BAKU: Turkish-Azerbaijani Circles Federation Addresses Abdullah Gul

Turkish-Azerbaijani Circles Federation addresses Abdullah Gul

APA
April 7 2009
Azerbaijan

Baku-APA. Turkish-Azerbaijani Circles Federation addressed Turkish
president Abdullah Gul. While results and tragedies of Karabakh war
are before eyes, outside pressures on Turkey to open its borders with
Armenia are increased, the Federation said, the State Committee for
Diaspora Activity told APA. The Federation authorities said that no
problem would be resolved without returning of occupied territories
to Azerbaijan. "How can those, who call Eastern Anatolia the "Western
Armenia" and Agri Mountain the "Ararat" and those, who committed
genocide against the Turkish people for many times, to demand the
opening of borders?"

"Both Turkey and Azerbaijan have a historic responsibility to defend
their peoples. Turkey fulfilled this responsibility so far and will
fulfill it further. We, the citizens of Turkish Republic, have no doubt
that Turkey will do that. Azerbaijan is not alone. We have no right to
lose the belief and love of Azerbaijani people", said the Federation.

NKR: Congratulatory Address In View Of April 7

CONGRATULATORY ADDRESS IN VIEW OF APRIL 7

NKR Government Information and
Public Relations Department
April 06, 2009

Dear women of Artsakh

Accept my warmest congratulations in view of April 7, the Day of
Maternity and Beauty, a wonderful holiday, and the best opportunity
to express our respect, gratitude and love towards you, Your grand
and unique existence once again.

your mission in the life of our people and country by the God’s
will – to impart the life of the society with sense, interest, charm
and purposefulness is really unappreciable. At present, when it is
important to overcome socio-economic difficulties aroused before our
country, to improve the demographic situation, to found healthy and
creative moral and psychological atmosphere by joint efforts, our
state appraises maternal strivings and rights of women time and again
Maternity and beauty are mighty impulses for maintaining our hearths
and national originality, to be inspired and pass the retained path
successfully. Deeply realizing Your irreplaceable role, our state has
outlined different programmes, which will improve Your life greatly,
will make working and living conditions of all of you more auspicious,
and is already putting them into practice Dear mothers, wives and
daughters! Let all the flowers of Artsakh blossom and be fragrant
for You! Be healthy and happy! My hearty wishes to Your families
and relatives.

With loving care

PRIME MINISTER of NKR ARA HAROUTYUNYAN

Barack Obama Sidesteps Armenian Genocide Row On Trip To Turkey

BARACK OBAMA SIDESTEPS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ROW ON TRIP TO TURKEY
Philippe Naughton

Times Online
April 6, 2009

Barack Obama found his diplomatic skills tested to the limit today
when he was forced to address the Turkish slaughter of Armenians during
the dying days of the Ottoman Empire without using the word "genocide".

Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed in a
systematic campaign of extermination during the First World War, and
during his campaign for the presidency Mr Obama declared that "America
deserves a leader who speaks truthfully about the Armenian genocide".

Today, during a joint press conference in Ankara with his Turkish
counterpart Abdullah Gul, President Obama said that his views had
not changed but he took extreme care not to use the word "genocide"
so as not to inflame his hosts, who have always denied the claims.

Instead, he expressed the hope that talks between Turkey and Armenia
could "bear fruit very soon" and he wanted to support that process.

"Well, my views are on the record and I have not changed views,"
Mr Obama said in response to a question about the genocide and his
stance on it.

"I want to focus not on my views right now, but on the views of the
Turkish and Armenian people. If they can move forward and deal with
a difficult and tragic history, then I think the entire world should
encourage that."

Responding to the same question, Mr Gul appeared to back Mr Obama
by declaring that it was "not a legal or political issue, but an
historical issue" which was being addressed by a joint commission
of historians.

Even though he took a swipe at members of the Armenian diaspora
who use the issue to "cling to their identity", he also appeared to
suggest that a breakthrough was near.

"Our view is that we should let the historians, the experts, sit down,"
Mr Gul said.

"We are ready to face the reality, the facts. I cannot be the
politicians who decide what happened when, who lost the most lives
and who is right and who is wrong."

Turkey Looks Forward to Historic Obama Visit

*Turkey Looks Forward to Historic Obama Visit*

By Kevin Sullivan
Washington Post Foreign Service
Saturday, April 4, 2009; 2:29 PM

rticle/2009/04/04/AR2009040401484.html

ANKARA, Turkey, April 4 — Shoe-shiner Kasim Kirsakal sat outside a
mosque, directly across from a bank using a poster of President Obama to
promote low-interest loans.

"Obama is trustworthy, that’s why people like those ads," he said,
referring to Garanti Bank’s poster campaign and its popular television
spot, in which an Obama look-alike promotes the bank at a mock White
House news conference.

When Obama arrives in Turkey on Sunday night for a two-day visit to this
capital city and Istanbul, he will find a nation of nearly 72 million
Muslims almost giddy at the prospect of improved relations with the
United States after years of tension with the Bush administration.

"Obama is going to just mesmerize people," said Ali Carkoglu, professor
of political science at Sabanci University in Istanbul. "He’s going to
be a rock star."

By making a high-profile visit to this proudly secular, predominantly
Muslim nation on his first overseas trip, Obama is signaling Turkey’s
strategic importance as a bridge between the West and the Middle East.

Turkey, which borders Greece and Bulgaria to the west and Syria, Iraq,
Iran, Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia to the east, is an increasingly
active player in nearly every major issue affecting U.S. relations in
the region.

It’s a member of NATO and the G-20 group of leading economies, it holds
a rotating seat on the U.N. Security Council (for the first time since
1961) and it is pressing to join the European Union.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government has been deeply
involved in dialogue between Israel, and Syria, and with Iran,
Pakistan and Afghanistan, where it has about 1,200 troops deployed as
part of a NATO force. Incirlik, a U.S. airbase in southern Turkey, is
a key staging area for operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Turkey is also a critical part of the supply route for energy reserves
flowing from the Caspian Sea to Western markets. While the country is
dependent on Iran for much of its oil, it is a valuable partner as
Washington looks to engage Tehran.

"During the Bush administration, we had some different views. But now we
have identical policies with the Obama administration," said Ahmet
Davutoglu, Erdogan’s chief foreign policy adviser, who called Obama’s
visit "historic."

"If you look at the agendas of the two countries, it is almost the
same," he said. "Our experience in the region and their new approach are
very compatible."

During his visit, Obama will address the Turkish parliament — the first
U.S. president to do so since Bill Clinton in 1999 — and meet with
religious leaders. He will also make high-profile visits to the tomb of
secularist national founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in Ankara and the Blue
Mosque in Istanbul, one of Islam’s most stunning sites.

On a sunny morning in the Bahceli neighborhood, where smartly dressed
shoppers sipped Starbucks coffee and the less well-to-do hawked fish
from their trucks, nearly every mention of Obama was greeted with a smile.

Yurdagul Oguzman, 29, who works in a small food shop, said that Obama
"seems peaceful." And, like many people interviewed, she said her
impressions of Obama were more positive than her views of the United
States.

"I have a bad impression of America because they are so fond of making
wars," she said. "But I think Obama can change that."

A recent poll by Infakto, a Turkish research firm, found that Turks
viewed Obama as the most trusted foreign leader. Almost 52 percent had a
"positive opinion" about Obama, although only 23 percent viewed the
United States favorably.

"People believe Obama has warmer feelings toward the Muslim world and
the relationship will be different," said Emre Erdogan, head of Infakto.
"And his middle name is Hussein!"

On one of the highest hilltops of Ankara, near the stone walls of a
citadel dating to Roman times, street sweeper Erdal Aydogan, 44, said
Obama was exciting.

"He has a Muslim background, so when he was elected we were so happy —
it was like he was elected for Turkey!" said Aydogan, who wore a blue
jumpsuit and old tassel loafers.

Turks are fiercely proud of their separation of mosque and state, and
many bristle when the country is referred to as a "moderate Muslim"
nation rather than a "secular democracy."

Carkoglu, the political scientist, said Turks are suspicious that Obama
sees Turkey mainly as a Muslim platform for repairing the battered U.S.
reputation in the Islamic world.

"Obama is facing a subtle balancing act," Carkoglu said. "He has to be
careful not to call Turkey a Muslim country that is a role model for the
Middle East. We don’t want to be a Muslim role model. We want to be a
secular role model."

However, Islam is still a central pillar of Turkish identity. This
weekend, at the NATO summit in France, Erdogan objected to the
selection of Danish Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen as the
group’s new secretary general — largely because it was a Danish
newspaper whose publication of cartoons of the prophet Muhammad
enraged Muslims in 2005.

Obama also must balance the question of how to handle the deaths of
hundreds of thousands of Armenians 90 years ago as the Ottoman Empire
collapsed. For years Obama has called the incident "genocide" and
promised to recognize it as such if elected president.

Turks vehemently deny any mass killings and Erdogan, in a speech Friday
in London, again dismissed the "so-called genocide." Many people
interviewed said their opinion of Obama would sour immediately if he
mentioned Armenian "genocide."

In a narrow alley of ancient wood-and-brick houses, Handan Tunc, 33, a
mother of two in a headscarf, said she hoped Obama’s leadership could
help reverse the global economic crisis. She said her husband’s small
business selling socks and underwear had decreased by 70 percent.

"We don’t know yet what Obama will do, but there is something about him
that makes us think he will do better," she said.

While Turkish banks, which were restructured after a crisis in 2001,
have remained relatively stable, Turkish exporters have been battered as
European markets have dried up. The country is seeking aid from the
International Monetary Fund.

Umut Oran, a member of the opposition Republican People’s Party, or CHP,
and head of the Turkish Clothing Manufacturers Association, said that in
the past eight months, the Turkish stock market and the national
currency, the lira, have lost 40 percent of their value.

Part of Turkey’s problem, Oran said, sipping cappuccino in the glitzy
Sheraton Hotel, where Obama will stay, is that relations between Turkey
and the United States "have been in the freezer" since the 2003 invasion
of Iraq. He said Turkey’s exports have quadrupled since 2001, but
exports to the United States have dropped from 10 percent of the total
to just 3 percent.

Oran said he hoped Obama would revive an idea, shelved in recent years,
to create an industrial zone in southeastern Turkey, near the Iraq
border, for production of tax-advantaged textiles and other goods for
export to the United States.

Oran said mass job creation in that region could help calm Turkey’s
long-standing battles with a Kurdish separatist insurgency that has
frequently crossed from northern Iraq to attack targets in Turkey.

"This is the most important thing Obama could do for the economy and to
help with stability in Iraq," Oran said.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/a

European Parliament Delegation to Arrive in Armenia

EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT DELEGATION TO ARRIVE IN ARMENIA

11:43 04/04/2009
Source: Panorama.am

European Parliament delegation arrives in Yerevan on 6 April to
participate in the European Union-Armenia Parliamentary Co-operation
Committee 10th session, the public relations department of the
National Assembly reports. According to the source the delegation will
have a meeting on 6 April with the chairman of European Commission
Delegation to Armenia Raul De Luzenberger and EU Ambassadors, the
President of the State and Legal Affairs Committee of the NA and the
chairman of Armenian delegation to PACE Davit Harutyunyan, The Chief
of Police Alik Sargsyan, the Minister of Justive Gevorg Danielyan. In
the frames of the committee session the delegation will also have
meetings with the President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan, the Chairman of
National Assembly Hovik Abrahamyan, the representatives of mass media
and NGO-s, the head of OSCE office in Yerevan Sergey Kapinos.

Dickranian School 28th Annual Banquet raises $30,000

TCA Arshag Dickranian Armenian School
1200 N. Cahuenga Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90038
Tel: 323-461-4377
Fax: 323-461-4247
E-mail: [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])
Web: _http://www.dickranianschool.org_ ()
PRESS RELEASE

Friday, April 3, 2009

TCA Arshag Dickranian School 28th Annual PTO Dinner Dance Raises
$30,000

Los Angeles: The TCA Arshag Dickranian School held its 28th Annual
Dinner Dance on Saturday, March 28, 2009 at the school’s plush Walter
and Laurel Karabian Hall. The traditional event, which was sponsored
by the school Board of Trustees and organized by the Parent Teacher
Organization (PTO), was well attended by close to 300 administrators,
parents, students, faculty members, alumni, friends and guests. The
evening was emceed by alumnus Lucine Nalchadjian (Class of 2005), who
gave her introductory remarks about the purpose of the event and the
diligent work done by its organizing committee. She then invited
Father Manoug Markarian, Parish priest of St. John-Garabed Church to
lead the invocation. During dinner served by Marquis Catering, PTO
Chairlady Ophelia Garibyan took the podium to welcome the guests and
give her brief report on what her committee had accomplished since
taking office, and what had yet to come. She then called on her
colleagues to stand up and be recognized.

Principal Vartkes Kourouyan reiterated on the vital support that the
PTO has

granted towards the improvement of the school in the academic and
extra- curricular fields. He then acknowledged the presence of
Mrs. Rozig Der Sarkissian, Mr. Harry Meneshian, Mr. Edward Lafian,
Mrs. Angine Garibyan, Mrs. Shoghig Kandralian and Mrs. Arsho
Shaklian, all past chairpersons of the PTO.

DJ Music was provided by ADS alumnus Arthur Garibyan, as guest singer
Harout

Balian entertained the evening with his vocal renditions. `It is arare
sight and quite enjoyable to see parents, students, alumni, faculty
members and guests all sharing the dance floor and joining the
Armenian circle dance,’ remarked Mrs.Taline Avakian, a visitor from
Switzerland attending the event.

PTO vice chairlady Houri Kourouyan conducted the fundraising. A
surprise gift came from the members of Student Council, who called on
Mr. George K. Mandossian, Chairman of the School Board of Trustees,
and handed a $5000 donation check. Founded in 1981, The TCA Arshag
Dickranian Armenian School is a Pre-K through grade 12 co-educational
facility which serves the Armenian community at large. It is
accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges (WASC)
and has federal tax exemption status. Visit _www.dickranianschool.org_
(http://www.dickranians chool.org/) for more information.

http://www.dickranianschool.org/

RA Government Reconsiders Brandy Production Order

RA GOVERNMENT RECONSIDERS BRANDY PRODUCTION ORDER

PanARMENIAN.Net
02.04.2009 15:15 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian government has approved new ratios
for brandy production. At that, the minimal percentage of alcohol on
Armenian brandy should make 8%.

The amount of brandy produced in 2008 has increased by 13% and totaled
15961.5 liters.

The edict will come into effect in 6 months.

I Asked Obama About Genocide

I ASKED OBAMA ABOUT GENOCIDE
Christian Van Gorder

Waco Tribune Herald
pinion/stories/2009/03/30/03302009wacvangorder.htm l
March 30 2009

What question would you ask if you had one chance to ask Barack
Obama something? Last October while campaigning in the swing state
of New Mexico for his presidential campaign (we also traveled to
Pennsylvania), my wife and I were told we would have a chance at a
$1,500 fundraiser we’d be attending to meet Obama for a few moments.

After days of thought, I decided to ask if he would pledge to recognize
the Armenian genocide if he became president. When I met him I asked my
question, and he said that he had already acknowledged this reality. He
is repeatedly on record that he would.

Why this question? In a world filled with evils there is no more evil
imaginable than genocide.

My German ancestors filled the sky with the ashes of millions of Jews,
gypsies, homosexuals, communists, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Mormons and
Slavs. In 1915, between 1 million and 2 million men, women and children
of Armenia were systematically massacred by the Ottoman Turkish Empire.

British postwar trials set the number at more than 1 million. Yet, the
Turkish government denies genocide and admits only that thousands of
Armenians died randomly in the midst of the paroxysms of World War I.

This is a blatant, revisionist lie.

The argument in favor of avoiding the recognition of the facts
of history is that the United States lives in a real world where
pragmatic solutions must address actual, present problems.

The United States values Turkey’s support for its wars and its
military bases there. Turkey threatens to remove assistance if we
acknowledge genocide.

This is bullying, pure and simple. Who needs whom more?

When France faced this same question, it acknowledged the facts of
the genocide, and, after months of feuding words, the two countries
returned to strong relations based on mutual self-interests.

This should be America’s path: Do not lamely kowtow to damnable
Turkish attempts to bully our great nation from recognizing Armenia’s
brutal genocide. Admit to the facts of history, then move on in a
constructive partnership.

Yes, it is important to be pragmatic; but at the cost of truth? I
campaigned for, and donated money to, a candidate for the first time
in my life because I was hoping for "change that we can believe in."

Friends told me I was naïve and that Barack was just like every
other snake-oil salesman. On April 24, the anniversary of the murder
of 1.5 million Armenians, we will find out exactly who is right about
Obama’s moral compass.

I pray our president will do the right thing and, with integrity,
honor his commitment to recognize the horrific Armenian genocide.

Christian Van Gorder is an associate professor of religion at Baylor
University.

http://www.wacotrib.com/opin/content/news/o

Rescue Committee Created

RESCUE COMMITTEE CREATED

A1+
01:29 pm | March 26, 2009

Politics

The "Armenian Civil Society" Human Rights Defense Association declares
the political prisoners of the "Case of Seven", as well as Gagik
and Vardan Jhangiryan as "Political Hostages" of the political
elite. According to today’s release, the life and health of the
political prisoners are in real danger.

With that purpose, the Los Angeles-based association has taken
the initiative to form the Rescue Committee for Shant Harutyunyan,
other accused of the "Case of Seven, as well as Gagik and Vardan
Jhangiryan with the following line-up: Vardan Iskandaryan, Harutyun
Harutyunyan, Davit Vardanyan, Vahe Tchughuryan and Karo Karapetyan,
who is head of the association, advocate and coordinator of the Los
Angeles association.

The Rescue Committee views the issue of saving Shant Harutyunyan
and the mentioned political prisoners not only as the issue of their
relatives and RA citizens, but also that of all mankind.

The committee demands the following from the Armenian authorities,
the Ministry of Justice and the court: "The immediate transfer of
Shant Harutyunyan from the psychiatric hospital to a civil one,
terminate the political persecution against him and the remaining
political hostages and not apply other means of imprisonment."

The Committee calls on all RA citizens, Armenian communities of the
Diaspora, all legal defense organizations involved in issues concerning
human rights and freedoms to support the "Political Hostages" Rescue
Committee.

The "Armenian Civil Society" Human Rights Defense Association informs
that former political prisoners of the USSR have joined the statement,
including

1. Yuri Orlov- scholar of the USSR, political prisoner of the USSR,
New York, USA 2. Vladimir Bukovski- political prisoner of the USSR
(has been exchanged with head of the Central Committee of Chili),
London, England 3. Yuri Agayev- former political prisoner of the USSR,
New Jersey, USA 4. Shahen Harutyunyan- former political prisoner of
the USSR, Los Angeles, USA

WTO Forecasts 9% World Trade Fall

WTO FORECASTS 9% WORLD TRADE FALL

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.03.2009 18:47 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The collapse in global demand brought on by the
biggest economic downturn in decades will drive exports down by
roughly 9% in volume terms in 2009, the biggest such contraction
since the Second World War, WTO economists forecast today. The
contraction in developed countries will be particularly severe with
exports falling by 10% this year. In developing countries, which are
far more dependent on trade for growth, exports will shrink by some
2%-3% in 2009, WTO economists say.

Economic contraction in most of the industrial world and steep export
declines already posted in the early months of this year by most major
economies — particularly those in Asia — makes for an unusually
bleak 2009 trade assessment, said the WTO in its annual assessment
of global trade.

Signs of the sharp deterioration in trade were evident in the latter
part of 2008 as demand sagged and production slowed. Although world
trade grew by 2% in volume terms for the whole of 2008 it tapered off
in the last six months and was well down on the 6% volume increase
posted in 2007.

"For the last 30 years trade has been an ever increasing part
of economic activity, with trade growth often outpacing gains in
output. Production for many products is sourced around the world so
there is a multiplier effect — as demand falls sharply overall, trade
will fall even further. The depleted pool of funds available for trade
finance has contributed to the significant decline in trade flows, in
particular in developing countries," said Director-General Pascal Lamy.

"As a consequence, many thousands of trade related jobs are being
lost. Governments must avoid making this bad situation worse
by reverting to protectionist measures which in reality protect no
nation and threaten the loss of more jobs. We are carefully monitoring
trade policy developments. The use of protectionist measures is on
the rise. The risk is increasing of such measures choking off trade
as an engine of recovery. We must be vigilant because we know that
restricting imports only leads your trade partner to follow suit and
hit your exports. Trade can be a potent tool in lifting the world
from these economic doldrums. In London G20 leaders will have a unique
opportunity to unite in moving from pledges to action and refrain from
any further protectionist measure which will render global recovery
efforts less effective," WTO official website cited Mr. Lamy as saying.