‘Success of traitors’

AZG Armenian Daily #097, 28/05/2005

Turkey

‘SUCCESS OF TRAITORS’

Cemil Ciceq, Turkish justice minister, accused the lecturers of the
Bosphorus University of treason and “stabbing Turkish nation in the back”.
The Council of Higher Educational, following the claims of the minister,
declared the conference a non-scientific one and considered the activities
of its organizers “disgraceful.”

Sabah newspaper wrote in “The Success of the Traitors” article in its May 27
issue that the Council of Higher Educational included the Bosphorus
University in the list of the five best universities of 77 higher
educational institutions functioning in Turkey, giving it the fourth place.
The sarcasm of the newspaper was caused by the accusations addressed by the
Council to the same university on May 25.

By Hakob Chakrian

EU leader: Armenian Genocide issue should be up to Turks, Armenians

Pan Armenian News

EU LEADER: SOLUTION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ISSUE SHOULD BE LEFT TO TURKS AND
ARMENIANS

27.05.2005 08:29

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ `The European Union Turkey aspires to join should not
participate in the debate called to qualify the mass slaughter of Armenians
a Genocide; the solution of the problem should be left to Turks and
Armenians,’ stated EU President, Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude
Juncker. In an interview with Le Soir Belgian newspaper Juncker noted that
`the issue in question incites Armenians and Turks against each other.’
`Turkish PM Erdogan has proposed to form a multinational commission. Let us
leave this issue to Turks and Armenians, who carry this heavy burden of the
history. I do not think we are able to do anything in this process, when the
Turkish Government stated for the first time the problem should be studied,’
he stated. As reported by the source, Jean-Claude Juncker condemned the law
submitted for ratification of the Belgian Senate and providing for criminal
responsibility for denial of the Armenian Genocide. `Belgium sets a bad
example,’ the EU President stated, reported Regnum news agency.

ANKARA: New penal code changes approved

NTV MSNBC, Turkey
May 27 2005

New penal code changes approved

Turkey’s parliament on Friday approved a set of changes to the
country’s new penal code to meet European Union requirements.

Ankara
ASSOCIATED PRESS

May 27 – Journalists said the amendments don’t go far enough in
removing threats to freedoms of expression.

Turkey’s parliament voted 343-3 in favor of the changes to the penal
code, which is scheduled to go into effect on June 1. The new penal
code, the first major overhaul of the 79-year-old legislation,
improves the rights of women and children and brings higher human
rights standards. It
recognizes rape in marriage and sexual harassment as crimes, and
includes tougher measures against rape, pedophilia, human traffickers
and torture.

Journalists criticized the penal code for its vague language, saying
it could make it easier to crack down on journalists. Critics say the
amendments approved Friday make no significant improvements. One
amendment, making it a crime to humiliate state institutions, would
even bring harsher punishments.

Friday’s approval came after Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s
ruling party which has roots in Turkey’s Islamic movement and the
opposition clashed over an amendment that reduces punishments for
people running illegal religion courses from jail terms to a fine.
The main opposition party, the center-left Republican Peoples’ Party,
did not take part in Friday’s vote to protest that amendment and its
leader, Deniz Baykal, accused Erdogan of trying to undermine Turkey’s
secular system.

One new article calls for prison sentences for those who disregard
the state’s «fundamental national interests.» A reasoning attached to
the draft of that article specified that those interest could include
calling for the withdrawal of Turkish soldiers from Cyprus or saying
that Armenians were subjected to genocide during World War I. The
offense could be punishable by three to 10 years in prison.

The legislation needs to be approved by President Ahmet Necdet Sezer.

Lachin region still vital for NKR

Pan Armenian News

LACHIN REGION STILL VITAL FOR NKR

26.05.2005 07:30

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Lachin (Kashatagh) region and other territories have
primarily and up to today been of vital importance for the Nagorno Karabakh
Republic, Nagorno Karabakh Foreign Minister Arman Melikian stated, when
speaking of the NKR stand over that region. `I suppose this will be so in
the future, too. I do not know what I. Aliyev means, when saying as if
agreements over all issues are available, Lachin is the only problem,
however, I am sure that he is well-informed that these regions are of
exclusive importance to us and in my opinion, Azerbaijan has to make
decisions over the issue that are rather difficult to itself,’ the NKR FM
emphasized, Regnum news agency reported.

Armenian premier advocates boosting defence budget

Armenian premier advocates boosting defence budget

Arminfo
26 May 05

YEREVAN

Armenia should draw the necessary conclusions from the statement of
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev that part of the profit to be made
from the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline will be channelled into the
defence sphere, Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Markaryan told
journalists today.

He said Armenia should also increase its defence budget as much as it
can.

At the same time, the prime minister said Armenia’s military budget
could not compete with Azerbaijan’s.

Violence clouds launch of major US-backed Caspian oil pipeline

Violence clouds launch of major US-backed Caspian oil pipeline

AFX Europe (Focus)
May 23, 2005

BAKU (AFX) – The planned launch this Wednesday of the 4 bln usd
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, a major US-backed global energy
initiative, has been clouded by a recent violent crackdown on the
opposition in Azerbaijan.

British oil giant BP holds a 30 pct stake in the consortium running
the pipeline. Other consortium members include Azerbaijan’s state oil
company SOCAR, Amerada Hess, ConocoPhillips, Eni, Inpex, Itochu,
Statoil, TPAO and Unocal.

A huge 11-year-long undertaking, the pipeline will transform the
Caucasus and Turkey into an energy bridge between the Caspian and the
rest of the world when it is fully operational six months from now.

But much of the gleam of that accomplishment was worn away over the
past week by Azerbaijan when police badly beat and arrested scores of
people attending a peaceful rally on Saturday as part of a wider
crackdown linked to the pipeline’s opening.

Authorities refused to allow the rally, saying that it fell too close
to the opening ceremony on Wednesday, which US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice and a host of other foreign dignitaries were due to
attend.

Police rounded up some 30 opposition members ahead of the protest in
what the opposition alleged was an attempt to derail the rally and
arrested another 45 during the rally itself as they doled out severe
beatings to dozens of pro-democracy protestors.

David Woodward, chief executive of BP’s Azerbaijan division,
criticized the violence and voiced skepticism on the government’s
stated rationale for the crackdown.

“It’s very unfortunate,” Woodward told Agence France-Presse, referring
to the weekend violence. “I find it rather surprising that they should
feel the need to ban a small gathering like that essentially well
before any of the VIPs arrive.”

The crackdown was widely criticized by the West, with Norway’s
ambassador to Baku, Steinar Gil, saying some guests expected at the
opening ceremony may find it embarrassing to take part while
opposition activists remain in detention.

The 1,770 km-long pipeline, which will ship up to a million barrels of
Caspian oil to the Mediterranean daily, was built with financial
support from the US.

It was initiated in 1994 as part of Azerbaijan’s so-called “deal of
the century” — a massive oil contract signed in the early 1990s to
develop Caspian Sea oil.

The US hopes transporting oil from this region will reduce its
dependence on fuel from the volatile Middle East. At the same time the
project has loosened Moscow’s grip here and bolstered US influence in
the region.

For Azerbaijan, wracked by corruption and poverty, the project has
been a useful political tool with officials lauding it as the answer
to all of the country’s financial problems.

But the crackdown on the opposition has highlighted concerns that the
awaited benefits, an estimated 40-60 bln usd in oil revenues in the
next 30 years, will not trickle down to the general population in an
atmosphere of general unaccountability.

SOCAR, which holds a 25 pct stake in the BP-led pipeline consortium,
refused to comment on concerns that a high level of opacity in the
company could hamper public accountability to the project.

“There is little transparency in the oil industry and a lot of
corruption in society, and that’s a very bad combination,” said
Ingilab Ahmedov of Baku’s Public Finance Monitoring Center.

According to BP’s Woodward, the government is trying to deal with the
issue. But he said “the old guard,” or officials who have remained in
power since the death in 2003 of the president, Heydar Aliyev, “don’t
want to see reforms progress… and wish to pursue their own personal
interests.”

Internationally, too, critics have said that the West and especially
the US have been too soft on Azerbaijan in their quest to secure oil
supplies.

“There is a huge reluctance to make a stink of what’s inexcusable and
most of that is to do with wanting to maintain the security of
supply,” said Simon Taylor, a director at Global Witness, the
London-based watchdog focused on corruption in resource-rich states.

NKR: Bank Cannot Run Risks

BANK CANNOT RUN RISKS

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic [NKR]
23 May 05

Susanna Balayan: `What loaning policy does the bank carry out?’ Kamo
Nersissian: `The bank grants loans to such branches of economy as
building, agriculture, food production, services, trade, consumer
sector, etc. Since 2004, in accordance with the government programme,
the bank loans money to small and medium-size businesses increasing
the sums significantly in 2005. It is planned to increase the volume
of mortgage loans.’ S.B.: `Will the population benefit from this? Why
cannot the rural population benefit from the loans? Aren’t the
conditions of the bank too tough?’ K.N.: `The economic development
determines the improvement of the quality of life, unemployment
decreases, salaries rise. People will be able to afford better forms
of leisure connected with the development of services. As to loaning
of agriculture, do not forget that Artsakhbank is a commercial bank
and must defend the rights of its shareholders and creditors. In
loaning the bank does not discriminate between rural and urban
inhabitants. Any type of loan is granted on security. Whereas, the
rural inhabitants do not have `suitable’ property to offer as
collateral, as it is required by the bank. The bank does not have the
right to run risks, it is possible only in cooperation with the
government. Today such attempts are made, but again it is mainly
Artsakhbank that runs risk, therefore the bank is cautious in granting
loans agriculture. Besides, the tough conditions in loaning are
determined by the regulations maintained by the Central Bank of
Armenia forall the trade banks, which is the main reason for the tough
loaning policy of the bank.’ S.B.: `Are there privileges for you
permanent customers?’ K.N.: `Certainly. Over several years of
cooperation good relationships have been set up with many of our
customers, and the bank offers more favourable conditions to them,
because the bank can estimate the degree of risk. Besides, the
department of loans regularly analyzes the financial state of the big
creaditors, and as a result surprises are excluded.’ S.B.: `How would
you evaluate the dynamics of loan investments of the bank?’ K.N.: `By
January 1, 2004 loan investments in the NKR economy totaled 3728.9
million drams, while by January 1, 2005 they had amounted to 5163.8
million drams growing by 38.4 per cent. For NKR this is a significant
growth.’ S.B.: `What is the situation on the loan market in NKR like,
what banks are involved in the market, and are there other
organizations likely to be involved in this sector?’ K.N.: `Today it
is pointless to speak about a loan market in NKR, for the monopoly of
the bank is obvious. We do not have competitors (there are small local
branches of Armenia which do not have great possibilities and conduct
an even more cautious policy of loaning). Unfortunately it is so,
whereas free competition would improve banking services, as well as
relieve our work, for efficiency is impacted by a large number of
customers, especially in the departmentof loans. In the nearest future
we do not expect appearance of serious banks because of the lack of
investments caused by geographic and political reasons. We still live
and work in an area of risk.’ S.B.: `Does the lack of the institution
of insurance affect granting loans negatively?’ K.N.: `A system of
insurance in NKR would be an ideal variant and would considerably
reduce the credit risk.’

SUSANNA BALAYAN.
23-05-2005

Turkish slyness and disappointment

Turkish slyness and disappointment

Yerkir/am
May 20, 2005

It seems that Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan’s letter to the Armenian
president sent weeks ago and Kocharian’s response to it have become a
kind of a center for the speculations on the Armenian-Turkish
relations.

Every now and then, Turkey circulates the thoughts expressed in the
letter, trying to prove at any price that the Armenian Genocide issue
should be left for historians. Moreover, the Turkish side proposed to
hold a gathering of Armenian and Turkish scholars to settle the issue.

In addition, a possible meeting between Kocharian and Erdogan was
persistently discussed; Turkey’s Foreign Minister Gul did not rule out
such a possibility, and the Turkish press was continuously raising the
issue. The predictions of the Turkish press, which presented the
desirable as a fact, did not come true and the foreign ministry’s
plans evaporated.

Official Baku maintains that Armenia will secede 7 occupied district

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
May 20, 2005, Friday

MINISTERIAL CANARD

SOURCE: Novye Izvestia, May 18, 2005, pp. 1, 4
by Mekhman Gafarly

OFFICIAL BAKU MAINTAINS THAT ARMENIA WILL SECEDE 7 OCCUPIED DISTRICTS

Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan Elmar Mamedjarov made a sensational
statement on Monday. Commenting on the outcome of a meeting between
presidents Ilham Aliyev (Azerbaijan) and Robert Kocharjan (Armenia), in
the course of the Council of Europe summit in Warsaw on May 15, he said
that “Armenia is ready to return 7 occupied districts to Azerbaijan.”

Mamedjarov spoke of Yerevan’s readiness on the air of Azerbaijani ATV
channel. He said that the Armenians had decided to make the concession
and were now thinking about when because “solution to the problem will
take a lot of time.” The minister ascribed the delay to the necessity
to settle the matters of refugees, restoration of communications,
sweep the territories of landmines, etc. Speaking of the format of the
forthcoming talks, Mamedjarov pointed out that Azerbaijan was ready
for negotiations on all levels for the sake of a successful solution
to the problem. He said nevertheless that Azerbaijan insisted on
complete restoration of its territorial integrity and that included
withdrawal of the Armenian army from Nagorno-Karabakh.

Yerevan took Mamedjarov’s statement with a grain of salt. Press
secretary of the Armenian Foreign Ministry said yesterday that he had
not heard anything about any such agreements. Sources in the Embassy
of Armenia in Moscow declined comments altogether.

In the meantime, representatives of the Azerbaijani opposition claim
that Mamedjarov’s “sensational” statement is aimed first and foremost
for the population of the country. Aliyev needs people’s support
on the eve of the parliamentary election slated for November. The
opposition already accuses his regime of the inability to solve the
Nagorno-Karabakh problem and calls for restoration of territorial
integrity of the country by sheer strength of arms.

In the Armenian-Azerbaijani war in the early 1990’s Yerevan ended
up controlling Nagorno-Karabakh itself and seven adjacent districts
of Azerbaijan.

Almost 1,000,000 Azerbaijanis became refugees, living in tent camps.
The opposition uses them in its political actions and views refugees
as its potential electorate.

According to the opposition, Aliyev’s inner circle plans to renew
hostilities over Nagorno-Karabakh in case the situation deteriorates
after the parliamentary election. In an attempt to distract the
population from anti-presidential actions, the national army of
Azerbaijan may try to liberate the seven occupied districts. On
the other hand, official Baku will go for it only with silent
consent from the United States, Russia, and Armenia itself (which
is extremely unlikely of course). There are rumors in Baku nowadays
that Washington and Moscow have already given their consent to this
turn of events. These capitals are allegedly persuading Yerevan not
to support Nagorno-Karabakh separatists in a new war. The new war
will not affect Nagorno-Karabakh itself. There is the hypothesis
that when official Yerevan has been persuaded to let it go, Moscow
and Washington will organize a show – liberation of several districts
of Azerbaijan from the Armenian troops. The show will be followed by
lengthy and fruitless negotiations between the warring sides again.

Moscow and even Washington now are worried by the prospect of
solidification of Turkey’s positions in Azerbaijan. Pro-Turkish Musavat
financed by Turkish business is the main force of the opposition
in Azerbaijan that will surely ascend to state power were Aliyev
dethroned. Musavat leader, Isa Gambar has already promised official
Baku a revolution if it tampered with the outcome of the parliamentary
election. The government of Turkey headed by Tajip Regep Erdogan,
leader of the moderate Islamists, is closely interacting with Iran. He
is closer to Europe than to the United States. Since Washington may
use the territory of Azerbaijan in a conflict with Tehran, Turkish
clout with this republic is the last thing the Americans want. As for
Moscow, it fears that pro-Turkish bias in the policy of Azerbaijan
will provoke a new wave of separatism in the Caucasus.

Chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group (Foreign Minister of Russia Sergei
Lavrov, Foreign Minister of France Michel Barnier, and US Ambassador
Stephen Mann) released a joint statement on the outcome of the
meeting of Azerbaijani and Armenian president in Warsaw, yesterday.
According to the document, Aliyev and Kocharjan “confirmed their
willingness to settle the Nagorno-Karabakh problem by negotiations.”

Translated by A. Ignatkin

Las Vegas: Sarkisian family’s quest continues

Sarkisian family’s quest continues
By Timothy Pratt

Las Vegas Sun
May 16 2005

LAS VEGAS SUN

Sitting at a Formica table in that most American of institutions,
the pizza parlor, Ukrainian-born Rouben Sarkisian made a fist-pounding
point about the U.S. Constitution and the Bill of Rights.

“This is everywhere real,” he said.

“It hasn’t changed since 1776 … and this is a real democratic
republic.”

The point, perhaps obvious for most, was a revelation for Sarkisian
— who learned while studying for the federal citizenship exam he
recently took and passed — that the United States is the way it is
now because of events 229 years ago.

Sarkisian is the father of Emma and Mariam, perhaps the most famous
teenage sisters living illegally in the United States and almost
certainly the only ones in recent history saved from deportation by
a last-minute phone call from a high-ranking senator to the secretary
of homeland security.

His passing the test was key to the future of his daughters, since
becoming a citizen is the only way he can then petition for them to
do the same, which would guarantee their future in the United States.

But the case — already full of headline-grabbing twists and turns
— is still not over because passing the test, which included such
questions as “What were the original 13 colonies?” is not the same
as being accepted as a citizen.

As Peter Ashman, head of the local chapter of American Immigration
Lawyers Association, put it, “He’s a step closer, but he’s not
there yet.”

That step was taken in the half-hour exam April 20, after months of
late-night studying between pizzas at the Tropicana Pizza in Green
Valley that Rouben runs.

He said he was very nervous, since many people had told him the test
would be difficult for someone whose years of 12-hour work days
had left little time for studying English, let alone U.S. history
and politics.

But he passed, which felt, he said, “like an angel came down.”

That means he knew the answers to questions such as, “How many senators
are there in the Congress?” and “What is the Bill of Rights?”

Now he awaits a letter from federal immigration officials notifying
him of being approved in his application to become a citizen, at
which point he would be scheduled to take an oath of citizenship at
the George Federal Building.

If he reaches that step, he would be one of an average of about 300 new
citizens a month in the Las Vegas area, according to Marie Sebrechts,
spokeswoman for the Bureau of Customs and Immigration Services.

And then he could petition for his daughters to acquire legal status.

As with everything in this case, however, there’s a catch, and more
last-minute events may be in store.

The catch comes from the conditions left in place after Sen. Harry
Reid, D-Nev., called Tom Ridge on Jan. 26 and asked the official —
whose office oversees immigration — to give the case “personal
attention.”

The sisters had been detained in Las Vegas Jan. 14 and sent to a Los
Angeles holding cell pending deportation to Armenia, their birthplace.

The story of the Sarkisian sisters began more than a decade earlier,
however, when their parents brought them to this country. The couple
had three more daughters here, then got divorced. Rouben married
a U.S. citizen and obtained status as a resident, the step below
citizenship.

He thought he had obtained status for Emma and Mariam as well over
the years but found out otherwise when on Jan. 14 he took them to the
Las Vegas office of the Bureau of Customs and Immigration Services
for papers he thought would allow Emma to obtain a driver’s license.

Instead, the sisters were sent to Los Angeles and scheduled to be
sent back to Armenia, a country where they don’t speak the language
and have no family.

The media caught wind of the case. The public opposed the move and
let Nevada’s congressional delegation know it. Reid made the call
to Ridge after nearly two weeks of constant headlines and dozens of
calls and letters to his office.

But federal authorities released Emma and Mariam under what’s called
a “deferred action.” This means they still have no legal status in
the country and must report to authorities periodically. Their first
appointment is scheduled for late July.

So now the family is nervous about what happens if Rouben hears
nothing about his application until then, and they wonder why it’s
taking so long to hear from immigration authorities.

Ashman said he has seen some cases take a year or more to be
resolved. One reason for the hold-up could be that the FBI background
check required of all applicants may not have been completed, he said.

The Rev. Phil Carolin, executive director of the Citizenship Project,
a nonprofit organization that helps immigrants become citizens, said
that most people who seek help at his agency receive their acceptance
letter, which includes the swearing-in date, within two to six weeks
of having passed the test.

Kathia Pereira, an immigration lawyer who works pro bono for the
project, said that federal law says immigration authorities must
respond in 120 days or less, but are taking longer since Sept. 11,
mostly because of the FBI check.

Sebrechts said that about 15 percent of all applicants who pass the
test then have the same line checked off that was checked off for
Rouben’s case on a form called “Naturalization Interview Results.”

The line says simply, “A decision cannot yet be made about your
application.”

Carolin said those who have that line checked off in his agency wait
an average of six months to hear from authorities.

At the same time, however, Virginia Kice, spokeswoman for Immigration
and Customs Enforcement, said Emma and Mariam’s stay in the United
States is not necessarily in jeopardy just because the father’s
application for citizenship is still up in the air.

“The period of their deferred action is indefinite … (and) no
enforcement action is imminent,” she said.

The appointment for the sisters in July “is to check up on the status
of their case and see if anything has changed.”

Meanwhile, Rouben continues working in his pizza parlor and says that
he “remember(s) everything” he learned while studying for his exam.

“This is a real democratic republic,” he repeats.

“I am so happy my babies live in this country.”