

(This version CORRECTS spelling of KDP leader’s first name to Massoud,
not Masoud.)

photo: A sibling of Marou Awanis, one of two Christian women killed
Tuesday in Baghdad by members of a private security firm, mourns
during a funeral service outside the Armenian Orthodox Virgin Mary
Church, Baghdad, Iraq, Wednesday, Oct. 10, 2007. Weeping mourners
called for justice Wednesday during a funeral Mass for two Armenian
Christian women killed the day before at an intersection in Baghdad,
the second shooting of civilians involving a heavily armed security
firm linked to U.S. government-financed work in Iraq in less than a
month. (AP Photo/Hadi Mizban)

http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5gkx-3oYeF

BAKU: Ann Derse: US Administration Is Against Adoption Of The Bill O

ANN DERSE: US ADMINISTRATION IS AGAINST ADOPTION OF THE BILL ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Oct 10 2007

I want to state again that U.S Administration is against the adoption
of the bill on Armenian genocide to be debated in Foreign Affairs
Committee of House of Representatives of the Congress, U.S ambassador
to Azerbaijan Ann Derse told journalists, APA reports.

Ambassador stated that US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and
former 8 secretaries of state stated that adoption of this bill will
negatively influence on the processes.

"US government wants to explain to the Congress that we are against
the adoption of this resolution. US Administration regards that
historians can solve such problems through open dialogue," she said.

Azerbaijan’s Prosecutor General’s Office Does Not Respond To Invitat

AZERBAIJAN’S PROSECUTOR GENERAL’S OFFICE DOES NOT RESPOND TO INVITATION BY ARMENIA

Panorama.am
18:36 09/10/2007

Azerbaijani prosecutor general office did not respond to the invitation
by Armenia on participation in the session of NIS prosecutor generals’
coordination council, Sona Truzyan, press secretary of the Armenian
prosecutor general, informed Panorama.am.

The session of the council will take place today.

Armenian Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan is expected to receive the
participation of the coordination council today during the day.

Prosecutor General of Belarus, Ghazakhstan, Tafjikstayn,
Ghrghrstan P. P. Miklashevich, R. D. Tusupbekov, B. K. Bobokhonov,
S. Kh. Satibaldev, spearheaded by the first deputy of Moldova’s
prosecutor general, V. T. Pascar.

Earlier, on October 7, the delegations spearheaded by first deputy of
Ukraine’s and Turkmenistan’s prosecutor generals, S. M. Vinokurov and
M. M. Tachmamedov, arrived in Yerevan. The delegations of Russian and
Georgian prosecutor generals’ offices will arrive in Yerevan early
on October 9.

Vahe Danielyan – Deputy Minister

VAHE DANIELYAN – DEPUTY MINISTER

A1+
[02:48 pm] 09 October, 2007

Vahe Danielyan was appointed to the post of the Deputy Minister of
Trade and Economic Development of Armenia by the RA Prime Minister
Serge Sargsyan’s decision.

In 2001 Vahe Danielyan was the director of "Artsakh Development
Agency".

In August 2001 he was appointed to the post of the Member of
Statistical Board of RA and reappointed to that post in 2006.

Romania’s Defense Minister To Visit Armenia

ROMANIA’S DEFENSE MINISTER TO VISIT ARMENIA

ArmRadio – Public Radio
Oct 8 2007
Armenia

October 9 the delegation headed by Teodor Melescanu, Romania’s Minister
of Defense, will arrive in Armenia.

October 10 the delegation will have official meetings with RA Prime
Minister Serge Sargsyan, Defense Minister Michael Harutyunyan and
Chairman of the National Assembly Standing Committee on Defense,
Security and Domestic Affairs Arthur Aghabekyan, Chief of General
staff of the armed Forces of the republic of Armenia, First Deputy
Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan.

October 11 the Romanian delegation will visit the memorial of
Tsitsernakaberd, as well as the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute,
where the Defense Minister of Romania will leave a script in the
memorial book. Documents on bilateral military cooperation between
Armenia and Romania will be signed by the Defense Ministers of the
two countries.

The same day the delegation headed by Romania’s Minister of Defense
Teodor Melescanu will leave for Bucharest.