Justice Min. threatens to start dissolution cases against parties

Armenpress

JUSTICE MINISTRY THREATENS TO START DISSOLUTION CASES AGAINST PARTIES

YEREVAN, JUNE 21, ARMENPRESS: Armenian justice ministry has warned today
57 officially registered parties it will ask local courts to open
dissolution cases against them if they fail to meet a requirement of the
amended law on political parties under which they have to present until
August 7 complete information about the number of party members and their
regional chapters.
The amended law requires that each of the 67 political parties shall have
at least 2000 members and each of their regional chapters 100 members.
Gurgen Sarkisian, head of a justice ministry state registry said so far only
13 parties, mainly opposition, have presented the required information He
also said 37 parties have failed to meet a March 31 deadline for presenting
financial reports.

Food stalls fined for sanitary norms violations

Armenpress

FOOD STALLS FINED FOR SANITARY NORMS VIOLATIONS

YEREVAN, JUNE 21, ARMENPRESS: In a follow-up to its previous warnings on
Yerevan residents to refrain from buying foods and soft drinks from street
food stalls, the hygienic-epidemic inspection of Armenian health ministry
moved today to penalize owners of more than a dozen food stalls in a
downtown pedestrian subway for violation of sanitary requirements.
The stalls are located at a busy crossing near the Medical University,
and their main customers are hundreds of students, consuming hot-dogs and
kebab. The Inspection has sent relevant documents to Economic Court asking
it to levy fines, each 40,000 drams (around $90). It said such kiosks are
allowed to sell only packaged food, but none has running cold and hot water,
neither waste water systems.
Earlier this month Yerevan Mayor’s Office and sanitary inspection
officials called on Yerevan residents to abstain from buying food and drinks
in the streets, saying they contain toxic germs hazardous to public health

Turkish Prime Minister to visit Baku in late June

Armenpress

TURKISH PRIME MINISTER TO VISIT BAKU IN LATE JUNE

BAKU, JUNE 21, ARMENPRESS: Turkish prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is
set to visit Azerbaijan on June 29 for two-day talks with its leaders, Turan
news agency reported citing Turkish diplomatic sources.
Turan said Erdogan will discuss in Baku bilateral relations, regional
developments and the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. This will be the first visit
of Erdogan to Azerbaijan as prime minister. He was in Baku in 2003 as the
leader of Justice and Development party.

In rejection of the EU, voices of pride

Newsday, NY
June 21 2005

In rejection of the EU, voices of pride

James P. Pinkerton
June 21, 2005

GENEVA

This is a great place to observe the workings – and unworkings – of
the European Union, because the Swiss were never dumb enough to get
caught up in the politico-bureaucratic trap of the EU.

The failure of the European Union to become a “United States of
Europe” provides a cautionary lesson to all those – on the right as
well as the left – who think national borders and cultural traditions
are just so many scraps of paper to be trampled upon in the name of
some abstract global Good.

The Swiss are nobody’s enemy. They haven’t fought a foreign war since
1815. Indeed, they are eager to trade with anyone, as well as offer
foreigners those famously secretive Swiss bank accounts.

But precisely because Switzerland became a rich country by doing its
own thing, the Swiss never wanted to join the EU, the 25-member-state
conglomeration that stretches from Portugal to Finland to Greece.

The EU has been in the news lately because voters in two linchpin
countries, France and Holland, voted down the proposed EU
constitution that would have cemented the Union. That constitution
was a 474-page brick of a document, written by pan-European elites
who wanted to flatten the continent, politically, so that decisions
about the fate of 450 million people would be made in Brussels, far
beyond the reach of any mere individual nation.

Americans, who prize state and local control of their government,
would immediately reject any similar attempt to move political
authority to Washington, let alone move it to a coalition of
foreigners headquartered in a foreign country. But most observers
thought that the Europeans were different and that people there would
vote for the new EU constitution, thus forever mixing the Irish and
the Spanish and the Maltese into the same Brussels blender for the
benefit of multicultural business, as well as multicultural politics.
But of course, because true democracy is impossible when the voters
speak 100 different languages, the EU constitution would have ushered
in a perpetual Eurocratic reign.

Well, now we know the stubborn truth about Europe. In voting down the
constitution, Europeans demonstrated that they, too, have a pride of
place and reverence for their unique traditions. They don’t want to
see their flags, anthems and everything else buried by red tape from
a centralized Eurocracy.

Indeed, not only has ratification of the constitution been put on
hold, but efforts to enact a new EU budget are deadlocked as well.
And now the euro currency is under siege. “People will tell you
Europe is not in a crisis – it is in a profound crisis,” Luxembourg
Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker told Reuters after he chaired the
latest failed summit of EU chieftains.

Of course, what Juncker, a prototypical Euro-litist, regards as a
“crisis” would be regarded by others as a somewhat belated outbreak
of common sense. That’s because the EU elites weren’t eager to create
just a hulking European superstate. They wanted to create an even
bigger Eurasian superstate, by including Turkey and possibly other
Muslim and Arab countries.

Turkey, population 70 million, is a relatively modern and democratic
Muslim country, even if it has yet to properly account for, or
apologize for, its massacre of more than a million Armenians during
World War I. But Turkey has only the barest toehold in Europe,
physically, ethnically and religiously. Its capital and most of its
population are in what the Romans were the first to call Asia Minor,
and most of its people bow down to pray toward Mecca. And so for the
EU elites to seek to bring Turkey into their union was proof those
elites were dismissive of “Europe” all along. What the EU-ers really
wanted was an intercontinental empire, as big as possible, reaching
everywhere possible.

Most people want peaceful trade and travel. The Swiss had it right
all along. And so, like an earlier polyglot project dreamed up by the
powerful, the Tower of Babel, the EU is now falling.

Karabakh democratic achievements need international recognition

Pan Armenian News

KARABAKH DEMOCRATIC ACHIEVEMENTS NEED INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION

21.06.2005 08:38

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Observers from Russia appreciated the parliamentary
election in Nagorno Karabakh. According to their statement, «The election in
Nagorno Karabakh was democratic, transparent, free, independent, exemplary
and complying with the Nagorno Karabakh Electoral Code and all highest
standards.» The statement notes the election has demonstrated the
unflinching urge of the NKR people towards strengthening the democratic
election institution and promotion of the civil society in Karabakh. «The
democratic achievements of NKR need to be recognized and assisted by the
civilized international community, which could promote the soonest possible
resolution of the conflict, establishment of stability and peace in the
region, would fit the genuine interests of the region and all of its
peoples,» the statement notes, Mediamax reported.

International observers content with election in NKR

Pan Armenian News

INTERNATIONAL OBSERVERS CONTENT WITH ELECTION IN NKR

21.06.2005 08:36

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ « The authorities of Nagorno Karabakh have done their best
to hold honest and fair parliamentary election meeting democratic norms,»
says a document signed by international observers in Stepanakert, reported
Mediamax. The observers have recorded no significant shortcomings either in
the course of registration of voters and organized election or the counting
of votes and sending the vote protocols to the Electoral Commission. The
document says that for the first time transparent ballot boxes were used in
NK. Over 130 international observers from Russia, UK, US, CIS, France,
Italy, the Netherlands and other countries followed the election.

Turkish Premier to discuss Karabakh settlement in Baku

Pan Armenian News

TURKISH PREMIER TO DISCUSS KARABAKH SETTLEMENT IN BAKU

21.06.2005 07:14

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan will arrive in
Baku on a two-day visit June 29, reported RFE/RL. In the course of the visit
Erdogan will discuss regional developments, Azeri-Turkish relations as well
as the process of settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict with the Azeri
authorities. It should be noted that it is Erdogan’s first visit to Baku as
the Turkish PM.

PACE Karabakh Commission to convene first meeting June 23

Pan Armenian News

PACE KARABAKH COMMISSION TO CONVENE FIRST MEETING JUNE 23

21.06.2005 06:10

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The first meeting of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe temporary commission on the Karabakh issue will be held
June 23. The Commission includes Armenian and Azeri delegates,
representatives of diverse PACE committees, heads of delegations, as well as
rapporteurs on Armenia and Azerbaijan. Lord Russell-Johnston heads the
Commission, the Yerkir newspaper reported.

Dhaka: Int’l Genocide Exhibition-2005 underway at Zainul Gallery

The New Nation, Bangladesh
June 22 2005

International Genocide Exhibition-2005 underway at Zainul Gallery
By Nafiza Dawla
Jun 21, 2005, 11:15

Anti-Genocide Human Rights Organisation (AGHRO) has been holding a
five-day long photo exhibition beginning from 20th June at gallery
No. 2 of the Institute of Fine Arts, Dhaka.

One of the organisers said `This Photo Exhibition will help the
students of history and the people of Bangladesh to gather knowledge
on War. We profoundly remember the heroes killed in the battlefields
(for just causes). Holding this kind of photographic exhibition on
what happened in the (past) wars and aftermath is an important
matter. The show presents more than 80 black and white and colour
photos taken during wartime. The main objective is to create the
public opinion against genocide and to highlight the UN Convention on
Genocide.

The slogan of this exhibition is `Stop Genocide: It is a crime
against humanity’. The posters and documents of the exhibition
reproduce the major genocides and mass killing committed in many
countries of the world, including Bangladesh, Vietnam, Bosnia,
Cambodia, Palestine, Armenia, Kossovo and Rwanda are being displayed.
To utter surprise, genocide in Afghanistan and Iraq is ignored in the
exhibition.

One of the photos shows heap of human bones, one photo shows a dog
eating the flesh of a dead man and another shows a man covering his
nose with napkin while storing human bones at a place. One photo
shows a soldier shooting a woman and her two children and one such
shows dropping of atom bomb on the Japanese city of Hiroshima.
Watching these horrible photos, the visitors will surely get a flash
as to what extent a war is ghastly.

A visitor said, `I have been appalled to see the terrible photos on
war. No peace loving neither individual, nor a nation can back up
war. But the imperialists are imposing it on the small and the
peaceful nations. Invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq is the latest
example of the imperialists’ evil design. Unfortunately, the small
nations are not united; rather divided for which the imperialists
have become desperate to plunder their wealth.’

Another visitor said, `We have experienced the horrifying effects of
war in 1971. What crime did not the Pakistani soldiers commit in the
name of integrity and solidarity? The Value of a man reaches lowest
during wartime. But the brave fight back and defeat the war
criminals. The photos exhibited here are the testimony thereof.’

It is open to the visitors everyday from 1000 hours to 1900. The
exhibition will conclude on June 24.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Commission: No New Enlargement Wave Seen

Newsday, NY
June 21 2005

Commission: No New Enlargement Wave Seen

By JAN SLIVA

BRUSSELS, Belgium — The European Commission warned Tuesday it would
postpone EU membership for Bulgaria and Romania if they failed to
introduce essential reforms, and said the European Union must ‘pace
itself’ after 10 new members joined last year.

“My message to (Romania and Bulgaria) is to fulfill the conditions of
accession to the letter,” said Olli Rehn, the EU commissioner
overseeing the expansion plans. “I hope that they will make it in
time, but I would not hesitate to recommend a postponement of their
membership.”

Romania and Bulgaria are scheduled to join Jan. 1, 2007, while
Croatia’s membership has been postponed because a fugitive former
general wanted by the war crimes tribunal remains at large.

The next wave of enlargement “isn’t just round the corner,” Rehn
said.

“We need to pace ourselves after last year’s big bang when the 10 new
states joined the union,” he told the European Parliament’s foreign
affairs committee.

Concerns over further EU expansion were believed to be one of the
reasons why French and Dutch voters rejected the EU constitution.

Turkey must maintain the momentum of its reforms if it wants to start
accession negotiations Oct. 3 and Rehn urged it to resolve a dispute
over the massacre of Armenians during World War I. Armenians say that
Ottoman Turks slaughtered 1.5 million Armenians in a planned genocide
and have demanded that Turkey recognize the killings as genocide.

“Turkey has problems tackling the truth, which is always the basis
for reconciliation,” he said.

Rehn also said it was important to prepare for membership talks with
other Balkan nations to give them a European perspective, and
insisted a long-term prospect of EU membership will help bolster
stability in a region recently wracked by war.

He spoke after Bosnia’s prime minister urged EU leaders not to stop
the enlargement process because of the current EU crisis triggered by
the disagreements over the bloc’s constitution and future funding.

“We expect European leadership to avoid having second thoughts about
future enlargements, after the double ‘no’ to the European
constitution,” Prime Minister Adnan Terzic told the Council of
Europe’s parliamentary assembly in Strasbourg, France.

Albania, Macedonia and Serbia-Montenegro are also seeking to join the
EU but are yet to start negotiating membership with the bloc.