Bulgaria’s Experience Of Implementing The European Neighborhood Poli

BULGARIA’S EXPERIENCE OF IMPLEMENTING THE EUROPEAN NEIGHBORHOOD POLICY WILL BE USEFUL FOR ARMENIA

armradio.am
29.04.2008 15:07

RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan today received the Ambassador
Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of Bulgaria to
Armenia Todor Marinov Staykov. Noting the current high level of
Armenian-Bulgarian relations, the Prime Minister expressed hope that
Mr. Staykov’s rich experience will help to develop the friendly
relations between the two countries and peoples. Todor Staykov
congratulated Tigran Sargsyan on the occasion of his appointment to
the post of Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia and wished him
success in his further activity for the benefit of the Armenian people.

The interlocutors agreed that Bulgaria’s experience of implementing the
European Neighborhood Policy will be useful for Armenia. The Bulgarian
diplomat noted that his country views the relations with Armenia as
a priority. Tigran Sargsyan and Thodor Staykov specially underlined
the necessity of fostering the economic relations, which, according
to them, still yield to the level of political relations established
between the two countries. The parties expressed hope that in autumn
of the current year it will be possible to conduct a sitting of the
Armenian-Bulgarian Interparliamentary Commission and an economic forum.

Tigran Sargsyan noted that the Armenian community of Bulgaria
plays an important role in the development of Armenian-Bulgarian
relations. For his part, the Ambassador assured that the Armenian
community of Bulgaria has always managed to preserve its national
features – the language, religion and culture – and have a full
participation in the country’s life, contribute to the development
of Armenian-Bulgarian cooperation.

At the end of the meeting RA Prime Minister wished success to
Todor Staykov in carrying out his diplomatic mission for the sake
of development and deepening of friendly relations between the two
countries and peoples.

Tigran Torosyan: Rumors That I Ignore PACE Resolutions Are Senseless

TIGRAN TOROSYAN: RUMORS THAT I IGNORE PACE RESOLUTIONS ARE SENSELESS

arminfo
2008-04-28 16:51:00

ArmInfo. "We should take into consideration any document contributing
to development of democratic institutions in Armenia", Speaker of the
Armenian National Assembly Tigran Torosyan said at a press-conference,
Monday, commenting upon the PACE Resolution "On Functioning of
Democratic Institutions in Armenia".

Torosyan qualified the rumors that he allegedly ignores the PACE
resolutions by calling them "unimportant" as senseless. "The
PACE Resolution "On Functioning of Democratic Institutions in
Armenia" has formulations which do not present the March 1-2 events
completely", Torosyan stressed. He added that all proposals reflected
in the resolution should be taken into account by the Armenian
authorities. However, Torosyan noted that it was suggested changing
the order of formation of the National Commission on Television
and Radio. "This is a Constitutional norm which was approved by the
Venice Commission", Torosyan said. "We should consider not only the
resolution, but also the statements and suggestions of the experts",
he said. Torosyan also pointed out that the parliament will take
relevant steps in the near future.

"It is no secret that Armenia has serious problems with consolidation
of democracy and formation of civil society, as well as normalization
of relations between the opposition and political majority", the
Speaker said.

Are The Programs Of Armenia Foundation Failing?

ARE THE PROGRAMS OF ARMENIA FOUNDATION FAILING?

KarabakhOpen
28-04-2008 15:05:57

On Saturday the NKR government and Karabakh Telecom signed a
memorandum, and the company committed to donate 500 million drams
for the health sector of NKR, which will be spent on building the
regional hospital of Martakert.

Meanwhile, the hospital of Martakert was part of the Rebirth of Artsakh
program of Armenia Foundation. Prime Minister Ara Harutiunyan said
after signing the memorandum: "A new building will be built which
had to be built by Armenia Foundation but unfortunately the program
failed because of the lack of funds." He said construction will start
thanks to Karabakh Telecom and will be completed in 2009.

The reporters reminded that by the end of the past year the
representative of the foundation stated in Martakert that the sum
foreseen for the hospital is available. The prime minister said the
sum is not there, and it is impossible to continue the construction
on the funds of the Foundation.

"I received a letter that the funding of not only the program of the
hospital of Martakert but also the program of water supply of the
villages of Mets Tagher, Drakhtik, Azokh was suspended, and we must
seek for funding for those programs," said the prime minister of NKR.

In answer to the question of Karabakh-Open.com whether it means
that the foundation failed and the programs will not continue in
Karabakh, he said: "I am not aware of the financial state of the
foundation but the foundation has explanation for the two programs,
the depreciation of the dollar. With the current inflation it is
impossible to implement them."

Armenia’s Ombudsman Calls On To Form Independent Commission To Inves

ARMENIA’S OMBUDSMAN CALLS ON TO FORM INDEPENDENT COMMISSION TO INVESTIGATE MARCH 1 CLASHES IN YEREVAN

ARKA
April 28, 2008

YEREVAN, April 28. /ARKA/. Armenia’s Ombudsman Armen Harutyunyan has
made a special report calling on to form an independent commission
to investigate the March 1 clashes in Yerevan.

Since February 20 rallies, sit-ins and student walkouts had been held
by the opposition led by Armenia’s first President Levon Ter-Petrosian
in the center of Yerevan. The initiators and protesters accused
ex-President Kocharian’s ally and Serge Sargsian of rigging the
presidential election on February 19.

The clashes began on March 1-2 when authorities used force to clear
Freedom Square of thousands of demonstrators who had camped there
for the past 10 days. Over 100 people were charged after the bloody
clashes.

The Human Right Defender believes the February 19 polls have
influenced the system of individual rights, as well as social-economic,
political and human rights. In this connection, Harutyunyan considers
it necessary to assume public control over the authorities and the
strong opposition. According to him, in this case, the opposition
will not have to go to streets, as they will be able to openly voice
their opinion.

Harutyunyan calls on to amend the electoral code and change
the voting procedure. He believes objective electronic media and
pluralism are necessary preconditions for freedom of speech. In his
report, the Ombudsman attaches importance to amendments to media
regulations. Harutyunyan suggests forming a media coordinating body,
involving both authorities and opposition.

He calls on to lift restrictions on human rights and amend the
disputable law on rallies.

The Ombudsman believes extremism causes social polarization. "We need
to preclude causes instead of struggling against their aftermath,"
he says.

"The most dangerous and unreasonable thing we can do now is to pretend
effecting reforms."

Police: Thousands attend Easter ritual at important shrine

Police: Thousands attend Easter ritual at important shrine
AP foreign,
Saturday April 26 2008

JERUSALEM

(AP) – Thousands of worshippers are crowding Christianity’s holiest
shrine to celebrate the Easter Week holy fire ritual, police said.

Hundreds of police were deployed in and around the Church of the Holy
Sepulcher on Saturday to control an estimated 10,000 pilgrims.

Greek Orthodox, Armenians and other Eastern rite Christians mark Easter
on Sunday, several weeks after observances by other Christian
denominations. The two groups adhere to different calendars.

On the day before Easter, Eastern rite churches mark the holy fire
ritual.

Christians believe Jesus was crucified and buried where the church now
stands. The ritual is in honor of the belief that a holy fire appears
spontaneously from Jesus’ tomb as a message that he has not forgotten
his followers.

ANCA: Bush Again Breaks Pledge to Recognize Armenian Genocide

Armenian National Committee of America
1711 N Street, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Tel. (202) 775-1918
Fax. (202) 775-5648
Email [email protected]
Internet

PRESS RELEASE
April 24, 2008
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

EIGHT YEARS OF BROKEN PROMISES: PRES. BUSH AGAIN BREAKS PLEDGE TO
RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

WASHINGTON, DC – In his eighth and final year in office, President
George W. Bush, today, again resorted to the use of evasive and
euphemistic terminology to obscure the full moral, historical, and
contemporary legal implications of Turkey’s genocide against the
Armenian people between 1915-1923, reported the Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA).

"This April 24, President Bush’s last in office, he completed his
eight-year long betrayal of his campaign commitment to properly
recognize the Armenian Genocide," said Aram Hamparian, Executive
Director of the ANCA.

"The President not only failed to honor his promise to recognize
the Armenian Genocide, but used the full force of his White House
to block Congress from taking the very step he himself had pledged
to undertake as a candidate for office. He not only fired a
sitting U.S. Ambassador who had the courage to honor his
president’s forsaken pledge by speaking truthfully about this
crime, but then went on to nominate a genocide denier to take his
place. He not only pursued patently anti-Armenian policies
throughout his two terms in office, but never once – amid his many
meetings on Armenian-related issues with foreign leaders – agreed
to discuss these concerns with the leadership of the Armenian
American community."

The full text of the President’s statement is provided below.

#####

The White House
April 24, 2008

Statement by the President on Armenian Remembrance Day

On this day of remembrance, we honor the memory of the victims of
one of the greatest tragedies of the 20th century, the mass
killings and forced exile of as many as 1.5 million Armenians at
the end of the Ottoman Empire. I join the Armenian community in
America and around the world in commemorating this tragedy and
mourning the loss of so many innocent lives.

As we reflect on this epic human tragedy, we must resolve to
redouble our efforts to promote peace, tolerance, and respect for
the dignity of human life. The Armenian people’s unalterable
determination to triumph over tragedy and flourish is a testament
to their strength of character and spirit. We are grateful for the
many contributions Americans of Armenian heritage have made to our
Nation.

We welcome the efforts by individuals in Armenia and Turkey to
foster reconciliation and peace, and support joint efforts for an
open examination of the past in search of a shared understanding of
these tragic events. We look forward to the realization of a fully
normalized Armenia-Turkey relationship.

The United States is committed to a strong relationship with
Armenia based on shared values. We call on the Government of
Armenia to take decisive steps to promote democracy, and will
continue our support for Armenia to this end. We remain committed
to serving as an honest broker in pursuit of a lasting and peaceful
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

On this solemn day of remembrance, Laura and I express our deepest
condolences to Armenian people around the world.

George W. Bush

# # #

www.anca.org

1,000 Canadian-Armenians Commemorate the 93rd Anniversary

Armenian National Committee of Canada
Comité National Arménien du Canada
130 Albert St., Suite/Bureau 1007
Ottawa, ON
KIP 5G4
Tel./Tél. (613) 235-2622 Fax/Téléc. (613) 238-2622
E-mail/courriel:national.office@anc-canad a.com

PRESS RELEASE

April 24, 2008

Contact: Roupen Kouyoumjian

1,000 Canadian-Armenians Commemorate the 93rd Anniversary
of the Armenian Genocide

Ottawa–Over 1,000 Canadian-Armenians from Montreal, Laval, Ottawa,
Toronto, Hamilton, Cambridge, and St. Catharines gathered on
Parliament Hill in Ottawa today to commemorate the 93rd anniversary of
the Armenian Genocide.

After playing the national anthems of Canada and Armenia by
Homenetment Montreal’s boy scouts band, Taline Abrakian, the master of
ceremonies, invited the gathering to observe a moment of silence in
memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide and all other
genocides.

Immediately thereafter, Archbishop Khajag Hagopian, Prelate of the
Armenian Prelacy of Canada; Rev. Mher S. Khatchikian of the Armenian
Evangelical Church of Montreal; Very Rev. Georges Zabarian from Notre
Dame de Nareg Armenian Catholic Church in Montreal and other clergymen
conducted a requiem service for the victims of the Genocide.

Dr. Girair Basmadjian, president of the Armenian National Committee of
Canada (ANCC), extended the Canadian-Armenian community’s `expressions
of gratitude to the Canadian Senate and the House of Commons for their
adoptions of resolutions recognizing the Armenian genocide.’ Moreover,
he said that he was `proud as a Canadian of Armenian heritage to
listen to our Prime Minister reaffirm, in no uncertain terms, the
position of our government,’ on the Armenian Genocide as a Government
policy.

Dr. Badsmadjian said that he welcomed the honest opinions of Turkish
genocide scholars, authors and historians, who have confirmed
unequivocally the Armenian genocide perpetrated by

the Turkish government in 1915. ‘They deserve praise and
congratulations because they are victimized by their current
government, not the government of 1915. Actually, the government of
today does not miss any opportunity to prosecute and punish honest
Turkish academics who exercise their freedom of expressions for
anti-Turkishness and treason. The terror against those academic voices
are legalized by laws in Turkey.’

Pierre Lemieux, parliamentary secretary for official languages and
deputy whip of the Conservative Party, talked about the positive
contributions the Canadian-Armenian community had made to Canada. He
said: `Armenian-Canadians are an integral part of this country’s
history, and Canadians of Armenian heritage have definitely made an
important contribution to the Canada of today.’

As official opposition and as government, the Conservative Party
recognized the Armenian Genocide and would continue to do so, Lemieux
emphasized. He reminded everyone of the `letter that Prime Minister
Stephen Harper sent to the Armenian National Committee of Canada,’
where the prime minister said: `We have made it very clear that our
recognition of the Armenian genocide represents the official position
of the Government of Canada.’

At the end of his speech, Mr. Lemieux read the Right Hon. Stephan
Harper’s message. The Prime Minister in his message `on the day of
commemoration of the Armenian genocide,’ recalled `the terrible loss
of life…and in particular the horrific suffering endured by the
Armenian people.’ He also reminded Canadians `that both Houses of
Parliament have adopted resolutions recognizing `the first genocide of
the twentieth century.”

Dr. Bernard Party representing the Liberal Party of Canada, relayed
the message of the leader of office Opposition the Hon. Stephan
Dion. Mr. Dion said that he greeted with `deep reverence’ the people
gathered on Parliament Hill to commemorate the 93rd anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide.’ He paused to `remember those Armenians who were
persecuted and killed in 1915′ and expressed solidarity with the
survivors.’

Madam Nicole Demers, representing the Bloc Québécois, described
her fond memories about her recent visit to Armenia and her admiration
of the Armenian people. She told the gathering that she and her
leader, Gilles Duceppe, would stand by the Armenian community until
justice is rendered. She also urged Armenians to continue the struggle
for the international recognition of the Armenian Genocide and that
they should not stop until it is achieved.

Paul Dewar, representing the New Democratic Party, read the NDP
leader, Mr. Jack Layton’s message where Mr. Layton committed the NDP
to work with the Canadian-Armenian community to `press other countries
to recognize this horrific chapter of our collective history and for
non-governmental organizations such as the UN to recognize one of the
worse crimes against humanity in the 20th century.’

In his speech, Jon-Carlos Tsilfidis, director of public relations of
the Pontian Community in Toronto, recalled the Armenian Genocide as
`an unprecedented event in human history both in terms of the misery
and destruction it exacted…Many have called it the first holocaust
of the 20th century but sadly, it was not the last…Sadly, there are
still some people who deny the very existence of the Genocide… This
is why events such as the gathering of today are vital…We have to
shout out the truth, to amplify our memories and to let them resonate
in the historical record… In the Turkey of today, Armenian Genocide
denial has somehow been transformed into national doctrine.

`My message to you today is that we can never forget. We, as the
Greeks of Pontos, share your pain of the past and are prepared for the
challenges that lie ahead. We know all too well about ‘relocations’,
‘deportations’, and death marches. We have been down that road
ourselves as well. We will walk step by step with you.’

The keynote speaker, Ken Hachikian, chairman of the Armenian National
Committee of America, reiterated that `Canada’s recognition of the
Armenian Genocide both holds profound meaning for the Armenian nation
and has sent a powerful message to the government of Turkey as well as
to those who condone Turkey’s campaign of denial by looking the other
way… The acknowledgement of this crime by your Parliament and Prime
Minister Stephen Harper–in the face of fierce foreign threats and
intimidation and no end of political pressure–speaks to Canada’s
courage in matching her actions with her ideals. It also speaks to her
special role as a worldwide leader in advancing human rights…In
taking this step toward justice for the Armenian Genocide, Canada
served many noble aims, first and foremost among them the cause of our
collective conscience, our shared morality, and our common humanity as
citizens of the international community.’

Hachikian said that a `vital part of ending the cycle of genocide is
rejecting the denial of past genocides…As Armenians we are owed a
profound debt, but also carry a special burden like the Jews,
Pontians, Assyrians, Cambodians, Rwandans, and, unfortunately, too
many others – to bear witness to the suffering visited upon our
people. To make sure that the horrors of our past are not repeated
against any other people, anywhere in the world.’

The ANCA Chairman said he considered it chilling and ominous `the
growing military partnership between Sudan and Turkey. The recent red
carpet, three-day visit to Turkey by Sudan’s president,’ and the
Sudanese Government usage of `Turkish arms to kill the people of
Darfur.’

The ANCA chairman said that he found it ironic that after 93 years of
the Armenian Genocide that `Sudan is today using the same
tactics–including starvations and deportations–used by the Ottoman
Empire against Armenians in 1915.’

Furthermore, he said: `Sudan is today already employing the same
hateful methods used by Turkey to deny the Armenian Genocide.’

At the conclusion of his remarks, Hachikian stated that `denial stands
in the way of the truth. And without the truth, we can never have
justice.’

Thereafter the dignitaries and the people at the gathering laid
flowers around the Centennial Flame in memory of the victims.

Among dignitaries present were Secretary of State for Multiculturalism
and Canadian Identity Jason Kenney’s chief of staff; the Executive
Assistant of the President of Canada-Armenia Parliamentary Group
President, Gary Goodyear; and Eric Vernon representing the Canadian
Jewish Congress.

Then started the march toward the Turkish Embassy to protest the
Turkish Government’s denial policy, and called on the Turkish
Government to recognize the Genocide.

Earlier in the day, a delegation headed by Dr. Vagarch Ehrmadjian,
Chairman of the Armenian National Committee of Canada, visited the
Embassy of Armenian in Ottawa and laid a wreath at the `Armenia
Immortal’ monument which is dedicated to the victims of the Armenian
Genocide.

******

The ANCC is the largest and the most influential Canadian-Armenian
grassroots political organization. Working in coordination with a
network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout Canada and
affiliated organizations around the world. The ANCC actively advances
the concerns of the Canadian-Armenian community on a broad range of
issues.

Regional Chapters/Sections régionales

Montréal – Laval – Ottawa – Toronto – Hamilton – Cambridge –
St. Catharines – Windsor – Vancouver

www.anccanada.org

EuroVision Song Contest: Armenia: Sirusho In Paris

ARMENIA: SIRUSHO IN PARIS

esctoday.com, Netherlands
April 25 2008

Right after London where she is currently for the UK Eurovision Preview
party tonight at the Scala, Sirusho, the Armenian representative
in the 2008 Eurovision Song Contest will fly to Paris for a special
party performance organised by OGAE France and HayEvents.

Sirusho will be performing Qele, qele in a private party on April
29th at 10:30pm. at the Le Garden Club, 4 rue Arsène Houssaye,
in Paris. Many fans, members of the press and media as well as
local celebrities will be attending the party. Among them Ortal,
who represented France in 2005, as well as Mischa Aznavour and
Helène Segara.

A press conference will be held earlier in the day at the Madam,
128 rue de la Boetie, 75008 Paris at 4pm.

Party by invitation only, Paris contact 0629648342

–Boundary_(ID_kZDbdPU7d4qUZ6RgJ85s8A) —

Turkey: Slaughter Of Three Martyrs In Malatya Mourned

TURKEY: SLAUGHTER OF THREE MARTYRS IN MALATYA MOURNED

Compass Direct News, CA
April 24 2008

Christian families, communities commemorate slain Christian workers.

ISTANBUL, April 24 (Compass Direct News) – A year after the brutal
martyrdom of three Christians for their faith in Malatya, Turkey’s
tiny Christian community gathered quietly this past week to honor
their memories and pray for their sorrowing families.

Turks Necati Aydin and Ugur Yuksel and German Tilmann Geske were tied
up, taunted for their faith in Christ, tortured and then slaughtered
with knives in Turkey’s southeastern city of Malatya on April 18, 2007.

Murdered in the local Zirve Publishing office by five young Turkish
Muslims who claimed to be defending Turkey and Islam from Christian
missionaries, the three men left behind two widows, five fatherless
children and a grieving fiancée.

Their memorials began mid-morning last Friday (April 18), in a small
village cemetery in eastern Turkey.

There a freshly installed tombstone marks the grave of Yuksel, buried
at the edge of Elazig’s Son village. He was 32 when he was slain.

"He was killed like Jesus," reads the lettering at the foot of the
gravestone. On either side of the monument are the words from one
of Yuksel’s favorite Psalms, "Whom have I in heaven but You? And I
desire nothing on earth but being with You."

Twenty of Yuksel’s Christian friends came for the short ceremony of
hymns, prayer and Scripture reading led by Diyarbakir pastor Ahmet
Guvener.

Comforting mourners at Yuksel’s gravesite Yuksel’s elderly parents
also attended the service, screaming when news photographers and a
filming crew from Dogan News Agency videotaped the entire ceremony –
they had felt disgraced in the eyes of the local Muslim community when
their son became a Christian, and the prospect of their presence at his
Christian funeral being made public threatened even more loss of face.

A second graveyard service took place several hours later, 60 miles
away in Malatya’s rarely used Armenian Christian cemetery.

There German widow Susanne Geske and her three children, Michel, Lukas
and Miriam, joined 35 others to commemorate the life of Tilmann Geske,
murdered at age 46.

Pastor Ihsan Ozbek of Ankara’s Kurtulus Churches led the service,
which one participant told Compass was filled with songs of praise
and "a powerful celebration" demonstrating that followers of Christ
"do not weep like those with no hope."

Local gendarme delayed both ceremonies for nearly a half hour by
stopping vehicles going to and coming from Son village. Christians
were certain that the ostensible purpose of providing security was
only an excuse to harass them. After examining the identity papers
of all Christians attending Yuksel’s service, soldiers allowed the
mourners to drive on.

"This was not a routine check, because we were travelling on a tiny
side road into the village," complained one of the Christians who
attended both graveside services. "It was disgraceful, nothing less,
to treat people like this who were just going to commemorate the
dead. They just wanted to find out who had come to Ugur’s service."

That same day, Christian-owned Zirve Publishing Co. published a
traditional black-bordered death anniversary notice in the daily
Sabah newspaper.

"We remember with love and longing the ones mercilessly taken from
us a year ago,"

the notice declared, displaying in large bold print the names of the
three martyrs.

Aydin and Yuksel were both former Muslims who converted to
Christianity. Geske was a German citizen who had lived in Turkey with
his family for nearly 10 years.

"In the hope of our faith, we will be together with you again beside
our Heavenly Father," the ad concluded. "We have not forgotten you."

Praying for widows, children in Istanbul Overflow Crowd in Istanbul

On Sunday (April 20), a nationwide memorial service in Istanbul drew
more than 900 Christians from across Turkey to pay honor to the lives
and savage deaths of the three Christians. The crowd overflowed the
spacious sanctuary, spilling out into the courtyard and ringing the
balcony corridor with onlookers.

Semse Aydin and Suzanne Geske sat side-by-side in the front pew of
Istanbul’s St. Esprit Catholic Cathedral during the 90-minute service,
accompanied by their five children.

They were flanked by clerics representing the local Orthodox and
Catholic communities, foreign diplomats and several of the lawyers
representing them in the murder trial against the five arrested
suspects.

Seated just behind them, Armenian Christian widow Rakel Dink had
come to pay her respects to the memory of the Malatya victims and
meet their families. Her high-profile journalist husband, Hrant Dink,
was murdered in Istanbul three months before the Malatya slaughter.

Both widows addressed the gathering briefly, sharing the difficulties
they had faced over the loss of their husbands, along with the courage
and hope they had found through God’s promises and fellow Christians.

"Every day without Necati this past year has been a bitter cup for
me to drink," Aydin said. "I am sure it has been the same for Suzanne
and for Ugur’s fiancée."

Geske quoted the Turkish words she had requested on her husband’s
tombstone: "He came to serve the people of Malatya, but unfortunately,
the people he came to serve killed him."

Tears trickled down the cheeks of 6-year-old Esther Aydin and
9-year-old Miriam Geske as a 15-minute collage of photographs of
their fathers and "Uncle Ugur" flashed up on an overhead screen,
combined with recordings of the martyred men singing and speaking
words of testimony.

Turkish Officials Absent

The absence of invited Turkish government officials and local media
was conspicuous. According to the organizing committee for the
memorial sponsored by the Alliance of Turkish Protestant Churches,
both government officials and the Turkish press had been sent formal
invitations.

With the exception of Cumhuriyet newspaper and the English-language
Turkish Daily News, Turkish media made no mention of the Malatya
murders memorial ceremony in Istanbul.

But in the closing address of the afternoon, the chairman of
the Alliance of Turkish Protestant Churches tackled head-on the
significance of "this merciless massacre" for Turkey.

Declaring that individuals as well as society make deliberate choices,
Izmir pastor Zekai Tanyar begged leaders governing Turkey to "awaken
to the realities" taught in Christian Scriptures.

"Those who sow death cannot reap life. Those who sow evil cannot reap
goodness. Those who sow curses cannot receive blessing," he stressed.

"I knew Necati, Ugur and Tilmann, and especially Necati very well,"
Tanyar said. "I laugh bitterly to hear the unscrupulous lies told
about them. The only crime my three brothers committed was believing
in God, following Jesus and telling people about God’s message of
love and hope for them."

Tanyar spoke against the common mindset that to be Turkish is to
be Muslim.

"Give permission for my faith, and let the Creator be the
judge!" Tanyar pled. "My heart loves my country and my Lord, and no
slander, anti-propaganda, pressure or politicians can change that!"

Turkish Protestants have listed 19 incidents of violence perpetrated
against their community of fewer than 4,000 during the past year.

At the close, dozens of participants filed down the side aisles of
the church to lay long-stemmed red roses and flickering vigil candles
before the cathedral altar.

A special edition of the Turkish Christian magazine Gercege Dogru
(Toward the Truth) dedicated to the Malatya martyrs was distributed to
attendees out in the cathedral courtyard, along with a newly published
book of Necati Aydin’s poetry entitled My Name is Written in Heaven.

A third graveside service will be observed by Turkish widow Semse Aydin
and her children Elisha and Esther next week in the Aegean coastal
city of Izmir, where Necati Aydin was buried just weeks before his
36th birthday.

END

*** Photographs of the first three Christian memorial services for
the Malatya martyrs are available electronically. Contact Compass
Direct News for pricing and transmittal.

–Boundary_(ID_zB5BFVdloRn2Tj/7hfB6N Q)–

BAKU: Azerbaijani And Armenian Foreign Ministers To Meet In Strasbou

AZERBAIJANI AND ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTERS TO MEET IN STRASBOURG ON MAY 7

Azeri Press Agency
April 23 2008
Azerbaijan

Baku. Tamara Grigorieva-APA. Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers
can meet within the plenary session of the Council of Europe Cabinet
of Ministers on May 7 in Strasbourg, Bernard Fassier, French Co-Chair
of the OSCE Minsk Group told APA.

He said the date of the meeting had not been specified yet. "I
suggested this version to Edward Nalbandyan yesterday and it will be
suggested to Elmar Mammadyarov too. If the parties accept Strasbourg
version, it will be the first meeting between Elmar Mammadyarov and
Edward Nalbandyan".