Les partisans de Hrant Dink reclament une justice impartiale

L’Express, France
2 juillet 2007

Les partisans de Hrant Dink réclament une justice impartiale
Reuters

Un millier de manifestants ont réclamé justice lundi à Istanbul
devant le tribunal où doivent être jugés 18 suspects dans le cadre de
l’assassinat de l’intellectuel turc d’origine arménienne Hrant Dink.

Ce dernier a été tué par balles en janvier par un jeune homme de 17
ans, qui a reconnu les faits. Le journaliste et écrivain avait
auparavant publié des textes sur le génocide arménien, contesté par
Ankara, en 1915, provoquant la colère des nationalistes turcs.

Plus de 100.000 personnes avaient assisté à son enterrement, en signe
de solidarité face aux violences des ultra-nationalistes.

"Tous unis contre le fascisme !", scandaient les manifestants devant
le tribunal dans le quartier de Besiktas, alors que commençait la
première audience.

La sécurité a été renforcée, avec la présence d’un demi-millier de
policiers.

Les avocats de Dink ont estimé que l’enquête sur sa mort n’avait pas
été correctement menée et ont mis en doute l’indépendance du
tribunal.

Ils craignent notamment l’implication dans le dossier de membres
ultra-nationalistes présents au sein de l’administration et de
l’appareil sécuritaire, en mesure de détourner la loi pour servir
leurs intérêts.

POSE HÉROÏQUE

Plusieurs journaux turcs ont rapporté lundi les propos de l’un des
principaux suspects, Yasin Hayal, qui expliquait que lui et ses
compagnons avaient tué Dink selon un ordre donné par des policiers.

"Je ne sais pas si c’était légal ou illégal, mais une chose est
certaine : il y avait un groupe au sein de la police qui nous
contrôlait", a-t-il écrit dans une lettre adressée aux procureurs,
dans des propos rapportés par le quotidien Radikal.

"Bien que vous ayez vu ceci, vous n’avez pas protégé nos droits.
Alors je vous le demande : si nous avons été utilisés pour le service
de l’Etat, n’est-il pas du devoir de l’Etat de protéger nos droits ?"

La police n’a pas réagi à ces accusations.

Plusieurs responsables de la police, dont le chef des renseignements
d’Istanbul, ont été renvoyés ou mutés à cause de leur traitement de
l’affaire Dink.

Peu après sa mort, un enregistrement vidéo avait été diffusé,
montrant l’assassin présumé prenant une pose héroïque au milieu de
membres des forces de sécurité qui semblaient le féliciter.

Dink travaillait à la compréhension mutuelle entre Turcs et
Arméniens. Il avait reçu de nombreuses menaces de mort, mais n’avait
pas bénéficié d’une véritable protection policière.

Ses écrits sur le génocide arménien par les Ottomans ont touché un
point sensible en Turquie, où la position officielle est qu’un grand
nombre de Turcs musulmans et d’Arméniens chrétiens sont morts lors
d’affrontements ethniques à la chute de l’Empire ottoman.

Dialogue only solution to Karabakh conflict – Azeri envoy to Russia

Dialogue only solution to Karabakh conflict – Azeri envoy to Russia

Day.az website, Baku
30 Jun 07

The Azerbaijani ambassador to Russia, Polad Bulbuloglu, has said that
dialogue is the only way to resolve the conflict with Armenia over
Nagornyy Karabakh. In an interview published on an Azeri website, he
said Azerbaijan would not be able to attract investment if it had a war
on its doorstep which made progress in talks with the Armenian side
that much more important. In a moving account of a visit he made to his
home town of Susa in Nagornyy Karabakh with a group of intellectuals,
Bulbuloglu said that despite opposition from certain quarters it was
the right thing to do. The following is the text of his interview with
Emil Quliyev entitled "Polad Bulbuloglu: ‘I believe we did the right
thing by going to Karabakh’", published on the Day.az website on 30
June; subheadings have been inserted editorially:

A Day.az interview with Azerbaijani ambassador to Russia Polad
Bulbuloglu.

[Correspondent] Polad muallim [mode of address], your visit to Karabakh
and then to Armenia was a surprise to everyone. How did the idea come
about?

Meeting Armenian ambassador

[Bulbuloglu] It seems that as you grow older there is something in your
genes which draws you to visit your homeland. I have done a lot of
travelling, visited virtually all the major countries and continents,
and when I was on tour I visited all the republics of the USSR, and
during Soviet times I visited 72 countries. Then I stopped counting,
but I reckon that I must have been to over 140 countries in my
lifetime. But it may be the fact that it was virtually impossible to go
there that Susa became more and more the focus of my dreams. It was as
if my forefathers were forever calling me to this town. So it turned
out that a former rector of a conservatoire, a minister of culture, and
a very intelligent man called Armen Smbatyan, is working as Armenian
ambassador to Russia.

Even when we were musicians and ministers we very often met at various
functions. The point is that, because of their position in the
alphabet, Azerbaijan and Armenia are always put next to one another at
international conferences and banquets. We came into contact, whether
we wanted to or not. It would not be out of place, perhaps, to recall
that five years ago, when I was elected chairman of the council for
cultural cooperation of the CIS, it was the Ukrainian cultural minister
who proposed that I be elected chairman of the council.

Armenia was represented there by its ambassador Armen Smbatyan who
asked to take the floor. There was a deathly silence. Everyone thought
that since he was Armenia’s representative, he would definitely oppose
the candidature of an Azerbaijani. However, he said that he believed
this was a correct decision because everyone had known Polad Bulbuloglu
for a long time, and Armenia believes that he alone should head this
council. The effect was like an exploding bomb. Naturally, such things
are never forgotten and so we got to know each other.

I would like to point out that many people become jealous when someone
associates with the Armenian side. But you have to understand that
talking with the Armenian side does not mean you have to take their
position. First and foremost, it is an opportunity to put over
Azerbaijan’s position and set out one’s vision. Apart from that
dialogue is also an opportunity to home in on mutual points of contact
and to seek compromises.

[Correspondent] When you were a minister you were against contacts with
Armenia. But when you were appointed ambassador your position changed
and now you are talking about the need for a dialogue. What was the
reason for your change of views?

Change of mind

[Bulbuloglu] It’s true, I was once an avid supporter of avoiding
contact. When I was minister I followed this line strictly. What is
more, I tried as often as I could to block Armenia’s participation in
any international events that might be taking place in our country.
There was one occasion when I cancelled an international conference due
to be held in Azerbaijan under UNESCO. And despite the fact that our
Foreign Ministry insisted on holding this event, I stood by my
positions of complete isolation.

But one must have the courage to admit that such a policy does not
bring results. Such a policy only alienates the two sides. And one
should emphasize one important aspect. Our generation that is people in
the 50-70 age group in Armenia and Azerbaijan – is going, so when our
generation goes and a new one comes, it is not going to see eye to eye.
But war is the very last and the worst solution.

On this trip each side had one TV cameraman and I noticed that within
half an hour of working together they were helping each other. In other
words, there is no substitute for human contact. You don’t have to be
like an ostrich and hide your head in the sand and think that the rest
of you cannot be seen. Azerbaijan and Armenia, when they joined the
Council of Europe, gave a written undertaking to resolve the Nagornyy
Karabakh problem by peaceful means. Azerbaijan is a country which, as a
rule, carries out its international obligations.

Apart from this, we must take into account the fact that Baku-Ceyhan
[oil pipeline] is now in operation and will bring considerable profit
to the country. Many investors have put a lot of money into this
project. What do you think, who is going to allow a war when the
pipeline starts bringing in real revenue? Neither the US, nor Russia,
nor France is going to let us fight. In order to start a war, one must
break off ties with all the major countries of the world. Can
Azerbaijan allow itself to do such a thing? Recently in Moscow at a
very high level talks between Azerbaijan and Armenia were set up as an
example to other world conflicts.

We must realize that after a settlement to the conflict we will have to
accept the Armenians living in Nagornyy Karabakh as citizens of
Azerbaijan, and we must be prepared to have a dialogue with them. They,
too, must be prepared for this. We should not forget that they also
have a media which conducts propaganda against Azerbaijan. Nor must we
forget that in Armenia for years they have conducted propaganda against
the Turks and the Azeris. There is no denying that we have a similar
propaganda and the younger generation is being brought up, if we are to
call a spade a spade, deeply hating everything Armenian. This is not
the way to carry on.

Communities get along in Russia

As ambassador to Russia, I can say that in this country particularly
almost all the Armenian and Azerbaijani communities live in friendship
and it cannot be ignored that in many cases they do business together.
The communities help one another. Particularly now, when migration
questions have arisen, they help one another to resolve these problems.
Does it mean that Armenians and Azeris can live together in Russia, but
not here?

On a world scale we live in a tiny plot of land. Tomorrow, we three
Caucasian countries will have to answer no less important global
challenges as shortage of water, problems of ecology, and other issues.
We must be able to live together. For example, our civil aircraft fly
through Armenian air space, and if necessary, they are also given
permission to fly through our air space. Nobody shoots them down. We
are neighbours. There is conflict in every family. It happens that
families argue because of where they come from, but this should not go
on forever!

I have come to this opinion over a period of time, and so you must not
think that my views have suddenly changed. Anyway, the post of a
minister is one thing, and the post of an ambassador is quite another.
I have occasion to read a lot, a huge amount of information, including
special information, which is not available to the ordinary citizen.
Ambassadors are in the thick of things. Perhaps all this information is
the reason why I have started to think differently. As they say, there
is a time to throw stones and a time to collect stones.

We are gradually beginning to realize that we must talk and come to an
understanding. Even if we reach a state of war, the positive process we
have acquired from the talks will come to our aid. The president of
Azerbaijan, when he received us, said that he, as head of state, will
do everything he can, including using his contacts with intellectuals
and public organizations who will contribute to this understanding.

[Correspondent] Polad muallim, what do you remember of that day when
for the first time you crossed the contact line and entered Karabakh?

Visit to Karabakh

[Bulbuloglu] It is natural that I will remember that day for the rest
of my life. Because I have been in the house of my father which is now
a ruin. Believe me, it was difficult to hold back the tears when I saw
the ruined house of my father and grandfather. All that is left is a
mulberry tree on which my father used to sing when he was a child. We
saw his bust, with half his face missing. We once built a small house
to keep our valuables in and a museum for the servants. Fortunately,
both these houses are still there even though many houses in Susa were
destroyed. There was a woman there who when she saw me said
straightaway: "I know you, you are Bulbul’s son. How nice that you have
come back to your father’s house." How can I forget this when this
brought tears to the eyes of an Armenian woman. This shows that
people’s feelings are the same everywhere.

I used to say to the Armenians that [eminent musician and public
figure] Uzeyir Hacibayov and [singer] Bulbul, apart from the fact that
they were Azeris, came from Karabakh and are the pride of these places.
If you want to live in this land, you must be proud of them. There are
Armenian military commanders who fought during the Great Patriotic War
and whom we Azeris – can be proud of because they are from Karabakh.

When we arrived in Susa they offered to take us through the town by
car, but we decided to walk. I took a handful of soil, went to the
cemetery and scattered it on the graves of Bulbul, Uzeyir Hacibayov and
[eminent actor] Suleyman Alasgarov.

Mentally, this was very stressful for us. When we crossed the contact
line, the representatives of the OSCE insisted that we put on
bullet-proof vests because there were snipers about. But we refused,
saying it would be a great honour to die in this land. I looked at the
Azeri officers and could see pride in their eyes. But what can I say
about what I saw on the road to Karabakh? Armenian signs, shattered
roads, old vehicles. This is a very long way from the development we
are used to in Azerbaijan.

Meeting with Karabakh president

[Correspondent] There has been a lot of gossip about your meeting with
[Nagornyy Karabakh president Arkadi] Ghukasyan. Could you tell us your
side of the meeting and about your position?

[Bulbuloglu] Journalists often ask this question. We have never
recognized and never will recognize this self-proclaimed republic. The
whole world also will never recognize them. But there is some kind of
public formation there. There are people living there who go to work,
go to the shops, buy food, and get paid. They do have some kind of
life. We cannot say they do not exist.

They have a leader. Call him what you will, but he is there. I must say
that Mr Ghukasyan speaks Russian very well and grammatically. He can
express his point of view. He greeted us warmly and said that the
arrival of the Azerbaijani intellectuals was a big day. He said: "We
welcome this step and consider it historic. We would like you to talk
with us, so that you understand our aspirations and our point of view".
I must admit I was struck by one thing that Ghukasyan said: "How can
you want to live with us if you cannot talk with us?" This is a logical
question, and it must be answered. Imagine inviting someone into your
home but at the same time not wanting to talk with them.

[Correspondent] What do you remember of the last time you were in Susa?

[Bulbuloglu] I have fond memories of the first folk festival Xari
Bulbul which was organized in Susa in 1989. There were about 120 people
there from seven or eight countries. We arranged a concert on Cidir
duzu [Hippodrome], where children used to sing "Karabakh sikastasi".
And even under the [Arkadiy] Volskiy committee [on Karabakh] I as a
member of the delegation went there to explain our relations with it.
This was a very unhappy visit, an unpleasant conversation, both with
Volskiy himself and with his people who were right when they said that
they could not understand what sort of government had been established.

[Correspondent] I would like to understand one thing. You saw what Susa
was like. Do you think that the Armenians realize that the occupation
has not been justified?

Occupation cannot be justified

[Bulbuloglu] I cannot speak for the Armenians, but, of course, the
occupation cannot be justified. There is hardly any life to speak of in
the town, it has been destroyed. Believe me, these five members of the
Armenian intelligentsia, when they saw our capital, probably went away
with the same thoughts you are now expressing.

[Correspondent] How do you feel now? After all, won’t a lot of people
criticize what you have done?

[Bulbuloglu] I went to bed yesterday with a sense of having fulfilled
my duty. Over the past few years I have wanted to do something like
this. Some inner strength has always said to me that I must do
something. It is impossible to explain. You go to bed and you wake up
with the same thought. You talk to someone and suddenly this thought
forces its way through. We understood perfectly that there would be
people who will start to earn publicity from our mission and vilify us.

But wise and level-headed people understand that we have made an
important first step. We have broken through the 15-year old screen of
resentment. During my work as ambassador I have come to the conviction
that the path of talks is the truest path. I believe that we did the
right thing in going to Karabakh. I believe it my duty to express
immense gratitude to my fellow companions Farhad Badalbayli, Kamal
Abdulla, Azarpasa Nematov and Ilham Fataliyev who, without a shadow of
a doubt, agreed straightaway to my proposal of an unusual trip to our
beloved Karabakh.

BEIRUT: No topics off-limits at talks in Paris – Safadi

Daily Star – Lebanon
July 5 2007

No topics off-limits at talks in Paris – Safadi

By Hani M. Bathish
Daily Star staff
Thursday, July 05, 2007

BEIRUT: The French-organized trust-building meeting in Paris between
senior delegates from 14 Lebanese political parties in mid-July has
an open agenda, and all issues previously discussed and agreed on in
the national dialogue are open for discussion, according to Public
Works and Transport Minister Mohammad al-Safadi.

Safadi said after meeting French envoy Jean Claude Cousseran
Wednesday that the meeting in Paris is not a continuation of the Arab
League’s initiative to resolve the Lebanese political deadlock.

Cousseran was accompanied by French Ambassador Bernard Emie and other
embassy officials.

"The meeting has nothing to do with national dialogue, we do not want
to say that such and such was agreed upon before and we shouldn’t
discuss it, this is an open meeting to discuss any issue that the
delegates would like to discuss," Safadi said.

The minister said the hope is that some agreement can be reached over
certain issues, whether big or small, that can later be the basis for
an inter-Lebanese accord.

The French envoy also met Wednesday with former President Amin
Gemayel, Democratic Gathering leader MP Walid Jumblatt, Change and
Reform bloc member MP Ibrahim Kanaan, Metn MP Michel Murr and Popular
Bloc leader MP Elias Skaff. Cousseran also met a delegation from the
Lebanese Forces including MP Georges Adwan, as well as a delegation
from Hizbullah.

Cousseran said after meeting Gemayel that the Paris meeting is not
competing with the Arab League initiative: "This is not an
international meeting, nor is it a meeting to discuss and negotiate
on the hot topics in Lebanon. It is a meeting to restore dialogue and
create a new atmosphere between various Lebanese parties."

Speaking from Bikfaya, the French envoy said the important thing is
for Lebanese to succeed in "establishing an atmosphere of trust among
themselves" that would allow them to find a solution to the political
crisis.

Jumblatt, however, told Reuters that only agreement among outside
powers can resolve the paralyzing political struggle between the
majority and opposition in Lebanon, giving no hint of optimism for
the success of the Paris meeting.

Asked on prospects for the meeting’s success, Jumblatt said: "If the
French, with their contacts with the Iranians, can fix up a Lebanese
dialogue in Paris, and somewhere behind the scenes the regional
actors agree to stabilize Lebanon, why not?"

Meanwhile, Jumblatt’s political ally, Gemayel, said after meeting
Cousseran that Lebanon was in desperate need of an initiative that
brings the Lebanese together, contributing to restarting the stalled
dialogue. Gemayel welcomed the initiative and said he would do all he
can to ensure its success.

Cousseran also met with Kanaan, who conveyed to the French envoy the
support of Change and Reform Bloc leader MP Michel Aoun for the
French initiative. Kanaan said Lebanon was in need of a solution and
all who seek a solution and aim to bring the Lebanese closer together
ought to be encouraged.

"The issues for discussion in France are the current issues,
especially the sensitive ones, concerning the current crisis, both
its internal and external components, including the problems facing
our constitutional institutions," Kanaan said.

Aoun arrived from Qatar Wednesday and was unable to meet with the
French envoy.

Metn MP Michel Murr met Cousseran Wednesday at his home in Rabieh,
from where he announced his willingness to participate in the
meeting, naming his daughter Mirna Murr as his first delegate.

"I consider useful any conference or call to dialogue through which
the Lebanese can meet, whether first or second tier leaders," he
said,

After meeting Wednesday, the Loyalty to the Resistance Bloc, headed
by MP Mohammad Raad, reiterated its well established position that
any"serious" dialogue ought to be within a national unity government
that includes all "key factions" in the country.

The bloc said such a government would lay the groundwork for
approving a new and just election law to redress the imbalance in
representation and through which constitutional institutions may be
reconstituted.

Reports published in Al-Akhbar newspaper on Wednesday that President
Emile Lahoud was working to dissolve Parliament by appointing a new
mini-cabinet were dismissed by Lahoud’s spokesperson, Rafik Chelala.

Chelala said Lahoud never issued a statement to that effect,
reiterating the president’s earlier position that the solution to the
crisis is in forming a national-unity government: "[Lahoud] has said
repeatedly Lebanon’s experience with a two-government system was not
encouraging, in fact it was awful and pushes the country toward
divisions."

Factions pick delegates

Many of the 14 political factions invited to inter-Lebanese talks in
Paris scheduled for July 14-16 have already designated their
representatives to the meeting. The Central News Agency reported
Wednesday that Hizbullah will name their two delegates in the coming
24 hours.

Speaker Nabih Berri has delegated professor Mahmoud Berri and Ali
Hamdan, head of external relations for the Amal Movement. Future
Movement leader MP Saad Hariri delegated Sports and Youth Minister
Ahmad Fatfat and MP Nabil Defreij. March 14 MP Boutros Harb delegated
MP Jawad Boulos while a second delegate is still to be named.

Former President Amin Gemayel has named two Phalange Party stalwarts
to attend the meeting in Paris, Walid Fares, member of the party’s
political office, and Dr. Salim Sayegh, Gemayel’s representative
during the national dialogue.

The Lebanese Forces designated MP George Adwan and the party’s head
of external relations, Joseph Neameh, to serve as delegates.

The Armenian Bloc delegated MP Hagop Pakradounian, Hagop Qasarjian
and Yehya Jirjian.

Democratic Gathering leader MP Walid Jumblatt designated MP Ayman
Choucair with the second delegate to be named later.

Change and Reform Bloc leader MP Michel Aoun designated MP Ibrahim
Kanaan and the Free Patriotic Movement representative in France,
Simon Abi Ramiya. March 14 MP Ghassan Tueini and Popular Bloc leader
Elias Skaff have yet to name delegates.

http://www.dailystar.com.lb

What Price Open Borders With Turkey?

WHAT PRICE OPEN BORDERS WITH TURKEY?
by Edmond Y. Azadian

AZG Armenian Daily
04/07/2007

Turkey can eat its cake and still have it, as long as it enjoys
the US support in its drive to join the European Union. The EU has
mandated a number of preconditions for membership, chief among them
being open borders with other member states. In the case of Cyprus,
Ankara dragged its feet until the last moment of the set deadline to
meet the EU condition of opening its seaports to Cypriot shipping
and in the final moments announced that it would open one port,
without specifying which one.

Cyprus is a full-fledged EU member and it can veto Turkey’s
membership. Armenia does not have that kind of leverage over Turkey. It
has only to rely on the international law, which is applied always
in double standards. Right at this moment the US is pressuring the
UN Security Council to vote for Kosovo’s independence over Russia’s
objections, but the rights of Armenians in Karabagh do not enjoy
that kind of support and the principle of territorial integrity of
Azerbaijan has become a given factor, despite all historical and
legal documents against that argument.

The issue of opening the Armenian-Turkish border was again raised in
Istanbul on June 25 by Armenia’s Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian,
who attended the Black Sea Economic Cooperation Organization
Conference. He underlined that:"Genocide recognition, although it’s
in our political agenda to pursue it, has never been a precondition
to normalize relations".

But to no avail. Even a private meeting with Turkey’s Foreign Minister
Abdullah Gul led nowhere. Because Turkey itself has preconditions
to open its borders and establish normal diplomatic relations with
Armenia.

Those conditions are:

a) The settlement of the Karabagh dispute, preferably to the
satisfaction of its Azeri cousins.

b) Abandonment of the genocide issue by Armenia.

c) The explicit recognition by Armenia of the 1923 Treaty of
Kars between Ankara and Moscow, determining Armenia’s borer with
Turkey. That would indirectly signify that Armenia has no territorial
claims over historic Armenia occupied by Turkey.

The first precondition may be settled down the road, but Turkey knows
that the last two are no-starters.

It is very significant that the international law is extremely flexible
and it can be stretched to fit the arguments of the most powerful.

A case in point is a meeting at the White House, where eleven members
from the Armenian community leaders participated, right after the
election of President George W. Bush. When Karl Rove was asked by
this writer how come the US cannot ask Turkey to open its borders
with Armenia, when Ankara is forced to form a strategic alliance with
Israel, at the cost of turning Turkey into a pariah in the Moslem
world, Mr. Rove, with his characteristic arrogance, decided to leave
the room.

All the preconditions set by Turkey to open its borders with Armenia
are hollow excuses. In world politics governments may make concessions
over counter concessions or rewards, which Armenia is in no position to
offer. Should the EU come up with a carrot for Ankara, all objections
will evaporate overnight.

The closed borders between the two neighboring countries have become
a double-edged sword for both sides. Turkey’s Eastern provinces
have suffered economically more than Armenia. Also, Turkey’s push
to extend its political, economic and strategic influence to the
Central Asian Turkic nations have been blocked by Armenia, although
Christian Georgia has treacherously offered some relief in that sense,
by bypassing Armenia.

Despite the Turkish blockade to punish Armenia, the latter has enjoyed
economic growth better than most former Soviet republics. Also, many
fear that open borders may mean to open the flood gate of influence
of Turkish capital in Armenia, allowing the opportunity for Ankara
to strangulate Armenia over any excuse.

As a general rule open borders may lead towards more civilized
relations between neighboring countries, but in this case there may
also be some inherent dangers for Armenia.

Mr. Oskanian presented the issue at the Black Sea conference because
that is the right thing to do politically. He knows, as well as
anyone else, that the key is in Turkey’s hands and that key will not
be used until the US pressures Ankara or the EU comes up with some
tangible rewards.

In reporting the news about Oskanian’s speech the immorality of the
international news media surfaces once again. Indeed, the Reuters
News agency states that "Turkey closed its border in 1993 to protect
against Armenia’s occupation of territory inside Azerbaijan, Ankara’s
close Turkic ally." Historic documents and international law cut no
ice with these agencies. No one would like to listen that Karabagh
has never been an integral part of Azerbaijan’s territory and that it
has come out of the Soviet Union, under the same laws and conditions
that have defined Azerbaijan’s own independence.

Both Associated Press and Reuters adhere also to the immoral position
in the case of the genocide issue by turning it into a "he said –
you said" controversy, contrary to overwhelming evidence of the
Ottoman Turkish crime.

Oskanian’s above speech is concluded in a positive note, expecting
that July 11 parliamentary elections in Turkey may change Ankara’s
position on the border issue.

Unfortunately, Turkey will not budge from its current position,
unless it is forced by a greater power or unless a reward is offered
to compensate its good behavior.

As a seasoned diplomat, Mr. Oskanian knows better.

A. Arzmanyan’s Lawyer Says Nat’l Sec. Service Took Coercive Measures

Alexander Arzmanyan’s Lawyer Says National Security Service Took
Coercive Measures to Family of His Client

arminfo
2007-06-29 16:36:00

"My client does not give testimonies as the National Security Service
took coercive measures to his family from the very beginning," Hovik
Arsenyan, the lawyer of Alexander Arzumanyan, the former foreign
minister charged with money laundering, said at the "Pressing" Club,
Friday.

He said the former head of the foreign political department is
indignant that the criminal case was lodged without warning. "They
could invite him, interrogate as a witness. In the meanwhile, they
started from the search," the lawyer said.

On July 2 the First Instance Court of Center and Nork Marash
communities will consider the petition of the National Security Service
Investigation Department for prolongation of Arsen Arzumanyan’s term
for 2 months.

One More Congressman Becomes Supporter Of Resolution Concerning Arme

ONE MORE CONGRESSMAN BECOMES SUPPORTER OF RESOLUTION CONCERNING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Noyan Tapan
Jun 29, 2007

PHOENIX, JUNE 29, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Harry Mitchell,
Arizona, became the 211th supporter of Resolution 106 of U.S. Congress
concerning the Armenian Genocide.

The Hay Dat office in Arizona, as well as the Armenians living in
the province, welcomed Congressman Harry Mitchell’s step supporting
the bill.

The Congressman is the former Tampa mayor and the former co-chairman
of the Democratic party of the province, who also held a high position
in the provincial Senate of Arizona.

NKR MFA Sent A Note To Coordinator Of OSCE Economic And Environmenta

NKR MFA SENT A NOTE TO COORDINATOR OF OSCE ECONOMIC AND ENVIRONMENTAL ACTIVITIES

PanARMENIAN.Net
27.06.2007 17:23 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ June 27, 2007 the NKR Ministry of Foreign Affairs
sent a note to Coordinator of OSCE Economic and Environmental
Activities Bernard Snoy expressing regret that the practical
recommendation presented in the report of the OSCE-led Environmental
Assessment Mission to fire affected territories along the contact
line, prepared as a result of the 10-day monitoring (October, 2006)
had not been realized. The Ministry considers that implementation
of the recommendations on rehabilitation of the affected territories
and counteraction to any detrimental impacts of the fires in future,
undoubtedly, would allow transforming fire prevention and suppression
into an opportunity of regional cooperation, confidence building
measures and ultimately reconciliation.

The Ministry informed Coordinator of OSCE Economic and Environmental
Activities that since the third decade of May 2007, fires from
Azerbaijani side along the contact line have been occurring. The fires
acquire systematic character and the Azerbaijani side again is trying
to use them for propaganda.

The Ministry called upon the Office of Coordinator of OSCE Economic
and Environmental Activities to take a principled and consistent
position in realization of the OSCE Mission’s recommendations. This
will allow achieving the goals set in the report and creating an
efficient mechanism for fire prevention and suppression along the
line of contact, which may become one of elements of the confidence
building measures, the NKR MFA press office reported.

ANCA Leo Sarkisian Interns Arrive In Washington, DC

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
June 27, 2007
Contact: Dzovak Kazandjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

ANCA LEO SARKISIAN INTERNS ARRIVE IN WASHINGTON, DC

WASHINGTON, DC – The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)
welcomed 7 interns from across the U.S and Canada to Washington, DC
this week for the Leo Sarkisian Internship, an eight week intensive
program designed to give student leaders and activists the tools
necessary to effectively advance Armenian American concerns.

The Leo Sarkisian Internship Program, now in its 23rd year, is an
integral part of a growing effort to provide Armenian Americans
greater opportunities to explore careers on Capitol Hill, in the
U.S. Foreign Service and key Washington, DC foreign policy think
tanks. It is a part of the larger ANCA Capital Gateway Program,
which is designed to help university students and graduates find
internships and permanent positions in Congressional offices as
well as a host of other government agencies and policy groups.

"The ANCA Leo Sarkisian program is not just an internship; it’s a
training ground for the next generation of leaders in our
community," said Capitol Gateway Program director Serouj
Aprahamian. "We work to provide our interns with a broad array of
knowledge, skills, and first-hand experience so that they can be
more effective activists and have a solid foundation on which to
build for the future."

Interns, who participate in a wide variety of projects based on
their individual interests, are given the opportunity to gain
hands-on experience within the American political system. They
participate in a bi-weekly lecture series featuring guest
lecturers, including public officials and Armenian American
leaders.

Participants were able to attend the first-ever joint U.S. Congress
– Russian Duma open meeting and see congressmen such as House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Representative Tom Lantos (D-CA)
participate in a discussion about democracy, human rights and
unresolved regional conflicts with Russian leaders on Thursday.

Interns this year include Paul Ternamian from Canada, Alidz Oshgan
and Nyree Naljian from the East Coast, and Alex Der Alexanian,
Shant Hagopian, Dzovak Kazandjian and Christopher Yemenidjian from
the West Coast.

Shant Hagopian, a political science major transferring to the
University of California, Berkeley this fall, has been a student
government officer and member of the Alpha Gamma Sigma state
honor’s society at Pierce College in Woodland Hills, CA. He has
also worked closely with the ANC of West San Fernando Valley on a
variety of projects.

"I’m here to combine my passion for politics and government with my
pride as an Armenian-American to advance Hai Tahd here in our
nation’s capital with the ANC," said Hagopian.

"As participants in this year’s internship, our objective is to
develop the effective tools and knowledge necessary to make a
positive difference in our respective communities," said Paul
Ternamian, a recent graduate of the University of Toronto with a
degree in Economics. "Moreover, the Leo Sarkisian internship
program will allow us to improve our understanding of various
important ANCA issues affecting Armenian Americans." In addition to
his work with the Armenian National Committee of Toronto and his
participation in Homenetmen, Ternamian is on the executive
committee of his local ARF Youth Organization of Canada (ARF YOC)
Simon Zavarian chapter.

Dzovak Kazandjian, a Sociology and English double major at the
University of California, Irvine, serves on the executive committee
for the South Bay ANC and has interned for the Orange County
Register and Asbarez Daily Newspaper.

"Leo Sarkisian gives interns the opportunity to travel to
Washington DC and completely immerse themselves in the political
process," Kazandjian said. "It allows young Armenians to gain the
tools necessary to further help Armenian Americans in their local
communities."

Alidz Oshagan, a Sociology major at the University of Wisconsin-
Madison, is a member of the Detroit "Kopernik Tandourjian" AYF
Senior chapter. She has interned at the Armenian Weekly and has
also taught at the A.R.S Detroit Zavarian Armenian weekly school.

"I wanted to be a part of the Leo Sarkisian internship because it
will allow me to explore Hai Tahd issues, which is something I want
to continue doing in the future on a bigger level," said Oshagan.

Alex Der Alexanian, a business administration major with a
concentration in finance at the California State University,
Fullerton, has dedicated numerous hours volunteering with the On
Track Mentorship program for at risk youth, in addition to his ANC
activism and involvement in Orange County’s Ashod Yergat AYF.

"I was interested in the Leo Sarkisian Internship Program because
it is an excellent way to get hands-on experience with Hai Tahd on
a national level," said Alexanian. "Also, I wanted to learn the
skills necessary to become an effective activist and take those
skills back to my community."

"I love being a part of the Armenian community and working for the
Armenian Cause," said Nyree Naljian, a student at Pace University
in New York receiving her masters in Accounting. "When I heard
about this organization, I was extremely excited to be a part of it
to be able to fight for my rights as an Armenian and not deny my
identity."

A New Jersey native, Naljian has been involved in the Armenian
Evangelical Youth Fellowship, the Armenian Church Youth
Organization of America and also serves as a Sunday school teacher
at the Armenian Presbyterian Church. She is also a member of Lambda
Sigma national honor’s society at Pace University.

Christopher Yemenidjian, a Political Science and English double
major transferring to the University of California, Berkeley this
spring, has shown immense dedication to his local Armenian
community, serving as the chairman of the South Bay AYF Potorig
chapter, South Bay ANC, and the United Human Rights Council. In
addition, he has interned at the ANCA-Western Region office, is a
veteran of the U.S Air Force, and has also been inducted into the
Alpha Gamma Sigma honor’s society.

"The Leo Sarkisian internship permits future leaders to showcase
their abilities, while allowing them to reach their full
potential," said Yemenidjian. "It is essential for us to stand
united and continue to fight the intellectual war against those who
deny our cultural history and those who stand in our way during our
quest for a united Armenia."

#####

Photo Caption: The ANCA 2007 Leo Sarkisian Interns (from l to r):
Alex Der Alexanian, Dzovak Kazandjian, Chris Yemenidjian, Nyree
Naljian, Paul Ternamian, Alidz Oshagan, and Shant Hagopian.

www.anca.org

Armenian PM Meets With President Of Greece

ARMENIAN PM MEETS WITH PRESIDENT OF GREECE

ARMENPRESS
Jun 27 2007

YEREVAN, JUNE 27, ARMENPRESS: Armenian Prime Minister Serzh Sargsian
met today with the Greek President Karolos Papoulias who arrived in
Armenia on a state visit.

Governmental press service told Armenpress that during the meeting
the prime minister said that the Armenian government is ready to exert
all the possible efforts to carry out the agreements reached between
the Armenian and Greek presidents for the sake of the two countries
and peoples.

Serzh Sargsian expressed gratitude for the support displayed to
Armenia in various spheres.

The Greek president spoke about the high level of bilateral political
relations and cooperation between Armenia and Greece within the
framework of international organizations. He noted that Greece has
certain experience in Euro-integration and Euro-Atlantic circles and
is ready to be helpful for Armenia.

During the meeting the two sides underscored the activity of the
Armenian-Greek intergovernmental commission in the development of
economic cooperation.

ANTELIAS: Co-Chairs of Christian-Muslim Dialogue Cte visit HH Aram I

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version: nian.htm

HIS HOLINESS RECEIVES THE CO-CHAIRMEN OF
THE CHRISTIAN-MUSLIM DIALOGUE COMMITTEE

His Holiness Aram I received the co-chairmen of the Christian-Muslim
Dialogue Committee in Lebanon, Dr. Mohammed Sammak and Hares Shehab, in
Antelias on June 25. The representative of the Armenian community in this
committee, Dr. Jean Salmanian, also attended the meeting.

The aim of the meeting was consultations on how to bring Lebanon out of
its current stalemate and what initiatives the MECC can take in this
respect.

The Pontiff and his guests discussed the possibility of convening a
meeting of the spiritual leaders of all the communities in Lebanon, as well
as plans for a closed meeting between spiritual and political leaders. His
Holiness advised adopting a realistic approach, staying away from inciting
new sensitivities. He proposed organizing meetings with prominent political
figures with the following process:

1..
Formation of a new government with the participation of all sides. In
this respect, the Catholicos pointed out that for understandable reasons, it
might be premature to form a national unity government, but it is essential
to form a government in which all sides and communities participate.
2..
The re-launching of national dialogue under the auspices of the new
government.
3..
An agreement on the election of a new president, someone who would not
be the representative of one side, but a person representing the whole of
Lebanon.

http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Arme