Caucus Co-Chairs Urge President Bush To Reaffirm The Armenian Genoci

CAUCUS CO-CHAIRS URGE PRESIDENT BUSH TO REAFFIRM THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

ArmRadio.am
18.04.2007 13:54

Co-Chairs of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues Reps. Frank
Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ) and Joseph Knollenberg (R-MI), sent a letter
to President George W. Bush, urging him to reaffirm the United
States’ record on the Armenian Genocide in his upcoming April 24th
commemorative statement, reports the Armenian Assembly of America.

Last year in his annual commemorative speech, the President noted that
it was a "tragedy for all humanity and one that we and the world must
never forget, " but he has repeatedly failed to use the word genocide
when referencing the tragic killings of 1.5 million Armenians from
1915-1923 by the Ottoman Turks.

In their letter, the Co-Chairs encouraged the President to recognize
the atrocities committed against the Armenian people as genocide
stating in part: " The United States must never allow crimes against
humanity to pass without remembrance and condemnation." In addition
the letter emphasizes the importance of the US commitment to prevent
future occurrences of genocide, reiterating that "it is imperative
that we pay tribute to the memory of others who have suffered and to
never forget the past."

This year, Armenians across the world will commemorate the 92nd
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. On Capitol Hill, Pallone
and Knollenberg, in conjunction with the Armenian Embassy and
Armenian-American organizations, will be spearheading an April
24th event.

The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness
of Armenian issues.

It is a 501 (c) (3) tax-exempt membership organization.

Bush Administration Will Do Everything To Block The Adoption Of The

BUSH ADMINISTRATION WILL DO EVERYTHING TO BLOCK THE ADOPTION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION
Tatul Hakobyan

"Radiolur"
17.04.2007 14:47

April 24 is near. If the Armenian lobbyist organizations in Europe
and the United States are trying to include bills condemning the first
genocide of the 20th century in the agenda of parliaments, Turkey is
taking every step to prevent it in every way possible. Official Ankara
today is no ready to regret for 1.5 million Armenians slaughtered in
the Ottoman Empire in 1915-1923. Moreover, it upholds the denialist
policy.

President of the Labor Party of Turkey Dogu Perinjek, who was
charged 4 000 Euros for the expression "The Armenian Genocide is an
imperialistic lie," continues his activity. Together with hundreds of
other deniers he participated in the conference titled "Against the
lie of the Armenian Genocide," initiated by the Secretary General of
the "Talaat Pasha" Commission Ferit Ilsever.

This organization intends to clarify to France that the parliament
of that country has behaved incorrectly, adopting the resolution
envisaging criminal punishment of denying the Armenian Genocide.

It’s not accidental that that Turks have chosen France as a target.

Presidential elections are expected in this influential European
country, and two of the candidates have assured that in case they
are elected they will ratify the bill criminalizing the denial of
the Armenian Genocide.

The voting on the bill in the Senate will, most probably, take place
after the parliamentary and presidential elections, Chairwoman of
the European Armenian Federation Hilda Tchoboyan declared in Yerevan
recently.

The last group of parliamentarians made up of deputies from the ruling
and opposition parties departed for the United States over the weekend
to lobby against a resolution recognizing the killings of Armenians
as genocide.

Speaking to reporters before departure, YaÅ~_ar YakıÅ~_ of the
Justice and Development Party (AKP) said they would seek support in
Washington against the resolution

Publisher of the California Courier weekly Harut Sasunyan noted
in a phone conversation with "Radiolur" that despite the fact that
the Turkish Government has undertaken all the measures, the number
of supporters of the resolution is increasing. Sasunyan said the
resolution has no force of law.

It has a moral value.

Will the resolution be put on Congress agenda before April 24? Harut
Sasunyan said it is hardly possible unless extreme measures are
taken. These measures can be taken by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

Recently the Speaker of the House of Representatives was criticized
by the White House for visiting Syria and holding negotiations with
President Bashar Asad. Therefore, it is hard to anticipate that at
this point Nanci Pelosi will support the Congressmen’s initiative to
include the issue in the agenda.

"Nansi Pelosi has made no public statement after being elected, but
we know that for 20 years she has had a pro-Armenian position. On the
other hand not only Turks, but also the White House, the Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert Gates are
exerting pressure on her. Even in case this resolution is delayed
because of the presidential elections in Turkey, it’s not excluded
that the bill will be included in the agenda in a few months.

Let us remind that a month ago another group of Turkish
parliamentarians met with US Deputy Secretary of State Nicolas
Burns. The latter had declared that the Bush Administration would do
everything to block the adoption of the resolution.

–Boundary_(ID_1tIVel3cD/CjdsVKr84H2w )–

60 Dominant Companies

60 DOMINANT COMPANIES

A1+
[07:27 pm] 16 April, 2007

The RA State Commission for Fair Economic Competition adopted the
report on 2006. Armine Udumyan, press secretary of the commission,
claims that in 2006 the commission studied 40 markets, adopted
146 decisions, registered 29 new companies in the head register of
businesses with a dominant position. 60 businesses have been registered
this year.

The commission made inquiries from 1314 businesses for market research;
54 were fined 500 thousand drams each for refusing to provide
information. 53 were sued for a fine of a total of 72 200 000 drams.

`The post of president is great responsibility’

`The post of president is great responsibility’

Azat Artsakh
16-04-2007 11:41:48 – KarabakhOpen

Interview with the head of the NKR State Security Service Bako
Sahakyan

Mr. Sahakyan, the recent polls give you the highest rating among the
likely presidential candidates in NKR. What is your attitude?

I am happy that the institution of the public opinion is developing in
the country. As to the likely presidential candidates, I think this
question needs a more serious consideration.

What do you mean?

It is a highly responsible decision for any person who realizes that
the post of president is first of all great responsibility for the
fate of people and the state rather than a political privilege. I
realize this as a citizen, and as a public official, therefore I
cannot express my attitude earlier.

How about today?

Recently we’ve had meetings with the leaders of the influential
parties and NGOs. Representatives of the intelligentsia and the youth,
the veterans of World War II and the war in Artsakh came up to me with
proposals. During these meetings I felt real support and now I can
say that I may be running in the presidential election. And if I am
nominated, it will be a conscious decision acknowledging the great
responsibility which I will assume if I am elected president.

Does it mean that you already have agreement with the political forces
over your nomination?

I have already said that there is timing set down in the law. The
present stage is a stage of consultations. Besides, if I make up my
mind, I will prefer nomination on a civil initiative not to offend any
of the parties whom I respect and whose support I will need.

Foreign ministers to discuss Karabakh settlement on Apr 18

ITAR-TASS News Agency, Russia
April 13, 2007 Friday 02:29 PM EST

Foreign ministers to discuss Karabakh settlement on Apr 18

Foreign Ministers Vartan Oskanian and Elmar Mamedyarov will meet in
Belgrade on April 18 to discuss the Karabakh settlement, a source at
the Armenian Foreign Ministry’s press and information department told
Itar-Tass on Friday.

The Russian, French and U.S. cochairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group and
an envoy of the OSCE chairman-in-office will attend the meeting.

Armenia stands for the soonest peaceful settlement of the Karabakh
problem and the prevention of similar collisions and displacement of
people in the future, Armenian Prime Minister Serzh Sargsian said on
Friday. In his opinion, “the Karabakh conflict cannot be resolved by
force.”

“The question of Azerbaijani refugees requires a very careful and
comprehensive analysis and can be resolved only in case of a positive
outcome of the settlement negotiations. That must be done to prevent
new clashes in the return of refugees,” he said at a meeting with UN
Envoy on Human Rights of Internally Displaced Persons Walter Kalin.

Meanwhile, President Ilham Aliyev told the national government on
Friday that Azerbaijan will never grant independence to Karabakh.

“Karabakh will never join Armenia either,” he added.

The Armenian people already have their state – Armenia, Aliyev said.
“If anyone in Karabakh wants self-determination, they can move to
Armenia,” he said.

Aliyev disagreed with claims of the alleged plans to keep off Armenia
from regional projects. Armenia has isolated itself with claims to
neighbors and became “an economic and transport dead-end,” he said.

“If the Armenian administration offers a constructive attitude, the
Karabakh problem can be resolved,” Aliyev said.

He reaffirmed his “clear and invariable position: the territorial
integrity of Azerbaijan must be restored; the occupied lands must be
freed unconditionally; and refugees must return home.”

Egyptian FM holds talks with Armenian counterpart

Middle East News Agency, Egypt
April 14 2007

EGYPTIAN FOREIGN MINISTER HOLDS TALKS WITH ARMENIAN COUNTERPART

Cairo, 14 April: Egyptian Foreign Minister Ahmad Abu-al-Ghayt met on
Saturday with his Armenian counterpart Vardan Oskanyan.

During the meeting, Abu-al-Ghayt reviewed the Egyptian vision of
developments in the Mideast, especially with regard to the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict, Iraq, Lebanon, Sudan and the Iranian
nuclear file.

Hailing ties between Egypt and Armenia, Abu-al-Ghayt said that the
two countries would ink seven agreements on cooperation in fighting
crime and in the customs field as well as signing a memorandum of
understanding between the Egyptian and Armenian businessmen councils.

For his part, the Armenian minister highlighted the importance
Armenia attached to ties with Egypt.

Egypt established diplomatic ties with Armenia in 1992.

The Armenian minister also reviewed developments of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan, ties with
the US and Russia and the impact of developments of the Iranian
nuclear file on the Caucasus region.

Earthquake Measuring 4-5 Takes Place On April 12 In Armenia

EARTHQUAKE MEASURING 4-5 TAKES PLACE ON APRIL 12 IN ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
Apr 12 2007

YEREVAN, APRIL 12, NOYAN TAPAN. Earthquake with 3 magnitude took place
on April 12, at 00:43 by local time in Armenia, 6 km north-west to the
village of Parakar. Its strength in the epicenter measured 4-5. The
earthquake was felt in Parakar where it measured 4-5, in Etchmiadzin,
Ashtarak and Yerevan 3-4.

As Noyan Tapan was informed from Seismic Protection National Service,
at 01:03 by local time a tremor with 1.9 magnitude followed the
earthquake.

History Lessons For The Balkans

HISTORY LESSONS FOR THE BALKANS
By John Brady Kiesling

Spero News
April 12 2007

The goal of new elementary-school history textbooks for Balkan
countries is to downplay the inevitability of ethnic and religious
conflict in the Balkans. Greek nationalists burn the books in
Thessaloniki in protest.

The new Greek textbook seems a sensible attempt to match the teaching
ofhistory to current Greek reality. Among its goals is to downplay the
inevitability of national/racial/religious conflict in the Balkans,
to reduce the sense of Greek victimisation by hostile outsiders and
to weaken the myth that Greek national independence is a gift of
the church

Thousands of young Greek university graduates wait ten years on a
roster for appointment as a schoolteacher. The pay is miserable,
and they start their career in a remote village. If they looked more
carefully at the Greek history they aspire to teach, they might well
opt for another profession.

The Iraq on our television screens resembles late Ottoman Macedonia a
century ago. When Greek, Bulgarian or Vlach freedom fighters arrived
in the village in 1907, the schoolteacher was the first person they
murdered. Today, Shiite, Sunni and Kurdish militias, with equally
untidy beards but deadlier weapons, eliminate Iraqi teachers for the
same reason.

Murdering schoolteachers is a token of respect for how dangerous they
are. Winning the battle for Macedonia required persuading illiterate
peasants that they were not humble taxpayers of the Ottoman Empire
but rather patriotic sons of the Greek/Bulgarian Nation. The Nation,
however, was a recent import from Europe, one prudent peasants
viewed with alarm. To mobilise village children to kill and die for
politicians in Athens or Sofia required giving them a nationalist
education.

This is the context in which to understand the impulse of the Church of
Greece, the nationalist bullies of Chrysi Avgi and a few Thessaloniki
(ed. note: Salonica) politicians to burn the new sixth-grade Greek
history textbooks. Mystical nationalism was a successful ideology
for Northern Greece in the early 20th century.

Perhaps it will be again. At the moment, however, people do not
benefit when politicians and priests assure them that history proves
God smiles on their hatred of the neighbours.

This does not mean Greek schoolteachers should force their pupils to
memorise, for example, the 1821 massacre of Muslim and Jewish women
and children at Tripolitsa. The object of teaching history is not
to give our children nightmares or to harden them as future football
hooligans. But what history lessons will best form young Greeks into
good citizens of the society they will inherit?

Americans are not taught their debt to the USSR for victory in
World War II. No one tells Greeks they owe their independence to
the intercession of the Great Powers. There is tacit agreement that
ordinary citizens serve their country better when they believe its
security and prosperity depend entirely on their own efforts. Beyond
that, what constitutes good citizenship is a political debate.

Destiny is no more manifest in Greek history than it is in anyone
else’s. Who knows which of hundreds of contradictory lessons from
history will prove valid in twenty years?

Historical revisionism is thus an unending political process.

American secondary school graduates now benefit from reasonably
factual accounts of slavery, the destruction of the Native Americans
and the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Had they been armed
with equally sober accounts of the Vietnam War, they might not be
dying in Iraq today. Turks and Kurds would understand one another
better if they admitted their joint complicity in the destruction of
the Armenians. One Japanese government admitted the ugly truth about
"comfort women" and the Rape of Nanking as part of building a more open
Japanese society. Those textbooks were then rewritten by nationalists
preaching Japanese ethnic superiority. Now Japan’s relationship with
China is in crisis.

The new Greek textbook seems a sensible attempt to match the teaching
of history to current Greek reality. Among its goals is to downplay the
inevitability of national/racial/religious conflict in the Balkans,
to reduce the sense of Greek victimisation by hostile outsiders and
to weaken the myth that Greek national independence is a gift of the
church. In today’s secular EU context, these are good lessons.

In Thessaloniki, I twice visited the Centre for Democracy and
Reconciliation in Southeast Europe. This idealistic group has
an impressive list of donors that includes Greek foundations and
Thessaloniki businessmen as well as EU governments and the United
States. Its major initiative is the Joint History Project. A panel
of scholars, chaired by a Greek, prepared a set of four history
workbooks for simultaneous use in all the Balkan countries. Unlike
the sixth-grade textbook, this is a genuine effort at non-nationalist
history.

Greek and other education ministries are wavering on whether to approve
the CDRSEE workbooks for use in schools. Meanwhile, wild accusations
are flying that this is an American plot to "denationalise" Greeks
(along with Turks, Serbs, Bulgarians, Albanians, and Romanians) to
make them easier prey for US imperialism. The Thessaloniki business
community knows better. If national resentments can be transcended,
they calculate, Thessaloniki will become what it was in Ottoman times,
the port and business centre of a huge Balkan hinterland. Then they
will all be rich.

Few village schools in Macedonia had any history books to burn back
in 1907. I’m not sure the lack mattered. I remember nothing of my
sixth-grade textbook, but I remember my teacher vividly. Whether
students learn useful history or murderous myth depends more on their
teachers than on even the bravest drafting committee. I prefer to
live in a world that feels no duty to murder teachers at regular
intervals. Teachers should embrace these new textbooks in that
selfish spirit.

John Brady Kiesling is a former US diplomat and author of "Diplomacy
Lessons: Realism for an Unloved Superpower".

Aram I Catholicos Receives Ambassador Of Bulgaria

ARAM I CATHOLICOS RECEIVES AMBASSADOR OF BULGARIA

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Apr 11 2007

ANTELIAS, APRIL 11, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Aram I Catholicos of
the Great House of Cilicia received Ambassador of Bulgaria to Lebanon
Venelin Lazarov on April 10 at the Antelias Patriarchate. Issues
relating to the present state of Lebanon, activity of international
forces and, in general, overcoming of the Middle East crisis were
discussed during the conversation lasted for an hour. As Noyan Tapan
was informed by the Press Services of the Great House of Cilicia
Catholicosate, during the meeting Aram I introduced his guests with the
Armenian Church with its administrative units, diocesan structures,
spiritual works promoted in the direction of Christian education
and, in general, re-appraisal of religious-moral values in life of
the youth.

Sergey Ivanov: The Enrichment Of Uranium In Iran Should Be Strictly

SERGEY IVANOV: THE ENRICHMENT OF URANIUM IN IRAN SHOULD BE STRICTLY CONTROLLED BY IAEA

ArmRadio.am
11.04.2007 17:24

"The issue of the nuclear dossier of Iran should be settled in a
political-diplomatic way, sine the threat of war is a way to disaster,"
the First Deputy Prime Minister of Russia Sergey Ivanov said during his
visit to the Yerevan School # 21 of the Russian Ministry of Defense.

He added that Iran has the right to develop peaceful nuclear energy. "
However, if the question refers to enrichment of uranium, it is a
different matte," said the First Deputy PM in response to the question
of one of the schoolboys, who was concerned about the current situation
in Iran.