Sanctions Must Be Imposed On Turkey

SANCTIONS MUST BE IMPOSED ON TURKEY
By Theodoros Karakostas

Assyrian International News Agency

June 2 2008

The European Union has just published a briefing paper on minorities
in Turkey. The fact that the European Union is addressing issues of
minorities in Turkey is itself positive, but utterly useless without
the imposition of sanctions upon Turkey. To the average observers
of the current plight of the Ecumenical Patriarchate and the Greek
minority in Turkey, the conclusions of the European report about their
problems and the prospect that the Patriarchate itself may be doomed
to extinction is not exactly a new revelation.

Quite problematic is the fact that the European report only addresses
the question of the Greek minority in Turkey emanating to the signing
of the Lausanne Treaty. The persecution and slaughter of the Greek
inhabitants of Asia Minor were begun as early as 1914 under cover of
the First World War. It is in the midst of these genocidal policies
that Greek Prime Minister Eleutherios Venizelos put forward claims on
the territory of the dying Ottoman Empire. It is important to mention
here that several members of today’s European Union, along with the
United States were instrumental in assisting the subsequent rise of
Turkish leader Mustafa Kemal, the horrific slaughter of Greeks and
Armenians at Smyrna in 1922, and legalized through the Lausanne Treaty
the ethnic cleansing of Greek populations throughout Asia Minor under
the obscene phrase "exchange of populations".

The Italians, the French, and the British all supplied the Turkish
nationalists of Mustafa Kemal with arms while simultaneously imposing
an embargo on the Greek Army in Asia Minor. These European powers
all prevented Greece from winning what should have been a war of
liberation for the oppressed Greeks of the collapsed Ottoman Empire. At
the Lausanne Treaty, the man who was to become the dictator of the
Turkish nation (Mustafa Kemal) practically dictated the terms of
"peace" and all the European powers accepted the human sacrifice of
one million Greeks who were forced from their ancestral homelands.

The Lausanne Treaty was in itself an abomination that legitimized
the inhuman measures of the Turkish Nationalists. That even this
Treaty that ceded everything to the Turkish nationalists was violated
from its inception speaks volumes about the European powers and the
international political and legal system which refused to challenge
Turkey’s mistreatment of its minority populations. Turkish leaders
from the time of the signing of the Lausanne Treaty proceeded to
continually harass the Ecumenical Patriarchate and the Greek minority,
without any discernible protests.

To its credit, the report of the European Union makes reference to
the policies against the minorities in Turkey during the Second War,
and to the anti-Greek pogroms of September 1955. These policies however
were the continuation of the genocide that was undertaken between 1914
and 1922 against the Greek populations of Asia Minor. The Turkish
invasions of Cyprus in 1974 were the continuation of the events of
the 1940’s and 1955.

Turkish leaders have come to comprehend that the Western world values
Ankara’s borders at all costs, including the lives of minorities in
Turkey which have absolutely no value whatsoever to the so called
"international community". The Turkish diplomatic and military
leadership despite their public denials, understand full well what
their predecessors did to the Armenians, Assyrians, and Greeks of
Anatolia. The United States and three European powers (Great Britain,
France, Italy) were present when the Greek civilian population of
Smyrna was slaughtered in 1922.

The NATO alliance was entirely indifferent in the midst of the
anti-Greek pogroms in Constantinople in 1955, and during the 1960’s
when thousands of Greeks were driven from Turkey. Now, in fairness to
the United States and the European Union, there are today protests
against the mistreatment of the Ecumenical Patriarchate and the
closure of the theological Seminary on Halki. But these protests are
quite likely too little, too late.

The time for analysis of the problems facing minorities in Turkey is
past. Ankara will not consider such reports, especially when Islamic
fundamentalists and Turkish nationalists alike bitterly oppose ceding
any rights to the Ecumenical Patriarchate. Turkish officials have
in fact been feeding the rage of extremists in Turkey by refusing to
acknowledge the Patriarch’s title of "Ecumenical".

Therefore, the only conclusion to be made is that any serious report
on the mistreatment of minorities must proceed to recommend serious
sanctions against Turkey. Turkey must be made to pay heavily for its
persecution of Christian and other minorities by being officially
barred from joining the European Union. The United States in turn
will remain a hypocrite by continuing to bestow military and economic
assistance upon a country that so disregards the lives of its minority
populations. In short, Turkey must be treated as any pariah country
that so blatantly violates religious freedom and human rights.

Both the United States and the relevant European countries must come to
terms with the roles they played in the destruction of Christianity
in Asia Minor. The United States continues to encourage Turkey’s
persecution of Christianity. Eight present and former Secretaries
of State actively lobbied to block a Congressional Resolution that
would have recognized the Armenian Genocide last year. It would
be very difficult to improve the plight of Christian minorities in
Turkey today, while simultaneously expressing support for Turkish
genocide denial when Turkish instigated genocide is the very reason
why Christians in Turkey today are endangered.

The Ecumenical Patriarchate is endangered because of what transpired in
the past. The difficulties of the Ecumenical Patriarchate preceded the
Treaty of Lausanne. Historically, it may prove to be that the Treaty
of Lausanne was a death warrant for the Ecumenical Patriarchate and
Christianity in any land or territory under Turkish rule.

http://www.aina.org/news/20080602014454.htm
www.globalpolitician.com

UNICEF, HSBC Bank Armenia To Launch Campaign "Help Children To Stay

UNICEF, HSBC BANK ARMENIA TO LAUNCH CAMPAIGN "HELP CHILDREN TO STAY IN FAMILY"

ARKA
June 3, 2008

YEREVAN, June 3. /ARKA/. UNICEF and the HSBC Bank Armenia plan
to launch a campaign Help Children to Stay in Family, UNICEF
Representative in Armenia Sheldon Yett said yesterday at the Yerevan
press conference in the International Press Centre Novosti.

He stressed the importance of involving the private sector and
non-government organizations in the campaign.

Together with HSBC, UNICEF has shot a reel with participation of
Armenian popular singer, UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Alla Levonyan.

The reel is an appeal to help children stay with their family, not in
orphanages. Everyone can contribute to children by sending money on
a special banking account. The organizers plan to launch the campaign
in September, just after the first broadcast of the reel.

Karabakh But Not Genocide Key Problem In Armenia-Turkey Relations, M

KARABAKH BUT NOT GENOCIDE KEY PROBLEM IN ARMENIA-TURKEY RELATIONS, MARKEDONOV SAYS

PanARMENIAN.Net
02.06.2008 18:51 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In early 1990-ies Armenia was ready to normalize
relations. However, the process was uncoordinated, according to a
Russian expert.

"When the Karabakh war broke out Turkey closed the border with Armenia,
thus nullifying all possibilities of reconciliation. Fearing that
Armenian forces can enter Nakhijevan, Ankara has taken up the policy
of late President Turgut Ozal, who said that Turkey is responsible for
the Ottoman heritage," head of the interethnic relations department
at the institute of political and military analysis Sergei Markedonov
said in an interview with PanARMENIAN.Net.

"True, there are politicians in Turkey who wish to normalize relations
with Armenia but the strong Azeri lobby hampers the process. I
should also mention that the key problem is Nagorno Karabakh but not
recognition of the Armenian Genocide," he said.

Armenian & Russian FMs Discussed Karabakh Settlement Process

ARMENIAN AND RUSSIAN FMS DISCUSSED KARABAKH SETTLEMENT PROCESS

DeFacto Agency
June 2 2008
Armenia

YEREVAN, 02.06.08. DE FACTO. Karabakh talks were discussed in Moscow
on May 30, in the course of a meeting of Armenian and Russian FMs
Edvard Nalbandian and Sergey Lavrov.

According to the RA MFA Press Office, Edvard Nalbandian again
reaffirmed Armenia’s adherence to the peaceful resolution of the
Karabakh conflict and the Armenian party’s readiness to continue talks
on the basis of proposals presented by the OSCE Minsk group Co-Chairs.

In the course of the meeting the parties also discussed the issues
referring to security and stability in the South Caucasus.

TABDC: discussion of Genocide, NK make reconciliation possible

PanARMENIAN.Net

TABDC: discussion of Genocide and Karabakh issues make
Turkey-Armenia reconciliation possible
29.05.2008 18:39 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Mosaic Institute invited Kaan
Soyak, the Co-chair of the Turkish Armenian Business
Development Council (TABDC) to Toronto to address a
group of Canadians of Turkish and Armenian origin at a
dinner reception on May 22, independent French
journalist Jan Eckian told PanARMENIAN.Net.

Kaan Soyak and Arsen Ghazarian, the Armenian Co-chair,
established the TABDC in 1997, as a think tank NGO
aimed to improve relations between Armenia and Turkey.

The mission of the TABDC is to seek normalization of
relations between Turkey and Armenia by opening the
border between the two countries, which has been
closed for more than a decade. In addition, the TABDC
advocates establishing diplomatic relations between
Turkey and Armenia.

The Embassies of both Turkey and Armenia in Ottawa
sent senior representatives to the Toronto meeting
convened by the Mosaic Institute. In addition, Foreign
Affairs and International Trade Canada sent a senior
diplomat to be present at the Mosaic Institute event.

"There was a wonderful atmosphere of respect and
willingness to listen" said Vahan Kololian, Chairman
of the Mosaic Institute. "Clearly the TABDC is doing
important work in the Caucuses region, and it is
important for them to know that many in the Turkish
and Armenian Diaspora support their efforts," he said.

Mr. Soyak said, "It is the position of the TABDC that
diplomatic relations can be established and borders
can be opened, while the Genocide issue and the
Nagorno Karabakh problem continue to be studied and
discussed.-

Renowned French Historian arrives in NK

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
May 29 2008

RENOWNED FRENCH HISTORIAN ARRIVED IN NAGORNO-KARABAKH

YEREVAN, 29.05.08. DE FACTO. On May 28 the Chair of the
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic National Assembly Ashot Gulian held a
meeting with a renowned French historian Ives Thernon.
According to the NKR NA Press Office, Ashot Gulian congratulated the
historian on receiving the RA President’s annual award for
contribution to the Armenian Genocide’s international
recognition. `’This award is a worthy estimation of your standing work
for study of Armenian history’s tragic pages”, the Karabakh
Parliament’s Speaker noted.
In his turn, Ives Thernon said he had arrived in Stepanakert on an
acquaintance visit. He also noted he knew Nagorno-Karabakh’s history
well enough.
Upon completion of the meeting the Nagorno-Karabakh Parliament’s Chair
presented Ives Thernon with a memorable medal devoted to the 20th
anniversary of the Karabakh movement.

A sweet dream job: Dressing up cakes

Posted on Thu, May. 29, 2008

A sweet dream job: Dressing up cakes

By Marilynn Marter

Inquirer Food Writer

In her 20s, Nina Asadoorian tried several different outlets for
expressing her artistic talents, including dabbling in clothing
design. She worked successfully as a makeup artist.

And in time turned to making fanciful desserts.

That led to cakes:

Carrot cake with pineapple compote and cream cheese filling. Butter
pound cake with lemon curd and raspberry preserves. Chocolate fudge
cake with chocolate ganache, bits of Reese’s peanut butter cups, and
chocolate-peanut butter buttercream.

Not your typical wedding cakes, to be sure.

But the basis for the decorative cakes that won their creator
Asadoorian, now 41, top honors this month on the Today show.

"I want my cakes to taste as good as they look," she says.

Fifteen years ago, Asadoorian was busy building credits as a makeup
artist in Los Angeles working mostly on music videos and shows, with
some success but little real satisfaction. She came home in 1994.

While she was in L.A., her parents in Philadelphia bought the popular
Rilling’s Bakery from the original owners, transitioning from the
clothing business to baking. (Though her mother still helps out with
the baking, Nina’s brother and brother-in-law now run the business.)

In time, between makeup gigs here, Nina began helping out at the
bakery’s second location (since closed) in Warminster. Later, in 2000,
she produced a line of individual, plated desserts for area markets.

It would be another two years before Nina (then married and the mother
of one son and with twins on the way) stumbled onto what would become
her true calling: cake decorating.

In theatrical "understudy" style, the regular decorator for Rilling’s
broke her foot and a very pregnant Nina was called in at the last
minute to help out.

"It was an emergency, we had a lot of commitments, so I filled in,"
Nina recalled.

"And I really, really liked it."

So much so that several months after her twin daughter’s, now age 5
1/2, were born, Nina began on her path toward becoming a decorating
diva by taking a three-day class with a professional in Lancaster.

"That’s when I decided I loved it. I drove home with a big grin on my
face," she recalled.

By the time her daughters’ first birthday rolled around, she was ready
to produce a special cake for the occasion, one that prompted family
and friends to insist she start doing more.

More classes followed in New York City. She won a city-wide charity
cake competition in 2005 and started taking orders for cakes,
including one for a wedding at the Four Seasons that ended up being so
well-received that it prompted the hotel to place a few orders of its
own.

"At 37, I found my niche and things sort of snowballed," said
Nina. Now she focuses on creating unique, artistic (and pretty costly)
cakes for special occasions.

Truli Confectionary Arts was born as a division of Rilling’s, with
Nina at the helm, and has grown to a staff of six including two
decorating assistants.

And her credits include the cover of the Knot’s "Best of Weddings
2008" issue now on the stands. (She was asked to submit cover
contenders after being featured in the magazine last year, and says
she didn’t know she had won the coveted spot until she saw the
magazine on a rack at Wegman’s.)

Most recently her cakes, the luscious ones aforementioned, were chosen
for Today’s on-air wedding and reception airing June 25.

In addition to the main, three-tier cake for the bridal couple,
smaller (4- to 5-inch) individual cakes – 200 of them – will be served
to each guest at the reception.

Such mini cakes, she concedes, are "a total indulgence" for a bride.

"It’s expensive. Doing smaller cakes is a lot harder work and takes
more time," Nina explained, citing a starting price of about $35 per
cake. With the large handcrafted gumpaste flowers that have become
part of Nina Asadoorian’s signature style, the price goes up from
there. And yes, those big orchids and roses on the cakes shown here
are all handmade and (technically) edible although many prefer to
preserve them in airtight containers or show them off under glass
domes.

"They dry hard and can last a lifetime with proper care," says Nina.

For more traditional large wedding cakes with varying degrees of
decoration, she notes, prices typically run from $6 to about $15 per
person (or serving). She estimates her average cake being $8 to $10
and serving 125 guests (that’s $1,000 to $1,250). On a higher plane, a
seven-tier cake with handpainted designs, flowers, drapes and swags
was among her more expensive contracts at $6,500.

While more orders are coming in from her own and bridal Web sites,
most of her cakes are for private clients and are local jobs for
delivery within reasonable driving distance, which has stretched to
include New York.

"And we had one cake delivered to Belize, by air," she noted.

Along with her custom-designed cakes, Nina does simpler party cakes
that go into the cases at the family bakery every week.

But her interest is in custom work. Even if a customer asks for a
particular design from the Truli Confectionary photo gallery, Nina
encourages personalizing each cake.

"We rarely repeat ourselves. I just love making creative, beautiful
things."

Her inspirations can come from anything and everything – invitations,
pieces of jewelry, gardens, textures, patterns, fabrics.

She has replicated a Marine cap for a groom’s cake, a saddle and boots
for a horse-lover’s birthday, and a poker table so realistic that the
recipient tried to pick up the winning hand of slick gumpaste cards.

Among her favorites: a five-tiered square cake with stenciled designs
and huge lifelike peonies, and a scaled down cascade of Niagara Falls
complete with a mini Maid of the Mist.

Between cakes and caring for now four children (the youngest is 2),
Nina is compiling a book on cake decorating that she expects to
complete next year.

"I’m doing it for charity, either Smile Train [for children with cleft
palates] or St. Jude’s.

"It will be tips and tricks of the trade, with decorating instructions
and recipes from 13 of us, myself and 12 other decorator’s from around
the country. My decorators’ dozen. We each have different styles and
each will do one or two cakes for the book."

Truli Confectionary Arts
2990 Southhampton Road
Philadelphia 19154
215-856-9206

Contact food writer Marilynn Marter at 215-854-5743 or [email protected].

www.truliconfectionaryarts.com

Toronto Board Told Ukrainian Famine Should Be Part Of Genocide Cours

TORONTO BOARD TOLD UKRAINIAN FAMINE SHOULD BE PART OF GENOCIDE COURSE

CBC.ca
May 28 2008
Canada

On the eve of Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko’s visit to Toronto,
the public school board is under pressure to include the Ukrainian
famine in a high school course on genocide.

The course will be offered next year to grade 11 students and will
focus on the Holocaust as well as the Armenian and Rwandan genocides.

Irene Mycak of the Ukrainian Canadian Congress says there’s no reason
for the school board to exclude what Ukrainians call Holdomor from
the genocide course.

In 1932-33, the Soviet government under Josef Stalin systematically
starved and killed anywhere from three million to 10 million people
in Ukraine.

"All food stuff was literally removed from people’s homes. Borders were
closed so no one could run elsewhere to look for food," said Mycak.

On Tuesday, while Yushchenko was on his first official trip to Canada,
Prime Minister Stephen Harper expressed support for a private member’s
bill that would recognize the Ukrainian famine as an act of genocide.

Mycak is hoping that will help influence the Toronto District School
Board.

"Living in Canada, a country which promotes multiculturalism, we
believe that the way the course is structured, it defeats the entire
purpose of the Canadian mosaic," she said.

Darryl Robinson, a human rights lawyer who was on the independent
committee that reviewed the genocide course, recommended excluding
the Ukrainian famine.

Robinson says the recommendation was not politically motivated. "The
course already had three case studies. We thought it was better to go
in-depth with these three case studies. They’re from three different
eras and three different regions."

Officials with the TDSB aren’t commenting on the course until the
curriculum is finalized.

The board is holding a meeting next week to hear submissions from
Ukrainian supporters, as well as appeals from people of other ethnic
backgrounds.

Armenia – Bridge Between Islamic And European Finance World

ARMENIA – BRIDGE BETWEEN ISLAMIC AND EUROPEAN FINANCE WORLD

Panorama.am
17:41 26/05/2008

How to apply Islamic financial services? The question is being
discussed in Armenia. Current topic is a unique tool in the modern
world, said the Prime Minister of Armenia Tigran Sargsyan in financial
banking first conference organized in Armenia on 24 May in Dilijan.

Common services are served in London and United Arabic
Emirates. "Taking into account the legislation of Islamic financial
service, Armenia can pretend to have privileges," said T. Sargsyan. He
mentioned that Armenia has been always intended to become a bridge
between Islamic and European financial worlds.

Russian Youth Group Disputes Georgian Election Results In Ethnic Arm

RUSSIAN YOUTH GROUP DISPUTES GEORGIAN ELECTION RESULTS IN ETHNIC ARMENIAN AREA

Interfax News Agency
May 23, 2008 Friday
Russia

Moscow, 23 May: The Nashi movement, whose representatives received
accreditation to observe the Georgian parliamentary election on 21 May,
intends to challenge the results of voting in one electoral district,
Interfax was told at the movement press service on Friday [23 May].

"In support of our demand, we pointed to numerous violations of the
election process, including ballot-box stuffing, violations of the
inking procedure and other breaches that have prevented voters from
expressing their will appropriately," the Nashi press service said
in a statement.

The document has been sent to the district electoral commission in
the [mainly ethnic Armenian-populated] town of Akhalkalaki, the press
service added. [Passage omitted]

"In general, one can speak of large-scale fraud in this district, which
became possible, among other things, because of the total absence of
opposition observers," the head of the delegation of Nashi observers,
Konstantin Goloskokov, told Interfax. [Passage omitted]

"During the Georgian parliamentary election our observers operated
across the entire country. A huge number of irregularities were
detected at polling stations. Almost none of the polling stations had
lists of parties standing in the election. Voters were transported to
polling stations by force and people who had not lived in Georgia for
a long time and did not have the country’s citizenship were allowed
to vote," the press service said.

Nashi’s evaluation differs radically from the position of international
observers, who did not detect serious irregularities during the
Georgian parliamentary election.