BAKU: Turkish Foreign Minister Urges Armenia To Pull Out Of Azerbaij

TURKISH FOREIGN MINISTER URGES ARMENIA TO PULL OUT OF AZERBAIJAN

Azad Azarbaycan TV
May 26 2009
Azerbaijan

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has urged Armenia to pull
out of the territory it has seized from Azerbaijan in the early 1990s
to ease tension in the region.

"Our message to Armenia is very open: the region needs to be cleared
of occupation and high tension," Davutoglu was shown on Azad Azarbaycan
television telling reporters in Baku on 26 May. "The way to resolve the
frozen conflicts in the region is to exploit bilateral, multilateral,
and all kinds of relations to bring about peace and not to continue
these problems."

Aris Janigian Presents New Book In Glendale

ARIS JANIGIAN PRESENTS NEW BOOK IN GLENDALE

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
26.05.2009 22:26 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Aris Janigian’s Riverbig novel will be presented
in Glendale on June 1.

This broad-shouldered work of fiction-the follow-up to Bloodvine,
Aris Janigian’s acclaimed first novel – continues the tale of Andy
Demerjian. Having finished college, returned to farming, and undergone
a chain of disasters, he is now landless. Desperate to support his wife
and two sons, Demerjian embarks on a series of ventures that put his
integrity and mettle to the test. Set in California’s Central Valley,
and ranging in time from World War II to the drug wars of the 1960s,
Riverbig explores both emotional terrain and physical topography as
it transports the reader through the valley and into the rhythms of
rural life.

A second-generation Armenian American, Aris Janigian was born in
Fresno, California, and currently lives in Los Angeles with his
family. He returns to the Fresno area annually to work as a grape
packer and shipper. He is the author of Bloodvine and the coauthor,
with April Greiman, of Something from Nothing.

Armenia Plays Stabilizing Role In Black Sea Region

ARMENIA PLAYS STABILIZING ROLE IN BLACK SEA REGION

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
27.05.2009 15:24 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia plays stabilizing role in Black Sea region,
Ara Nranyan, ARFD Advisor on Economic Issues, told a PanARMENIAN.Net
correspondent. "BSEC has 12 member states, some of them being CIS
countries. Being one of South Caucasian states, Armenia plays an
important stabilizing role," he said.

In the meantime, Mr. Nranyan finds BSEC the only international
organization where all countries (including those having territorial
problems) adhere to constructive positions. "It’s noteworthy that
this is the only organization where Turkey conducts constrictive
policy in relation to Armenia," Nranyan said.

Destructive policy, according to ARFD representative, is conducted
by Azerbaijan. "This is seen in their attempts to subordinate the
organization’s objectives to their political goals, something other
members states do not approve of," Nranyan noted, adding that the
organization’s objective was economic cooperation and most problems
discussed there concerned regional development issues.

Armenia became BSEC member state in November 2008.

Black Sea Economic Cooperation was established in 1992, with Armenia
being one of the founding states. Currently, the organization has
12 member states: Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Greece,
Georgia, Moldova, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Turkey and Ukraine. BSEC
observer states are Austria, Belarus, Croatia, Czech Republic, Egypt,
France, Germany, Italy, Poland, Slovakia and US.

Advice Not To Expect Anything Good From The Prime Minister

ADVICE NOT TO EXPECT ANYTHING GOOD FROM THE PRIME MINISTER

LRAGIR.AM
13:04:48 – 26/05/2009

The intention of the government to insert a tax official within the
major enterprises, according to the former Prime Minister, Hrant
Bagratyan, is absurd. He stated that it would be understandable if
this idea concerned only those enterprises, where there is need to
count the waste material.

Hrant Bagratyan does not have a better opinion in connection with the
governmental anti-crisis program, saying that such a program does
not exist at all. He stated that he only knows that the government
allocated 10 million dollars to the mining industry, but it is not
known whom precisely they gave it. Hrant Bagratyan added that he is
sure that the copper-molybdenum plant of Kajaran, which was allocated
the 10 million, belongs to Robert Kocharyan.

Hrant Bagratyan stated that it comes out that the government helps
a person. Besides, Hrant Bagratyan pointed out that it is not known
whether the money that the government gives is a loan or a financial
assistance, or what are its percents, etc. He stated that the policy
of the government is to contribute their relatives, ex-president,
deputy prime minister and so on; instead, they state that they help
the small and midsize businesses.

Hrant Bagratyan stated that in January, he predicted a decrease of
8-19 percent and the heads of international structures laughed at
him. But, now they are changing their predictions once a month.

Hrant Bagratyan predicts that in 2009, the economic decrease of
Armenia will be from 6 – 7 to 12 percent. "I know the Prime Minister,
don’t expect anything good", stated Hrant Bagratyan.

Armenian, Croatian presidents discuss development of ties

Public Television of Armenia
May 22 2009

Armenian, Croatian presidents discuss development of ties

[Presenter-read report] Armenia sees extensive prospects for
developing bilateral and multilateral cooperation with Croatia,
President [Serzh] Sargsyan has said at a meeting with Croatian
President Stjepan Mesic, who has arrived on an official visit to our
country. An official welcome ceremony for the high-ranking guest took
place at the presidential residence today, and the two presidents had
a tete-a-tete meeting afterwards. Mesic said that he had faced a
friendly and warm welcome from the first minutes upon arriving in our
country and invited Serzh Sargsyan on an official visit to
Croatia. Presidents Sargsyan and Mesic also informed journalists about
agreements on the present and future projects of Armenian-Croatian
relations.

[Correspondent speaking over video of a welcome ceremony] The Croatian
president is for the first time in Armenia, on an official visit. This
is the first meeting in the history of the two countries at the
highest level. Armenia attaches importance to the further development
of relations in the political, economic and cultural spheres with the
country which is the candidate country to the European Union, and also
considers it necessary to fill in the legislative framework. An
official ceremony of welcoming the top official took place at the
presidential residence. The Armenian and Croatian presidents discussed
the current state and the prospects for Armenian-Croatian relations
first at a tete-a-tete meeting and later in an expanded meeting. The
presidents spoke about similarities of civilizations of the Armenian
and Croatian peoples, which have history of millenniums, and
similarities of challenges, which the two peoples have faced during
their history.

[President Sargsyan speaking at the meeting] In fact, this visit is
the first visit in the history of our countries and I consider that
with this we initiate the beginning of good relations and the process
of developing our relations.

[Mesic speaking with Armenian voice-over] I am grateful for the
invitation to visit Armenia, I am content with the result of the
negotiations. Part of Croatia, like Armenia, was under Turkish yoke
for long years, and to some extent, it was part of the state against
the will of its people.

[Correspondent speaking over video of meetings; over video of signing
an agreement] Armenia and Croatia see prospects for developing
bilateral and multilateral relations. The official visit of President
Mesic to Armenia is viewed as a clear stimulus for business circles of
the two countries to boost contacts and trade and economic
activities. The Croatian leader stressed that his country is open to
cooperation and is interested in the market of countries located
geographically far from Europe and that Croatia, for its part, can
help these countries represent their products in the European market.

An agreement on excluding double income and property taxation and
prevention of tax evasion has been signed between the Armenian and
Croatian governments. Also agreements on cultural, education and
scientific cooperation have been signed. The EU candidate country is
in turn interested in developing ties with Armenia, which are included
in the EU Neighbourhood and Eastern Partnership. The Armenian and
Croatian presidents believe that regional conflicts should be settled
in an exclusively peaceful way via negotiations. Sargsyan denied
speculations about that Armenia has toughened its positions on the
Karabakh settlement.

[Sargsyan] I do not believe that the Republic of Armenia has toughened
its positions in the talks with Azerbaijan [on the Karabakh conflict
settlement]. This is not our position. As you know, the major issue in
the Karabakh conflict settlement is Karabakh’s status. If Armenia
raises these issues more clearly, expecting answers to them, it yet
does not mean that we have toughened our positions.

[Correspondent speaking over video of a briefing] Sargsyan said that
Armenia is ready to continue negotiations and added that his another
meeting with the Azerbaijani president is planned to be held in St
Petersburg in June.

There are no issues that cannot be solved, the Croatian president
believes. By citing Kosovo’s example, Mesic emphasized that time is
coming when the solution of the issue of status becomes inevitable.

[Mesic speaking in Croatian with Armenian voice-over] Serbia did not
have further capacity to use its rule over Kosovo and to hold
negotiations. So the issue of Kosovo’s status had to be solved. Kosovo
declared its independence, a new situation emerged and we accepted
this situation. I believe it is possible to settle the Karabakh issue
and this should be done exceptionally via negotiations. The military
way of conflict settlement is fraught with unpredictable consequences,
which lead to a deadlock. It is better to hold talks for 10 years than
to be at war for 10 days.

[Corespondent] Sargsyan told his Croatian counterpart that
Armenian-Azerbaijani relations have nothing to do with the
Armenian-Turkish talks and are different from each other. He said the
solution of complicated problems required great efforts and going
through a complicated path.

[Sargsyan] It is obvious that there are optimists and pessimists both
in Armenia and Turkey and other countries who, not having full
information [about the negotiations], can emotionally express their
happiness or dissatisfaction, their optimism or pessimism. So I was
not inspired by statements of optimists in the beginning, and now I am
also not inspired by statements of pessimists. I believe that Turkey
still continues to have a great opportunity to prove to the
international community and Armenian citizens that it is a modern
country, guided by contemporary principles, and I think it is still
early to make conclusions.

[Correspondent speaking over video of the meeting] Mesic’s three-day
official visit was a familiarization one; the invitation for a
reciprocal visit has been already made. President Sargsyan gladly
accepted President Mesic’s invitation to go on an official visit to
Croatia and said he is sure that the visit will be paid this year and
will contribute to the development of political and economic ties
between the two countries.

Armenian stories ring familiar

New Britain Herald, CT
May 23 2009

Armenian stories ring familiar

Friday, May 22, 2009 10:10 PM EDT
By JENNIFER ABEL
Staff writer

NEW BRITAIN ‘ The New Britain Public Library’s month-long celebration
of Armenian culture continued Thursday night, with a children’s hour
dedicated to traditional Armenian folk and fairy tales.

`Some of the fairy tales have themes similar to American stories,’
said Amy Litke, head of the children’s department. `Themes like strong
women, and the importance of taking control of your life … one
story, `A Weave of Words,’ is about a woman who is a weaver and a man
who is a prince. He can’t even read or write, because he loves hunting
so much. So the woman tells him, `fortunes can change, learn a trade.’
Eventually they’re captured, but manage to earn their freedom by
weaving beautiful rugs.’

The fairy-tale reading, and other Armenian-themed events this month,
are part of the library’s `World of Words’ program. Pat Watson, the
library’s assistant head of adult services, explained the program in
more detail.

`Every year, we select a country to celebrate its culture, literature
and history,’ Watson said. `We try to pick countries with a population
in New Britain, and there’s a good-sized Armenian population here.’

As part of the Armenian World of Words festival, the library will host
an `Armenian Double Feature’ today afternoon at 1 p.m., featuring two
documentary films about Armenian religious culture. (Last Saturday
they had a double feature on a more sobering topic: a documentary on
the Armenian genocide perpetrated by the Turks during World War I).

Other scheduled World of Words events include a bilingual presentation
of Armenian poetry Wednesday and an Armenian cafe featuring native
music and cuisine on May 30.

For more information about the Armenian World of Words festival, call
(860) 224-3155, ext. 125.

9/05/22/news/doc4a175a768a7a3659285147.txt

http://www.newbritainherald.com/articles/200

Armenia Says Nagorny Karabakh ‘Separate’ From Turkey Relations

ARMENIA SAYS NAGORNY KARABAKH ‘SEPARATE’ FROM TURKEY RELATIONS

RIA Novosti
16:5622/05/2009

YEREVAN, May 22 (RIA Novosti) – Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan
said on Friday that Armenian-Turkish ties should be kept separate
from the Nagorny Karabakh conflict.

Turkey is a key ally of Armenia’s neighbor Azerbaijan in the conflict
between the two ex-Soviet states over Nagorny Karabakh, a disputed
region in Azerbaijan with a largely Armenian population.

"Relations between Armenia and Turkey are a separate issue, discussed
during bilateral talks, while negotiations on the Nagorny Karabakh are
a different topic for discussions," Sargsyan told a news conference
after a meeting with Croatian President Stjepan Mesic in Yerevan.

The Armenian leader said Turkey still had a chance to convince the
international community and the Armenian people that it was a modern
country, which conducts its policies on the basis of international law.

Sargsyan and Turkish leader Abdullah Gul met in Prague in May and
agreed to try to rebuild relations within a reasonable timeframe and
without any preconditions.

Armenia and Turkey have had no diplomatic relations since the
Soviet Union broke up in 1991. However, they agreed to a "roadmap"
to normalize their relations under Swiss mediation in April this year.

Turkey closed its border with Armenia in 1993 in a show of support
for Azerbaijan following a bloody conflict over Nagorny Karabakh. Over
35,000 people died in fighting over the area in the early 1990s before
a ceasefire was signed in 1994. Nagorny Karabakh technically remains
part of Azerbaijan, but has its own de facto government.

Turkey Plays The Good Neighbor

TURKEY PLAYS THE GOOD NEIGHBOR
By Helena Cobban

Asia Times Online
23Ak01.html
May 22 2009
Hong Kong

ISTANBUL – Two soaring bridges link Asia and Europe in this historic
city, which straddles the two continents.

For the past few years Turkey has likewise acted as a crucial bridge
between the Western and Muslim worlds. Turkey is a member of both
the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the Organization
of the Islamic Conference (OIC). The current secretary general of
the OIC is a Turkish historian.

In early April, United States President Barak Obama issued a crucial
appeal for understanding between the West and Islam during a visit
to the Turkish capital, Ankara.

The Turkish government has been led since 2002 by the

moderate-Islamist Justice and Development Party (known by its Turkish
initials, AKP). Now Turkey, a democratic country of 71.5 million people
that has long embraced the separation of church (mosque) and state,
looks set to play an increasingly important role in both the Middle
East and the broader Muslim world.

In the Arab-Israeli arena, for eight months until last December,
Turkey sponsored and hosted a series of breakthrough proximity talks
between Israel and Syria. It brought the two nations closer than ever
to concluding a final peace agreement. The talks were abruptly ended
after Israel invaded Gaza on December 28.

In February 2006, Ankara played host to Khaled Meshaal, the national
leader of the Palestinian Islamist movement, Hamas. One month earlier,
Hamas had won the elections to the Palestinian legislature.

Turkey’s President Abdullah Gul and Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan, have both repeatedly called on the international community
to respect the results of the Palestinian elections and urged Western
countries to find a way to deal with Hamas.

In an achievement that indicates Turkey’s weight in world affairs,
Turkey has been able to retain its good relations with Israel even
while adopting this stance.

On US-Iranian relations, Gul and Erdogan have consistently called for a
negotiated resolution of the two countries’ problems. At a conference
held by Sabanci University’s Istanbul Policy Center here Thursday,
former diplomat Can Buharli noted that Turkey’s relations with Iran
have grown stronger over the past decade.

Turkey is a majority-Sunni country. Inter Press Service found no
Turkish nationals who agreed with the claim made by some Western
officials that an Iranian-backed "Shi’ite wave" is about to take
over the Middle East or that Iran’s nuclear program poses a threat
to the region.

In 2003, Turkey firmly opposed the George W Bush administration’s
decision to invade Iraq, and refused to allow the US military to use
Turkey as a transit corridor for the invasion.

The distinctive position that Turkey now occupies in world affairs is,
most Turkish commentators agree, largely a result of the in-depth
strategic thought of Dr Ahmet Davutoglu, who was appointed foreign
minister on May 1. Before that, Davutoglu, 50, worked as a special
adviser to Erdogan, running Turkey’s shuttle diplomacy between Israel
and Syria and other initiatives on Erdogan’s behalf.

Some years ago, Davutoglu developed the concept that Turkey should
have "zero problems with its neighbors". More recently, he has
advocated building on that to strive for "maximum cooperation" with
all neighbors.

With some neighbors, like Armenia and the Kurdish region of northern
Iraq, that approach has proven difficult. But even with those two,
Erdogan has considerably improved relations that were previously
very tense.

In late April, Turkey concluded a five-point "road map" agreement
with Armenia. One of the points stipulated that the two countries will
establish a joint historical commission to investigate what happened
to the Armenians in Turkey in 1915.

Regarding northern Iraq, Turks now seem confident that they have solid
commitments from the ethnic-Kurdish provincial leaders there that they
will no longer give sanctuary to fighters from the Kurdistan Workers’
Party (PKK), a movement of ethnic-Kurdish Turkish citizens that has
waged a lengthy armed struggle in eastern Turkey in support of its
secessionist goals.

Israel is not an immediate neighbor to Turkey. But even there, Erdogan
has worked for maximum cooperation, despite deep differences over Tel
Aviv’s policy toward the Palestinians. In January, those differences
spilled into the elite halls of the annual Davos conference when
Israeli president Shimon Peres raised his voice to Erdogan in a panel
discussion – and Erdogan stormed out of the hall.

Peres later called Erdogan to apologize.

For all its attention to the Middle East, Turkish foreign policy is
still strongly oriented toward the country’s longstanding goal of
joining the European Union.

"We see ourselves as part of the West, without a doubt," Buharli
said. "And our neighbors in the region see us that way, too. Indeed,
that is part of what makes us attractive to them."

The two successive AKP governments in Ankara have brought seven years
of unprecedented political stability to a country that throughout
the Cold War was plagued by numerous military coups. Many people
around the world also view the AKP as an intriguing example of how
an Islamist party that commits to democratic principles can become
well-integrated into the political life of a democracy.

When Turkey became a nation-state in 1923, it was founded on the
explicitly secular and Turkish-nationalist principles of its first
president, Kemal Ataturk. From then until today, Turkish women have
been forbidden to wear Muslim-style headscarves in public universities
or government offices.

Ataturk ran the republic as a one-party state, clamping down on
political opponents. Under him and until very recently, successive
Turkish governments also used the military to ruthlessly suppress
any signs of cultural autonomy or political separatism from members
of the country’s sizeable Kurdish minority.

Since the AKP came to power in 2002 it has moved ahead carefully
on all these once explosive issues. It has not pushed forward its
longstanding request that scarf-wearing women be allowed their full
economic and social rights.

The wives of both Gul and Erdogan are scarf-wearers, as are around
one-quarter of the women one sees on the streets of Istanbul. (The
proportion is reportedly higher in the country’s interior.) But here,
as in many majority-Muslim countries, young women with and without
headscarves mix easily together.

On Kurdish issues the AKP has moved ahead more determinedly – in a
constructive, pro-peace way. Earlier this year the public television
station started airing programing in Kurdish for the first time.

In general, the AKP has built a strong political base by pursuing a
policy of "live and let live" at the ideological level – while also
paying attention to the efficient and non-corrupt delivery of good
public services to all citizens.

One liberal secularist told IPS that though she was not an ideological
supporter of the AKP, "If you are a liberal in Turkey, then the AKP
is probably the party that will best support your needs and interests."

Not all Turkish secularists agree. On Sunday, around 20,000 militant
supporters of Ataturk-style secularism demonstrated in Ankara against
the AKP and against a wide-ranging investigation the country’s
judiciary has launched into a reported anti-government plot hatched
in 2007 in what is called the Ergenekon case.

Istanbul residents expressed different opinions to IPS on whether
there is any substance to the Ergenekon allegations, or whether the
whole affair is an AKP exaggeration or witch-hunt. But they seemed
to agree that the judiciary could be trusted to sort out the truth
from the many lurid allegations now swirling around the case.

In a country where the rule of law was trampled on so thoroughly until
recent years, that trust in the judiciary seems like a significant
achievement.

Helena Cobban is a veteran Middle East analyst and author. She blogs
at

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/KE
www.JustWorldNews.org.

Masis Nikoyan, Who Got Gunshot Wounds, Is Unable To Give Testimony

MASIS NIKOYAN, WHO GOT GUNSHOT WOUNDS, IS UNABLE TO GIVE TESTIMONY

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
22.05.2009 17:23 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On May 21, at 12:20 a.m., Masis Nikoyan, age 40,
Martuni resident, was delivered to Yerevan Hospital N 3 with gunshot
wounds to the head, chest and abdomen.

Upon arriving to the crime site, operative group discovered
four 6,35mm caliber shells and one bullet which were sent for
examination. Circumstances of the case are being clarified.

"Masis Nikoyan is in a grave state and is unable to give testimony,"
RA Police Press Secretary Sayatt Shirinyan told a PanARMENIAN.Net
reporter.

29th Annual Holocaust Conference At Millersville University

29TH ANNUAL HOLOCAUST CONFERENCE AT MILLERSVILLE UNIVERSITY

US Fed News
May 19, 2009 Tuesday 3:49 PM EST

MILLERSVILLE, Pa., March 25 — Millersville University issued the
following news release:

Millersville University of Pennsylvania’s 29th Annual Conference
on the Holocaust and Genocide will take place on Wednesday, April
1 until Friday April 3, 2009. This year’s conference is titled
"Resisting Genocide: History, Culture and the Arts in the Holocaust and
beyond." "In its inception, the conference was aimed almost exclusively
at the study and analysis of the Jewish Holocaust and associated
problems, such as the role of anti-Semitism," said director of the
conference Dr. Saulius Suziedelis, history. "Over the years, however,
while our primary interest still revolves around the Holocaust we have
come to pay increasing attention to other genocides, for example,
the events in Armenia and more recently in Rwanda and Bosnia." The
University’s annual convention is the longest running Holocaust
conference in the world, featuring noted scholars on the Holocaust and
Genocide. Opening the conference is keynote speaker Robert Gellately,
Earl Ray Beck professor of history at Florida State University,
an internationally renowned scholar and award-winning author.

Also included on April 1, Cristina Bejan, research fellow of the
Center for Advanced Holocaust Studies (CAHS) and the United States
Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM) will be the chair discussant of
"National Myths of Holocaust Resistance and Rescue: Slovakia, Turkey,
Bulgaria." In this discussion, various members of USHMM and CAHS will
speak on the involvement of Turkey, Bulgaria and Slovakia’s role in
the Holocaust and Genocide. Films are also involved this year in the
discussions, including Paul Bartorp of Bailik College in Australia’s
discussion of "The Grey Zone and "Escape from Sobibor." Mary Johnson,
senior historian, will show "Blessed is the Match: The life of Hanna
Senesh," a story about Hanna Senesh, a poet and diarist during World
War II. Senesh was involved in the only military rescue mission for
Jews during the holocaust. Producer of "As Seen Through These Eyes,"
Hilary Helstein, executive director of the Los Angeles Jewish Film
Festival will lead the discussion "Art, Film and the Holocaust," along
with survivor of the Vilna Ghetto and artist Judith Goldstein. "As Seen
Through These Eyes" will then be shown after the discussion. A musical
program will take place on April 2 from 7:30 p.m. until 9 p.m. in Lyte
Auditorium, featuring Dr. Robert Convery’s "Songs of Children," written
in memory of the children of the Terezin Concentration Camp. The
Millersville University Chorale, directed by Dr. Jeffrey Gemmell,
music, will perform. Tickets are $10 and more information can be found
at The conference features a wide variety of
discussions and perspectives on the Holocaust, from viewing the arts
of World War II, to the anguish of victims through films and speeches,
to discussions on the use of propaganda during a Genocide to appeal
to emotions. "This is the longest ongoing conference of its kind in
the world and it has a pronounced international element," explained
Suziedelus. "We have hosted presenters from Portugal, Lithuania,
Poland, Bosnia, Rwanda, Israel and other countries." On April 1,
all events will be held in the Lehr Room in Gordinier Conference
Center. For more information on each of the events and speakers, please
see the conference website at The
Heritage Hotel in Lancaster, Pa. is providing lodging for those hoping
to attend the conference. For reservations, call 717-898-2431. If
you would like to be included on the mailing list for the conference,
email Maggie Eichler at [email protected] with your name
and address.For more information please contact: Sarabjit Jagirdar,
Email:- [email protected]

www.muticketsonline.com.
www.millersville.edu/~holo-con/.