There is big optimism for NK conflict settlement: Azeri FM

ARMINFO News Agency
September 20, 2005
THERE IS BIG OPTIMISM FOR KARABAKH CONFLICT SETTLEMENT: AZERI FM
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 20. ARMINFO. The last meeting of the Azeri and
Armenian presidents in Kazan Aug 26 2005 has given ground for
believing that there is a chance for the Karabakh conflict settlement
and that the Prague Process talks can be continued, the 525th
newspaper reports Azeri FM Elmar Mamedyarov as saying during the 60th
plenary session of the UN General Assembly.
At the same time there should be no illusions that Azerbaijan will
put up with the loss of its territories.
The UN Security Council’s immediate reaction to the occupation of
Azerbaijan’s territories (resolutions 822, 853, 874 and 884) give
ground for optimism. This is a basis for settling the conflict. The
last year’s UN SC discussing a point on the situation on the occupied
Azeri territories has drawn wide international attention to the
danger coming from Armenia’s operations on the territories.
Today there is big optimism for resolution and Azerbaijan remains
adherent to peace and compliant to the UN SC, CE and OSCE
resolutions. Azerbaijan hopes that Armenia will show constructive
approach and will not miss the opportunity to no longer be labelled
as aggressor and to resolve the conflict favorably.
Azerbaijan is ready to ensure security for the Armenian community of
Karabakh. Necessary conditions should be created for the return of
the Azeri community to Karabakh and other occupied territories and
for reviving the region economically.
If peace is attained the international community will have to support
it by peacekeeping, demining, recovery and security. The next but not
the last step is to create communication between the Armenian
community of Karabakh and Armenia as well as between Nakhchivan and
mainland Azerbaijan.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Kocharyan: After mobile comm. market, Internet svcs to be liberated

ARMINFO News Agency
September 20, 2005
ROBERT KOCHARYAN: AFTER MOBILE COMMUNICATION MARKET,
INTERNET-SERVICES SPHERE WILL BE LIBERALIZED
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 20. ARMINFO. ‘ We have already solved part of the
problem with ArmenTel. It concerns the sphere of mobile
communication,’ Armenian President Robert Kocharyan said at a meeting
with the winners of a contest for IT-specialists, Tuesday.
The president noted the fall in the prices of mobile communication
services caused by the competition in the sphere. As regards
Internet, Robert Kocharyan said that years-long problematic talks
with ArmenTel resulted in some liberalization of the sphere of
international data transfer. The president said that when monopolist
ArmenTel directed the profits from the cellular communication
services to development of the fixed telephone network on the system
of cross financing. ‘Almost whole Yerevan is equipped wit digital
ATXs and the quality of the fixed communication in Armenia is the
best in the post- Soviet area. In this connection, Armenia has a big
progress in development of fixed communication, but it slackens as to
the level of mobile communication,’ Robert Kocharyan said. The
president expressed confidence that the whole country will be
provided with mobile communication as the second operator started its
activity “rather aggressively.”
The president said the next step with be an attempt to liberalize the
sphere of Internet services. In particular, the country will try to
lift the restrictions on Internet services, which is the prerogative
of ArmenTel at present.
To note, after the two-year conflict of the Government and ArmenTel,
a second operator entered the mobile communication market of Armenia
on July 1 2005 – K- Telecom. In the middle of September, K-Telecom’s
subscribers numbered 217,000, those of ArmenTel numbered 250,000.

Claims lodges against Armenian scholars in Turkey (re UCLA conf.)

ARMINFO News Agency
September 20, 2005
CLAIMS LODGES AGAINST ARMENIAN SCIENTISTS IN TURKEY
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 20. ARMINFO. A claim was lodged in the Turkish
Prosecutor’s Office Uskudar against Armenian scientists.
The Turkishpress writes: “A denouncement has been filed against
several Armenian scholars who organized a conference on ‘the
so-called Armenian genocide’ and used Ataturk’s picture on a poster
at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). The denouncement
was filed at the Uskudar Republican Prosecutor’s Office and had the
signatures of Dr. Ibrahim Oztek, Dr. Zihni Papakci and owner of
Iktidar Magazine Metin Hacimustafaoglu. A conference ‘on the
so-called Armenian genocide’ was organized at UCLA which was attended
by Armenian scholars Vahram Shemmassian, Ardashes Kassakhian and
Levon Marashlian last April. The conference posters had Ataturk’s
picture in front of puppies. Dr. Oztek stressed that Turks and the
founder of Turkey Ataturk were insulted by the posters and conference
organized at UCLA. ”We will sue those responsible for the insult
against the Turks,” noted Oztek.”

RAO EES Russia plans to shortly obtain Armenia electric networks

ARMINFO News Agency
September 20, 2005
RAO EES RUSSIA PLANS TO SHORTLY OBTAIN ARMENIA ELECTRIC NETWORKS
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 20. ARMINFO. RAO EES Russia is planning to become
the owner of the Electric NEtworks of Armenia very shortly, Chairman
of the Board of Directors of INTER RAO EES Andrey Rappoport says in
an interview to Regnum.
The company is ot going to be just manager for 99 years and has
already applied for owning the networks or giving the ownership to
its daughter company Interenergo B.V.. Some Western organizations
have expressed concern that the deal is not transparent. But RAO EES
Russia has already shown WB and other experts that the deal is legal.
RAO EES Russia is already a subject of Armenia’s electricity market,
knows the country’s laws very well and closely complies with them.
Simply the process is underway and some very emotional media have
interpreted this as illegal change of owner. This was simply
misunderstanding. The deal is not over de jure and will be finalized
as soon as the Armenian Government gives its consent to it, says
Rappoport.

Kocharyan ready to cooperate with Project Armenia 2020

ARMINFO News Agency
September 20, 2005
ARMENIAN PRESIDENT READY TO COOPERATE WITH PROJECT ARMENIA 2020
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 20. ARMINFO. Armenian President Robert Kocharyan
expressed readiness to cooperate with the project Armenia 2020 for
stable development of the country.
In his address to the conference participants “The Growth of
Production and Competitiveness of Armenia” organized under the
project, President Kocharyan said that “such initiatives are useful
for our country.” The president appreciated the efforts by the
organizers, the heads and the participants of the project. He call
the stable development of Armenia the country’s goal. The president
wished the conference-participants success.

Glendale: Dad pleads for son to resurface

The Daily News of Los Angeles
September 13, 2005 Tuesday
DAD PLEADS FOR SON TO RESURFACE;
MAN’S GIRLFRIEND FOUND DEAD IN TRUNK OF HIS CAR IN AZUSA
By Alex Dobuzinskis Staff Writer
GLENDALE – Police continued to search Monday for a missing Glendale
man whose girlfriend was found dead in the trunk of his car, and
detectives said they consider him a “person of interest” in her
death.
Police said Artur Khanzadyan, 24, had no criminal history. But the
family of his girlfriend, Odet Tsaturyan, 24, whose body was found in
the trunk of his 2005 Audi on Friday in Azusa, has said Khanzadyan
was violent with her.
Ashot Khanzadyan, the father of the missing man, issued a tearful
plea to his son after meeting with Glendale police.
“I’m pleading you as your father, as your friend,” Ashot Khanzadyan
said in Armenian through a police translator. “I’m pleading in the
name of your mom, your brother and your entire family, that please
… contact us and the Police Department, just like I am contacting
the Police Department and asking for their help to find you.”
Police are treating Khanzadyan as a “person of interest” in the
homicide case but not a suspect.
Tsaturyan’s car, a 2002 silver Honda Accord with license plate
4VAM520, is still missing. The Coroner’s Office is expected to
perform an autopsy today on Tsaturyan to determine the cause of
death.
Tsaturyan was last seen alive at 5 p.m. Tuesday, leaving the
apartment complex where she lived with her parents in the 800 block
of East Lomita Avenue in Glendale. Her family reported her missing
after she failed to show up at a party that evening.
Khanzadyan also lives with his parents, and he was last seen leaving
home at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. He was reported missing the following day.
“We don’t know if they were together that night,” Lorenz said.
“Something leads us to believe that they crossed paths because she’s
in the trunk of his car.”
Melkon Isagulyan, an uncle of Tsaturyan, said Khanzadyan had tried to
scare his niece in the past.
“The parents had felt a while ago that he was not normal and they
tried to keep their daughter away from him,” Isagulyan said in
Armenian.
“And the daughter had told the parents that she wouldn’t see him. We
don’t know how he convinced her to get out of the house the other
day.”
Tsaturyan, who worked at Glendale Memorial Hospital and Health Center
and later as a clerk in Los Angeles, was remembered by family and
friends as a fun person who liked to joke.
Khachik Essakhan, 45, who was a neighbor to the Tsaturyans for a
decade until he moved away some 11 months ago, said he worried about
Odet Tsaturyan being with Khanzadyan.
“He tried to control her all the time so that’s why I told her,
Odet, stay away from this guy. She said, ‘No, I love him.’ I don’t
know what kind of love is that,” he said.
Ashot Khanzadyan, who had worked with his son in the family’s
construction tile business, said his son is not violent.
“My son, for the past 24 years of his life, he’s never even killed a
fly and never hurt anyone,” Khanzadyan said.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

New crosses to grace outside of Armenian church in Worcester

TELEGRAM & GAZETTE (Massachusetts)
September 13, 2005 Tuesday, ALL EDITIONS
New crosses to grace outside of Armenian church
WORCESTER
The Armenian Church of Our Savior consecrated two new exterior
crosses Sunday. The largest cross will replace the existing one on
the dome, and the smallest will replace the existing one on the gable
at the front end of the church. His Eminence Archbishop Khajag
Barsamian, primate of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America,
shown in the center of the top photo, leads the consecration
ceremony. The purchase of the crosses was made possible through a
donation from Margaret E. Bedrosian of Worcester and her family in
memory of her late husband, Edward. In the photo at right, Mrs.
Bedrosian, left, receives a hug from fellow parishioner Margaret
Kazarian of Worcester.

ANKARA: Third Swiss charge against =?UNKNOWN?Q?Perin=E7ek?= fordenyi

Diplomacy Newsline
Tuesday, September 20, 2005
Diplomacy News
Third Swiss charge against Perinçek for denying `genocide’
ANK – TDN with AP
Authorities have brought a third charge against a Turkish
politician for a new incident in which he is accused of breaking
Switzerland’s racial discrimination laws by denying Armenian genocide
allegations.
Doðu Perinçek, the leader of Turkey’s Workers’ Party (IP), made the
remarks on Sunday in a speech in central Switzerland’s Bern canton,
police said in a statement. He has already been charged by Swiss
authorities for two similar incidents.
`Based on the fact that during the course of his address Doðu
Perinçek denied the Armenian genocide and expressed prejudices
against the Western world, the Bern canton police have filed a
complaint based on suspicion of racial discrimination,’ said the
police statement.

House might make history

Fresno Bee (California)
September 16, 2005, Friday FINAL EDITION
House might make history Armenian genocide measures pass by wide
margins.
by Michael Doyle Bee Washington Bureau
DA
History returned with a vengeance Thursday as a House committee
approved the latest versions of an Armenian genocide resolution.
With San Joaquin Valley lawmakers and residents looking on
approvingly, the House International Relations Committee approved the
two politically charged Armenian measures by wide margins. It’s the
first time in five years the panel has taken up the resolutions that
incite international controversy.
“I think it’s great,” said Mariposa Republican George Radanovich,
lead author of one of the two Armenian genocide measures. “This is a
good message to send to Turkey.”
But with the Bush administration strongly opposed, and the government
of Turkey lumbering out its big lobbying guns, the Armenian genocide
resolutions still face an uncertain future.
“These resolutions could undermine efforts to rebuild a partnership
between the United States and Turkey in pursuit of America’s broad
national security interests,” Assistant Secretary of State Matthew
Reynolds cautioned in a letter Thursday.
The White House and congressional Republican leaders can still veto
the Armenian genocide measures in several ways. House Speaker Dennis
Hastert can simply refuse to let them reach the House floor, as he
did in October 2000 to block an earlier Radanovich effort.
Conceivably, Republican leaders could also bring them up under a
procedure that would require a two-thirds vote to pass.
“As it stands now, it’s tough,” Radanovich conceded.
Both resolutions would put the House of Representatives on record as
affirming that the Ottoman Empire engaged in attempted genocide
between 1915 and 1923. Countless Armenians died; Turkish officials
now estimate hundreds of thousands perished in a wider war, while
Armenians contend as many as 1.5 million were killed in a targeted
campaign.
Approved by a 40-7 margin, Radanovich’s resolution spells out in 11
pages the evidence demonstrating why the 1915-23 catastrophe deserves
the name genocide. This characterization is the fundamental purpose
of the resolution, which would not have the force of law even if
passed by the House.
The committee also approved by a 35-11 vote a related resolution
authored by Pasadena Democrat Adam Schiff, which goes on to urge the
Turkish government to acknowledge that a genocide occurred.
“This is a step toward righting an historical injustice,” Schiff
said.
Turkish officials and their allies retort that history is ambiguous,
with Turkish Ambassador Faruk Logoglu urging lawmakers in a letter
Thursday to “not let our as-yet unreconciled views of a specific era
dictate our present or our future.” The Turkish government has
proposed that a joint study commission with historians from both
countries examine the evidence.
“I’m afraid the resolution will perpetuate a standoff,” Florida
Democrat Robert Wexler said. “It is time for all parties to place a
greater emphasis on bringing Armenian and Turkish groups together.”
Schiff and Radanovich both represent districts with sizable Armenian
American populations, where politically active constituents have long
pressed the genocide resolutions. Merced Democrat Dennis Cardoza, a
member of the International Relations Committee, also supported the
resolutions that were a deeply personal issue for some in the packed
hearing room.
Part-time Fresno resident Paul Jamushian, for one, described himself
as a “genocide son.”
His mother was slashed and left for dead at age 4, he said, and his
father was smuggled to safety dressed as a little girl. Now retired,
and alternating his time between Washington and Fresno, Jamushian
listened avidly to the debate that started midmorning and, after a
break, carried on into the afternoon.
“I’m a very strong believer in this, because of what happened to my
family,” Jamushian said.

Member of UAE supreme council to visit Armenia

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Sept 19 2005
MEMBER OF UAE SUPREME COUNCIL TO VISIT ARMENIA
YEREVAN, September 19. /ARKA/. The member of the Supreme Council of
the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Emir of Sharja, Sultan Mohammad
Al-Kasimi is to be on an official visit to Armenia on September
19-21. The press service of the RA Foreign Office reports that during
the visit he is to hold meetings with RA President Robert Kocharyan
and Premier Andranik Margaryan. Sultan Mohammad Al-Kasimi is to visit
the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial to Genocide victims, National Picture
Gallery of Armenia, where Days of Culture of Sharja are to be opened.
He is also scheduled to meet with students of Yerevan State
University, visit the RA National Academy of Sciences and
Matenadaran. Sultan Mohammad Al-Kasimi is also to visit Sevan and
Dilijan. P.T. -0–