ANKARA: Turkey would welcome “positive gesture” by Armenia – spokesm

Turkey would welcome “positive gesture” by Armenia – spokesman

Anatolia news agency
1 Jun 05

Ankara, 1 June: Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Namik
Tan has said assessment of Armenian head of state Robert Kocharyan’s
reply letter had been continuing and Armenia’s “positive statements
and gestures would affect” this assessment.

Tan told weekly press conference that result of the assessment would
be publicly announced, adding: “However, it is clear that future
positive statements and gestures would affect this assessment.”

Tan recalled that a newspaper had claimed that relations between
Turkey and Armenia would be suspended, stressing: “However, it is
out of question because there are not any relations between the
two countries.”

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan proposed establishment
of a joint delegation of Turkish and Armenian historians to deal with
the events of 1915.

President Kocharyan responded the proposal saying that the commission
should have an intergovernmental status.

BAKU: Azerbaijan declines Council of Europe demand for changes toele

Azerbaijan declines Council of Europe demand for changes to electoral bodies

ANS TV, Baku
1 Jun 05

[Presenter] A session of the Venice Commission of the Council of Europe
in Strasbourg has finished. Azerbaijan has accepted some suggestions by
the Venice Commission, but did not agree on introducing changes to the
composition of electoral commissions. Sergey Kuznetsov, a member of the
referendum and elections department of the Venice Commission has more.

[Kuznetsov by phone in Russian with Azeri voice-over] We had meetings
all day long yesterday and worked on the project. We took into
account suggestions by experts and discussed what kind of changes
could be introduced.

Unfortunately, back in 2004, we suggested that the composition of
electoral commissions be changed, but nothing has changed since
then. Azerbaijani officials said that they would not discuss this
issue. So, we had to put forward these suggestions again.

Ambassador Markarian Presents His Credentials to President George W.

PRESS RELEASE
June 1, 2005
Embassy of the Republic of Armenia
2225 R Street, NW, Washington, DC, 20008
Tel: 202-319-1976, x. 348; Fax: 202-319-2982
Email: [email protected]; Web:

Ambassador Markarian Presents His Credentials to President George W. Bush

On May 26, 2005, Ambassador of Armenia Tatoul Markarian presented
his Letter of Credence to President George W. Bush, accrediting
him as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the United
States. During the ceremony, President Bush and Ambassador Markarian
exchanged remarks, in accordance with the established tradition.

In his remarks, Ambassador Markarian noted the strength of our
bilateral relations and the solid base on which they are founded,
including common interests and shared values. Our common agenda
covers the entire spectrum of political, economic, military and
security cooperation, the Armenian Ambassador noted. He expressed
Armenia’s great appreciation for the enormous political, economic,
and humanitarian support that the United States extended from the
early years of Armenia’s independence. The Ambassador expressed the
determination of Armenia to further enhance the already high level of
cooperation and partnership with the United States in order to meet
the global challenges facing both our nations and the international
community in the twenty-first century.

In his reply, President Bush stated that the United States deeply
valued its friendship with Armenia, noting that our countries are bound
together by a unique history. President Bush stated that since Armenia
became independent in 1991, our countries worked together toward the
creation of democratic institutions and a growing economy so that
Armenia could rebuild after the devastation of the 1988 earthquake,
the collapse of the Soviet Union and the devastation wrought by the
Nagorno-Karabakh war with neighboring Azerbaijan. Armenia has made
such progress in the last 15 years that it is eligible for Millennium
Challenge Account assistance, noted the President.

The President’s remarks stated that he truly appreciated the assistance
that Armenia had rendered in the Global War on Terrorism and its
deployment of forces to Iraq to support that nation’s transition to a
stable, democratic state, and expressed the commitment of the United
States to working with Armenia and Azerbaijan to seek resolution
soon to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and normalization of relations
between Armenia and Turkey.

www.armeniaemb.org

BAKU: Visiting US senator opposed to re-deployment of Russian troops

Visiting US senator opposed to re-deployment of Russian troops in Armenia

Trend news agency
1 Jun 05

Baku, 1 June: The visiting US senator, Chuck Hagel, welcomes the news
that Russia has decided to withdraw its military bases from Georgia.

“But if the arms are moved from Georgia to Armenia, this will cause
a serious concern. Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia are independent
countries. There should be no foreign bases in any independent country
because it creates tension in the region,” he said.

Touching on the Karabakh settlement, the senator said the USA
supports a negotiated settlement. He welcomed the dialogue between
the Azerbaijani and Armenian presidents held on the sidelines of the
Council of Europe summit on 15 May.

“A dialogue is important to reach a consensus,” Hagel said.

more……..

Sunday, May 29, 2005
**************************************
When an expert writes a book for laymen, he doesn’t write everything he knows, only that which will be accessible to the average reader; and as everyone knows by now, for every expert there will be another who will contradict him.
*
I was born and raised in Greece. I have lived and dealt with Greeks and I have read a great deal about them. What do I know about Greeks and their history and culture? I know that there are more than a thousand books on the subject and if I were to read all of them I would discover something new in each one.
*
I have lived in Canada for many years. What do I know about Canadians and Canadian history and culture? What do I know about the small city where I live? The truth is, I don’t even know the names of my next-door neighbors.
*
What does the average Armenian layman know about Turks or, for that matter, Armenians? But then, what an Armenian knows is one thing and what he pretends to know another. In mathematical terms, if what he knows equals to zero or even minus one, what he pretends to know will be closer or equal to infinity.
*
We are a nation of ignoramuses parading as experts on any given subject.
*
Reality has been compared to a vast mosaic, puzzle, or Oriental carpet. What we know is only a tiny fraction of it. Sometimes an expert will discern a pattern but it will be only a guess, which will be contradicted by another expert.
*
Entire books (incomprehensible to laymen) have been written about “the meaning of meaning” and about why 2+2=4. And no philosopher so far has been successful in answering (to the satisfaction of all philosophers) the question, “why things exist.”
*
Perhaps the true meaning of knowing is, the greater the area of knowledge, the greater the area of ignorance. Or, to understand more consists in the awareness that what we don’t understand far outweighs what we understand and may never understand.
#
Monday, May 30, 2005
********************************
When an Armenian wants to validate his ideas, the chances are he will quote his grandmother rather than a boss, bishop, or benefactor. Perhaps what we need today, and what we have always needed in the past, is to be ruled by a committee of grandmothers.
*
How to stop bullying in schools: this has become a hot topic in both Canada and the United States recently. There has been a spate of studies, hearings and recommendations. I wonder why is it that so far bullies have been allowed a free hand. The only answer I can come up with is that capitalism and militarism legitimize and promote bullies, who are seen as future captains of industry, generals, and men with leadership qualities.
*
Because I was brought up with anti-Turkish prejudices, I make up for it by being against all prejudices, including, and above all, pro-Armenian prejudices.
*
When I speak of Ottomanized Armenians or Ottomanization in general, it is not because I am prejudiced against Ottomanism (whose abuses may not be worse than the abuses of many others -isms, beginning with nationalism, imperialism, Stalinism, Nazism, fascism, anti-Semitism, and so on…). Rather, I am against Armenians who preach Armenianism but practice Ottomanism and are totally unaware of the contradiction.
*
I committed some of my most unforgivable blunders when I was sure I was right.
*
Since there is no humor in the Bible and some of the most brilliant comedians today are Jewish, one must conclude that one of the preconditions of acquiring a sense of humor is five thousand years of persecution. As for common sense and decency: that may take a little longer.
*
Whenever I say something that makes sense, I make another enemy.
*
Once upon a time we thought the world was on our side. We now think it’s against us. Some day when we grow up we may discover to our astonishment that nobody gives a damn.
*
Am I wrong? Probably. Since I have no political ambitions, I don’t mind admitting that I don’t know much and I understand even less.
#
Tuesday, May 31, 2005
*******************************
ON CRITERIA
**********************
You can tell a man’s character by the criteria he uses to judge other men.
*
A rule without exceptions:
Only the scum of the earth assert moral superiority.
*
Even the smartest Armenian is not qualified to judge the dumbest Armenian, probably because it is the dumbest Armenian who assesses himself as the smartest. And because a really smart Armenian knows that he may be smart in one, two, or three fields, but he might as well be a complete ignoramus in a thousand others.
*
Only a mentally challenged kibitzer suffering from verbal diarrhea will assess himself as a competent judge of men, and only a moral moron will judge his fellow men by the number of their university degrees. According to Franklin D. Roosevelt (or one of his speechwriters): “A man who has never gone to school may steal from a freight car, but if he has a university education he may steal the whole railroad.”
*
Mario Puzo, who ought to know what he is talking about: “A lawyer with a briefcase can steal more than a thousand men with guns.”
*
I remember to have read somewhere that more university graduates become criminals every year than policemen, janitors, or garbage collectors.
*
There are good men and bad men. Likewise, there are good Armenians and bad Armenians as there are good and bad Turks. If it had been up to good Armenians and Turks there would have been no massacres. And if some day Turks and Armenians learn to coexist to their mutual benefit it will be because of the good men on both sides. Because if it were up to the bad, history would repeat itself; and history tends to repeat itself because bad people are more ruthless in their pursuit of evil aims. One reason: good people use only good means to rise to the top, whereas bad people use both good and bad means.
*
Good men know that all massacres are alike in the sense that the victims are invariably innocent and defenseless women, children, and old men. Only bad men say, “When we massacre our enemies, it’s good. When they massacre us, it’s bad.”
#
Wednesday, June 01, 2005
**************************************
Since 1922 Armenians have killed more Turks than Turks have killed Armenians. At the going rate we may have a good chance of getting even in about two million years, give and take a millennium or two.
*
In this context it is also worth mentioning that since 1922 Armenians have killed many more Armenians than they have killed Turks. At the going rate, and if you add up the assimilated (or victims of our self-inflicted “white massacre”) we may be extinct long before we settle our score with the Turks.
*
It is not unusual to meet the proud Armenian who thinks he has a license to behave like a bad Turk.
*
To those of my readers who get all worked up whenever they disagree with me, I say, “Relax, take it easy, you have nothing to worry about. I am only a slum-dwelling failure on my way to oblivion.”
*
I am not complaining. There are advantages to being a failure. You don’t have to put up with agents, accountants, lawyers, editors, and psychiatrists. I see only one advantage in being a success: you get a better class of critics.
*
Whenever I run out of things to say, I read my critics. Nothing stimulates me more than unspeakable perversity coupled with loudmouth arrogance.
*
If historians criticize one another of misunderstanding or misinterpreting the past it may be because, as more or less reasonable men, they cannot grasp the fact that, the absurd and the irrational play a more important role in human affairs than reason, common sense and decency.
*
Deep Throat is a Jew. One more reason why I love Jews. Haldeman and Ehrlichman were loyal to the boss. One more reason why I loathe bosses and fascists.
#

MOSCOW: Russia moves hardware from base in Georgia to Armenia

Russia moves hardware from base in Georgia to Armenia

Interfax news agency
1 Jun 05

Moscow, 1 June: A train carrying surplus ammunition and hardware
belonging to Russian military base No 12 in Batumi [Georgia] left
for Russian military base No 102 in Armenia’s Gyumri on 31 May.

“These are surplus ammunition and hardware that are being transferred
to supply the 102nd base in line with an earlier endorsed plan,”
deputy commander of the Group of Russian Forces in the Caucasus,
Col Vladimir Kuparadze, told Interfax by phone from Batumi.

“The train is composed of 15 carriages and flat wagons carrying
ammunition and vehicles,” Kuparadze said. This is the third train with
surplus materiel leave Batumi in the last three months, Kuparadze said.

“The transfer of the materiel to Russia and base No 102 is not related
to the Russian-Georgian agreement on the dates the bases’ withdrawal
signed in Moscow on Monday [31 May],” he said.

The train’s dispatch was coordinated with the Georgian side,
Kuparadze added.

EU-sought Turkish penal code takes effect amidst criticism over pres

EU-sought Turkish penal code takes effect amidst criticism over press freedom

Forbes from AFX
June 1 2005

06.01.2005, 05:48 AM

ANKARA (AFX) – Turkey’s new penal code, a key reform demanded by the
European Union, took effect today after months of political wrangling
and despite criticism that it severely restricts press freedoms.

Controversy has haunted the code ever since the government rushed
it through parliament last September as part of reforms that helped
Turkey win an EU green light for accession talks, scheduled to start
this autumn.

The law has been welcomed for introducing a more liberal criminal
justice system, in particular increasing penalties against human
rights abuses and torture and significantly improving the rights of
women and children.

However some parts, notably those concerning the media, triggered
a widespread campaign against the law, forcing Ankara to put it on
hold just days before it was due to take effect on April 1, to allow
parliament time to amend several provisions.

Parliament passed the amendments last week, but President Ahmet Necdet
Sezer, who has two weeks to study the articles, had not signed them
into law by midnight Tuesday, which means the code has taken effect
in its original form.

Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul played down the prospect of Sezer
vetoing the amendments, insisting that the main reforms demanded by
the EU are part of the code’s original version.

‘The issues of concern to the EU — in other words, provisions related
to the (EU) political criteria — have already been amended,’ Gul said.

Turkish newspapers have responed to the introduction of the new code
with protests and scepticism.

‘Freedom of the press is in danger,’ declared the daily Aksam, while
Milliyet headlined: ‘Sour start to a new era.’

The Radikal newspaper also slammed the government for failing to
address the complaints of press groups, which argue that under the new
code, journalists may still end up behind bars, despite jail sentences
having been purged from the press law in an earlier reform last year.

Experts say legal articles concerning the media contain terms vague
enough to leave prosecutors and judges with room for arbitrary
decisions that may threaten freedom of expression.

One article of particular concern foresees up to 15 years imprisonment
for those who disseminate propaganda via the media against ‘fundamental
national interests’ in return for material benefits from foreigners.

The article raised alarm when it emerged that explanatory notes in
the draft said it targets those who may, for instance, advocate the
withdrawal of Turkish troops from Cyprus or support claims that the
massacre of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire was genocide.

Press groups also say provisions pertaining to the protection of
privacy and the secrecy of judicial proceedings until suspects are
formally charged are too restrictive and will deal a heavy blow to
investigative journalism.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Nicosia: Armenian cemetery ‘was being demolished for a car park’

Armenian cemetery ‘was being demolished for a car park’

Cyprus Mail, Cyprus
June 1 2005

AN ARMENIAN cemetery, listed as a heritage site, was being demolished
to make way for a parking lot, Green party deputy George Perdikis
said yesterday.

The House Education Committee yesterday discussed the serious damage
caused to the Armenian cemetery near the Ledra Palace Hotel, when the
Armenian Prelature decided last month to dig up the remains and place
them in a communal pit in the new Armenian cemetery on the outskirts
of the capital.

But the move sparked outrage among the Armenian community, who saw
machinery digging indiscriminately, scattering remains all over
the place.

Interior Minister Andreas Christou suggested the procedure resembled
the digging of bunkers to place tanks inside.

Perdikis suggested a crime had been committed, despite the Armenian
Prelature’s good intentions, and claimed that the cemetery was being
demolished to make way for a parking lot.

Christou said the site had been listed since April 2, 2004 though
the Prelature claimed it had not known about it.

Neither did they know that the company, which took on the digging,
would have committed such unpleasant acts, the committee heard.

The Nicosia Municipality said the order declaring the site listed
had been published in three daily newspapers, though the owner had
not been informed in person.

Work at the cemetery had been halted after the Interior Ministry
secured an injunction. Townplanning department representative Athina
Aristotelous stressed that the workers doing the job were not skilled,
smashing the tombstones – some of which date back to the Middle Ages –
and collecting them in a heap.

The Education Committee asked the Prelature to inform them in writing
about what they were planning to do to restore the damage.

BAKU: Gov. of Italy to render to Azerbaijan food assistance

GOVERNMENT OF ITALY TO RENDER TO AZERBAIJAN FOOD ASSISTANCE
[June 01, 2005, 18:40:45]

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
June 1 2005

The government of Italy will render to Azerbaijan humanitarian food
assistance at amount of 1 million Euros. The agreement on it has been
signed on June 1 in the Cabinet of Azerbaijan. From the Azerbaijan
side, the agreement was signed by Vice-Premier, Chairman of the State
Commission on International Humanitarian Assistance Ali Hasanov,
from the Italian side – by the ambassador of Italy to Azerbaijan
Margarita Costa. The food assistance, aimed for the IDPs driven
form their homelands as a result of the Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno
Karabakh conflict, will consist of packages of Parmesan cheese, rice,
granulated sugar.

Vice-Premier Ali Hasanov, expressing gratitude to the Italian
government for this noble action, has emphasized that Italy rendered
great volume of the humanitarian assistance to the Azerbaijani refugees
among all European countries. It has been marked that the present
aid appears after official visit of the President of Azerbaijan Ilham
Aliyev to Italy. The first humanitarian assistance has been rendered
to Azerbaijan on results of visit of the national leader, President
Heydar Aliyev in 1997 by oil company “ENI” at amount of 2,2 million
US dollars. The Azerbaijani refugees have received assistance also
during visit to Azerbaijan in May 2002 of the head of the Catholic
Church, the Pope of Rome.

At the ceremony of signing, also were present representatives of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Italy.

ANKARA: Investigation on MasterCard Booklet Launched

Investigation on MasterCard Booklet Launched
By Anadolu News Agency (aa)

Zaman, Turkey
June 1 2005

Published: Wednesday 01, 2005
zaman.com

The Istanbul Attorney General Office has launched an investigation on
the Istanbul city guide distributed to visitors and VIP guests, who
visited Istanbul for the UEFA Champions League final match on May 25.

Attorney General Nazmi Okumus has accepted the news published in
some newspapers as a denunciation and has launched an investigation
into the booklet for including expressions that claimed Armenians
were massacred and Kurds faced assimilation and they were murdered
by Turkish soldiers.

MasterCard’s Southeastern Europe General Director Ozlem Imece
will reportedly provide information within the framework of the
investigation.

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http://www.zaman.com/?hn=20185&amp
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