Armenian Swimmers Not Pass To World Championship Final

ARMENIAN SWIMMERS NOT PASS TO WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP FINAL

Noyan Tapan
April 15, 2008

YEREVAN, APRIL 15, NOYAN TAPAN. The Swimming World Championship was
held in the city of Manchester, England. Representatives of Armenia
Mikayel Koloyan and Haroutiun Haroutiunian took part in competitions
in freestyle swimming.

They improved their personal results. M. Koloyan even established
3 records of Armenia, in the distances of 50 meters, 100 meters,
and 200 meters.

Nevertheless, the Armenian swimmers’ results are still lower than
the highest international standards and they were not included in
the final eight.

NKR NA Speaker Sends A Letter Of Thanks To Congressman Michael McNul

NKR NA SPEAKER SENDS A LETTER OF THANKS TO CONGRESSMAN MICHAEL MCNULTY

armradio.am
16.04.2008 15:20

Chairman of the NKR National Assembly Ashot Ghulyan sent a letter
of thanks to the US House of Representatives member, Congressman
Michael McNulty.

"I express my gratitude to you for your words of welcome on the
occasion of the 20th anniversary of the national liberation movement
of Artsakh’s Armenians. We highly appreciate the consistent assistance
of our friends in the US Congress aimed at freedom, independence, as
well as democratic and economic development of Artsakh. Your political
assistance acquires greater value on the background of Azerbaijan’s
being not ready to begin a constructive dialogue with us to establish
stability, peace and prosperity in the region. Azerbaijan continues
to threaten Nagorno Karabakh with a new war instead", the letter reads.

The Speaker reminded, that in February, 1988, with the national
liberation struggle, "Nagorno Karabakh people chose the path leading to
fulfillment of its aspirations and made it the master of its own fate."

"We are determined to continue this path intending to build a free,
secure, democratic and successful country for the present and future
generations", Ashot Ghulian noted.

The NKR National Assembly Chairman expressed hope that "cooperation
with the congressmen, friends of Armenia and Artsakh, will go on for
the sake of attaining common aims, i.e. establishing peace, democracy
and wellbeing in the South Caucasus and other parts of the world."

Struggle Against Authorities Should Not Be Turned Into Struggle Agai

STRUGGLE AGAINST AUTHORITIES SHOULD NOT BE TURNED INTO STRUGGLE AGAINST STATE, ARFD FACTION SECRETARY CONSIDERS

Noyan Tapan
April 16, 2008

YEREVAN, APRIL 16, NOYAN TAPAN. The people’s "extreme discontent"
with the current situation and the fact that the people did not
see off the leaving power with applause, as the power along with
good things also left us bad things as a heritage," is one more
evidence that the new power needs to be "changed a lot," otherwise
the current "problems instead of being solved will become more
aggravated." Artashes Shahbazian, the Secretary of the National
Assembly ARFD faction, expressed such an opinion on April 16 in the
Urbat (Friday) club. Meanwhile the deputy said that the problems
stipulated in the coalition agreement give a ground to suppose that
the authorities are willing to change the present.

Touching upon the discussions over the domestic situation in
Armenia underway in the Strasbourg PACE spring session in these
days, A. Shahbazian expressed an opinion that the estimations and
proposals voiced in connection with the presidential elections do not
differ much from those espressed in Armenia, including by parties
making part of the power. He affirmed that "we should we concerned
and draw conclusions for the future," think of steps to improve the
situation, and mediation from outside is not so pleasant, especially
some politicians’ "attempts to bring a person from outside" are not
praiseworthy.

At journalists’ request the deputy also touched upon first RA
President Levon Ter-Petrosian’s interview to the Noviye Izvestiya
newspaper given lately, in which he, in particular, said about his
future plans that he is going to form a certain public opinion so that
the current power will not be recognized. The ARFD deputy said that
he would like the struggle not to become so deep when the struggle
against the authorities becomes a struggle against the state. "If a
civilized struggle is carried out against the authorities, I welcome
it, as a civilized political struggle is necessary," M. Shahbazian said
adding that "it will only make sound our political system, our life."

Civil Appeal Court Rejects Complaint Of Chap LLC – Owner Of Gala Tel

CIVIL APPEAL COURT REJECTS COMPLAINT OF CHAP LLC – OWNER OF GALA TELEVISION COMPANY

Noyan Tapan
April 14, 2008

YEREVAN, APRIL 14, NOYAN TAPAN. The RA Civil Appeal Court (chairman
– Judge Tigran Sahakian) on April 14 rejected the complaint of Gala
television company’s representative Karen Tumanian against the decision
on the case "Gyumri mayor’s office against Chap LLC – the founder of
Gala television company".

The representative of Chap LLL had petitioned to overturn the decision
of the Shirak regional court and to send the case to the same court for
re-examination. According to the complaint, in making the decision,
the regional court committed violations of Substantive Law and
Procedural Law, as well as a number of articles of the Constitution,
the European Convention on Human Rights and the Civil Procedure Code.

To recap, the Shirak regional court (chairman – Judge A. Khachatrian)
had sustained the claim of the mayor’s office "on eliminating
the violations of ownership rights" and ruled to oblige Chap LLC
to dismantle its broadcasting antenna from the television tower
representing the property of the mayor’s office. By the same decision,
Chap LLC’ claim "to establish a servitude" on the mayor’s office
was rejected.

During a talk with NT correspondent, Levon Barseghian – coordinator of
the headquarters on protection of speech freedom and Gala TV company,
chairman of "Asparez" club of journalists said that in all likelihood
the decision of the appeal court will be disputed in the Cassation
Court and the European Court of Human Rights. The decision of the
Appeal Court takes effect from the moment of its publication and may
be disputed within 3 months.

HSBC Bank Armenia Organizes Tree Planting In Area Of Tsitsernakaberd

HSBC BANK ARMENIA ORGANIZES TREE PLANTING IN AREA OF TSITSERNAKABERD MEMORIAL COMPLEX

arminfo
2008-04-14 19:14:00

ArmInfo. Over the past weekend, the HSBC Bank Armenia organized tree
planting in area of Tsitsernakaberd Memorial Complex dedicated to
the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

ArmInfo correspondent, who took part in the action, reports that 70
employees of the bank planted a total of 100 ash-trees. HSBC Bank
Armenia has been regularly organizing tree planting since the day of
its establishment in Armenia. Trees have already been planted in the
area of Sardarapat Memorial, as well as in the yard of a boarding
school in Nubarashen community.

Director General of the bank Tim Slater stressed that the ecological
initiatives are carried out under the HSBC Group’s program on fight
against climatic changes. The HSBC Bank Armenia, which is a part of
the HSBC Group, invests in ecological technologies. For instance, the
bank’s offices use electric appliances, including bulbs, which save
electricity. Furthermore, the bank is going to organize wastepaper
utilization, and spend the receipts on tree planting. According to
the estimation of the bank’s employees, the offices of HSBC Bank
Armenia pile up about 50 kg of wastepaper weekly.

Two Allegiances, One Truth

TWO ALLEGIANCES, ONE TRUTH
By Lisa Haidostian

Michigan Daily
rage/paper851/news/2008/04/09/TheStatement/Two-All egiances.One.Truth-3312034.shtml
April 9 2008
MI

PrintEmail Article Tools Page 1 of 1 In ninth grade, my world studies
teacher was delivering a requisite "We are the melting pot of the
world" lecture when he said something that jarred me away from my
old-school Nokia cell phone game.

"I mean, if there was a war, most immigrants in this country would
fight for America’s army," he said, or something along those lines.

Not so fast, I thought. It can’t be that clear-cut.

As a third-generation Armenian, and ever since I spent my first summer
transitioning abruptly from country club tennis matches to singing
the Armenian anthem at culture camp, I’ve been playing some sort of
identity hopscotch game, never quite knowing on exactly which square
to land.

It’s no surprise that there’s a blurring of national loyalties for
someone who grew up, as I did, with steadfast ties to an ancestral
homeland, but who also waves the American flag, as I do, as high as
the rest on the Fourth of July.

But for many Armenians, there’s an especially strong devotion to our
ethnicity because of an unrecognized, unaddressed and often unknown
genocide that’s been stinging our people for more than 92 years.

While the passing of almost a century might seem to dim the catastrophe
for most, it only sharpens it for Armenians of my generation. The
survivors and witnesses to the systematic killings are all but
gone, and most countries still won’t go on the record to call it a
genocide. Many young Armenians feel it now falls to them to make sure
the atrocities aren’t blotted out of history forever.

By now, I hope you’ve heard. Between the years of 1915 and 1918,
the Ottoman Turks killed an estimated 1.5 million Armenians. Many
were either brutally murdered or died of starvation or exhaustion
while on forced marches to concentration camps in the Syrian Desert
that most never reached.

It concerns me that most students won’t read about the genocide in
textbooks. Despite the scholarly consensus, overwhelming evidence and
first-hand accounts of the atrocities, Turkey’s government claims
the mass killings were "ethnic conflicts" due to World War I. Only
22 countries to date have officially recognized the Armenian genocide.

It’s impossible for me not to relate the "Save Darfur" e-mails dotting
my inbox to my own country, which, almost a hundred years later,
still needs some saving of its own.

While President Bush has officially acknowledged the killings in
Darfur as genocide, the United States has yet to condemn the Armenian
killings as such.

In October, the U.S. got sort of close when the House of
Representatives nearly brought to a vote a resolution condemning the
Ottoman Turks’ actions against Armenians as genocide.

But for me, the resolution represented both a step toward the
fulfillment of a longtime hope and a personal identity crisis.

Immediately after the U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs passed
the resolution, there was backlash from President Bush, prominent
politicians and others who insisted that, while what happened was
regrettable, relations with Turkey were too crucial to be harmed. And
relations with Turkey were what mattered.

This isn’t the right time, they insisted. Not when Turkey is an ally
in an ongoing war, they decreed.

At the risk of making the Armenian community’s collective jaw drop,
I found myself a bit conflicted while sifting through the many news
articles and columns on the issue. I’d been grappling with the genocide
since I was five years old, ever since my Sunday school teacher
explained it as I crafted a cross out of dry macaroni noodles. I’d
written the letters to my congressmen. I’d held my candle during the
vigils on the Diag.

But I’m an American, too, I thought. As government official after
government official warned of violence and a ricochet of consequences
felt round the world, I wondered whether it would be best if we waited
just a few more years. Maybe this isn’t the right time. What if the
resolution was adopted and the next day, Turkish syndicates launched
an attack on the U.S.? I felt un-Armenian and un-American at the same
time, and suddenly I wasn’t even on the hopscotch board at all.

But soon I understood that I was in such a state of flux because I
wasn’t looking at the situation properly. I realized that it does more
harm than good for the U.S. to continue denying that the massacres
were genocide and to condoning the millions of dollars the Turkish
government spends trying to convince people it never happened. Sitting
center stage in the global arena, the U.S. can send a message to the
world that there are actual consequences for committing genocide. It
doesn’t matter that ours was in the past.

Genocide is still happening today.

I also realized that it’s OK to have two homes and sport both an
American flag and an Armenian key chain. There’s no need to pick
between countries, and if there was, I’d fight for whichever needed
me most.

-Lisa Haidostian is an associate news editor for The Michigan Daily

http://media.www.michigandaily.com/media/sto

Heiki Talvitie: "OSCE Observes The Negotiation Process Around Nagorn

HEIKI TALVITIE: "OSCE OBSERVES THE NEGOTIATION PROCESS AROUND NAGORNO KARABAKH"

Today.Az
politics/44169.html
April 9 2008
Azerbaijan

OSCE keeps the negotiation process on Karabakh in the center of
attention, said Heiki Talvitie, special representative of the OSCE
chairman-in-office, during a meeting with Armenian Foreign Minister
Vardan Oskanyan.

According to a source from the department of press and information
for the Foreign Ministry, the sides discussed prospects of Nagorno
Karabakh conflict resolution.

Oskanyan expressed satisfaction with the attention, the Finnish
representative pays to Armenia and the region. In turn, Talvitie
thanked the minister for many years of joint and effective work.

Helki Talvitie is visiting Yerevan for participation in the
inauguration of the newly elected president of Armenia Serzh Sarkissyan
who won presidential elections on February 19 of 2008.

http://www.today.az/news/

The Armenian Weekly; April 5, 2008; Darfur and Armenia

The Armenian Weekly On-Line
80 Bigelow Avenue
Watertown MA 02472 USA
(617) 926-3974
[email protected]

http://www.a rmenianweekly.com

The Armenian Weekly; Volume 74, No. 13; April 5, 2008

Darfur and Armenia:

1. For a Genocide-Free Investing
By Jirair Ratevosian and Eric Cohen

2. An interview with Nicholas D. Kristof
By Khatchig Mouradian

3. Turkey and Sudan: A Genocidal Tandem
By Serouj Aprahamian

***

1. For a Genocide-Free Investing
By Jirair Ratevosian and Eric Cohen

Many would suppose that today, 93 years after the start of the Armenian
genocide and 63 years after the end of the Holocaust, no company that values
the public trust would attempt to profit from connections to genocide.
Looking back, who would support the idea of investing in firms that sought
to profit by selling Zyklon-B gas to the Nazis or machetes to the Ottoman
Turks? Looking forward, who wants their savings invested in companies that
help fund genocide?

Sadly, as we mark the beginning of the sixth year of the genocide in Darfur,
Sudan, we are faced with the problem of ordinary investors having their
hard-earned savings invested by mutual fund managers in companies that fund
genocide. For example, Fidelity has been one of the largest holders of
PetroChina, which, through its closely related parent China National
Petroleum Company, is providing funding that the government of Sudan uses to
conduct genocide in Darfur.

Thus, ordinary individuals, through their investments in Fidelity mutual
funds, inadvertently invest in companies funding genocide. Since no policy
prevents these investments, holdings in these problem companies may increase
or involve additional funds in the future. Mutual fund investors cannot
practically avoid investing in genocide, unless the fund makes a commitment
to genocide-free investing.

Few of us are in a position to set foreign policy, and fewer yet are
individually positioned to stop a genocide. Yet, each of us is responsible
for doing that which we are able. Each of us can and must speak out. We can
and must recognize genocide as the horror that it is and as a grave affront
to humanity. Each of us can and must take responsibility for how we invest
our family savings.

Can we influence mutual fund companies such as Fidelity to make a commitment
to genocide-free investing? Yes, we can, through shareholder action. The
Boston-based non-profit group, Investors Against Genocide, has submitted
shareholder proposals to 56 mutual funds, giving hundreds of thousands of
mutual fund shareholders the opportunity to cast a vote for genocide-free
investing. Once the proposal passes, the mutual fund industry can become a
bulwark against genocide, rather than one of its major financial supporters.

Fidelity shareholders now have the opportunity to vote on this unprecedented
shareholder proposal concerning "oversight procedures to screen out
investments in companies that substantially contribute to genocide."
Fidelity is recommending that shareholders vote against the proposal.
However, we know that ordinary Americans, once they learn the facts, will
vote to make their mutual funds genocide-free.

We cannot advance our interests by compromising our values. The true danger
to our interests comes from failing to stand up for our values. Therefore,
we must stand against genocide.

If you own mutual funds in your retirement plan or your savings account, you
have a vote in the way your money is managed, just as you have a vote in a
presidential race. Votes are being cast now for eight Fidelity funds with a
shareholder meeting on April 16 and eleven more funds that will meet on May
14.

If you are a Fidelity shareholder, don’t discard your proxy ballot without
checking it carefully. If there is a proposal referencing genocide, read the
detail and vote "FOR" the proposal to make your mutual fund genocide-free.
If you have discarded the proxy materials, or have already voted and want to
change your vote, you can. You can revise your vote until the day of the
meeting.

Votes with additional Fidelity funds and other major fund companies,
including Vanguard, Franklin Templeton, and Barclays, will follow.

Even if you are not a mutual fund shareholder, you can help support
genocide-free investing. You can help spread the word by telling your
family, friends, and co-workers, writing letters to the editor, and helping
leaflet at upcoming events in the Armenian community. If your employer has a
Fidelity 401K or 403B plan you can help spread the word at your office about
the opportunity for shareholders to vote.

Ethical investing may mean different things to different people. However,
surely there is a minimum standard upon which nearly everyone agrees. We
draw the line at investing in genocide. The shareholder proposal on
genocide-free investing sets this minimum standard for all mutual funds.

Fidelity sought to prevent this proposal from coming to a vote, but its
efforts to block the issue failed. Fidelity continues to oppose the
proposal, and its opposition will also ultimately fail. As shareholders
become increasingly aware, we are confident that the proposal will pass in
the future. The reason Fidelity will fail is simple: Fidelity’s customers do
not want their family savings and pension funds invested in companies that
help to fund genocide, whether that genocide is occurring today in Darfur or
somewhere else in the future.

Armenians, Jews, and unfortunately now Darfurians know the horrors of
genocide well. From the first genocide of the 20th century to the first
genocide of the 21st, we are obligated to act, lest we stand with the
deniers. By voting for genocide-free investing, we can take a principled
stand against genocide and genocide deniers to help ensure that such a human
tragedy is never repeated.

Whether you own one share, no shares, or thousands, we hope you will become
a voice for genocide-free investing. For more information on ways to help,
visit www.InvestorsAgainst Genocide.org.

Jirair Ratevosian is the director of event planning at the Massachusetts
Coalition to Save Darfur. Eric Cohen is the chairperson of Investors Against
Genocide.

Investors Against Genocide is a non-profit organization dedicated to
convincing mutual fund and other investment firms to change their investing
strategy to avoid complicity in genocide. The organization works with
individuals, companies, organizations, financial institutions, the press,
and government agencies to build awareness and to create financial, public
relations, and regulatory pressure for investment firms to change. Investors
Against Genocide is a project of the Massachusetts Coalition to Save Darfur,
an alliance of organizations from across Massachusetts working to stop the
genocide and protect civilians in Sudan.

For more information, visit For more
information on the Massachusetts Coalition, visit
—————————- —————————————–

2. An interview with Nicholas D. Kristof
By Khatchig Mouradian

NEW YORK (A.W.)-Nicholas Kristof has been an Op-Ed columnist for the New
York Times since November 2001. In his weekly columns, he often tackles
issues of human rights abuses and genocide, and has been instrumental in
creating awareness on the situation in Darfur.

A two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, he has lived on four
continents, reported on six, and traveled to 140 countries. (He is at least
a two-time visitor to every member of the Axis of Evil.)

Nicholas Donabet Kristof is the son of Ladis Kristof, a Transylvanian-born
Armenian who immigrated to the United States after World War II.

In this interview, conducted in his office at the New York Times on March
28, we talk about the genocide in Darfur.

***

Khatchig Mouradian-You’ve been covering the genocide in Darfur for four
years now. What has changed over this time in both public awareness and the
situation on the ground?

Nicholas Kristof-There’s certainly more attention to Darfur now. And it
really is heartening, for example, how many university students all across
the country have been willing to campaign for Darfur. So in my more hopeful
moments, I think about the hundreds of thousands of college students who are
protesting on behalf of people of a different religion, different skin
color, who they will never meet, and I think, "Wow, we are really making
some progress."

But then at the end of the day, on the ground in Darfur, the situation is as
messy now as it was four years ago. If you had told me four years ago when I
first went there that in 2008, people would know what Darfur is, they would
know what is going on there, that the president would have called it
"genocide," I would have been surprised. But if you told me that people
would know what’s going on and yet still we wouldn’t do anything, then I
would have been even more stunned and depressed.

K.M.-In the past, governments were careful not to invoke the term "genocide"
because then they would have to act. Now, President Bush used the word when
referring to Darfur, but nothing happened. Has the word "genocide" lost its
meaning?

N.K.-I don’t think it ever really had a lot of meaning to inspire action.
However, it does make people feel guilty. The reason you do have a lot of
people protesting on behalf of Darfur is the word "genocide." If you use the
word "ethnic cleansing," I don’t think it gets people so upset.

Look at how in the Congo the death toll has been much greater, but it’s not
really a case of genocide; it’s a messy difficult case of rival militias and
that has attracted much less attention than Darfur. What has made a
difference is that in Darfur the death toll is smaller, but it is genocide.
So I do think that genocide as a reality and as a term does make a
difference-but just not nearly enough.

K.M.-In your columns, you’ve mentioned that you’ve received emails from
people saying, Yes, the situation in Darfur is bad, but we have other
priorities. How do you feel about this kind of reaction, be it from ordinary
people or government officials?

N.K.-I think that one of the basic mistakes that Western governments make is
that while they think that it’s unfortunate what is happening in Darfur,
that there are a lot of unfortunate things going on in a lot of places
around the world. And Darfur is their number 38th priority.

In fact, I think it’s one of the lessons of history that over time genocide
really does rise to the very top of the priority list. The Armenian genocide
is a perfect example of that. When it was going on, the Wilson
administration certainly thought that it was unfortunate; they didn’t want
Armenians killed, but they had huge challenges with Europe, with the Ottoman
Empire, and so it just never rose very high on the priority list. The same
is true with the Holocaust, Rwanda, and Bosnia. Yet, each of those has had a
staying power, a resonance throughout history precisely because it was
genocide. I think that the mistake that the administration has made, the
State Department has made, and a lot of us in the media have made is that we
don’t appreciate that there really is something different about a government
choosing a people based on race, color, religion, or whatever, and deciding
to kill them.

K.M.-Do you think there will be any drastic changes in the U.S. policy on
Darfur when there’s a new president in the Oval Office next year?

N.K.-There is some reason to believe that the next president will be
modestly more active on Darfur. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama have both
been very active on the issue. John McCain had been earlier on; he has
slowed down a little bit on Darfur more recently. But all of them have been,
at one time or the other, real leaders on it. So yes, there is hope that if
they were in the White House, they would be more active on it.

But at the end of the day, I think that one of the things we see from
history is that the president is never going to really lead in a case of
genocide because there tends not to be a national interest involved, and
there tends to be a lot of uncertainty about the right thing to do, and
there are a lot of other priorities. When there has been some kind of
response, it has been because you just had a lot of Americans shaming their
president to act. Kosovo is a good example of that. There, we had the
Clinton administration that really didn’t want to do very much, but they had
just been tormented over a combination of Rwanda and Bosnia and, finally,
they felt they had to do something and they did the right thing. Ultimately,
I think it is going to be the same in the case of Darfur. The shaming of the
U.S., Europe, China is going to actually make a difference.

K.M.-So you believe that the movement to change the situation is going to be
>From the bottom-up.

N.K.-It would be great if there were more change at the top, but the reality
is that Mia Farrow has done more good for the people of Darfur
diplomatically than Condi Rice has. And to the extent that China is now
paying attention to Darfur, and is being somewhat helpful, that’s really
because of Mia Farrow, not because of Condi Rice.

That said, I hope that we’re going to see more rigorous action by government
officials, and Sarcozy, I think, is going to be more helpful in Chad
especially. But fundamentally, political leaders are going to be reactive
rather than proactive. So it’s going to be the grassroots activists who are
going to be the ones bringing about that change, whether it’s in our
government or in the Chinese government.

K.M.-What are your thoughts about the way Muslim countries have been
reacting to the crisis in Darfur? They point out the double standards of the
U.S., but they also uphold similar double standards by speaking about human
rights violations in Israel and the Palestinian territories, while ignoring
the genocide in Darfur.

N.K.-Everybody has double standards and we always tend to be more shocked
about everybody else’s double standards. Look at Zimbabwe, for example. The
world was horrified when you had white Rhodesians doing terrible things to
blacks there, but when it’s Zimbabwe president Robert Mugabe, then it tends
to be more accepted by everybody. Likewise, Sudan can get away with doing
things to its own people that no outsider could get away with.

I do think that there have been double standards in the Egyptian news media,
in particular. I really had hoped that the Egyptian news media, because it’s
so important in the region, could have done more with Darfur. Instead, there
is this reflexive sense that those Yankee imperialists went after Iraqi oil
and neutralized Iraq on behalf of Israel and now they’re going to do the
same thing to Sudan. I think that’s very unfortunate, but, I must say, we
suffer from double standards all the time as well.

K.M.-And U.S. foreign policy in recent years has aggravated the situation.

N.K.-Absolutely. I think that our Middle Eastern policy-the Arab-Israeli
conflict and Iraq-has left us in a situation where everything we do is
viewed through an incredible prism of suspicion. That makes it very
difficult for us to do anything about an Arab country, especially an Arab
country with oil. This is one reason why it would be so helpful if we worked
more with European countries and Muslim countries. If Egypt, the Arab
League, or other Muslim countries outside the Arab world were to be more
concerned about Muslims being slaughtered in Darfur, that would be of huge
help.

K.M.-How does this affect you on a personal level? Isn’t it very frustrating
to see how slowly things change-if they ever do?

N.K.-Absolutely. And the most frustrating is the difficulty translating from
concern to actually any kind of positive action. I find that incredibly
frustrating. I’m quite worried that the next issue is going to be the
North-South war in Sudan. And Darfur might just be remembered as the
prologue to something much bloodier.

One of the lessons that we should have learned is that you can intervene
much more easily early on in a conflict. Once Humpty Dumpty has fallen off
the wall, then it’s impossible to put him back together again. Right now,
everybody is watching south Sudan fall off the ledge. We can still do
something, but a year from now it may be utterly too late.

K.M.-What do you usually tell people who ask what they can do to help?

N.K.-Some of the websites that I recommend people to go to are Save Darfur
(www.Save Darfur.org), the Genocide Intervention Network (www.genocide
intervention.net) and Dream for Darfur ().

I do think that the Armenian community has some special responsibility to
lead the way. One of the ways of memorializing the Armenian genocide should
be to prevent the next genocide from happening.

K.M.-Just like the role the Jewish community is playing.

N.K.-Exactly. I think those websites are a good place to start, and some
combination of calling the White House and writing member of Congress. There’s
a website called Darfurscores.org that shows how each member of Congress has
done. I think letters to other governments are helpful, too.

K.M.-What about the humanitarian aspect of all this?

N.K.-Early on, when people asked me what they could do to help, I would
point them to specific humanitarian organizations like Doctors Without
Borders (). I think they do great work and if
one donates to them, that’s not money wasted at all.

But for four years now I’ve been going and I’ve seen doctors bandage up kids
with bullet wounds. That can keep on going for 20 years. So at some point,
you begin to think that the real response is not a lot more bandages and
more surgeons, but to do something to actually stop the killing. And so for
that reason, now when people ask, I tend to emphasize the advocacy
organizations.
———————————- ————————————————– —————-

3. Turkey and Sudan: A Genocidal Tandem
By Serouj Aprahamian

While other countries in the world have criticized and increasingly
distanced themselves from the Sudanese regime and its atrocities in Darfur,
the Turkish government has been going out of its way to forge ever-closer
ties with its genocidal apprentice in Khartoum.

This past January, Turkey’s president, Abdullah Gul, hosted an extravagant
three-day visit for Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir. This was the second
such official trip from Sudan to Turkey at the presidential level. During
his stay, Bashir was treated to an exclusive state dinner at the Turkish
presidential palace, met with several top-level officials, and attended a
Turkish-Sudanese business meeting held by the Turkish Foreign Economic
Relations Board (DEIK) in Istanbul.

This latest trip is only the most recent manifestation of a Turkish affinity
for Sudan that has been steadily growing in line with an escalation of
violence in Darfur since 2003.

As has been well documented, the Darfur region of Sudan has been subject to
a systematic campaign of murder, looting, rape, and pillaging, carried out
mainly by a government-sponsored militia known as the Janjaweed.

According to international human rights groups, this campaign has already
resulted in the deaths of over 400,000 people and the displacement of 2.5
million from their homes, in what the United States has officially described
as genocide.

While the rest of the world has marginalized Sudan and called for an end to
its crimes in Darfur, the Turkish government has proceeded to turn this
country into its largest trading partner in Africa. The volume of trade
between Ankara and Khartoum shot up from $48 million in 2002 to $220 million
in 2006-an increase that took place during the same period when Sudan was
intensifying its killings in Darfur. Turkey hopes to develop these trade
links even further in the future, with one of the stated goals of the
above-mentioned DEIK meeting being to boost levels of trade to $1 billion.

As a country that has been outcast in the international community,
especially in the West, Sudan very much values Turkey as an economic and
political partner. As al-Bashir stated during his remarks at the DEIK
meeting, "Sudanese businessmen do not only want to emerge in the Turkish
market, but also to use it as a passage to European and other international
markets." In turn, Turkey hopes to benefit economically from Sudan’s
potential in sectors such as oil, cotton, industry, and services. There have
also been reports that the Turkish Defense Ministry is currently looking
into supplying Sudan’s deadly demand for weapons.

Perhaps it should come as no surprise that the country responsible for the
first genocide of the 20th century has no qualms about building a strong
strategic relationship with the country now carrying out the first genocide
of the 21st century. Indeed, not only is Turkey rewarding Sudan for its
inhumanity by filling up its coffers and helping it access markets in
Europe, but we also see it actively taking part in Khartoum’s shameless
campaign of genocide denial.

In a Jan. 20 interview, prior to al-Bashir’s visit to Turkey, President Gul
told the Sudan News Agency that Turkey is in "solidarity" with Sudan and
warned against any "foreign intervention" over Darfur aimed at breaking "the
unity of Sudan." He later dismissed calls for putting pressure on al-Bashir
to end the atrocities in Darfur by claiming that what is happening there is
a "humanitarian tragedy" that "stems from poverty and environmental
conditions."

Gul’s colleague, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, also joined in on the
denial when he stated in March 2007, "I do not believe that there has been
assimilation of a genocide in Darfur. In any case, the verses of the Koran
reject tribalism and clans."

In fact, when one takes a close look at Sudan’s method of genocide and its
subsequent denial, we see that they are doing nothing more than taking a
page out of Turkey’s playbook (see the chart below for Sudan’s almost word
for word use of Ankara’s genocide denial techniques). The fact that Turkey
committed genocide and remains unpunished for so long has surely emboldened
the regime in Khartoum to carry out similar policies in Darfur without fear
of serious retribution. Like Hitler, al-Bashir must be thinking to himself,
"Who, after all, speaks today of the annihilation of the Armenians?"

Indeed, Sudanese officials have repeatedly stated their lauding admiration
for Turkey as "a model for Sudan" and desire to "want to benefit from Turkey’s
experiences." They have also sought to market themselves to the world in an
identical manner, with Sudan describing itself as a "bridge between Arabic
and African nations," much like Ankara claims itself to be a bridge between
Europe and Asia.

Thus, it is clear that the Sudanese regime is trying to follow in Turkey’s
footsteps. This adds further proof to the fact that giving in to the Turkish
denial machine makes the world a more dangerous place. As long as Turkey
does not own up to the crimes it has committed (and is aided in this process
by officials in the U.S.), it will continue to serve as a model for
governments such as that of Khartoum who seek to get away with slaughtering
an entire group of people.

In the words of Mark Hanis, founder and director of the Genocide
Intervention Network, "Increased cooperation between the two countries
[Turkey and Sudan] serves to highlight the connections between genocides of
the past and those of the present. … The continued denial of the Armenian
genocide sends the wrong message to Sudan and those who would commit
genocide in the future."

If we want to stop the cycle of genocide today and prevent future
atrocities, we have to start by speaking truthfully about the genocides of
the past. In this way, recognizing the Armenian genocide is not a historical
issue but, rather a very current one with real world consequences for peace
today.

www.InvestorsAgainstGenocide.org.
www.SaveDarfurMA.org.
www.dreamfordarfur.org
www.doctorswithoutborders.org

Cannery Opens Soon

CANNERY OPENS SOON

KarabakhOpen
07-04-2008 16:17:42

Soon the processing facility of the Artsakh Fruit Company opens
in Stepanakert, which will start buying fruits and vegetables from
farmers this spring, said the minister of agriculture of NKR Armo
Tsatryan in an interview with Karabakh-Open.com.

According to the minister, as soon as the equipment is installed,
the processing facility will be operated. In the beginning it is
foreseen to produce 2.5 million cans.

In answer to the question what assistance the government will provide
to the company, the minister of agriculture said the company will
borrow money from one of the banks based in Karabakh, and part of
the interest rate will be subsidized by the government. According
to Armo Tsatryan, thereby the government stimulates processing and
agribusiness.

"It will be a major factory which will produce other production in
future. The factory is ready to buy fruits and vegetables, including
from the remote villages of the south of the region of Kashatagh. There
is a preliminary arrangement that if a major quantity is concentrated
in one of the areas of the region, the factory may transport it,"
Armo Tsatryan said.

He also reminded that the owner of the factory which costs 3 million
dollars is the director of the Armenia-based Biokat Company Garik
Sarukhanyan.

VimpelCom To Continue Rendering Statuionary Telephone Communication

VIMPELCOM TO CONTINUE RENDERING STATUIONARY TELEPHONE COMMUNICATION SERVICES IN ARMENIA

ARKA
April 7, 2008

YEREVAN, April 7. /ARKA/. The Russian VimpelCom Company, full owner
of the ArmenTel Company, has no intention to stop rendering stationary
telephone communication services in Armenia.

Dmitry Pleskonos, VimpelCom Vice-President for Business Development
in the CIS, reported that the issue of selling this business was
removed from the agenda long ago.

According to him, Armenia has become a "pioneer" in stationary
communication services for the company. However, the purchase of
the Golden Telecom Inc, one of the leading providers of integrated
telecommunication and Internet services, by VimpelCom this February
suggests the company’s intention to expand the field of activities.

"Moreover, we are setting ourselves a serious strategic task of
developing a convergent network in Armenia, which will allow us to
develop the stationary network in the country," Pleskonos said.

The VimpelCom Group of Companies comprises companies rendering
communication services in Russia, Kazakhstan, Ukraine, Tajikistan,
Uzbekistan, Georgia and Armenia – an area with an approximate
population of 250mln.

According to the VimpelCom Company’s financial report, the current
number of active customers is 442,500 – a 6.4% annual increase. The
company covers 26.1% of Armenia’s mobile communication market. The
number of users of stationary communication in Armenia is 629,300,
the average revenue per unit (ARPU) is $19.5 – a 5.4% increase.