ANKARA: Denktas lauds courage of Azerbaijani group visiting TRNC by

Turkish Press
July 29 2005

Press Review

TURKIYE

DENKTAS LAUDS COURAGE OF AZERBAIJANI GROUP VISITING TRNC VIA DIRECT
FLIGHT

Former Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) President Rauf
Denktas yesterday received an Azerbaijani delegation which arrived in
the TRNC via a direct flight from Baku. This direct flight is the
first to the TRNC from another country besides Turkey. During the
meeting, Denktas said that he appreciated the delegation’s action,
adding, `I congratulate you for your bravery and I hope you will set
an example for the world.’ Denktas also criticized countries which
have threatened to recognize Nagorno-Karabagh if Azerbaijan
recognizes the TRNC, adding that the Karabagh dispute between
Azerbaijan and Armenia had nothing to with the Cyprus issue.
/Turkiye/

The Persian Pleasure Principle and the Relative

Persian Journal, Iran
July 27 2005

The Persian Pleasure Principle and the Relative

Samira Mohyeddin – Persian Journal

What the historian says will, however careful he may be to use purely
descriptive language, sooner or later convey his attitude. Detachment
is itself a moral position. The use of neutral language (“Himmler
caused many persons to be asphyxiated”) conveys its own ethical tone.
(Isaiah Berlin / Introduction to “Five Essays on Liberty”, 1969).

Recently, Micheal Ignatieff, Canadian author, broadcaster, and
director of the Carr Centre for Human Rights Policy at the Kennedy
School of Government at Harvard University, was invited to Iran by an
Iranian NGO known as the Cultural Research Bureau, to lecture on
human rights and democracy.

On July 17, 2005, Ignatieff wrote a lengthy editorial about his
experiences in Iran for the New York Times Magazine Titled Iranian
Lessons, Ignatieff begins his article by noting that because of
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s recent win in the Iranian presidential
elections, Ignatieff had to alter his planned lecture. Instead of
asking: “What do democracy and human rights mean in an Islamic
society”?, Ignatieff asks: “Can democracy and human rights make any
headway at all in a society deeply divided between the rich and the
poor, included and excluded, educated and uneducated?”

Initially, one thinks that Ignatieff is speaking to the necessity for
equating and associating socio-economic rights as a human right, a
project that Canadian, Louis Arbour who is currently the United
Nations’ High Commissioner for Human Rights, is advocating and
developing. Ignatieff however does not speak to the constituents,
which he attempts so poorly to champion. Instead, Ignatieff chooses
to give voice to the enfranchised upper echelons of Tehran society.

Although his article begins in south Tehran, with a detailed
description of a walled cemetery dedicated to those who senselessly
perished in the first gulf war, Ignatieff does not address the
concerns and confines of the more than forty percent of Tehran’s
population that live below the poverty line.

Why would Ignatieff choose to not have a single conversation with
anyone in southern Tehran? After all, it was this exact constituency
that brought Ahmadinejad to power. The same constituency that made
Micheal Ignatieff alter the topic of his lecture. Other than an
over-blown and prosaic description of the walled cemetery, complete
with Persian poem, and tea drinking mourners, Ignatieff does not
offer much insight and leaves southern Tehran to its mourning.

In 1985 the United States Congress tried to pass a resolution
officially recognizing the massacre of more than a million Armenians;
specifically referring to the “genocide perpetrated in Turkey between
1915 and 1923.” Sixty-nine historians sent a letter to Congress
disputing this, writing:

As for the charge of “genocide,” no signatory of this statement
wishes to minimize the scope of Armenian suffering. We are likewise
cognizant that it cannot be viewed as separate from the suffering
experienced by the Muslim inhabitants of the region. The weight of
evidence so far uncovered points in the direct of serious inter
communal warfare (perpetrated by Muslim and Christian irregular
forces), complicated by disease, famine, suffering and massacres in
Anatolia and adjoining areas during the First World War. One of the
sixty-nine historians was well known Orientalist and Islamic scholar,
Bernard Lewis.

Although the New York Times reported the atrocities in 1915: “Both
Armenians and Greeks, the two native Christian races of Turkey, are
being systematically uprooted from their homes en masse and driven
forth summarily to distant provinces, where they are scattered in
small groups among Turkish Villages and given the choice between
immediate acceptance of Islam or death by the sword or starvation.”
(“Turks are Evicting Native Christians,” New York Times, July 11,
1915.), in a 1993 interview with Le Monde magazine in France, Lewis
declares that what happened should not be considered genocide — and
that calling it genocide was just “the Armenian version of this
story.” In a second interview a few months later, he referred to “an
Armenian betrayal” in the “context of a struggle, no doubt unequal,
but for material stakes… There is no serious proof of a plan of the
Ottoman government aimed at the extermination of the Armenian
nation.”

Although Lewis is not a human rights or genocide scholar, he is a
historian, and like Ignatieff, who purports to be a human rights
champion extraordinaire, has a certain responsibility. I am not
suggesting that Ignatieff’s self-induced myopia regarding the abysmal
human rights record of the Islamic Republic of Iran, is on par with
genocide denial. I am arguing however that we all make choices. Lewis
made a choice when he referred to the genocide of the Armenians as
“their version of history”. Ignatieff also makes a choice when he
praises the Islamic Republic of Iran on “the achievements of the
revolution”, and continually fetishizes Persian culture throughout
his article.

Referring to something that he coins as “Persian pleasure”, Ignatieff
paints a picture of present day Isfahan: “I spent a night wandering
along the exquisitely lighted vaulted bridges, watching men, not
necessarily gay, strolling hand in hand, singing to each other, and
dancing beneath the arches – came away from a night in Isfahan
believing that Persian pleasure, in the long run, would outlast
Shiite Puritanism.”? Never bothering to define what “Persian
pleasure” is, Ignatieff disregards Iran’s multicultural,
multilingual, and multi-ethnic reality, and instead chooses to paint
a little miniature of boys and men frolicking with one another, BUT
NOT NECESSARILY GAY, and just leaves it there.

Ignatieff also trivializes women’s issues by making repeated
references to women’s dress, make-up, and hair. Yet, Ignatieff fails
to mention that the covering of women’s hair, however miniscule it
may seem these days, is mandatory for women in Iran, and failure to
do so carries the penalty of 102 lashes. After lamenting the fact
that “young Iranians are so hostile to clerical rule”?, Ignatieff
goes on to make an audacious suggestion to the female students that
he speaks to in the university telling them not to reject sharia out
right but to “reform shariah from within.”? Irrespective of
Ignatieff’s deluded prescription, what was heartening was the answer
that those female students gave to Ignatieff’s suggestion: “You are
too nice to Shariah law. It must be abolished. It cannot be changed.”

Early on in the article, Ignatieff describes how he came upon the
scene of a small student led demonstration regarding the elections in
Iran and was witness to a secret police officer attempting to abduct
one of the students and push him into the back of an unmarked
vehicle. Ignatieff goes on to describe how some of the demonstrators
came to the aid of the student by punching and kicking the officer.
Ignatieff’s next assertion regarding what he has just been witness to
is quite puzzling and disappointing. Referring to the student who had
managed to wrangle himself free, Ignatieff posits “In a more
genuinely fearful police state, he would have gone quietly.”? Is
Ignatieff suggesting that Iran is not a police state? Although
Ignatieff does recognize that the Iranian government does not give
much credence to the concept of human rights, he fails to offer any
critical assessment of the situation of human rights in Iran.

Two days after Ignatieff’s publication, on July 19, 2005, Amnesty
International reported that two youths, both under the age of 18,
were executed in the Iranian province of Mashad for having sexual
relations with one another and a 13 year-old boy. Prior to their
execution both were given 228 lashes for consuming alcohol and
disturbing the peace.

Unlike Ignatieff’s idyllic miniature of late night Isfahan, these
boys ARE NECESSARILY GAY, and were hung for being so in true medieval
fashion. This is where Ignatieff’s dreamy and congenial romance with
Persian pleasure falls apart. Ignatieff’s self-induced myopia
regarding the socio-political situation of Iranians, particularly the
young, is the specific reason why Ignatieff’s article on Iran reads
more like the accounts of a political economist turned harlequin
romance writer, than a scholar of human rights.

NOTE: Bernard Lewis’s denial of the Armenian Genocide can be found on
the Turkish embassies website
().

Samira Mohyeddin is a graduate student at the Institute for Women’s
Studies and Gender Studies at the University of Toronto

http://www.turkishembassy.org/governmentpolitics/issuesarmenian.htm
http://www.iranian.ws/iran_news/publish/article_8487.shtml

EBRD provides $3m finance to Armenian bank

EBRD provides $3m finance to Armenian bank

July 25 2005

Press Release – European Bank for Reconstruction and Development

The European Bank for Reconstruction and Development is providing a
$3 million financing to the Agricultural Cooperative Bank of Armenia
(ACBA). The loan is the first in Armenia of a new type of EBRD
instrument, the Medium-Sized Loan Co-Financing Facility (MCFF).

The MCFF is one of several instruments offered in Armenia,
Azerbaijan, Georgia, the Kyrgyz Republic, Moldova, Tajikistan and
Uzbekistan, the Bank’s seven lowest-income countries of operation,
under the Early Transition Countries (ETC) initiative. This
initiative, launched by the EBRD in 2004, aims to stimulate market
activity by using a streamlined approach to financing more and
smaller projects, mobilising more investment, and encouraging
economic reform. The initiative is part of an international effort to
address poverty in these members of the Commonwealth of Independent
States (the former Soviet Union). The Bank will accept higher risk in
the projects it finances in the ETCs, while still respecting the
principles of sound banking.

The MCFF is available to banks with strong credit policies and
procedures, but which are limited in the loans they can provide to
local corporate clients. It allows ACBA to co-finance, with the EBRD,
bigger sub-loans to its clients and share with the EBRD any risks
involved with such lending. While ACBA’s internal credit procedures
have until now limited any credit exposure per single borrower to a
maximum of $180,000, with the help of the MCFF it will be able to
offer its most trusted and financially viable clients from $400,000
to $1 million.

ACBA was created in 1996 to help farmers find finance after Armenia
privatised state-held land. It was modelled on France’s Credit
Agricole. Its structure — with collective ownership based on village
cooperative associations, and coffers swelled at the grassroots by
more than 20,000 farmers’ sign-up fees of $10 – is unique in the
former Soviet space. ACBA has since developed business outside
agriculture in almost all areas of the economy. The EBRD is delighted
to make this co-financing available to ACBA, which is now Armenia’s
largest bank by capitalisation, and generates solid profits, said
Michael Weinstein, head of the EBRD’s Armenia Resident Office.

Alumna and Husband Give Cal State Northridge Record $7.3m Donation

AScribe
July 20 2005

Alumna and Husband Give Cal State Northridge Record $7.3 Million
Donation; Largest Cash Gift Will Expand Student Scholarships, Aid
Performing Arts Center

NORTHRIDGE, Calif., July 20 (AScribe Newswire) — A former San Fernando
High School art teacher who graduated from Cal State Northridge
and her husband have donated their entire $7.3 million estate as
a bequest to the university for expanding student scholarships,
marking the largest cash and alumni gift in the university’s history.

The endowment created by longtime San Fernando Valley residents
Mary and Jack Bayramian — who passed away in November 2002 and
January 2005, respectively — will fund two major new university
scholarship programs, including a $2.3 million portion to launch
student scholarships for the future Valley Performing Arts Center
project on the campus.

“This remarkable gift from Mary and Jack Bayramian will empower the
university to support outstanding students,” said Cal State Northridge
President Jolene Koester. “The Bayramians, who were devoted to each
other during more than 60 years of marriage, now have extended that
caring to improve the lives of hundreds of our students.”

To honor the gift, the California State University Board of Trustees,
meeting today in Long Beach, is scheduled to consider renaming the
university’s Student Services Building as Bayramian Hall. President
Koester called the dedication a fitting tribute, because the building
houses the university’s scholarship, financial aid and other student
support services offices.

“Because Aunt Mary graduated from Cal State Northridge, she had a great
feeling for the university,” said Don Barsumian, Mary Bayramian’s
nephew, who is the couple’s trustee. “I think she had a real love
for young people and for education. Mary believed in education and
she wanted to help. This was her way of helping,” Barsumian said.

Mary and Jack Bayramian each had Armenian parents from Aintab, Turkey,
who came to the United States to escape persecution. The two lived
near each other as teenagers and graduated together from Hamilton
High School in West Los Angeles in 1939, marrying in 1942.

After Navy service during World War II, Jack had a 20-year career as
a Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Co. technician.

After the war, the couple first lived in Reseda and later bought a
Northridge house several blocks west of today’s university campus. A
homemaker who returned to college in her late 30s, Mary Bayramian
attended from 1960 to 1963, earning a bachelor’s degree in art and
a teaching credential from San Fernando Valley State College, which
later became Cal State Northridge.

After graduating, Mary Bayramian went on to teach art at nearby San
Fernando High School, where she was affectionately known as “Mrs. B,”
until the couple retired in 1971. At age 50, they moved to Laguna Beach
in Orange County and lived there another 30 years, investing, improving
and managing real estate, and settling in an ocean-front home.

The Bayramians led an extraordinarily active life. Mary was an active
cook and author of published cookbooks, designed and created her own
jewelry, painted and played golf well into her 70s. Barsumian described
Jack as the unofficial greeter of Laguna Beach and a “firecracker”
who in his younger years was an avid handyman skilled in electrical,
carpentry and concrete work.

The couple’s $7.3 million endowment will create the Bayramian Family
Scholarship Fund at Cal State Northridge and support two major new
programs. The earnings from $5 million of the endowment will fund
the newly named Mary and Jack Bayramian Presidential Scholars and
related scholarships within the university’s premier Northridge
Scholars Program.

The Bayramian Presidential Scholar awards, the most prestigious
granted by the university, will ultimately go each year to two dozen
or more high-achieving upper-division students through a competitive
process. Recipients will partner with faculty members on scholarly
projects. The scholarships include a $5,000 award, bookstore discount,
priority registration and other perks.

Earnings from the other $2.3 million will fund Mary Bayramian Arts
Scholars and become the largest gift yet toward Imagine the Arts,
the fundraising campaign for the 1,600-seat Valley Performing Arts
Center planned for the campus. These scholarships will support upper
division and graduate students involved in the project through their
courses, internships or related activities.

“Mary Bayramian was an art student at Cal State Northridge, an arts
teacher at San Fernando High School, and an artist herself,” said Judy
C. Knudson, CSUN’s vice president for university advancement. “She
was deeply engaged in the arts, and especially in opening the world
of art to others, a goal that will be advanced by the Performing Arts
Center project.”

CSUN earlier this month launched the campaign for private funds to
match the state dollars that will build/operate the Valley Performing
Arts Center, due to open within the next five years.

Planned as a signature facility, the center will be the largest
venue of its kind in the San Fernando Valley and open the region to
high-caliber performances not currently able to perform there.

The university learned only recently that the couple had given CSUN’s
largest-ever cash gift after the husband’s passing in January 2005. The
university’s prior largest cash gift came from The Eisner Foundation
in 2002 when Disney CEO Michael D. Eisner and his wife Jane gave $7
million to create a new teacher-training program at the campus.

Lili Vidal, the associate director of CSUN’s Financial Aid and
Scholarship Department, said the Bayramians’ gift will provide a major
boost to the university’s scholarship programs, which last year aided
about 1,600 CSUN students based on their talent and achievements. “To
have this gift is really fabulous for our students,” Vidal said. “We
will help many students with it.”

Transdniestrians coming to Sukhumi need visas – minister

Transdniestrians coming to Sukhumi need visas – minister

Interfax
July 20 2005

TBILISI. July 20 (Interfax) – The heads of the self-proclaimed
republics who plan to attend a summit in Sukhumi should not violate
visa regulations, Georgian State Minister and special envoy for
conflict settlement Giorgy Khaindrava said.

“If South Ossetian, Abkhazian and Transdniestrian officials want
to talk, they are free to do so, but there are visa regulations in
Georgia, and by violating them, Transdniestrian representatives in
particular could get into an embarrassing situation,” he said.

Khaindrava confirmed that Nagorno-Karabakh officials will not take
part in the meeting. “As far as we know, Nagorno-Karabakh has refused
to take part in this event,” Khaindrava said.

ANKARA: Putin to Take Concrete Steps to Support Turkish Cyprus

Zaman, Turkey
July 18 2005

Putin to Take Concrete Steps to Support Turkish Cyprus
By Mirza Cetinkaya
Published: Tuesday July 19, 2005
zaman.com

Russian President Vladimir Putin said economic isolation of the
Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC) should be ended. Putin has
signaled for concrete steps to be taken in this regard.

Russian President hosting Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
as an “honorary guest” in the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi
noted, the “meaningless” embargo imposed on TRNC must be lifted and
his country will have direct contacts with both the Turkish and Greek
Cypriot societies on the island. The two leaders emphasized their
opinions overlapped on many issues. “The first thing we must do is to
solve the problem of economic isolation on one part of the island, to
create conditions for establishing normal links between the island’s
two parts and, to lay a foundation for exhaustive normalization in
the interests of all residents of the island,” Putin remarked. The
Russian news agency Interfax quoted Putin as, expressing Russian
support for Annan’s initiative by saying, “We are absolutely
convinced that the United Nations (UN) Secretary-General Kofi Annan
is moving in the right direction.”

Putin reassured Russia would begin ties with both the Greek and
Turkish Cyprus. His announcements indicate Russia vetoing Annan’s
report against the Greek Cypriot side in 2004 would concretely change
its policy regarding Cyprus issue. Yet, what kind of steps Russia
possessing $40 billions in southern Cyprus thanks to businessmen
would take is wondered.

The Turkish Prime Minister also expressed pleasure for the Russian
support for current Annan policies. The two leaders took a walk
around Putin’s summerhouse after a breakfast meeting. At a news
conference later, they touched upon the significance of mutual
relations. Putin reported he had listened to Erdogan’s opinions on
Iraq and Iran as both leaders expressed mutual agreement on several
international issues. The Russian President underlined that they had
also discussed Erdogan’s point of view on providing security and
cooperation in the Black Sea.

On Putin’s conviction for the solution of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict, Erdogan said, “We don’t want a world dominated by
hostility.” Putin pointing out they had met with Erdogan four times
within the last seven months said, their meeting passed in a sincere
atmosphere.

The Russian President also emphasized they discussed about not only
exporting natural gas and oil to Turkey but also putting into
practice many projects in the energy field to develop bilateral
economic relations. The two leaders promised support for developing
relations between Turkey and Russia.

NKR President: Baku cannot get all having ceded nothing

NKR PRESIDENT: BAKU CANNOT GET ALL HAVING CEDED NOTHING

PanArmenian News Network
July 19 2005

19.07.2005 07:10

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Azeri leaders are ready to prepare the society
of their country to solution of the Karabakh conflict. According
to Arkady Ghukasyan’s observations, lately Azeri media have become
covering the Karabakh settlement as well as the Armenian-Azeri
relations on the whole less aggressively. “Earlier they artificially
disseminated hatred toward Armenians – a thing the Armenian party did
not do. We were much more restrained,” the NKR President stated in
an interview with the Public TV Company of Armenia. As noted by Mr.
Ghukasyan the Azeri party’s leadership will need “political will
and ability to run a risk” at the given stage of settlement of the
Nagorno Karabakh conflict. “I am not sure Azeri leaders are ready to
that, however individual political figures have the desire to solve
the problem. However, desires are not enough, will is necessary,”
Ghukasyan remarked. In the NKR President’s opinion, Azeri leaders
clearly realize the ideas the advocated before are unattainable.
“They cannot get everything having ceded nothing. It should be taken
into account that they have made rather large-scale promises to the
people. So they have to gradually give up these ideas, as these are
not real. The problem lies in whether Azeri authorities will take
the risk or not,” A. Ghukasyan said, reported IA Regnum.

Armenian opposition activist says authorities impede country’sdevelo

Armenian opposition activist says authorities impede country’s development

Arminfo
18 Jul 05

Yerevan, 18 July: “We hope that our colleagues from the Justice bloc
will reconsider their approach to the process of constitutional
changes, otherwise our party will issue its own assessment of the
situation in the near future,” the press secretary of the opposition
Republic Party, Suren Surenyants, has told an Arminfo correspondent.

Surenyants said the Republic Party was categorically against returning
to the parliament to discuss changes to the constitution. Furthermore,
the press secretary and his fellow party members believe that any
discussion around the proposed constitutional reform “would provide
the authorities with the opportunity to imitate a civil accord in
the country”.

“The main obstacle in the way of development of our country is not
the constitution but the criminal regime, while systemic reforms can
be carried out only if legitimate power is restored in the country,”
Surenyants said.

He added that Republic was ready to cooperate with any party and
society as a whole in this issue. At the same time, the opposition
activist added that “it is premature to speak about any negotiations
between parties”. Surenyants said that although the positions of some
parties on the issue of constitutional changes overlap, this is not
enough to establish alliance-like relations with parties that are
not part of the Justice bloc.

Primate welcomes interns

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

July 15, 2005
___________________

ARCHBISHOP TALKS WITH AGBU INTERNS

Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese of the Armenian
Church of America (Eastern), welcomed about 35 participants in the
Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU)’s summer internship program to
the Diocesan Center in New York City on Wednesday, July 13, 2005.

He hosted a dinner for the interns, and took the opportunity to talk
with them and answer their questions about a variety of issues, from the
Armenian Christian faith to modern issues. The Primate also asked each
intern to share any advice or ideas they have about making the Armenian
Church significant in the lives of all Armenians.

“It is always a pleasure to see such bright, young Armenians. They are
taking an active role not just in their Armenian communities, but in the
world at large,” the Primate said.

The interns come from all around the globe to work in government
offices, non-profit organizations, banking and financial companies, and
media news rooms. This is the 18th year the AGBU has organized the
8-week program.

While holding down internships, the participants also get involved in
the community by visiting the Diocese and Armenian schools and
retirement homes.

— 7/15/05

E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable in the News
and Events section of the Eastern Diocese’s website,

Photos by Tamar Serce

PHOTO CAPTION (1): Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese
of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern), welcomes the AGBU interns
to the Diocesan Center on Wednesday, July 13, 2005.

PHOTO CAPTION (2): The Primate talks with the young participants of the
AGBU internship program.

PHOTO CAPTION (3): About 35 young Armenians from around the globe are
part of the AGBU internship program and visited the Diocesan Center in
New York City on Wednesday, July 13, 2005.

# # #

www.armenianchurch.org
www.armenianchurch.org.

BAKU: Hadjiyeva: Document of int’l crisis group tells on deliberateo

Today, Azerbaijan
July 16 2005

Gultekin Hadjiyeva: Document of international crisis group tells on
deliberaye order against Azerbaijan

15 July 2005 [09:25] – Today.Az

The conference dedicated to the prospects for solution of the
Karabakh conflict has taken place in Tbilisi, and has been organized
by the International Crisis group.

Representatives of Azerbaijan and Armenia took part in the event as
experts, member of the Azerbaijani delegation to PACE, the Milli
Mejlis deputy Gyultekin Hadjieyva told Trend. They have not
represented any state body and joined the conference as private
individuals.

The topic of the conference?s discussions remains closed. It has been
stipulated in advance at the conference that due to the principal
character of issues touched upon in the document, not to disclose its
content to the public until it is completely ready. ?

?The document under discussion contradicts the interests of
Azerbaijan completely. Therefore I voiced my protest, as well as the
other representatives from Azerbaijan. Generally speaking, this
document is against the interests of Azebaijan, its preparation and
significance generate doubts. I see the deliberate order against
Azerbaijan?, Hadjiyeva concluded.