Orhan Pamuk of Turkey wins Peace Prize in Germany

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
June 22, 2005, Wednesday
16:21:52 Central European Time

Orhan Pamuk of Turkey wins Peace Prize in Germany

Frankfurt

Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk, 53, has won this year’s German Book
Trade Peace Prize for his literary work in which “Europe and Islamic
Turkey find a place for one another”, the prize committee announced
in Frankfurt on Wednesday.

Pamuk, whose novels including “Snow”, “My Name is Red” and “The White
Castle” have been translated into 34 languages, lives in Istanbul.

The annual prize, handed over on the last day of the Frankfurt Book
Fair, is for writing that contributes to reconciliation. It is funded
by the Boersenverein, Germany’s association of publishers and
booksellers, and is worth 25,000 euros (30,250 dollars) this year.

The prize committee said Pamuk had pursued “the traces of the West in
the East, and of the East in the West” and was committed to a notion
of culture based on knowing and respecting other people.

Last year’s winner was Hungarian author Peter Esterhazy and the 2003
winner was Susan Sontag of the United States. This year’s award
ceremony will take place in Frankfurt on October 23.

The committee said Pamuk was a supporter of human rights and minority
rights and stood up to be counted on Turkish political issues,
despite encountering the hatred of Turkish nationalists.

This year there was controversy in Turkey after he spoke in sorrow of
the killing of a million Armenians in Turkey in 1915-1916. In
response several nationalist politicians demanded that Pamuk’s books
be burned.

The New York Times named his novel “Snow” one of the best non-U.S.
books of 2004. The author, whose books are mainly read by younger
Turks, comes from an affluent family and trained in architecture and
journalism.

Germany’s state minister of the arts, Christina Weiss, praised Pamuk
as an author who held up a mirror to the west by making the conflicts
within Turkish society more visible.

Faruk Sen, director of the Essen Centre for Turkish Studies in
Germany, said the choice was “excellent”, adding, “That may make
waves.” He said it was important that Turkey have critical authors,
but the prize was also a recognition of Turkey itself. dpa jbp sc sr

Putin considers Armenia’s work in EurAsEc useful

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
June 22, 2005 Wednesday

Putin considers Armenia’s work in EurAsEc useful

By Veronika Romanenkova

MOSCOW

Russian President Vladimir Putin considers Armenia’s participation in
the Eurasian Economic Community (EurAsEC) in the capacity of observer
as useful.

“The fact that you as the head of state take part in the EurAsEC’s
activities on the permanent basis is a positive signal,” he said at a
meeting with his Armenian counterpart Robert Kocharian. “Although
Armenia has an observer status in the organization, I am confident
that it will help develop interaction between all our countries.”

Putin expressed satisfaction with the Moscow-Yerevan constant
dialogue. “I am satisfied that we have such close contacts,” the
Russian head of state said.

The Armenian president said that the meeting with Putin was very
useful for discussing bilateral relations, “especially for continuing
the dialogue that began in Yerevan.” “I would like to focus on the
energy sector and investment projects,” he said.

“The orders that have been given so far have been implemented and
relations are on the ascent. Some corrections have to be made,
though,” Kocharian said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

An Armenian and Muslim Tragedy? Yes! Genocide? No

middleeastinfo.org
22 June 2005

An Armenian and Muslim Tragedy? Yes! Genocide? No!
By Bruce Fein

I. Both Armenians and Muslims in Eastern Anatolia under the Ottoman Empire
experienced harrowing casualties and gripping privations during World War I.

Hundreds of thousands perished. Most were innocent. All deserve pity and
respect. Their known and unknown graves testify to President John F.
Kennedy’s lament that “Life is unfair.” An Armenian tombstone is worth a
Muslim tombstone, and vice versa. No race, religious, or ethnic group stands
above or below another in the cathedral of humanity. To paraphrase
Shakespeare in “The Merchant of Venice,” Hath not everyone eyes? hath not
everyone hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions? fed with
the same food, hurt with the same weapons, subject to the same diseases
healed by the same means, warmed and cooled by the same winter and
summer…If you prick anyone, does he not bleed? if you tickle him, does he
not laugh? if you poison him, does he not die?

These sentiments must be emphasized before entering into the longstanding
dispute over allegations of Armenian genocide at the hands of the Ottoman
Turks during World War I and its aftermath. Genocide is a word bristling
with passion and moral depravity. It typically evokes images of Jews dying
like cattle in Nazi cyanide chambers in Auschwitz, Bergen-Belson, Dacau, and
other extermination camps. It is customarily confined in national laws and
international covenants to the mass killing or repression of a racial,
religious, or ethnic group with the intent of partial or total
extermination. Thus, to accuse Turks of Armenian genocide is grave business,
and should thus be appraised with scrupulous care for historical accuracy.
To do less would not only be unjust to the accused, but to vitiate the
arresting meaning that genocide should enjoy in the tale of unspeakable
human horrors.

It cannot be repeated enough that to discredit the Armenian genocide
allegation is not to deny that Armenian deaths and suffering during the war
should evoke tears in all but the stone-hearted. The same is true for the
even greater number of contemporaneous Turkish deaths and privations. No
effort should be spared to avoid transforming an impartial inquest into the
genocide allegations to poisonous recriminations over whether Armenians or
Turks as a group were more or less culpable or victimized. Healing and
reconciliation is made of more magnanimous and compassionate stuff.

In sum, disprove Armenian genocide is not to belittle the atrocities and
brutalities that World War I inflicted on the Armenian people of Eastern
Anatolia.

I. Sympathy for All, Malice Towards None “War is hell,” lamented steely
Union General William Tecumseh Sherman during the American Civil War. The
frightful carnage of World War I confirmed and fortified that vivid
definition.

The deep pain that wrenches any group victimized by massacres and
unforgiving privation in wartime, however, frequently distorts or imbalances
recollections. That phenomenon found epigrammatic expression in United
States Senator Hiram Johnson’s World War I quip that truth is the first
casualty of war. It is customary among nations at war to manipulate the
reporting of events to blacken the enemy and to valorize their own and
allied forces. In other words, World War I was no exception, about which
more anon.

II. The Armenian Genocide Accusation
The Ottoman Turks are accused of planning and executing a scheme to
exterminate its Armenian population in Eastern Anatolia beginning on or
about April 24, 1915 by relocating them hundreds of miles to the Southwest
and away from the Russian war front and massacring those who resisted. The
mass relocation (often mischaracterized as “deportation”) exposed the
Armenians to mass killings by marauding Kurds and other Muslims and deaths
from malnutrition, starvation, and disease. After World War I concluded, the
Ottoman Turks are said to have continued their Armenian genocide during the
Turkish War of Independence concluded in 1922.

The number of alleged Armenian casualties began at approximately 600,000,
but soon inflated to 2 million. The entire pre-war Armenian population in
Eastern Anatolia is best estimated at 1.3 to 1.5 million.

A. Was there an intent to exterminate Ottoman Armenians in whole or in part?

The evidence seems exceptionally thin. The Government’s relocation decree
was a wartime measure inspired by national self-preservation, neither aimed
at Armenians generally (those outside sensitive war territory were left
undisturbed) nor with the goal of death by relocation hardships and hazards.
The Ottoman government issued unambiguous orders to protect and feed
Armenians during their relocation ordeal, but were unable because of war
emergencies on three fronts and war shortages affecting the entire
population to insure their proper execution. The key decree provided:

“When those of Armenians resident in the aforementioned towns and villages
who have to be moved are transferred to their places of settlement and are
on the road, their comfort must be assured and their lives and property
protected; after their arrival their food should be paid for out of
Refugees’ Appropriations until they are definitively settled in their new
homes. Property and land should be distributed to them in accordance with
their previous financial situation as well as current needs; and for those
among them needing further help, the government should build houses, provide
cultivators and artisans with seed, tools, and equipment.”

“This order is entirely intended against the extension of the Armenian
Revolutionary Committees; therefore do not execute it in such a manner that
might cause the mutual massacre of Muslims and Armenians.”

(Do you believe that anything comparable has been issued by Yugoslav
President Slobodan Milosevic to his troops in Kosovo?)

The Ottoman government prosecuted more than one thousand soldiers and
civilians for disobedience. Further, approximately 200,000 Ottoman Armenians
who were relocated to Syria lived without menace through the remainder of
the war.

Relocation of populations suspected of disloyalty was a customary war
measure both at the time of World War I and through at least World War II.
Czarist Russia had employed it against Crimean Tatars and other ethnic Turks
even in peacetime and without evidence of treasonous plotting. The United
States relocated 120,000 citizens and resident aliens of Japanese ancestry
during the Second World War despite the glaring absence of sabotage or
anti-patriotic sentiments or designs. Indeed, the Congress of the United
States acknowledged the injustice in the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 which
awarded the victims or their survivors $20,000 each.

In sum, the mass wartime relocation of Ottoman Armenians from the Eastern
front was no pretext for genocide. That conclusion is fortified by the
mountains of evidence showing that an alarming percentage of Armenians were
treasonous and allied with the Triple Entente, especially Russia. Tens of
thousands defected from the Ottoman army or evaded conscription to serve
with Russia. Countless more remained in Eastern Anatolia to conduct sabotage
behind Ottoman lines and to massacre Turks, including civilians. Their
leaders openly called for revolt, and boasted at post-World War I peace
conferences that Ottoman Armenians had fought shoulder-to-shoulder with the
victorious powers. Exemplary was a proclamation issued by an Armenian
representative in the Ottoman parliament for Van, Papazyan. He trumpeted:
“The volunteer Armenian regiments in the Caucasus should prepare themselves
for battle, serve as advance units for the Russian armies to help them
capture the key positions in the districts where the Armenians live, and
advance into Anatolia, joining the Armenian units already there.”

The Big Five victors -Great Britain, France, the United States, Italy, and
Japan acknowledged the enormous wartime service of Ottoman Armenians, and
Armenia was recognized as a victor nation at the Paris Peace Conference and
sister conclaves charring the post-war map. Armenians were rewarded for
their treason against the Ottoman Empire in the short-lived Treaty of Sevres
of 1920 (soon superceded by the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne). It created an
independent Armenian state carved from large swaths of Ottoman territory
although they were a distinct population minority and had always been so
throughout the centuries of Ottoman rule. The Treaty thus turned President
Woodrow Wilson’s self-determination gospel in his Fourteen Points on its
head.

The Ottoman government thus had overwhelming evidence to suspect the loyalty
of its Armenian population. And its relocation orders responded to a dire,
not a contrived, war emergency. It was fighting on three fronts. The
capital, Istanbul, was threatened by the Gallipoli campaign. Russia was
occupying portions of Eastern Anatolia, encouraging Armenian defections, and
aiding Armenian sabotage. In sum, the mass relocation of Armenians was
clearly an imperative war measure; it did not pivot on imaginary dangers
contrived by Ottoman rulers to exterminate Armenians.

The genocide allegation is further discredited by Great Britain’s unavailing
attempt to prove Ottoman officials of war crimes. It occupied Ottoman
territory, including Istanbul, under the 1918 Mudros Armistice. Under
section 230 of the Treaty of Sevres, Ottoman officials were subject to
prosecution for war crimes like genocide. Great Britain had access to
Ottoman archives, but found no evidence of Armenian genocide. Scores of
Ottoman Turks were detained on Malta, nonetheless, under suspicion of
complicity in Armenian massacres or worse. But all were released in 1922 for
want of evidence. The British spent endless months searching hither and yon
for evidence of international criminality- even enlisting the assistance of
the United State yet came up with nothing that could withstand the test of
truth. Rumor, hearsay, and polemics from anti-Turk sources was the most that
could be assembled, none of which would be admissible in any fair-minded
enterprise to discover facts and to assign legal responsibility.

None of this is to deny that approximately 600,000 Ottoman Armenians
perished during World War I and its aftermath. But Muslims died in even
greater numbers (approximately 2.5 million in Eastern Anatolia) from
Armenian and Russian massacres and wartime privations as severe as that
experienced by relocated Armenians. When Armenians held the opportunity,
they massacred Turks without mercy, as in Van, Erzurum, and Adana. The war
ignited a cycle of violence between both groups, one fighting for
revolutionary objectives and the other to retain their homeland intact. Both
were spurred to implacability by the gruesome experience that the loser
could expect no clemency.

The horrifying scale of the violence and retaliatory violence, however, were
acts of private individuals or official wrongdoers. The Ottoman government
discouraged and punished the crimes within the limits of its shrinking
capacity. Fighting for its life on three fronts, it devoted the lion’s share
of its resources and manpower to staving off death, not to local law
enforcement.

The emptiness of the Armenian genocide case is further demonstrated by the
resort of proponents to reliance on incontestable falsehoods or forged
documents. The Talat Pasha fabrications are emblematic.

According to Armenians, he sent telegrams expounding an Ottoman policy to
massacre its Armenian population that were discovered by British forces
commanded by General Allenby when they captured Aleppo in 1918. Samples were
published in Paris in 1920 by an Armenian author, Aram Andonian. They were
also introduced at the Berlin trial of the assassin of Talat Pasha, and then
accepted as authentic.

The British Foreign Office then conducted an official investigation that
showed that the telegrams had not been discovered by the army but had been
produced by an Armenian group based in Paris. A meticulous examination of
the documents revealed glaring discrepancies with the customary form,
script, and phraseology of Ottoman administrative decrees, and pronounced as
bogus as the Protocols of the Elders of Zion and the Donation of
Constantine.

Ditto for a quote attributed to Adolph Hitler calculated to liken the
Armenians in World War I to the Holocaust victims and to arouse anger
towards the Republic of Turkey. Purportedly delivered on August 22, 1939,
while the Nazi invasion of Poland impended, Hitler allegedly declared: “Thus
for the time being I have sent to the East only my Death Head units, with
the order to kill without mercy all men, women, and children of the Polish
race or language. Who still talks nowadays of the extermination of the
Armenians.”

Armenian genocide exponents point to the statement as evidence that it
served as the model for Hitler’s sister plan to exterminate Poles, Jews, and
others. Twenty-two Members of Congress on or about April 24, 1984 in the
Congressional Record enlisted Hitler’s hideous reference to Armenian
extermination as justification for supporting Armenian Martyrs’ Day
remembrances. As Princeton Professor Heath W. Lowry elaborates in a booklet,
“The U.S. Congress and Adolph Hitler on the Armenians,” it seems virtually
certain that the statement was never made. The Nuremburg tribunal refused to
accept it as evidence because of flimsy proof of authenticity.

The gospel for many Armenian genocide enthusiasts is Ambassador Henry
Morgenthau’s 1918 book, Ambassador’s Morgenthau’s Story. It brims with
assertions that incriminate the Ottoman Turks in genocide. Professor Lowry,
however, convincingly demonstrates in his monograph, “The Story Behind
Ambassador Morgenthau’s Story,” that his book is more propaganda, invention,
exaggeration, and hyperbole than a reliable portrait of motivations and
events.

According to some Armenian circles, celebrated founder of the Republic of
Turkey, Atatürk, confessed “Ottoman state responsibility for the Armenian
genocide.” That attribution is flatly false, as proven in an extended essay,
“A ‘Statement’ Wrongly Attributed to Mustafa Kemal Atatürk,” by Türkkaya
Ataöv.

Why would Armenian genocide theorists repeatedly uncurtain demonstrative
falsehoods as evidence if the truth would prove their case? Does proof of
the Holocaust rest on such imaginary inventiveness? A long array of
individuals have been found guilty of participation in Hitler’s genocide in
courts of law hedged by rules to insure the reliability of verdicts. Adolph
Eichmann’s trial and conviction in an Israeli court and the Nuremburg trials
before an international body of jurists are illustrative. Not a single
Ottoman Turk, in contrast, has every been found guilty of Armenian genocide
or its equivalent in a genuine court of law, although the victorious powers
in World War I enjoyed both the incentive and opportunity to do so if
incriminating evidence existed.

The United Nations Economic and Social Council Sub-Commission on the
Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities examined the
truthfulness of an Armenian genocide charge leveled by Special Rapporteur,
Mr. Benjamin Whitaker, in his submission, “Study of Genocide,” during its
thirty-eighth session at the U.N. Office in Geneva from August 5-30, 1985.
The Sub-Commission after meticulous debate refused to endorse the indictment
for lack of convincing evidence, as amplified by attendee and Professor Dr.
Ataöv of Ankara University in his publication, “WHAT REALLY HAPPENED IN
GENEVA: The Truth About the ‘Whitaker Report’.”

B. If the evidence is so demonstratively faulty, what explains a widespread
credence given to the Armenian genocide allegation in the United States?

As Napoleon once derisively observed, history is a fable mutually agreed
upon. It is not Euclidean geometry. Some bias invariably is smuggled in by
the most objective historians; others view history as a manipulable weapon
either to fight an adversary, or to gain a political, economic, or sister
material advantage, or to satisfy a psychological or emotional need.

History most resembles truth when competing versions of events do battle in
the marketplace of ideas with equally talented contestants and before an
impartial audience with no personal or vested interest in the outcome. That
is why the adversarial system of justice in the United States is the
hallmark of its legal system and a beacon to the world.

The Armenian genocide allegation for long decades was earmarked by an
absence of both historical rigor and scrupulous regard for reliable evidence
and truth. The Ottoman Empire generally received bad reviews in the West for
centuries, in part because of its predominant Muslim creed and military
conquests in Europe. It was a declared enemy of Britain, France, and Russia
during World War I, and a de facto enemy of the United States. Thus, when
the Armenian genocide allegation initially surfaced, the West was
predisposed towards acceptance that would reinforce their stereotypical and
pejorative view of Turks that had been inculcated for centuries. The
reliability of obviously biased sources was generally ignored. Further, the
Republic of Turkey created in 1923 was not anxious to defend its Ottoman
predecessor which it had opposed for humiliating capitulations to World War
I victors and its palsied government. Atatürk was seeking a new, secular,
and democratic dispensation and distance from the Ottoman legacy.

Armenians in the United States were also more vocal, politically active and
sophisticated, numerous, and wealthy than Turks. The Armenian lobby has
skillfully and forcefully marketed the Armenian genocide allegation in the
corridors of power, in the media, and in public school curricula. They had
been relatively unchallenged until some opposing giants in the field of
Turkish studies appeared on the scene to discredit and deflate the charge by
fastidious research and a richer understanding of the circumstances of
frightful Armenian World War I casualties. Professor of History at the
University of Louisville, Justin McCarthy, and Princeton Professor Heath
Lowry stand at the top of the list. Professor McCarthy’s 1995 book, Death
and Exile: The Ethnic Cleansing of Ottoman Muslims, 1821-1922, is a
landmark. Turkish Americans have also organized to present facts and views
about the Armenian genocide allegation and other issues central to United
States-Turkish relations. But the intellectual playing field remains sharply
tilted in favor of the Armenians. Since public officials with no foreign
policy responsibilities confront no electoral or other penalty for echoing
the Armenian story, they generally acquiesce to gain or to solidify their
standing among them.

The consequence has been not only bad and biased history unbecoming an
evenhanded search for truth, but a gratuitous irritant in the relations
between Turkey and the United States. The former was a steadfast ally
throughout the Cold War, and Turkey remains a cornerstone of NATO and Middle
East peace. It is also a strong barrier against religious fundamentalism,
and an unflagging partner in fighting international terrorism and drug
trafficking. Turkey is also geostrategically indispensable to exporting oil
and gas from Central Asia to the West through pipelines without reliance on
the Russian Federation, Iran, Afghanistan or other dicey economic partners.

Finally, endorsing the false Armenian genocide indictment may embolden
Armenian terrorist organizations (for example, the Armenian Secret Army for
the Liberation of Armenia) to kill and mutilate Turks, as they did a few
decades ago in assassinating scores of Turkish diplomats and bombing
buildings both in the United States and elsewhere. They have been relatively
dormant in recent years, but to risk a resurgence from intoxication with a
fortified Armenian genocide brew would be reckless.

III. Conclusion
The Armenian genocide accusation fails for want of proof. It attempts to
paint the deaths and privations of World War I in prime colors, when the
authentic article is chiaroscuro. Both Muslims and Armenians suffered
horribly and neither displayed a morality superior to the other. Continuing
to hurl the incendiary charge of genocide on the Turkish doorstep obstructs
the quest for amity between Armenia and the Republic of Turkey and warmer
relations between Armenians and Turks generally.

Isn’t it time to let the genocide allegation fade away and to join hands in
commemorating the losses of both communities during World War I and its
aftermath?

*Note: Bruce Fein biography

Bruce Fein
Syndicated columnist, Washington Times
Former U.S. Deputy Attorney General
Biography
Bruce Fein is a nationally acclaimed expert on constitutional law. He
commands more than 25 years’ experience in legal fields ranging from
antitrust to communications to national security law. He is former Associate
Deputy Attorney General in the Department of Justice and former General
Counsel of the Federal Communications Commission. He also served as Research
Director for the Minority on the Joint Congressional Irancontra Committee,
and at the Justice Department as Assistant Director in the Office of Legal
Policy and Special Assistant to the Assistant Attorney General for
Antitrust. He has been a Visiting Fellow for Constitutional Studies at the
Heritage Foundation, an Adjunct Scholar at the American Enterprise
Institute, and frequent lecturer on constitutional and communications law
for Brookings Institute.

Both parties in Congress have repeatedly summoned Mr. Fein for testimony on
such issues as the confirmation of Supreme Court Justices, flag burning, the
Victims’ Rights Amendment, Helms-Burton law, and the executive powers of the
President. He has advised approximately two dozen countries in revising
their constitutions, from South Africa to Hungary to Russia to Mozambique.
Mr. Fein is a media fixture. He is a weekly columnist for the Washington
Times and a guest columnist for USA Today. According to the National Law
Journal, he is one of the seven most quoted attorneys in the nation. He
regularly appears on national radio and television, including National
Public Radio, Face the Nation, C-SPAN, CNN, MSNBC, and the Diana Rheem Show.
He is a monthly staple on the Armstrong Williams Show discussing law,
morals, and ethics. He has been featured on the cover of the American Bar
Association Journal. In addition to the Washington Times and USA Today, his
columns have been carried in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the
Los Angeles Times, Legal Times, the American Bar Association Journal, the
National Law Journal, and the District of Columbia bar journal. His law
review articles have been published in the Harvard Law Review and elsewhere.
He has addressed conferences of the United States Circuit Courts and
regularly speaks before esteemed legal audiences. He was Executive Editor of
the World Intelligence Review for several years.

Mr. Fein graduated Phi Beta Kappa from the University of California at
Berkeley in 1969, cum laude from Harvard Law School in 1972, and then
clerked with United States District Judge Frank A. Kaufman in the District
of Maryland. He serves as general counsel for a public interest
organization, Legal Affairs Council, and is an adjunct scholar and general
counsel with the Assembly of Turkish American Associations. He is a member
of the bars of the District of Columbia, the United States Supreme Court,
and several other federal courts.

MOSCOW: Russia: Eurasian Economic Community sets up own bank

Russia: Eurasian Economic Community sets up own bank

Channel One TV, Moscow
22 Jun 05

[Presenter] The Interstate Council of the Eurasian Economic Community,
or EAEC for short, met in Moscow today. The meeting was attended by
the leaders of the five members countries of the organization, Russia,
Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kirgizia [Kyrgyzstan] and Tajikistan. Armenian
President Robert Kocharyan attended as an observer. The EAEC expects
to have new partners.

[Vladimir Putin] The Eurasian Economic Community is developing quite
dynamically. Not only is it achieving its own integration tasks but it
is gradually gaining authority as an international regional
organization, becoming ever more interesting and attractive to our
partners in the post-Soviet space, and I am sure that it will also
gain similar authority in contacts with our other partners.

[Presenter] Several documents were signed at the summit today,
including a blueprint for currency cooperation. An interstate EAEC
bank will be set up. The first payments of 1.5bn dollars into the
bank’s accounts will be made by Russia and Kazakhstan.

TBILISI: Saakashvili opposes direct elections for Tbilisi mayor

Georgian president opposes direct elections for Tbilisi mayor

Georgian State Television Channel 1, Tbilisi
22 Jun 05

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili has rejected opposition calls
for a directly elected mayor in the capital Tbilisi. He told a news
conference on 22 June, which was broadcast live on Georgian TV, that
he favoured a new draft law providing for the selection of the mayor
from among the councillors representing the party that wins the
largest number of seats in Tbilisi in the local elections planned for
next year.

A directly elected mayor could be a weak figure without the support of
the council, which controls finances, and could be reduced to the role
of a “political commentator”, Saakashvili said.

He suggested that no major government reshuffles were being planned in
the near future. “Institutionalization has taken place in the sense
that there are far fewer changes now. Last year was more of a time for
experimentation, which is natural because it was a new government
then,” he said.

He announced that major infrastructure improvement projects were under
way in the hitherto neglected town of Akhalkalaki near the Armenian
border, which is populated almost exclusively by ethnic Armenians and
is home to one of the two remaining Russian military bases in Georgia.

He said that attempts were being made to facilitate the integration of
ethnic minorities into Georgian society. “We are inviting 100 of our
ethnic Armenian citizens, 100 ethnic Azeris and 50 Ossetians, if it
proves possible, to do an administration course for several
months. They will then be appointed to jobs in the customs and tax
services, police and, in general, everywhere else, so that
representatives of these ethnic groups feel that this is their
country,” he said.

Speaking about the withdrawal of the Russian company EvrazHolding from
the purchase of the Chiatura manganese mine, Saakashvili said that he
could see primarily political, rather than economic, motives behind
the move. “I think that the reasons are much more complex here and
they are linked to global politics, rather than the business of a
specific firm, let’s be honest. Don’t forget which country this firm
represents,” he said.

Saakashvili suggested that the Georgian authorities have identified a
person they suspect of unsuccessfully trying to detonate a grenade in
Tbilisi’s central square on 10 May while he and US President George
Bush were addressing the crowds there. “Someone, some despicable
person – not someone, we roughly know who it was – threw a grenade but
it did not explode. Our enemies have no luck,” he said.

A fuller report on Saakashvili’s news conference will be released
later.

Head of Russia-Belarus Union says Putin will become its president

Head of Russia-Belarus Union says Putin will become its president in 2006

NTV Mir, Moscow
22 Jun 05

[Presenter] New unions were being built in Moscow today, and existing
ones were being shored up: leaders of the member countries of the
Eurasian Economic Community [EAEC] met in the Grand Kremlin
Palace. The EAEC includes Russia, Belorussia [Belarus], Kazakhstan,
Kirgizia [Kyrgyzstan], Tajikistan and also Armenia – as an
observer. No major political decisions are expected from this
meeting. Experts say it is a response of sorts to alternative meetings
of [other] former Soviet republics within the framework of GUAM
[Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Moldova]. Vladimir Kondratyev
reports.

[Correspondent] [Passage omitted: EAEC, and not CIS or Single Economic
Space, appears to be the most viable integration platform in the
region. Known details about the meeting.] Belarusian President
[Alyaksandr] Lukashenka will be at the helm of the EAEC for the next
year: [Kazakh President Nursultan] Nazarbayev has passed on this heavy
burden. Lukashenka, however, is facing a more important task: to make
sure he achieves union with Russia on his own terms.

[Pavel Borodin, state secretary of the Union of Russia and Belarus] We
are a bit short of political will.

[Correspondent] What should it consist of?

[Borodin] It should be like it was before; convene the Politburo and
say: we are holding a referendum in November; in January-February,
elections to the parliamentary assembly of the Union State; and in the
autumn of next year, elect president and vice-president.

[Correspondent] Who will be president then?

[Borodin] Well, you know-

[Correspondent] I mean, what does the constitution say?

[Borodin] Don’t prompt me with the answer! Of course it will be Putin
because- Of course Putin, and Lukashenka [will be] vice-president.

[Correspondent] Does Lukashenka agree to this?

[Borodin] You know, even if he is loath to, he will still agree.

[Correspondent] The Belarusian delegation reacted sceptically to this
statement. The Belarusian blueprint is presumably different.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Russia does not recognize Nagornyy Karabakh as independent – Rus Min

Russia does not recognize Nagornyy Karabakh as independent, says ministry

ITAR-TASS news agency
22 Jun 05

Moscow, 22 June: Russia “does not recognize Nagornyy Karabakh as an
independent state”, ITAR-TASS was told at the Russian Foreign Ministry
today on the subject of the recent “parliamentary elections” in
Nagornyy Karabakh.

Moscow believes that “a peaceful settlement of the conflict should not
depend on some elections or other being held in Karabakh”. The Foreign
Ministry stressed that “Russian citizens who were observers at the
elections were in Nagornyy Karabakh on their own initiative and
exclusively in a private capacity”.

Moscow “consistently adheres to the principle of the territorial
integrity of Azerbaijan, just as it does to other basic norms and
principles of international law”, the Foreign Ministry said. The view
was expressed that “the future status of Nagornyy Karabakh should be
determined without the use of force or the threat of force and only
through political negotiation between all the sides and within the
OSCE Minsk group”.

The Foreign Ministry said Russia was for “close cooperation with
partners co-chairing the OSCE Minsk Group (the USA, Russia and France)
and for active assistance being given to the peoples of Azerbaijan and
Armenia in achieving the earliest possible settlement of the
conflict”.

Armenian, Russian presidents discuss ties at CIS summit

Armenian, Russian presidents discuss ties at CIS summit

Public Television of Armenia, Yerevan
22 Jun 05

[Presenter] The leaders of the [CIS] Collective Security Treaty
Organization [CSTO] member-states are attending a regular session of
the organization in Moscow today.

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan also left for Moscow earlier
today. The leaders will meet in private. Important issues and
cooperation priorities will be discussed at meetings of the foreign
ministers, defence ministers and secretaries of security councils of
the CSTO member-states.

[Correspondent Lilit Sedrakyan from Moscow by telephone] It is planned
to hold meetings of two structures of the CIS countries at the same
time: a sitting of the Eurasian Economic Community [EAEC] and a
session of the CSTO Council.

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan has met Russian President Vladimir
Putin in the Kremlin. The Russian president regards as important the
Armenian president’s participation in the sitting of the Eurasian
Economic Community, albeit as an observer. He pointed out that this
would facilitate both multilateral and bilateral cooperation. The
presidents of the two countries discussed the current state of
bilateral relation as well as the intensification of transport
communications.

The sides also touched on events being held as part of the year of
Russia in Armenia. Putin expressed his satisfaction with the high
level of organization of the events. Kocharyan said that a programme
of events to be held within the framework of the year of Armenia in
Russia, which is due to be held next year, was already being prepared.

After the meeting, the presidents attended the sitting of the
interstate council of the Eurasian Economic Community.

[Passage omitted: minor details]

[Video showed the meeting]

ANKARA: Turk Speaker Writes to German Counterpart Slams Resolution

Turkish Speaker writes to German counterpart slamming Armenian resolution

Anatolia news agency
22 Jun 05

Ankara, 22 June: Turkish Parliament Speaker Bulent Arinc sent today a
letter to German Parliament Speaker Wolfgang Thierse to denounce the
adoption (on 16 June) of a resolution by the German parliament to
commemorate the so-called Armenian genocide.

“We feel deep sorrow over the German parliament’s decision which we
believe to have been taken for small political interests and we regard
the decision as an irresponsible initiative,” wrote Arinc in his
letter.

Arinc stressed that this one-sided decision adopted by the parliament
of a “friendly and ally” country also deeply hurt three million
Turkish citizens living in Germany who regarded Germany as their
second homeland.

Arinc underlined the fact that there were many historical mistakes in
the decision which accused Turkish nation of committing a grave crime,
adding that “we are very sorry as the parliament of a country like
Germany which has a well-established state tradition, adopted such a
decision which is full of mistakes and distorted information”.

“In the resolution it was said that Turks don’t face their
history. Turkey is always ready to face its history and there is no
shameful page in our history,” Arinc wrote in his letter.

Referring to the call of the Turkish government and opposition party
for formation of a joint committee – composed of Armenian and Turkish
historians – to investigate the 1915 incidents by studying all
archives – in Turkey, Armenia and third countries – Arinc said that
Premier Erdogan conveyed this proposal to Armenian President Kocharian
by a letter dated 10 April 2005.

Arinc stressed that the recommendation of the German parliament to
include the so-called genocide in textbooks of German schools would
cause prejudice against Turkish people in the minds of German youth.

Arinc also denounced the demand of the German parliament which asked
the German government to help in urging Turks to apologize from
Armenians. “It is impossible to explain such a demand of a parliament
or government by taking into consideration the norms and principles of
international relations. I wonder how the German people and parliament
would react if the Turkish government adopted a decision urging the
German government to do something regarding a third state,” Arinc
asked.

“The German parliament has not referred to the views and documents of
the Turkish side in its decision… [ellipses as received] It is
impossible to qualify the deportation of Armenians who uprose against
the Ottoman State during the First World War as genocide, under the
1948 UN Genocide Convention,” Arinc said.

“Parliaments don’t have the right to judge historical events, as such
decisions don’t have any binding effect in respect of international
human rights… [ellipses as received] No international organization
including the UN had accepted a decision accepting the so-called
Armenian genocide to date,” he said.

Arinc concluded his letter saying that the Turkish parliament
condemned the decision of the German parliament.

BAKU: Rus. mediator: latest round of Armenian-Azeri talks reassuring

Russian mediator says latest round of Armenian-Azeri talks “reassuring”

Trend news agency
22 Jun 05

Baku, 22 June: “New reassuring prospects” emerged during the Paris
negotiations of 16-18 June between the Azerbaijani and Armenian
foreign ministers to resolve the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict, the
Russian co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group, Yuriy Merzlyakov, has told
Trend.

The OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs agree that the meeting between Elmar
Mammadyarov and Vardan Oskanyan was “very positive”.

“The positive impetus given by the meeting of the two countries’
presidents in Warsaw is still there. The negotiations will be
continued during our visit to the region, which will apparently start
on 10 July,” the diplomat said.

Merzlyakov added that there were issues in the negotiations whose
discussion “did not go smoothly”.

“The sides could not agree on a number of issues, otherwise the
discussions could have been stopped,” he added.

Asked whether anything was being done to draft a certain document on
the Nagornyy Karabakh settlement, the diplomat said: “Work is
currently under way on the foundation of the settlement, i.e. what the
document will be based on and what its key components will be. The
document itself will be prepared by expert delegations. When the sides
agree on general principles of it, they will start meeting and working
together.”

Merzlyakov added that it was up to the parties to the conflict to
determine who will head the expert delegations – special presidential
representatives or deputy foreign ministers.

Merzlyakov also commented on the statements that the next meeting of
the Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents would take place on the
sidelines of the CIS summit in Kazan scheduled for 27 August.

“I cannot say this for certain because we need to have this confirmed
by the presidents during our visit to the region,” he said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress