Baku to OK South Caucasus PA only after Karabakh conflict is settled

Pan Armenian News

BAKU TO OK SOUTH CAUCASUS PA ONLY AFTER KARABAKH CONFLICT IS SETTLED

20.06.2005 04:45

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The formation of the Parliamentary Assembly of the South
Caucasus is possible after the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh
conflictonly, assistant to executive secretary of Yeni Azerbaijan ruling
party, Milli Majlis member Siyavush Novruzov stated. To remind, a memorandum
on South Caucasus PA was signed June 16 in Tbilisi. It should be also noted
that the document was signed by Siyavush Novruzov himself, Georgian
Parliament Speaker Nino Burjanadze and Armenian NA Vice Speaker Tigran
Torosian. Novruzov confirmed that he had put his signature to the document
but with a reservation that the cooperation is possible only after the
Karabakh conflict is settled. The Azeri parliamentarian noted that he has
nothing against such an initiative, however `no cooperation with Armenia is
possible until Karabakh conflict is settled.’

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Aliyev: We know that Russian weapons not conveyed to Armenia

Pan Armenian News

ALIYEV: WE KNOW THAT RUSSIAN WEAPONS NOT CONVEYED TO ARMENIA

20.06.2005 04:11

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrovsays he managed to
reassure Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev about the withdrawal of the
Russian military base from Georgia. `We will convey the part of the military
equipment not to Armenia but to the Russian military base dislocated in
Gyumri. Thus the balance of forced will remain unchanged’, S. Lavrov noted.
In his turn I. Aliyev said that Baku understands that the weapons are not
conveyed to Armenia noting that Azerbaijan’s military expenses will increase
with $70 million by the end of the year. He also did not rule out that
Azerbaijan will purchase military equipment in Russia, Interfax reported.

Opposition slams poll in contested Nagorno Karabakh

Agence France Presse
June 20 2005

Opposition slams poll in contested Nagorno Karabakh

STEPANAKERT, June 20 (AFP) – Opposition parties in the
self-proclaimed republic of Nagorno Karabakh slammed parliamentary
elections there as unfair Monday, but said they had no plans to mount
street protests.

“We don’t consider that the elections were fair, free and
transparent,” Gegam Bagdasaryan, a representative of the opposition
bloc led by the national-socialist Dashnaktutsyun, told a press
conference called in response to Sunday’s vote.

“We’re saying that the authorities abused their administrative
resources before the campaign, during the campaign, and during the
elections,” Bagdasaryan said.

Asked if the bloc planned to launch street protests to contest the
results, another member of the opposition bloc, Armen Sarkisyan said
its primary goal was to “safeguard stability in the country.”

Early results showed that the opposition bloc had taken only three
out of the total 33 seats in parliament, confounding expectations
that the bloc would do well.

Karabakh’s leader, Arkady Gukasyan, was on course for victory, with
his Artsakh Democratic Party getting 12 seats. The Free Fatherland
party, generally considered loyal to Gukasyan, came in second place
with 10 seats.

It was unclear what proportion of votes had been counted. Fuller
results were expected later in the day.

The Karabakh enclave has been bitterly contested ever since it broke
from Azerbaijan upon the Soviet Union’s 1991 collapse.

Armenia and Azerbaijan fought a war for control of the territory
between 1993 and 1994 that left an estimated 25,000 people dead and
drove around a million people, mostly Azeris, from their homes.

Today Nagorno Karabakh is widely seen as propped up by Armenia and
maintains a tense ceasefire with Azerbaijan.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

OSCE Minsk Group to visit South Caucasus mid July

Pan Armenian News

OSCE MINSK GROUP TO VISIT SOUTH CAUCASUS MID JULY

20.06.2005 05:58

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group for the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict settlement are expected to arrive in the South Caucasus in
mid July, Yerkir Online reported. The agreement was achieved at the meeting
of the Armenian and Azerbaijani Foreign Ministers Vartan Oskanian and Elmar
Mamedyarov.

Congressman Schiff Is Gaining a Name in Foreign Affairs

Los Angeles Times
June 20 2005

PROFILE | ADAM SCHIFF
Congressman Is Gaining a Name in Foreign Affairs
By Johanna Neuman, Times Staff Writer

WASHINGTON – According to conventional wisdom, there’s no surer way
for a young congressman to destroy his career than delving into
foreign policy. Voters don’t care about it, the old hands say, and
time spent on what’s happening overseas is time squandered.

Democrat Adam Schiff may be the exception that proves the rule. Now
in his third term, the Burbank congressman seems to spend more time
on foreign affairs every year. Yet in each of his two reelection
campaigns, he’s held on to more than 60% of the vote.

Indeed, focusing on a foreign policy issue helped Schiff win his seat
in 2000, defeating Republican incumbent James Rogan in what is still
the most expensive House race ever. Since then, he has maintained and
extended his interest, without apparent political cost.

To be sure, the foreign policy issue that Schiff rode to his first
victory is one with exceptional appeal in his particular district –
the charge that, between 1915 and 1923, rulers of the Ottoman Empire
carried out a campaign of extermination that claimed about 1.6
million Armenian lives. California’s 29th Congressional District is
home to more Armenian American voters than any other in the state,
and they have pressed to have the episode officially branded as
genocide.

The present-day Turkish government denies genocide occurred, saying
Armenian fatalities stemmed from attempts to quell civil unrest.

Using parliamentary maneuvers he honed in Los Angeles as a prosecutor
and in Sacramento as a state senator, Schiff has rescued the issue
from defeat at the hands of a Republican majority.

On June 8, he won a major concession from House leaders, who agreed
for the first time in five years to vote on a bill in committee
recognizing the genocide. Schiff won that pledge by attempting to
amend the State Department authorization bill in two ways – one
seeking a historic study of how genocide could be prevented and
another seeking diplomacy to get Turkey to stop blockading another
Council of Europe country, Armenia.

That prompted frantic efforts by Turkey’s lobbyists – who include
former House Speaker Bob Livingston (R-La.) – to cut a deal that
would avoid embarrassing the Turkish prime minister, who was visiting
Washington that day and paid a call on President Bush on June 10.

The play to an Armenian audience was one of the focal points of the
2000 congressional campaign in California’s 29th District. Rogan took
to punctuating his stump speeches with cries of Getzeh Hayeruh –
“Long Live Armenia.”

Schiff raised the ante by delivering a whole speech in Armenian, one
syllable at a time.

Between them, the two candidates spent an estimated $15 million on
the campaign. Schiff won with 53% of the vote. Ever since, he has
taken the lead in the fight for recognition of the Armenian genocide
and made himself a prominent Democratic voice on foreign affairs.

For years the Armenian issue has languished in Congress, stymied by
vehement Turkish opposition and by the reluctance of American
presidents to antagonize an important ally.

That hasn’t stopped Schiff.

Last year, he spent hours in the parliamentarian’s office crafting an
amendment to the foreign aid bill that would pass parliamentary
muster. The gambit worked – up to a point. The House voted to bar
Turkey from using foreign aid funds to lobby against recognition of
the genocide, which Armenian advocates took to be tacit recognition
of their claim.

But then, under administration pressure not to upset Turkey, Speaker
J. Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) made sure the provision was removed early
in the process. This year, Schiff capitalized on current strains
between Washington and Turkey, which did not allow U.S. troops to
cross its territory to invade Iraq.

More recently, American officials have chafed at Turkey’s reluctance
to let American military operations expand at Incirlik Air Base.

Schiff saw hopeful signs in February, when the U.S. ambassador to
Armenia, John Evans, openly used the term genocide in a speech at UC
Berkeley, and added “I think we, the U.S. government, owe fellow
citizens a more frank and honest way of discussing this problem.”

Schiff, born in Framingham, Mass., is the son of a Jewish clothing
salesman who moved to California when Schiff was 9. His father is a
Democrat and his mother is a Republican. “Maybe that’s why I’m a
moderate,” he says.

Schiff ran for the Assembly in 1994 against Rogan and lost. But two
years later he won a state Senate seat. He rose to chairman of the
Senate Judiciary Committee and developed a reputation for thoughtful
tenacity.

Though not a flamboyant personality – staffers joke about his lack of
charisma – Schiff has continued to build a reputation as a skillful
tactician, even as a Democrat in a Republican world.

Since House Republican leaders take an uncompromising attitude toward
the Democratic minority, Schiff often can do little more than seek
modifications to Republican bills. And he can sometimes needle GOP
colleagues into what he sees as more balanced action.

In one Judiciary subcommittee, the chairman called five hearings on
gay marriage. Schiff, outraged that the subcommittee did not hold a
single hearing on the Abu Ghraib prison scandal, said, “Mr. Chairman,
I don’t think we should stop at five hearings. I know there are
issues we could discuss like Abu Ghraib, but honestly I think we need
more hearings on gay marriage.”

The chairman called no further hearings on gay marriage.

Potentially more important than such skirmishing, Schiff is trying to
help Democrats develop a longer-term vision on foreign affairs. He
frequently appears on television defending Democratic positions
against conservatives.

“When Fox News asks me how much credit Bush should get, I say that
the spread of democracy has been a core Democratic value since
Woodrow Wilson,” Schiff said.

Schiff is carving out a position as a leader of a centrist Democratic
national security bloc, a group he calls – in a deliberate parody of
right-wing neo-conservatives – the neo-progressives.

He has organized a national security caucus and led efforts to
prevent scientists from the former Soviet Union from spreading
nuclear and biological secrets. “He’s really emerging as one of the
key leaders in the House on national security,” said Will Marshall,
who heads the moderate Democratic Leadership Forum.

“For a long time, particularly in the House, it has been a little
lonely to be a Democrat who specializes in security. Members too
often regarded it as the other party’s issue. Adam sincerely believes
the Democratic Party has to reassert its leadership on national
security.”

*

(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX)

Emerging leader

Adam Schiff’s wife’s name is Eve. She apparently is not as amused by
the coincidence as he is and resisted various Garden of Eden
suggestions for their children’s names, Alexa and Elijah.

– At Stanford, Schiff majored in political science and pre-med.
Accepted by medical and law schools, he chose Harvard Law,
calculating that it would be a better launching pad to public
service.

– He clerked for a federal judge and spent six years in the U.S.
attorney’s office in Los Angeles.

– At a park in Glendale, longtime Armenian backgammon players were
shocked when Schiff challenged them to a game and won. It’s a game he
first played in junior high school.

– As a California state senator, Schiff, a consistent supporter of
the state’s Armenian genocide resolution, won state funds for a
documentary film on the subject. In Congress, when he arranged for a
screening, one of the speakers told the crowd he wished “genocide
deniers” had seen the film. From deep in the audience a voice rang
out, “Oh, we’re here, congressman, we’re here.”

Russia eases Azerbaijani concerns over military hardware in Armenia

RIA Novosti, Russia
June 20 2005

Russia eases Azerbaijani concerns over military hardware in Armenia
10:21

MOSCOW, June 20 (RIA Novosti) – Russia has managed to ease
Azerbaijan’s concerns over the withdrawal of Russian military
hardware from Georgia to Armenia, Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said
yesterday.

While speaking to a news program on national television’s Channel
One, he said that Russia had explained to its “Azerbaijani friends”
that the equipment and hardware would be located at a Russian
military base. “So the change to the balance of forces in the region
that some people are worrying about will not happen,” he said.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev told the same program: “We realize
that arms will be transferred to the Russian base, and they will not
be given to the Armenian Armed Forces.”

Nevertheless, he said, Azerbaijan planned to increase military
spending expenditures by $70 million by the end of the year so that
no one could have any security fears.

Aliyev said he hoped that some of the new armaments would be bought
in Russia.

Baku fears Karabakh may “turn into Kosovo”

Pan Armenian News

BAKU FEARS KARABAKH MAY `TURN INTO KOSOVO’

20.06.2005 06:08

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ A large article published on the front page of the
Baku-based newspaper Zerkalo and entitled “Will Karabakh become Kosovo”,
says that Armenia is copying the steps of the Kosovo Albanians, Yerkir
Online reported. The author of the article says that Armenians have proposed
a transitional period for Karabakh during which the international community
would decide whether Nagorno Karabakh is implementing democratic reforms and
based on the findings would decide whether or not grant an independence to
the republic. It is the same thing the Kosovo Albanians are currently doing,
the article goes on saying, and this may seriously hurt Azerbaijan’s
positions.

ACNIS 10th Anniversary Marked by US Congress, California Senate

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Center for National and International Studies
75 Yerznkian Street
Yerevan 375033, Armenia
Tel: (+374 – 10) 52.87.80 or 27.48.18
Fax: (+374 – 10) 52.48.46
E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected]
Website:

April 14, 2005

ACNIS 10TH ANNIVERSARY MARKED BY US CONGRESS, CALIFORNIA SENATE

Yerevan–The Armenian Center for National and International Studies (ACNIS)
recently marked the 10th anniversary of its founding here. On this occasion
the Congressional Record of the US House of Representatives has registered a
statement of commendation by Congressman George Radanovich, and the
California State Senate has adopted a resolution offered by Senator Charles
Poochigian.

The Congressional Record reads as folows:

HON. GEORGE RADANOVICH
of CALIFORNIA
in the U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

April 13, 2005

Mr. RADANOVICH. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to honor the Armenian Center for
National and International Studies on the occasion of celebrating their 10th
Anniversary as a leading strategic research center and think-tank. A special
reception to honor the occasion will take place on April 14th, 2005, in
Fresno, California.

The Armenian Center for National and International Studies was created by
Raffi K. Hovannisian, Armenia’s first Minister of Foreign Affairs. In the
post-Soviet era, ACNIS has served as a link between scholarship and the
public policy challenges facing the Republic of Armenia.

ACNIS continues to work diligently to be a vehicle for creative and
strategic thinking, focusing on public outreach, civic education, and
applied research on domestic and foreign policy issues affecting the
Armenian nation-state.

Mr. Speaker, I rise to honor the Armenian Center for National and
International Studies on the occasion of celebrating their 10th Anniversary.
I invite my colleagues to join me in wishing ACNIS many more years of
continued success.

The California Senate Resolution reads as follows:

HON. CHARLES S. POOCHIGIAN
of CALIFORNIA

April 14, 2005

WHEREAS, The year 2005 marks the tenth anniversary of the Armenian Center
for National and International Studies and, in recognition thereof, it is
deserving of special public commendations; and

WHEREAS, The Armenian Center for National and International Studies, located
in Yerevan, Armenia, is the institutional initiative of Raffi K.
Hovannisian, Armenia’s first Minister of Foreign Affairs; and

WHEREAS, Following his diplomatic service, Raffi Hovannisian, a native of
Fresno, California, and graduate of the University of California, Los
Angeles, the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, and Georgetown University
Law Center, founded the Armenian Center for National and International
Studies in 1994; and

WHEREAS, As a leading independent strategic and educational research center,
the Armenian Center for National and International Studies focuses its
research on a comprehensive agenda of foreign and public policy issues,
which are articulated analytically in political and academic arenas around
the world; and

WHEREAS, The Armenian Center for National and International Studies is
supported by the Lincy Foundation and a global network of contributors, and
serves as a link between innovative scholarship and the public policy
challenges facing Armenia and the Armenian people in the post-Soviet world;
and

WHEREAS, The Armenian Center for National and International Studies also
aspires to be a catalyst for creative, strategic thinking, and a wider
understanding of the new global environment; and

WHEREAS, In this, its tenth anniversary year, 2005, the Armenian Center for
National and International Studies is focusing primarily on public outreach,
civic education, and applied research on critical domestic and foreign
policy issues for the state and the nation; now, therefore, be it

RESOLVED BY SENATOR CHARLES S. POOCHIGIAN, that he draws the attention of
the public to the Armenian Center for National and International Studies on
the occasion of its tenth anniversary, commends Founder and President Raffi
K. Hovannisian on his exemplary record of service, and extends sincere best
wishes for continued success in the future.

Founded in 1994 by Armenia’s first Minister of Foreign Affairs Raffi K.
Hovannisian and supported by a global network of contributors, ACNIS serves
as a link between innovative scholarship and the public policy challenges
facing Armenia and the Armenian people in the post-Soviet world. It also
aspires to be a catalyst for creative, strategic thinking and a wider
understanding of the new global environment. In 2005, the Center focuses
primarily on civic education, conflict resolution, and applied research on
critical domestic and foreign policy issues for the state and the nation.

For further information on the Center call (37410) 52-87-80 or 27-48-18; fax
(37410) 52-48-46; e-mail [email protected] or [email protected]; or visit

www.acnis.am
www.acnis.am

13th Century Armenian Medical Book on Horses has been Translated

I-Newswire.com (press release)
June 20 2005

Linguistics meets Veterinary Medicine – 13th Century Armenian Medical
Book on Horses has been Translated

An Armenian manual about horse medicine from the 13th century has
been translated into German for the first time. The compendium is
Armenia’s oldest preserved veterinary medical work and offers an
overall view of expert knowledge about horses during the late 13th
century in the Near East. The Austrian Science Fund FWF supported
this project and it was made possible thanks to an Austrian
Armenologist, her excellent knowledge about the country and its
language as well as her close cooperation with veterinarians in
Vienna.

i-Newswire, – This oldest known manual about Armenian horse medicine
consists of 184 handwritten pages. It was written in the Armenian
kingdom of Cilicia between 1295 and 1298. An Armenian monk proficient
in languages and a Syrian horse veterinary were responsible for
writing this work.

Now, almost 750 years later, a similar interdisciplinary cooperation
has led to the work’s translation into German. For this project, the
linguist Dr. Jasmine Dum-Tragut, from the Institute for Linguistics
at the University of Salzburg, worked closely with scientists from
the University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna.

Herbs Heal Horses
In addition to the actual translation, it was possible to prepare an
extensive addendum that offers detailed insight into veterinary
medicine in the Near East in those days. Furthermore, the work also
includes comments on 13th-century veterinary medical knowledge from a
contemporary perspective. For example, experts from the University of
Veterinary Medicine Vienna were particularly surprised that knowledge
of the use of medicinal herbs in those days was much more advanced
than it is today. The plants came from the Armenian Highlands and
they were also used to treat human diseases.

However, the Cilician horse manual comprises much more than `just”
medical knowledge. The first chapter explains the creation of the
horse. The following chapters describe the good and bad
characteristics of horses, breeding, the different races known at
that time, breaking in and riding, horse care and defects. Only the
last chapters deal with different types of pain as well as illnesses,
symptoms and treatments.

Thus, this historical and medical work offers insight as well as
different facets of the cultural history of Armenia and horses. In
addition, as Dr. Dum-Tragut explains: “The Cilician book on curing
horses is a real scientific treasury. Not only for the analysis of
the Armenian language, but also for the history of literature and the
social history of horses in Armenia.” Altogether, the manual offers
an overall view of the knowledge about horses in the Near East during
the Middle Ages. Dr. Dum-Tragut came to this conclusion through
intensive studies of source references: “The book mentions an Indian
book as well as two Arabian works as references. Studying these
original references in Persian and Greek clearly shows that the
Cilician book on the curing of horses is not a mere translation of
already existing information: it is an independent Compendium.”

Terms Taken for a Ride
A central aspect of this two-and-a-half-year project was also to
investigate the terminology of special Armenian technical terms
mentioned in the manual. In order to clearly establish their
meanings, Dr. Dum-Tragut had many conversations with Armenian horse
breeders, farmers and veterinarians. During her research, she noticed
that these people generally prefer Russian or Turkish technical terms
over Armenian ones. Apart from the know-how, the special vocabulary
applied in the Cilician horse book seemed to be in jeopardy of
becoming extinct. Therefore, Dr. Dum-Tragut included this vocabulary
in a glossary for reasons related to linguistic preservation. It did
not take long to notice the success of this measure, because breeders
have already started to reincorporate this historic vocabulary of the
Armenian language. This is a fact that especially pleases Dr.
Dum-Tragut – as well as many horse lovers in Armenia. And that is
also why in 2003, an Armenian breeder decided to express his
appreciation to Dr. Dum-Tragut. He gave the enthusiastic horse-rider
a gift: a colt named `Bor’ – an especially beautiful sort of research
funding.

Image and text will be available online from Monday, 20th June 2005,
09.00 a.m. MEZ onwards:

Jasmine Dum-Tragut, ‘Kilikische Heilkunst für Pferde – Das
Vermächtnis der Armenier` ( The Cilician Art of Healing Horses – The
Armenian Legacy` ). Comments, translation, glossary. Editorial OLMS
Verlag, Hildesheim 2005. ( Available in German only )

Scientific Contact:
Dr. Jasmine Dum-Tragut
University of Salzburg
Institute for Linguistics
Mühlbacherhofweg 6
A-5020 Salzburg
Austria
Tel.: +43 / ( 0 )662 / 8044 – 4259
E-mail: [email protected]

Austrian Science Fund FWF:
Mag. Stefan Bernhardt
Weyringergasse 35
A-1040 Vienna
Austria
Tel.: +43 / ( 0 )1 / 505 67 40 – 36
E-mail: [email protected]

Issued by:
PR&D – Public Relations for Research & Development
Campus Vienna Biocenter 2
A-1030 Vienna
Austria
Tel.: +43 / ( 0 )1 / 505 70 44
E-mail: [email protected]

Vienna, 20th June 2005

http://www.fwf.ac.at/en/press/horses.html

ANKARA: Steps Leading to Oct 3 Start Talks for Turkish EU Acceptance

JOurnal of Turkish weekly
June 20 2005

Steps Leading Up to the October 3 Start Talks for Turkish EU Acceptance

source: Hurriyet

The most important step leading up to the October 3 talks which will
begin the process to determine Turkey-EU relations is the Framework
for Accession Talks document which will be published by the EU in
September. There is, however, the fear that relations between Turkey
and the EU could be affected negatively prior to the start of October
3 talks due to aspects of this document. Despite budget crises and
overturned referendums in the EU, there are no legal barriers to the
October 3 talks starting. A brief look at the process which will
proceed these talks for Turkey is as follows:

*** It is expected that Turkey will sign an additional protocol to
widen the current 25 country member Customs Union.

*** Following the signing of the additional protocol, a written
declaration that Turkey does not recognize the Cypriot Republic will
be recorded.

*** The Framework for Accession Talks document will be presented by
the EU Commission to the EU Council on June 29. This document is
expected to be a confirmation of the decisions made on December 17,
2004 regarding the Turkish EU membership process.

*** It is expected that this document will have many changes and
additions made to it be current EU member countries.

*** The real risk is that this document will have additions made to
it which will ultimately prevent Turkey’s EU membership. Demands made
on the Armenian matter, Cyprus, or the use of the “privileged
partner” expression are all aspects which could spell danger for
Turkey. If the requests made in the document become too heavy for
Turkey to handle, there is a real possibility that the start talks
could be rejected by the Turkish side.