CPA Think 2004 Was Marked by Aggravation of Situation in Armenia

ARMENIAN COMMUNISTS THINK THE PARTING YEAR WAS MARKED BY AGGRAVATION
OF SITUATION IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 27, ARMINFO. The parting year was marked with
aggravation of deep political and socio-economic crisis in the
republic, First Secretary of the Central Committee of Communist Party
of Armenia Ruben Tovmasyan told ARMINFO.

He said the aggravation of situation in all the regions in the country
is natural as it is a direct result of years-long anti-people activity
of the authorities. It is only the leave of Robert Kocharyan and his
entourage from the political arena and really fair and democratic
elections accompanying it that will become crucial for the current
situation. We intends to struggle for restoration of the
Constitutional order and the rights of workers in the country together
with other oppositionist forces, Tovmasyan said.

He wished the Armenian people a better life in the coming year and
expressed confidence that revival of Armenia is still in future, The
communists of Armenia will do their best to achieve welfare of the
people in Armenia, he said.

Creator of MIGs

Creator of MIGs

By Armine Ghazarian

Yerkir/arm
24 Dec 04

Recently, the Armenian National Library hosted the presentation of
Hovhannes Naltakian’s book, entitled `Creator of MIGs.’

The book presents Artem Mikoyans life and times. His articles and
interviews, as well as comments of various constructors, engineers,
pilots, writers and reporters on creation of MIGs, their construction
and relevant peculiarities.

Among speech makers at the event were director of the library David
Sargsian, deputy director Rafik Ghazarian, editor of the book Aghassy
Mkrtchian.

The book was published by Amaras publishing house.

Jewish Leaders and Armenian Min. Meet on Question of Anti-Semitism

The Federation of Jewish Communities of the CIS (FJC), Russia
Dec 27 2004

Jewish Leaders and Armenian Minister Meet on Question of
Anti-Semitism
Monday, December 27, 2004

YEREVAN, Armenia – Chief Rabbi of Armenia Gersh Meir Burshtein and
other Jewish leaders in Yerevan met with Armenian Foreign Affairs
Minister Vardan Oskanyan this week. While the Minister expressed his
wish to create appropriate conditions for regular cooperation with
the Jewish community, emphasizing his intentions to provide his
support to the Jewish community in Armenia, the main focus of the
discussion concerned anti-Semitic statements made by a number of top
officials in Armenia.

“These statement haven’t received the support of the Armenian people,
but nevertheless I consider it necessary to discuss the situation at
the governmental level,” expressed Vardan Oskanyan. These offences
included a statement comparing the Jewish community to a number of
sects known for spreading anti-Jewish propaganda, a comment made by
Granush Haratyan, the Head of the Department on National Minorities
and Religion. These and other anti-Semitic statements, one of which
suggested exiling Jews from Armenia, have been published in the
country’s leading commercial and even state-sponsored newspapers.

“We want to live and work in Armenia, but these false statements
printed in the mass media may result in negative attitudes towards
Jews by Armenians. I am counting on a positive and resolute response
from the Armenian Government regarding these anti-Semitic
statements,” affirmed the Chief Rabbi of Armenia. Such offenses to
the Jewish Diaspora in Armenia have also been aired on one of the
national television channels ‘ALM’.

“I have always been proud to say that there is no anti-Semitism in
Armenia,” stated Rimma Varjapetyan, the Chairman of the Jewish
Community in Armenia. “However, we have been receiving a number of
threatening calls as of recent, just as soon as the President of the
ALM Channel, Tigran Karapetyan, joined Mrs. Haratyan in Jew-bashing.
These anti-Semitic attitudes are unacceptable,” she declared
solemnly. Such concerns were echoed by the meeting’s other
participants, who are also afraid for the resultant security risks to
the Jewish institutions they head.

The Minister promised to take measures to resolve the situation. “I
understand your anxiety. There is actually no state anti-Semitism in
Armenia, although some individuals propagandize it and may consider
themselves to be anti-Semitists in order to be different”. The
Minister expressed his desire to meet with Granush Haratyan to
discuss her actions and to submit a report about this meeting and
issue to the President of Armenia, Robert Kocharian.

At the end of the meeting, the Jewish leaders presented the Minister
with a number of gifts as a symbol of friendship with the Jewish
community. In addition to a music album by composer Willy Vainer, the
Director of the ‘Menorah’ Jewish Cultural Center, who also attended
the meeting, the Minister received a calendar for the upcoming year,
the latest issues of the ‘Lechaim’ Magazine and the ‘Kohelet’ and
‘Magen David’ newspapers.

http://www.fjc.ru/news/newsArticle.asp?AID=245471

Azeri reporter pesters Yulia Timoshenko about being Armenian

Azeri reporter pesters Yulia Timoshenko about being Armenian

Ukrayinska Pravda
26.12.2004

According to Ukrainska Pravda online edition, Yulia Timoshenko was asked
by a “horrified” Azeri reporter today at her press conference if it was
true that she was Armenian by origin. (The Russian media said her
father’s surname was Grigyan). Timoshenko replied that she was in fact
Latvian on her father’s part, and pledged to seek peace between
Armenians and Azeris.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www2.pravda.com.ua/ru/archive/2004/december/26/news/25.shtml

BAKU: IDB president meets IDPS in Sabirabad

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan
Dec 27 2004

IDB PRESIDENT MEETS IDPS IN SABIRABAD
[December 27, 2004, 23:00:49]

The delegation of the Islamic Development Bank /IDB/ headed by its
president Ahmad Mohamed Ali met with IDPs temporarily settled in the
Galagayin tent camp located in Sabirabad region and got acquainted
with their living conditions and local school. IDB president said
that the main purpose of this visit is to learn of the plight of
people living in tent camps. The guest stated that he would bring the
truth on Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Garabakh conflict, plight of
IDPs to the world community’s notice and send a special IDB
commission to learn the needs of IDPs and, therefore, define the
amount of possible aid.

Deputy of the department of the Cabinet of Ministers Gurban Sadigov
updated the president on the Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno-Garabakh
conflict, plight of IDPs and government’s efforts to ensure their
social protection.

The delegation composed of ambassador of the Saudi Arabia to
Azerbaijan Ali Hasan Ahamd Jafar and ambassador of Egypt to
Azerbaijan Yusif Ahmad Ibrahim al-Sharkari was welcomed and seen off
by head of the executive power of Sabirabad Ashraf Mammadov.

Turkey’s EU bid: The long road ahead

Monday Morning, Lebanon
Dec 27 2004

Turkey’s EU bid: The long road ahead

Turkey has finally been given a date — October 3, 2005 — on which
it can begin negotiations that may in the fullness of time lead to
membership of the European Union. There has been dissent from this
decision from various quarters, notably in France and Austria, not to
mention Armenia, who complain of an attempt to `manufacture’ an
`artificial’ link to bind a Middle Eastern country to what Goethe
called `the Old Continent’.

The process of negotiations that is scheduled to start in October
2005 would take at least a decade before Ankara could be admitted.
Many details remain to be settled, including the issues of Cyprus,
human rights and legal reform. And the Turkish government, now led by
a government dominated by a moderate Islamic party, has to show how
deep the roots are of the secular tradition established by Kemal
Ataturk in the 1920s and `30s.
At the European Union summit, the Turkish prime minister, Recep
Tayyip Erdogan, said the possibility of EU membership was for Turkey
a promise of greater prosperity and influence in the Islamic world.
Addressing his people after coming back from Brussels, he said,
`There will no longer be interruptions, interim periods [of military
rule] and interventions, because there will be no need for them’. He
added that `Turkey is no longer a country that will progress for five
years, stall for 20 years, fight for three years. Stability has
come’.
These words were very expressive and show how very decisive Turks
consider EU membership to be for their future.
The other option for Ankara is to seek another regional gathering in
the Middle East, which is poorer and less stable from a strategic
angle. Joining the EU is a guarantee for the coming generations but
achieving it will be an immense task and challenge for the present
generation, which will have to mould the country into conformity with
EU standard, including thousands of pages of directives on almost
every imaginable subject.

A European country?
This is the principal question that many Europeans are asking. If we
look at the map, the European part of Turkey is very small,
comprising only about five percent of the country’s land mass.
Ninety-five percent of Turkey is `Asia Minor’. And joining the EU
will bring millions of Muslims into the European entity, where
Christianity has been the main source of morals and laws, despite the
secular character of many institutions. This point was brought to the
surface during discussions of the draft EU constitution. A big debate
took place whether the document’s preamble should mention the
Christian roots and values on which Europe’s civilization is based.
It is not a technical issue only as it seems to be when examining it
from above. Deep inside it is a cultural debate between separate
civilization, different traditions and practices. The Europeans are
afraid of the slow change taking place in their identity and culture.
This point has been clear when dealing with the immigration issue
bringing immigrants from North Africa to Southern Europe. Radical
anti-foreign parties are winning more and more seats in European
national parliaments simply because of a fear that Europe’s face is
being altered. This debate is another aspect of the `clash of
civilizations’ which, right-wing American commentators would have us
believe, is now going on between the Islamic world and the `coalition
of the willing’ led by the United States.
In this regard Ankara has to prove how European it is, and how stable
and capable it is of defending its secular tradition to alay all
these fears. A decade or fifteen years devoted to discussing these
questions may be enough to provide answers.

The role of the generals
Turkish generals have long held considerable sway over the country’s
elected politicians, staging three outright coups since 1960 and
forcing a fourth government, led by an Islamist party, to resign in
1997. But recent reforms aimed at meeting EU political criteria to
start negotiations have reined in the power of the military, which
sees itself as the guarantor of Turkey’s secular state.
Financial markets are finely tuned to any sign of friction between
the army and the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), a
moderate party viewed with suspicion by much of the secularist
establishment for its roots in a banned Islamist movement.
The generals themselves are in a paradoxical position: welcoming the
EU as a bolster to secularism in Turkey but seeing their own power
eroded in the process.
Another item of discussion is that of human rights. Brussels expects
a major improvement in Turkey’s record in this respect, including
full rights for non-Muslim minorities — including the use of the
Kurdish language –, women, and the eradication of torture. The EU,
the national parliaments and a legion of non-governmental bodies will
demand concrete proof of improvements on these points.

The Cypriot nettle
Ankara has a clear vision regarding the problematic issues mentioned
above, but its main complex is the Cypriot nettle. The sensitive
issue of recognizing the internationally-accepted Cyprus government,
a full EU member since May 2004, could prove a stumbling block for
Turkey. even before it starts negotiations. Even before talks can
even start next October, Turkey will have to take the difficult step
of acknowledging the Greek Cypriot government in Nicosia, something
it has said it can only do when a settlement for the divided island
is reached.
Ankara pledged last week that it would sign a protocol extending its
EU association agreement to the bloc’s 10 new members, including
Cyprus, before its EU accession negotiations are due to start on
October 3, 2005. But it insisted this was not tantamount to direct or
indirect recognition of the Greek Cypriot government in Nicosia. This
point promises many complications because Nicosia would not accept
any deviation in the general line aimed at securing recognition of
its independence. To provide a new impetus, UN Secretary-General Kofi
Annan offered his mediation to renew the bilateral talks that failed
months ago intended to reunify the island. The European Union urged
all sides in the Cyprus dispute to take up this offer. But Ankara
still needs time to decide what course to take.
Assuming this hurdle is passed, the negotiations will oblige Turkey
to make reforms more costly and far-reaching than those required by
other `clubs’ such as NATO or the United Nations. Turkish industry,
at present a strong backer of EU entry, will have to make expensive
upgrades of its machinery to comply with EU standards on health,
safety and the environment. One of the big challenges will be in
revamping an economy still recovering from the crisis of three years
ago, and whose reputation for corruption and red tape still scares
off many much-needed foreign investors.
Turkey adherence to the EU would change a great deal in the Middle
Eastern equation. And if Israel were to succeed in presenting its
candidacy for EU membership, it could be a slap in the face for the
Arab countries, split between various groups and interests. It would
be a `wake-up call’ to the Arabs regarding the need for them to form
strong alliances to keep their strength in the world of
globalization.

Beyond Ukraine, a grim picture

International Herald Tribune, France
Dec 27 2004

Beyond Ukraine, a grim picture

Rachel Denber
Post-Soviet democracy

TASHKENT, Uzbekistan On Sunday, Ukraine’s voters returned to the
polls to elect their president. Ukrainian society’s peaceful
rejection of last month’s manipulated vote and its demand for honest
elections and government accountability made the election a dramatic
break with the Soviet past.

The opposition leader, Viktor Yushchenko, appeared to have a clear
lead, but the very fact that the vote took place was a victory for
civil society. Across much of the former Soviet Union, however, the
picture for democracy and institutions that protect basic freedoms is
grim.

On Sunday, people in Uzbekistan, a former Soviet state 3,000
kilometers, or 1,875 miles, east of Kiev, elected a new Parliament.
Few people were watching what happened because there wasn’t much to
see. A victory for the pro-government party was a foregone conclusion
because there were no opposition candidates. The government has
stifled institutions that underpin a free and fair electoral process
– opposition political parties, media freedoms, an open atmosphere
for nongovernmental organizations and freedom of assembly.

This time last year, after reformists in Georgia staged the “Rose
Revolution” that ousted President Eduard Shevardnadze, many wondered
what lessons governments in the region would draw. No leader relishes
political instability. But the question was, what would the region’s
leaders do to avoid it? Would they promote honest elections, greater
accountability, better governance and peaceful transitions of power?
Or would they ignore the issues that cause public discontent, such as
entrenched, widespread corruption, and undermine the political
opposition and democratic institutions in order to retain power at
all costs?

Overwhelmingly, governments in former Soviet states have chosen the
latter path, continuing policies that had started well before the
Georgian revolt. Uzbekistan may be one of the more acute examples of
this trend but it has plenty of company.

Azerbaijan’s fraudulent presidential elections last year led to
political violence, for which the government has imprisoned many
opposition leaders. Public demonstrations in Azerbaijan by people
seeking to express dissident views are nearly impossible.

In Armenia in spring the government tried to use a variety of
arbitrary measures to prevent massive rallies protesting falsified
elections the previous year. The police used excessive force on
demonstrators, raided the headquarters of opposition parties,
arrested a handful of opposition political leaders and rounded up
hundreds of their supporters.

Two months ago the government of Kazakhstan created an unfair playing
field for the parliamentary vote, resulting in only one opposition
party member gaining a seat in the lower house of legislature. A
couple of weeks ago not a single opposition candidate was elected in
Belarus’s parliamentary vote, after the electoral authorities used a
combination of nonregistration of candidates and polling day fraud to
keep the opposition out.

In Kyrgyzstan, the government has already taken steps to increase its
control over the news media and other civil society institutions
before parliamentary elections in February.

Throughout the region, governments control television and try to
intimidate independent print media through punitive defamation suits
and sheer bullying. In many countries, human rights and other civil
society organizations are the targets of politically motivated tax
inspections. Human rights defenders are unlawfully jailed by the
authorities and subject to violent assaults by unknown attackers.

Russia’s crackdown on civil society has been under way for the past
four years. President Vladimir Putin’s government gradually seized
control over what had been a diverse, if not exactly free, broadcast
media and began using it to promote pro-government political
candidates and vilify the opposition.

Putin himself led a broadside attack on democratic organizations,
accusing them in his “state of the nation” speech of serving foreign
masters rather than the interests of ordinary Russians. Now new
legislation will make the funding of nongovernmental organizations
subject to government review.

In contrast to their response to compromised elections in other parts
of the region, Western countries leaped to the defense of Ukrainians
demanding electoral integrity in Ukraine. For the most part, they
were not cowed by accusations, from Russia and other countries, that
they were meddling. But what would Western leaders have done had it
not been possible for Ukrainians to take to the streets? Would their
defense have been as firm?

Elections in this part of the world are stolen all the time, but
governments get away with it by stifling democratic institutions.
Western leaders need to be every bit as supportive of the other
struggling civil societies in the region, before there is nothing
left to support.

(Rachel Denber is the acting executive director of Human Rights
Watch’s Europe and Central Asia division.)

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Armenia Increases Military Spending 35 %

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
Dec 27 2004

Armenia Increases Military Spending 35 %

Despite of the Social and Economic Problems Armenia Increases
Military Spending 35 Percent in 2005

Jan Soykok (JTW), 27 December 2004

According to Arminfo News Agency (Yerevan, Armenia) the Armenian
National Assembly made a decision to increase military spending more
than 35 per cent in the Armenian state budget of 2005. Military
spending envisaged by the final version of the 2005 draft budget
amounts to 127m dollars, Armenian Security Council Secretary and
Defence Minister Serzh Sarkisyan has told journalists.

Armenia has suffered from economic and social catastrophes since the
independence. Armenian forces occupied about 20 percent of
neighboring Azerbaijan, and Armenia does not recognize neighboring
Turkey’s national borders. Armenian groups also encourage irredentist
movements among the Armenians in Georgia and Russian Federation.
Armenian economy is depend on foreign aids from the United States and
the European Union. The Armenian diaspora also send significant
amounts. Armenian politicians accuse Turkey and Azerbaijan for the
economic problems. However Dr. Nilgun Gulcan from ISRO says `Armenian
Government curtails the real problem by abusing problems between
Armenia and Turkey.’

`Armenian people suffer from corruption and economic shortages while
the Government spends sources for imagined enemies. The decision to
increase military spending will definitely not help to ease Armenia’s
social problems. Moreover, the decision will not help stability and
peace in the region. Armenian increase in military budget will
possibly cause new increases in Azerbaijan’s and Georgia’s military
spendings. Armenia should not waste the American and European aids in
‘playing war games” added Gulcan.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Glendale: The stars do shine at night

Glendale News Press
LATimes.com
Dec 27 2004

The stars do shine at night

Armenian singers and entertainers come out to pay respects to 2004.

By Jacqui Brown, News-Press

GLENDALE – Under the light fall of snow on a chilly night stars
strutted across the red carpet at the Alex Theatre.

Although the snow was not real, the glamour was, and hundreds of
fans, young and old, gathered to watch as some of the most popular
Armenian singers headed inside to enjoy a glass of champagne before
hitting the stage to perform their favorite songs.

The first performer, Nersik Ispiryan, got the crowd going as he
cruised up to the red carpet in a white stretch Cadillac Escalade.
After that, there was a steady string of stretched-out and decked-out
Hummers and other limousines dropping off more than 40 performers for
the event.

“We haven’t seen Armenian singers in four years, so we’re very
excited to be here,” said Hrepsime Gasparyan and Artem Khechumyan.

Marina Sarkisyan, of Glendale, gathered with friends who were
anticipating hearing some of their favorite singers.

“We came to celebrate the New Year together,” Sarkisyan said.

Glendale native Sako was ready to perform the song “Whatever you say,
I’m going to say yes” from his newly released album “Flawless.”

Performer Araks Varteresyan said she felt right at home as she
watched the snow fall down on her.

“They say it’s snowing right now in Armenia, so this is nice,”
Varteresyan said. “It feels wonderful to be here.”

The show was taped for a special program to be shown on New Year’s
Eve, according to Meridian Productions spokesman Arthur Agajanyan.

“So many of these artists have become quite famous, and we thought it
would be nice to bring them together and conclude the year with their
best songs,” Agajanyan said. “We left it up to each artist to perform
whichever song they wanted from their repertoire.”

The show will be broadcast New Year’s Eve, starting at 6 p.m., on
channel 55 on Horizon 24-Hour Armenian TV.

Armenian Genocide Books Donated to U.S. Congressmen

PRESS RELEASE
Gomidas Institute (UK)
42 Blythe Road
London W14 0HA
England
Email: [email protected]

14 December 2004

Contact Person: Roland Mnatsakanyan

Armenian Genocide Books Donated to U.S. Congressmen

WASHINGTON, DC – In anticipation of the commemoration of the 90th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide and the consideration of the
Genocide Resolution by the incoming 109th Congress, the Gomidas
Institute has donated 500 copies of its latest publication, United
States Official Records on the Armenian Genocide 1915-17, to members
of the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives.

This initiative was taken at the request of a generous benefactor, and
made possible through the support of the Congressional Caucus on
Armenian Issues, as well as the Armenian National Committee in
Washington D.C.

“With the publication of this volume, the Gomidas Institute has, once
again, provided a vital resource for all those working to overcome the
Turkish government’s shameful campaign to pressure the United States
into complicity in Turkey’s denial of the Armenian Genocide,” said
ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. “The comprehensive and
compelling evidence assembled in this book establishes the
U.S. response to the Armenian Genocide as a critical milestone in
American history – one that Turkey should not be allowed to erase.”

United States Official Records on the Armenian Genocide 1915-17 was
published by the Gomidas Institute and is the latest book in a growing
body of vital sources on the Armenian Genocide. The Institute is at
the cutting edge of such work, which is utilized by students, scholars
and journalists today.

This book will soon be joined by its sister publication, United States
Diplomacy on the Bosphorus: The Diaries of Ambassador Morgenthau
1913-1916. These two works are an invaluable record of the Armenian
Genocide in all its complexities, and they show how much the United
States government knew about the Armenian Genocide as early as the
summer of 1915. For more information please contact
[email protected]

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress