ANKARA: Edelman: President Bush will not Say ‘Genocide’

Zaman, Turkey
April 24 2005

Edelman: President Bush will not Say ‘Genocide’
By Omer Sahin
Published: Sunday 24, 2005
zaman.com

US Ambassador to Ankara Eric Edelman announced that contrary to
Armenians’ expectations, US President George W. Bush would not use
the word “genocide” for what happened in 1915 in today’s annual April
24th speech on the Armenian issue.

Attending the Turkish Parliament’s 85th anniversary reception,
Edelman said: “The speech will be similar to the one last year.”

Turkish Parliamentary Speaker Bulent Arinc, meeting with Edelman,
said that he would make his first official visit to the US on May
28th and 29th.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Erdogan: Ups and Downs usual in Kardak, do not Exaggerate

Zaman, Turkey
April 24 2005

Erdogan: Ups and Downs usual in Kardak, do not Exaggerate
By Erdal Sen
Published: Sunday 24, 2005
zaman.com

The Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan made calming
statements about the tension taking place yesterday with Greece over
the Kardak reef.

Answering a question about the Kardak crisis in the 85th anniversary
reception of the Turkish Grand National Assembly (TBMM), Erdogan
said: “These kinds of things might occur. We do not care about them.
Ups and downs always occur.” Erdogan conveyed his reaction to Poland,
which passed the so-called Armenian genocide law in parliament via
the Polish ambassador Grzegorz Michalski.

To the Polish Ambassador: You upset me

Erdogan reflected his first reaction to Michalski saying, ‘you upset
me’. Reminding him of the support that Turkey gave to Warsaw in the
past, to which the ambassador said, ‘I know’, Erdogan said: ” Poland
was one of the members that gave us the biggest support in the EU but
you were deceived. A very small group made the alleged genocide
accepted. You should not have done this to us.” Upon this, Michalski
settled for telling: “We know your support to us against the Russian
occupation during the war. Our children learn how you supported us.”
while he was telling about the sympathy of the Polish public.

ANKARA: Making Genocide ‘Official History’, Paris Forgets Algeria

Zaman, Turkey
April 24 2005

Making so-called Genocide ‘Official History’, Paris Forgets Algeria

Published: Sunday 24, 2005
zaman.com

While we were preparing this story, the powerful Armenian lobby of
France rejected all our requests for interviews. Some even hung up
the phone on us when we said we were Turks.

Didier Billion, on the other hand, does not doubt the Armenian
genocide allegations at issue in the European Union (EU). Billion
notes that he could not be convinced that the Ottomans had committed
genocide and it would be more accurate to define the incident as a
massacre. He thinks the genocide law approved by theFrench Parliament
is “a big mistake”. Pointing out the lack of necessary historical
information to describe the 1915 happenings as genocide, Billion
notes that what happened can be solely characterized as a massacre;
but in the case that historians reveal information showing that a
genocide occured, his thoughts will change. ” The duty of the
deputies’ is to make law, not history. With such a decision, France
has made an ‘official history’. I am adverse to any ‘official
history’, whether in France or somewhere else. This law is
problematic in the operation of French democracy and in
French-Turkish relations. If we want deputies to give forth their
attitude about Algeria or the China-India Border War, it is
impossible to discuss these. We will not be free. Because there will
be an ‘official’ history line” says Billion. Stating that France has
not apologized to Algeria yet, Didier Billon said that the ambassador
in Algeria has made a handsome gesture of that kind a few weeks
before but no French president has apologized officially. To the
question “Why?” he has a clear answer; “Because Algeria is our
taboo.”

ANKARA: Becoming Europe’s ‘Sick Man’, France Makes Turkey Scapegoat

Zaman, Turkey
April 24 2005

Becoming Europe’s ‘Sick Man’, France Makes Turkey Scapegoat
By ALI IHSAN AYDIN, SELCUK GULTASLI
Published: Sunday 24, 2005
zaman.com

France, who gave birth to the idea of the European Union (EU), and
which is the homeland of Cartesian logic and the castle of
secularism, will hold a referendum to vote on the first constitution
in the history of the EU on May 29th.

Despite the fact that the idea of a constitution was carried to the
agenda by France at the Laeken Summit in 2001 and the team that
prepared the Constitution was led by a French official (former French
President Valery Giscard d’Estaing), French people are likely to
vote”no” in the referendum on May 29th.

While the French have been intensively discussing the constitution,
which they want to be in line with their traditions, one of the most
important matters of debate is Turkey’s possible future EU
membership. Several French politicians from right to left on the
political spectrum link Turkey’s membership with the constitution and
are calling on the French public to vote “no” on May 29th. It is an
exaggeration to say that French people will vote “no” on the
constitution only because of Turkey. As a matter of fact, French
people also complain about the EU’s moving away from the concept of
enlargement and the understanding of a social state. One of the most
controversial issues, however, is Turkey. Some French citizens,
despite the fact that they would probably vote “yes” to Turkey’s
membership in a referendum that will be held after 10 or 15 years if
Turkey completes EU negotiations with success, are asking “Why do we
wait for 15 years? Let’s say “no” to Turkey as of now.” Turning the
so-called Armenian “genocide” allegations into a principle in the
world for the first time, France has a public, which has the deepest
objection to Turkey’s EU membership. Thýs attitude in France is
hypocritical. As a matter of fact, Turkey’s “tough” secularism,
administrative system and linguistic borrowings when it encountered
with the modern West are all from France. Ýn short, France has
parallels with Turkey. Despite this fact, Turks are anxious this time
that their march towards Europe will be blocked in Paris. It is
rumored that French Foreign Minister Michel Barnier said: “Forget
about negotiations on October 3rd.” if the French would vote “no” on
the Constitution in the referendum on May 29th.

How has opposition against Turkey increased?

While describing France, the diplomats agree upon three
characteristics: high self-confidence, a great deal of contradicton
within itself and having no mean opinion of itself to the point of
arrogance from time to time. Some say, ‘You can appreciate France;
however, you cannot like it’. There are some books published with
titles as such, ‘Why do we like France, not the French?’

Why does a nation, which taught Europe logic, behave so illogically
when Turkey is at issue? Do the French deserve the ‘sick man’ title
of the Ottomans now? Didier Billion, who is a Turkish expert in IRIS
(Institute de Relations Internationales et Stratégiques), located in
Paris, thinks that France is now sick. According to Billion, when the
European Union (EU) had only six members, France was the leader, now
it is one of 25 members, so when it sees that its effect has
diminished, it gets peevish and feels isolated. Billion thinks that
the increasing opposition against Turkey’s accesion to the EU in
France is related to domestic politics and unrelated with Turkey
itself.

“In France, there is a conflict between the right-wing extremists and
the central right. The right-wing extremists follow a path, which is
against the Islamic world; and has a voting potential between 15-20
percent. The leader of National Front Party (FN) Le Pen and the
leader of the Movement Party of France (MPF) Phillippe de Villiers
will try to achieve new successes in the future elections by making
use of opposition against Turkey; however, the actual problem is with
the Republican parties such as the Union for the Popular Movement
(UMP) and the Union for French Democracy (UDF). Saying, “UMP and UDF
follow this policy due to reasons for elections”, Billion explains
that Turkey is the mirror of France’s complaints about the EU and the
Islamic world, and even the scapegoat. Indicating that the Turkey
discussion in France is not a ‘real’ one, Billion thinks that the
politicians use Turkey for their political careers. Billion charges
Nicholas Sarkozy, who is the leader of UMP, with this behavior.
“There is not a real discussion in France, the discussion is among
the politicians. The discussions on Turkey used in political
competition are not healthy. For example, Sarkozy has many goals for
the future, but he is not a real statesman. He is an opportunistic
politican who wants to be a hero. Sarkozy’s attitude about the Turkey
issue does not reflect the attitude of a real statesman.” According
to Billion, the second issue is the migration problem that France
developed in line with its ‘fantasies’. According to these
‘fantasies’ when Turkey becomes an EU member, the French people will
lose their jobs because Turkish people will occupy European markets
with their cheap labor force.

Boston: Armenians remember the horror

Boston Globe
April 24 2005

Armenians remember the horror
By Yvonne Abraham, Globe Staff | April 24, 2005

Today is the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, the mass
killings and deportations by Ottoman Turks that led to the deaths of
as many as 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and 1923. Few survivors
of those attacks — which the Turkish government says were part of a
civil conflict, not a genocide — remain. Some settled here in
Massachusetts, where Armenian-Americans now number about 30,000.

In the excerpts below, they share some of their memories.

Yeghsa Giragosian, 105, North Andover (native of Harput)
‘You don’t know who’s coming. And you don’t know what’s going to
happen. But you’re young and you take it.’

”I was 14. Everything was going good, then the genocide started one
morning. In every village, Armenian people, everybody has to go to
the cemetery. We are in the cemetery and the soldiers right away
start to take the girls. Turkish men took my two sisters [and married
them]. A Turkish man, a friend of my grandfather’s, he held my hand
and took me to his home. I lived with them. He had a wife and
children, and I didn’t know so much of what was happening. I was
young. And I didn’t know life. The wife was so good to me. She never
says, ‘You are Armenian girl,’ or this and that. They didn’t use me.
She wash me, she cook for me, she was good just like a mother. They
had two boys and a girl, and she talk Armenian and she was my age,
and we became two sisters. About three years later, my aunt, she come
back. And she told me my mother died. She told me, ‘If you can, run
away, because the war is stopped and the Turks can do nothing.’ I
did, right away. . . . My mind grew up and now I know the difference.
I run away. I didn’t say nothing . . . even [to] the girl I was with.
My second sister ran away too. I went to [an] Armenian orphanage. Two
years I stay over there. We come to Aleppo . . . and Marseilles. Then
we are here [in America], then a couple of years later, my sister
says she finally found out where [our older sister] is. She was still
in Turkey. My second sister, she went to her house [in Turkey] and
she says ‘Sister, run away, come on.’ She says, ‘I can’t, I have five
children.’ Last time I saw [my eldest sister] was in that cemetery. I
don’t know if she died. . . . She’s going to be 108. It must be she
died.”

Peter Bilezikian, 92, Newton (native of Marash)
”The dream I used to have, a Turk would cut my ears off, cut my
nose, pull my teeth, gouge my eye out.’

”All I remember is, we were hungry, and I thought that was a normal
thing. . . . There were so many people dying. . . . I remember
children dying with the big stomachs . . . dropping dead right in the
middle of the street. And a cart would come along, pick them up as if
they were nothing, and throw them up on the cart and keep going.
There’d be a big hole somewhere, they’d just dump it in there. During
the 1919 war, when the . . . Turks rebelled against the French . . .
there was a war in the city. We were in one place and it was fenced.
A lady was baking bread. I was hungry and I went over there and asked
for a piece of bread. She wouldn’t give it to me: ‘This is for my
children. If I give it to you, then my children won’t have any.’ So I
waited, I was hoping she would take her eyes off the bread, I could
steal. She never took her eyes off it, but they were shooting from a
minaret . . . I had a cowlick, like an Irish boy, you know . . . [the
bullet] singed my hair and hit her between the eyes. She died. I
grabbed all the bread that she had baked, ran under a stairway and
ate it all up. I didn’t care what anybody [thought]. It wasn’t a nice
thing to do, looking back. Poor woman died, and do you know, I never
thought anything of her dying? These are all dreams to me today. When
I came to this country I lived in Newtonville. At night I used to
find myself under the bed in a cold sweat. The dream I used to have
was, a Turk would cut my ears off, cut my nose, pull my teeth, gouge
my eye out. I would wake up all wet. . . . I never had these dreams
in the old country.”

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Arminé Dedkian, 92, Watertown (native of Tekirdag)
‘I didn’t know so much of what was happending. I was young. And I
didn’t know life.’

”I was just born when they killed my father. Everybody had to keep
going. We were walking towards the desert . . . to Syria. My mother
got a job in a hospital over there. Then this young man, he was
Armenian, he was working there too. They got married. He was ashamed
to say he had married a widow . . . you know, 17, 18 years old, she
had a child. They [left me with my grandmother]. They told her,
‘After we settle, we are going to come and get her.’ But then, again
things happened. The Turks chased us three times, we had to abandon
everything. We didn’t know where [my mother] was. . . . We didn’t
know who had died, who hadn’t. We found a way of finding each other
by writing in the Armenian papers. [We placed an ad, looking for my
mother.] My mother’s cousin saw the ad and he knew my mother was in
America. I was seven days on the boat by myself. I was 15. Whoever
had sponsored you had to be there to pick you up. My mother wasn’t
there. She had made a mistake. So they took me to Ellis Island. Six
or seven days there. You just sit there and your ears are wide open
and you hope that you are going to hear your name. You don’t know
who’s coming. And you don’t know what’s going to happen. But you’re
young and you take it. When my mother opened the door I just had a
feeling it was her, she was a very pretty woman. But because we never
knew each other, like two strangers we stood together, you know, no
hugging, no kissing, no nothing. That’s why my family always tell me,
‘We’re not a kissing family.’ I made something out of my life, but I
feel cheated that I didn’t have a childhood. I should have talked to
her: ‘What happened? Why did you leave me?'”

John D. Kasparian, 98, Worcester (native of Van)
”There was nothing to be eaten. I ate grass for days. That’s the way
we live. …It was a hell life to live.’

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”All I know, I was 7 years old, and I seen this fighting . . . all
the time. You get kind of sick of it, you get used to it in a way.
But things got so much worse, that Turks in 1915 start to go from
house to house, take the people out — father, mother, children, they
don’t care. One night . . . a Turkish friend of my father . . . woke
my house . . . and took my father and says ‘You know this is the
section they coming after tonight, you get out right away. If not
then you won’t be living to see the light tomorrow.’ We run away for
life. . . . By early morning the [same] man came and says . . .
‘After you left, they gathered 200 men, women, and children and put
in the armory. They closed the door and put kerosene, and lit up that
place.’ Men, women, children, they perished that particular night. If
we didn’t get out we would have been gone, for sure thing. We would
have been dead. We couldn’t eat nothing [on the road]. There was
nothing to be eaten. I ate grass for days. That’s the way we live,
till we came to Yerevan. It was a hell life to live. My brother got
lost . . . on the road to Yerevan. Somebody [found him] and brought
[him to Yerevan]. Now we were looking for our brother and we went
every place. Finally we went to this park, he was all by himself
sitting on a huge stone, so everybody could see and recognize him. He
was crying. ‘Where’s my parents? Where’s my folks?’ My father
naturally grabbed him and broke down and we got all together. But
unfortunately he didn’t last long. He died because of starvation and
no water. . . . Thank God we find him. That was a sad day for me
really. I don’t look back. I forget about it, just looking forward.
Thank goodness, I live in such a heavenly country.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenians mark 90th anniversary of mass killings in Ottoman Empire

Macleans, Canada
April 24 2005

Armenians mark 90th anniversary of mass killings in Ottoman Empire

AVET DEMOURIAN

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) – Tens of thousand of Armenians on Sunday
marked the 90th anniversary of the mass killings of Armenians in the
Ottoman Empire, vowing to press their case to have the killings
recognized by Turkey and the world as genocide.

Waving flags and carrying flowers, people streamed through the
Armenian capital and marched up to a massive hilltop granite memorial
to hear speeches and prayers.

Weeping mourners filed into the circular block memorial, laying
carnations on a flat surface surrounding a burning flame. A choir in
black sang hymns as the crowd filed past, some carrying umbrellas
against the sun.

The country will observe a minute of silence at 7 p.m. (1400 GMT) and
Yerevan residents will place candles on window sills in memory of the
victims.

“International recognition and condemnation of genocide is a goal
that not only Armenia must achieve,” President Robert Kocharian was
quoted as saying by the Russia’s ITAR-Tass news agency. “Armenia is
ready to build normal relations with Turkey. However, the policy
being pursued by Ankara is surprising not only in Armenia, but
elsewhere in the world.”

Ottoman authorities began rounding up intellectuals, diplomats and
other influential Armenians in Istanbul on April 24, 1915, as
violence and unrest grew, particularly in the eastern parts of the
country.

Armenia says up to 1.5 million Armenians ultimately died or were
killed over several years as part of a genocidal campaign to force
them out of eastern Turkey. Turkey acknowledges that large numbers of
Armenians died, but says the overall figure is inflated and that the
deaths occurred in the civil unrest during the collapse of the
Ottoman Empire.

France, Russia and many other countries have already declared the
killings were genocide; the United States, which has a large Armenian
diaspora community, has not.

Turkey, which has no diplomatic ties with Armenia, is facing
increasing pressure to fully acknowledge the event, particularly as
it seeks membership in the European Union. The issue is extremely
sensitive in Turkey and Turks have faced prosecution for saying the
killings were genocide.

Ankara earlier this month called for the two countries to jointly
research the killings.

Armenian communities around the world also marked the anniversary,
with church services and demonstrations. In Moscow, hundreds attended
a memorial service at the construction site for an Armenian church.
In northeastern Syria, some 4,000 people flocked to the city of
Marqada, where thousands of Armenians are buried.

“We are here to remember our martyrs whom we should never forget,”
said Krikour Haydenian, a 33-year-old merchant.

An estimated 100,000 Armenians currently live in Syria.

Germany: Armenian Massacre Clouds Turkey’s EU Bid

Deutsche Welle, Germany
April 24 2005

Armenian Massacre Clouds Turkey’s EU Bid

Photo: Honoring the dead at Armenia’s national memorial on Sunday

Tens of thousands of Armenians including the president and top
officials filed through the towering Genocide Memorial in Yerevan on
Sunday to commemorate the 90th anniversary of mass killings by
Ottoman Turks.

A silent procession headed by President Robert Kocharian laid flowers
at an eternal flame as Armenia’s chief clergymen sang an emotional
Gregorian Apostolic requiem service beneath the baking sun.

The long line and pounding sunshine were too much for many ordinary
Armenians who came to pay their respects.

Women could be seen as they were carried out of the line leading to
the memorial half-conscious from sunstroke after having made the long
climb to the hilltop where it is situated above the capital.

Armenia wants Turkish acknowledgment

In the run-up to the anniversary, Armenia has pulled out all the
stops in an effort to make Turkey acknowledge the massacres as
genocide and officials have estimated that 1.5 million people will
visit the memorial through Sunday.

The events being commemorated are the mass expulsion and mass deaths
of Christian Armenians in what was then the Ottoman Empire during
World War I.

“For 30 years now on this day, I’ve come to this memorial early in
the morning. Here I lay six tulips, the number of deaths in my family
at the time of the genocide,” said Mikhitar Haroutounian, 74.

April 24 marks beginning of massacre

On April 24, 1915 the Ottoman Turkish authorities arrested some 200
Armenian community leaders in the start of what Armenia and many
other countries contend was an organized genocidal campaign to
eliminate ethnic Armenians from the Ottoman Empire.

Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen perished in
orchestrated killings between 1915 and 1917 as the Ottoman Empire,
the predecessor of modern Turkey, was falling apart.

Ankara counters that 300,000 Armenians and thousands of Turks were
killed in “civil strife” during World War I when the Armenians rose
against their Ottoman rulers and sided with invading Russian troops.

Ninety years ago “a crime was committed that had no equals in the
history of Armenia or all of humanity, it did not even have a name,”
Kocharian said according to the presidential administration.

Apology, not compensation sought

He called on Turkey and the international community to condemn the
killings as genocide, adding that the former Soviet republic was
ready to build “natural” relations with its larger neighbor if it
faced up to its history.

A mass was to be celebrated later on Sunday in Yerevan’s Saint
Gregory cathedral, as well as in churches all over Armenia, and a
minute’s silence was to be observed throughout the country at 7 p.m.

Meanwhile, Kocharian (photo) made a conciliatory gesture towards
Ankara, saying his government would not ask for financial
compensation for the killings if Turkey recognized them as genocidal.

“We are not talking about compensation, this is only about a moral
issue,” Kocharian told Russia’s Rossiya television, which is also
broadcast in Armenia.

Pressure on Turkey ahead of EU talks

The row over whether or not to call the killings genocide has
embarrassed Turkey as it readies for the start of European Union
accession talks later this year.

On Friday, French President Jacques Chirac accompanied Kocharian to a
Paris monument for victims of the massacre, and in Germany members of
parliament from across the political spectrum appealed to Turkey to
accept the massacre of Armenians as part of its history, saying this
would help its EU aspirations.

On Tuesday, Poland joined a list of 15 countries that have officially
acknowledged the killings as genocide.

The decision has drawn protest from Ankara, where officials called it
“irresponsible,” and said it would hurt relations.

However, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan (photo) recently
proposed the creation of a joint Armenian-Turkish commission to
review the issue, though officials expressed confidence that the
study would confirm Turkey’s current position.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Tehran: Armenians commemorate massacre anniversary

Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA), Iran
April 24 2005

Armenians commemorate alleged massacre anniversary

Tehran, April 24, IRNA

Members of the Armenian community in Tehran held a rally Monday to
commemorate the anniversary of alleged massacre of Armenians by then
Turkish government under Ottoman rule in 1915 in Turkey.

The Armenians chanted slogans against the massacre, condemning the
carnage of Armenians on April 24, 1915 under Ottoman rule in Turkey,
the Public Relations Department of Iran’s Armenian Archdiocese said.

Armenia’s ambassador to Tehran, MPs representing Armenian community
and members of Armenian associations also took part in the march.

“The government of Turkey under Ottoman rule, in the aftermath of the
World War One, took advantage of chaotic situation, resulted as the
chaos of the war and adopted the policy of genocide against Armenians
to usurp their homeland,” said a statement issued by the Armenian
Archdiocese.

Armenian Archbishop Sibveh Sarkisyan called on the Armenian citizens
to make efforts for development of Iran.

He appreciated the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah
Ali Khamenei for his sympathy with the Iranian Armenians, saying that
Armenians cannot forget the hospitality of the Iranian people who
sheltered the survivors of the 1915 tragic event.

The Armenian community in the central city of Isfahan also held a
similar march to commemorate the 90th anniversary of the massacre of
Armenians in 1915.

Holding placards in the Church of Vaanak in Isfahan, over 500
Armenians condemned the event in Turkey.

The Armenians living in 56 countries across the world commemorate the
anniversary of genocide of Armenians by Ottomans on April 24, 1915 in
Turkey.

The United Nations in a meeting in 1948 termed the slaughter of
Armenians as a genocide.

The central city of Isfahan and southern cities in Iran are home to
12,000 Armenians whose residence in Iran dates back to Shah Abbas of
Safavi dynasty.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Leaving Iraq to settle for separatist Karabakh — an Armenian story

Agence France Presse
April 24 2005

Leaving Iraq to settle for separatist Karabakh — an Armenian story

24/04/2005 AFP

LACHIN, Azerbaijan, April 24 (AFP) – 4h29 – Turkish massacres of
Armenians which began 90 years ago on Sunday have a lot to do with
why a pretty 29-year-old from Iraq is now living on one of the most
contested chunks of land on earth in the Caucasus.

An ethnic Armenian whose grandparents fled to Baghdad when Ottoman
forces began their campaign against Armenians in eastern Anatolia,
Anakhit Petrosyan once dreamed of coming to Armenia to work in the
Iraqi embassy in Yerevan.

But when a US bomb killed her father last year her plans changed and
like her grandparents before her, she fled her birthplace to settle
in the Lachin district of Azerbaijan which is controlled by
pro-Armenian forces of the unrecognized Nagorno-Karabakh republic.

“I didn’t know much about Karabakh, all I knew was that there had
been a war here and these were our territories, we hoped to get help
here,” Petrosyan said.

Armenians around the world mark April 24 as the day Ottoman Turks
began the genocide of their people in 1915, something Turkey denies
ever happened.

But the events of the early 20th century are today overshadowed by
Armenia’s ongoing conflict with its other Turkic-speaking neighbor,
Azerbaijan.

In 1994, Armenia and its proxies captured Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic
Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan, as well as seven surrounding
Azeri regions, through a gruelling six-year war that cost 25,000
lives and displaced about one million people, 250,000 of them
Armenians.

Turkey closed its border with Armenia in solidarity with Azerbaijan,
dealing a crippling economic blow to the former Soviet republic from
which is has yet to recover.

But Azerbaijan still claims the territories and 750,000 Azeri
refugees remain in camps on the ready to return.

A shaky ceasefire is often punctuated by increasingly frequent
shootings that have taken at least a dozen lives this year.

The escalation prompted the Organization for Security and Cooperation
in Europe (OSCE) which is charged with mediating the conflict to
express concern about the breaches as well as recent public
statements about the possibility of war.

Azerbaijan charges that Karabakh and Armenian authorities have put in
place an Israeli-style settlement plan in the occupied regions
outside of Karabakh itself, so that they can lay future claims to
them.

The Azeri claim is highlighted by cases like Petrosyan’s who like
other Armenians from the diaspora outside the former Soviet Union
settled in the territory.

The focus of those concerns has been the mountainous area in which
Petrosyan and her family now live, the strategically important Lachin
corridor, renamed Verdzor by the Armenians, which represents the only
land route between Karabakh and Armenia.

Unlike Karabakh, which had a 75-percent ethnic Armenian population
before the war, Lachin was predominantly Azeri.

A recent OSCE mission sent to the separatist republic to verify
Azerbaijan’s claims said in its findings that up to 12,000 people,
mostly Armenian refugees from Azerbaijan, had been resettled in the
area.

This is immediately obvious to any visitor to Lachin where the only
sign of it ever having been in Azerbaijan’s hands are the
eastern-style window portholes in some of its war-gutted
administration buildings.

Petrosyan, whose husband was wounded in the Iran-Iraq war of the
1980s and taken prisoner by US forces in the Gulf war in 1991 said
the possibility of another war with Azerbaijan would not deter her
from staying in Lachin.

“If we could fight for Iraq, then we can surely fight for our own
homeland,” she said.

Lachin’s authorities deny any “foreign” Armenians have settled in the
area, or in fact that any live there at all.

“We don’t see our job as settling as many people as possible, our aim
is to give the refugees a place to live and secure the corridor,”
said Gagik Kosakyan, the deputy head of Lachin’s administration.

Securing the corridor has meant rebuilding much of the area’s
infrastructure and housing, so much so that the area looks more
prosperous than the adjacent region within Armenia proper.

Armenian officials have said any settlement over Karabakh would have
to include an Azeri concession of Lachin, an area that saw some of
the heaviest fighting during the war because of its strategic
importance.

Kosakyan estimated that the separatist republic had invested one
million dollars (765,000 euros) a year to rehabilitate the region
since 1994, with many extra funds coming from Armenia’s influential
diaspora in the West.

And like many other refugees in the region informally polled by AFP
Petrosyan she said she was intent on staying. “They can say what they
want, but we know this is our land,” she said.

ANKARA: Celebrating Turkish Nat’l Fest, Armenians Skip Genocide Demo

Zaman, Turkey
April 24 2005

Celebrating the Turkish National Festival, Armenian Students did not
Join Genocide Demonstration

Published: Sunday 24, 2005
zaman.com

Armenian students who partook in the April 23rd Turkish National
Sovereignty and Children’s festival did not participate in the
so-called genocide demonstration for the first time in front of
Turkish Embassy. The officials of the Armenian school said: “We need
to put politics aside and live in peace.”

At a time when pressures about the Armenian genocide allegation are
increasing on Turkey, the Armenian school gave a message of peace by
attending Turkey’s April 23rd celebrations. It has been reported that
the directors of the Armenian school, who attended the April 23rd
celebrations with their students, said: “We will not go to in front
of the Turkish Embassy to protest.” Meanwhile, Turkey’s Ambassador to
Moscow, Kurtulus Taskent, attended the opening ceremony of a science
fair, which was held ahead of the April 23rd program in the Capital
Teachers’ Guesthouse. Children’s works, which won the April 23rd
painting contest, were on the exhibition.

Russian-Turkish schools have been supported by Turkish entrepreneurs’
Tolerance Education Foundation and Saglasya Education Organization,
and Armenian students performed their traditional folk dances in the
children’s celebration festival. Armenian students shared their
excitement about presenting their folklore in a Turkish school
program. The children noted that except for an Azeri, and Iranian and
a few Russians, all the students are Armenians and took photos with
Turkish businessmen before the program. According to information
given, teachers of 56 numbered Russian-Turkish school were served
Turkish coffee on their visit to the Armenia school.