Romania not to send more troops to Iraq

Xinhua, China
June 28 2004
Romania not to send more troops to Iraq

BUCHAREST, June 27 (Xinhuanet) — Romanian President Ion Iliescu
announced in Istanbul, capital of Turkey, on Sunday that his country
will not send more troops to Iraq.
Speaking to the correspondent of the Rompres, Iliescu, who
arrived in Istanbul on Sunday to attend the NATO summit, said
thatRomania will only make some adjustments in the structure of its
troops in Iraq and may send a few technical officers there.
The president said that the Iraqi issue will be a top item on the
agenda of the NATO summit, and NATO is possible to get into the Iraqi
affairs.
Iliescu said Romania holds that NATO should expand the range
ofits peaceful partnership action plan in the western Balkans and the
Black Sea region to include Georgia and Armenia.
Romania will also propose NATO invite Serbia and Mongenegro,
aswell as Bosnia-Herzegovina to the partnership plan, Iliescu added.
Romania became the full-fledged member state of NATO on Mach
29this year. It is the first time for the Romanian president to
takepart in a NATO summit.

It’s all in the family at the annual Armenian Picnic

Journal Times Online, WI
June 28 2004
It’s all in the family at the annual Armenian Picnic
By Phyllis Sides
RACINE – It was a family affair at St. Hagop Armenian Apostolic
Church annual Madagh picnic Sunday at H.F. Johnson Park.
The picnic is like a family reunion: Anybody who has a connection to
St. Hagop comes back to Racine for it, picnic chairman Zohrab
Khaligian said.
“People come from all over,” said Khaligian, who has been chairman
about five years. “It’s very enjoyable and rewarding. There are
non-Armenians who have come so many times they are part of the
extended family.”
Agnes Garabedian from Downey, Calif., started coming to the picnic
about 15 years ago after meeting her “cousin,” Lucy Buchaklian.

“I met her on an airplane in 1971,” Garabedian said. “We were going
on a pilgrimage. We became friends and we’ve been cousins ever
since.”
All Armenians are cousins, Buchaklian added: “I told her if she
didn’t come to the picnic I wouldn’t visit her
anymore.”
St. Hagop’s has held their traditional Madagh picnic since 1938. The
traditional meal, bulgur pilaf and beef stew, is cooked over an open
fire pit in the park.
Preparing the traditional meal is a two-day affair. The pit is dug
and the fire is started Saturday evening so cooking can start at
about 5 a.m. Sunday. They have to start early so the food will be
ready by 11 a.m. for the blessing of the meal, said Andy Mikaelian,
one of the cooks.
“I’ve been at the park since 5 to 5,” Mikaelian said. “We use about
800 pounds of beef, 150 pounds of onions, special spices, tomato
sauce, tomato paste and we cook it until it’s ready.
“There is no recipe. It’s just to taste.”
“There were at least two generations of cooks helping prepare the
meal,” Khaligian said. “We want to keep the tradition going. It’s
important to maintain our cultural heritage and national identity.”
The meal is served after the blessing and it is shared with everyone
who attends the picnic. In addition to the Madagh meal, the picnic
features marinated shish kebab and chicken dinners, sarma (stuffed
grape leaves), pastries and other delicacies.
Madagh means offering and the tradition came over from the old
country, Sara Mikaelian said. The tradition dates back to biblical
times to Abraham, who was willing to sacrifice his only son.
“It’s a thank you for our bounty,” she said. “We are the only
community in the country that carries on the tradition this way.
“The food is passed out to the congregation and the public. In the
old country it was passed out to orphanages and old folks’ homes.”
The Rev. Arsen Kassabian said the traditional food and the blessing
were symbols of Abraham’s sacrifice and of Christ’s sacrifice.

Armenia, Iran to start gas pipeline construction

Interfax
June 28 2004
Armenia, Iran to start gas pipeline construction
Yerevan. (Interfax) – Armenia and Iran intend to immediately begin the
construction of a gas pipeline between the two countries, says a
report from the Armenian presidential press service.
The report discusses the results of a visit by an Armenian delegation
headed by Artashes Tumanyan, who heads the Armenian presidential
administration and is co-chairman of the bilateral intergovernmental
commission on economic cooperation, to Iran on June 21-24.
The terms for starting the construction are not given in the
statement. A source in the Armenian government told Interfax that it
will probably be decided before the visit of Iranian President
Mohammad Khatami to Yerevan, which is scheduled for September.
The agreement between Iran and Armenia on construction of the pipeline
was signed in Yerevan on June 13, 2004. The document envisages
supplying 36 billion cubic meters of Iranian gas to Armenia over 20
years in exchange for electricity.
The length of the pipeline will be 141 kilometers, 100 of which will
be located on Iranian territory. The total estimated construction cost
is $210-$220 million. It is expected that gas supplies to Armenia will
begin before January 2007.

Tigran Torossyan Quoting Yerzi Yaskernia

A1 Plus | 17:16:15 | 28-06-2004 | Politics |
TIGRAN TOROSSYAN QUOTING YERZI YASKERNIA
Armenian National Assembly Vice-Speaker Tigran Torossyan, speaking at a news
conference on Monday, said quoting the head of PACE Monitoring Group Yerzi
Yaskernia as saying at the recent PACE session that Armenian Constitutional
Court had a decision, according to which there was no need in revising the
election results announced by Election Commission.
In his words, Yaskernia said the Constitutional Court had proposed to
conduct confidence referendum. Yaskernia put special emphasis on proposed,
Torossyan said.

Poverty, Transition and Democracy in Armenia

AGBU London lecture Series
PHOTO PRESENTATION AND DISCUSSION
POVERTY, TRANSITION AND DEMOCRACY IN ARMENIA
Centre for Armenian Information and Advice
105a Mill Hill Road, Acton
London W3 8JF
Nearest tube: Acton Town
29 June 2004. 7:30 pm. Admission Free.
AGBU London is pleased to host a presentation on poverty in the republic of
Armenia. The speaker, Onnik Krikorian is a British photojournalist living in
Armenia for the past five years. He identifies some of the crippling poverty
and its probably long term consequences in Armenia today. The purpose of
Krikorian’s presentation is to share information, to cultivate a better
understanding of everyday realities in Armenia, and to foster informed
discussions when considering the future of Armenia and Armenians. The AGBU,
the largest Armenian philanthropic organisation in the world, has a vested
interest in promoting such an understanding of Armenia.
The Armenian Government recently declared a Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper
(PRSP) to reduce poverty in Armenia to 20% by 2015. This is a major
undertaking that merits serious attention and forms the backdrop to our
guest speaker. Krikorian will share his insights through his experience
working with international organizations and NGOs operating in the Republic,
as well as his every-day interaction with ordinary people in Armenia. His
talk will be illustrated with probing photographs and commentaries. He will
also address other related issues such as corruption, landmines, refugees,
the media and the democraticization process in the Republic of Armenia
today.
Finally, Krikorian will present a multimedia CD of his photographs and
articles. This CD project was partly supported by AGBU London and aimed at
NGOs working in Armenia. Copies will be available at the event.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER: While in Armenia, Krikorian has written and photographed
for the United Nation’s Children Fund (UNICEF), Médecins Sans Frontières
(France), Transitions Online, New Internationalist, Fox News, Radio Free
Europe / Radio Liberty, The Los Angeles Times, as well as Armenian Forum
(Gomidas Institute), The Armenian Weekly, and others.
He is currently working for the Association of Investigative Journalists of
Armenia / HETQ Online. For more information about the above presentation or
AGBU (London) please contact Ara Sarafian at (020) 7602 7990 or email
[email protected]
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Boris Navasardyan: A1+ Issue Must Not Be Removed from PACE Res.

A1 Plus | 20:19:48 | 28-06-2004 | Politics |
BORIS NAVASARDYAN: A1+ ISSUE MUST NOT BE REMOVED FROM PACE RESOLUTIONS
President Kocharyan has come up with a proposal to sent the PACE monitoring
group to Armenia to convince PACE that the situation in media field here is
not so bad, the opposition activists are not being bared from airing their
views on TV channels and the fact of stripping A1+ TV Company from
broadcasting license doesn’t mean restriction of freedom of speech. He’s
done it in a hope that the issue will be removed from the PACE resolutions.
On Monday, Chair of Yerevan Press Club Boris Navasardyan, commenting on
that, said there was convincing evidence that the 2002 and 2003 tenders for
broadcasting frequencies had been held with the law serious violation. The
A1+’s issue must not be removed from the resolutions. Even in the event the
things are put right in media field, the A1+ TV Company’s issue must remain
in the resolutions. In his opinion, these two issues are completely separate
and must not be lumped together.
“As a rule, monitoring held amid political tension produces is more
effective. Different organisations having conducted monitoring during the
2003 elections on Armenia noticed biased stance shown by leading media
outlets in covering them.
It laid grounds for saying Armenian faced serious problems related to
freedom of speech. Air availability for the opposition is one of freedom of
speech criteria. But there are other criteria. It is very important how
media outlets cover social and political developments”, Navasardyan said.
He thinks, measuring duration of air-time or space in newspapers given to
the opposition activists is only one part of monitoring.
Methodology of monitoring in calm political situation should be completely
different: it should show the media whole activity at the certain period of
time, Navasardyan said.

Returning to Beirut, An Architect Has Designs on Its Future

The Wall Street Journal
PAGE ONE
Returning to Beirut,
An Architect Has
Designs on Its Future
Bernard Khoury’s Plan
In Restoring a Building
Is Not to Forget the War
By BILL SPINDLE
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
June 25, 2004; Page A1
BEIRUT, Lebanon — Bernard Khoury stared up at an egg-shaped building,
half of it sheared away. A tangle of broken concrete, rusting girders
and bent steel rods stuck out the side. What remained was pocked with
bullet and shell holes. But for the Harvard-trained Lebanese architect,
here was something to behold. “It’s beautiful,” he said. “Like Beirut is
beautiful.”
Slated for destruction as recently as last year, the Beirut City Center
Building is among the last structures in Beirut’s once war-torn downtown
that still bear the scars of the war that raged off and on here until
1990. The building, constructed in the 1960s, has been empty since 1975,
when the conflict first broke out in the city commonly called the Paris
of the Middle East.
Beirut went on to suffer a decade and a half of shooting and shelling by
ethnic clans, religious fanatics and the Israeli, U.S. and Syrian
militaries. Since the end of the war, much of the area around the City
Center building has been restored through a monumental, and often
controversial, renewal effort led by a private development company,
Solidere, whose biggest investor, Rafik Hariri, is now Lebanon’s
billionaire prime minister.
Tourists once again fill downtown Beirut’s pavilions, which are lined
with Italian, French and Mediterranean cafés. The downtown renovation
has erased almost all signs of the war. Assem Salam, a prominent
Lebanese architect and Solidere critic, says it “has been done with a
total disregard for the memory of the city.”
But in a region where strife is again on the rise, the City Center
building’s path to preservation shows how Beirut’s turbulent past
continues to intrude on its present — and future.
Although Mr. Khoury, 35 years old, grew up in Beirut, he barely
remembers the distinctive egg-shaped dome from back then. The war
started when he was 7 years old. Downtown was especially contested
precisely because it was the area where the city’s ethnic and religious
hodgepodge — Druze, Maronite Christians, Shiite Muslims and
Palestinians — mixed each day and held competing claims. It became a
fearsome no-man’s land, divided by a “Green Line” demarcating the almost
completely Christian east side from the mostly Muslim west. Though
Christian, Mr. Khoury’s immediate family lived on the predominantly
Muslim side of the city, separated from relatives in the east.
Mr. Khoury left Lebanon in 1986 to attend the Rhode Island School of
Design, and then Harvard University’s architecture school, where he
became interested in the reconstruction of his hometown, just getting
under way. He returned with big ideas, mostly for the monumental
architecture he figured would mark the effort. But after more than a
dozen attempts to win major commissions, he came up empty. Solidere was
meticulously rehabilitating downtown, but largely in a refined French
Colonial style. Mr. Khoury bristled at this “postcard image” of the
Middle East. “There was just nothing here for me,” he says.
But after moving to New York in 1997 — for good, he thought — Mr.
Khoury was asked by a friend to design a dance club back in Beirut. The
project wasn’t exactly what he had aspired to, but he agreed to do it.
The site for the new club, eventually named B018, had a long history as
a refugee camp: Armenians congregated there around the first World War
and Palestinians in the early 1970s. In 1976, about 1,000 Palestinians
were massacred on the spot just after the beginning of the war.
Mr. Khoury says that kind of history can’t be ignored, even for a dance
club. So he designed a dark, bunker-like underground space with a
retractable roof and a dance floor studded with benches clearly designed
to evoke coffins. Criticized by some as utterly macabre, B018, named for
the number of an apartment where the club owner threw parties during the
war, attracted a big local and international following. It also won Mr.
Khoury a measure of acclaim in architectural circles.
That led to bar and restaurant commissions from Beirut to Berlin,
another city struggling to integrate its past with its present and
future through architecture.
Meanwhile, Solidere continued with its multibillion-dollar recasting of
downtown and frequently hired eminent architects and urban designers.
Despite long delays and financing headaches, the project helped put
Beirut back on the international bon vivant circuit. What was once the
local opera house is now a Virgin MegaStore. Officials talk of bringing
Formula One auto racing to town.
The next big phase of the project was launched earlier this month with
an international competition to design what’s known as Martyr’s Square,
a once bustling plaza where ethnic groups mixed more than almost any
place else in the country. It is now a barren swath of land. But plans
to revitalize the square have forced a confrontation with one painful
result of the war: Balkanized into sectarian enclaves, Beirut is still a
long way from the mixing pot it once was. Solidere planners want a
rejuvenated Martyr’s Square to help remedy that. “It’s the only place
where all the groups in the city really came together. That has to
happen again,” says Angus Gavin, who manages the urban development
division of Solidere. “If [downtown] works, it means the idea of a
multireligious, multiethnic society is back in business.”
Overlooking Martyr’s Square is the wreck of the Beirut City Center
Building. It was designed in the 1960s by Lebanese architect Joseph
Philippe Karam. At the time, Lebanon was coming into its own two decades
after gaining independence from the French. Beneath the large white
dome, which housed a theater and exhibition space, were six underground
floors of shopping and parking.
The war brought a long period of neglect. In the early ’90s Lebanon’s
finance ministry eyed the building as a headquarters, and even
constructed a foundation and four basement floors for a new tower next
to the egg before aborting the project. At first, Solidere recognized
little special about the building and planned to demolish it. But as
Solidere Chairman Nasser Chamma squired celebrity architects around town
in the past year, many were struck by the odd-shaped building next to
Martyr’s Square. “I’m glad we didn’t do anything to it,” Mr. Chamma
says.
Having decided to spare the building, Solidere officials didn’t know
what to do with it. But they did know who might: Mr. Khoury. He jumped
at the chance.
Classic restoration, though, isn’t what he has in mind. He plans to
surround the distinctive dome in huge red scaffolding that spreads out
over the whole property, giving it the permanent feel of a construction
site. The surface of the building will be left as is — bullet pocks,
mortar holes, crumbling plaster and all — wrapped in wire mesh. A
pavilion below the dome will be studded with windows onto the
subterranean floors, which will house gallery and exhibition spaces.
Solidere officials say they’re excited, and they especially hope the new
City Center will attract more young residents downtown. So does Mr.
Khoury. But if it does, he points out, the attraction will be the way
Beirut’s past and future intersect in its present. “It’s a complicated
situation, and I like complicated situations,” he says.
–Farnaz Fassihi contributed to this article.
Write to Bill Spindle at [email protected]

A life in harmony

Ventura County Star
June 28 2004
A life in harmony
Fourteen years after losing her sight, a woman rediscovers her love
of music
By Rosy Banks, [email protected]
June 28, 2004
When Gayane Pogosyan lost her vision in an accident 14 years ago, she
thought she would never be able to play a musical instrument again.
Her viola and violin collected dust.
Then her daughter, Marina, asked her to accompany her in a duet and
recorded the music. For painstaking hours, Pogosyan memorized the
music note by note.

Two years ago, that dedication earned her a part in the Moorpark
Symphony Orchestra. The only blind member among its 75 musicians, the
violist has memorized 115 minutes of music in Beethoven’s Symphony
No. 9, along with two concertos, for a performance. It took almost
five months for her to prepare for a recent concert at the Oxnard
Performing Arts Center.
“All of my body, mind and soul celebrates after that hard work,” said
Pogosyan, who lives in Simi Valley. “We don’t know what we’re capable
of until we only have one way to do it.”
The Armenian-born violist attests to the capabilities that lie in
individuals, regardless of their handicap. She overcame expectations
and spends much of her spare time studying music and preparing for
concerts and performances around the community.
“Its not easy being a blind person in an orchestra because being able
to watch the conductor is a must,” said James J. Song, music director
for the Moorpark Symphony Orchestra. “Gayane is a unique individual.
She joins in when others are playing and has become well acclimated
to the group.”
In 2003, she received the outstanding musician award for her devotion
to the orchestra. But finding time to practice and memorize each
piece isn’t easy for a mother and grandmother of three who works full
time.
Studying music is only one of a long list of daily tasks for
Pogosyan. During the week, she works as a counselor for the state and
helps visually impaired clients cope with loss and use resources to
improve their lifestyles.
“I help them stand up on their feet so they can start a new life, as
I did,” she said.
Graduating summa cum laude from California Lutheran University,
Pogosyan adapted as the only blind student from 1995 to 2000.
Disability, she said, was not going to stop her from pursuing her
dreams.
“Sometimes I think that my blindness came as a blessing,” she said.
“At first it was difficult, but I got through the challenges and it
made my character stronger. Because of my blindness I went back to
school and found God.”
Music provided the fuel for the another passion she said comes
naturally to her — dancing. On Friday nights, Pogosyan swings the
night away with friends or her new dance partner, Dan Cutler.
“I never regard her as having any handicap,” Cutler said. “I forget
lots of times.”
Others do not recognize her blindness immediately, Pogosyan said.
When she encounters people fearful or ignorant of her condition, she
tries to educate them. She remembers many times when people would
start talking slowly and loudly.
“I lost my sight, not my mind,” she would tell them.
Pogosyan thrives on new challenges and her dedication is respected by
orchestra members, friends and for her, above all else, her
grandchildren. Loved ones and music are her top priorities.
On a recent day off, her home echoed with their voices. Her grandson,
8-year-old Jake Brock, has decided to take violin lessons and sought
the guidance of his grandmother as her two other grandchildren sat
petting her retired guide dog. When the children get frustrated or
discouraged, they can look to Pogosyan.
“Sometimes at school I tell people my grandma is blind and I tell
them all the things she does,” said Lauren Reiber, her 13-year-old
granddaughter. “They just say, ‘Wow.’ “

Mormon microfilming project stirs protests

Press Herald, ME
June 28 2004
Mormon microfilming project stirs protests
By BETTY JESPERSEN, Associated Press
FARMINGTON – Mormon missionaries Donald and Jeanette Christensen have
left their home in Preston, Idaho, to spend the next two years in
Maine putting fragile, aging probate documents onto microfilm. Since
April, the retired couple have spent about eight hours a day in the
Franklin County Courthouse, microfilming more than 6,400 documents
listing the estates and assets of people who died here between 1838
and 1915.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, through its
Genealogical Society of Utah, has long collected names from
government and church documents worldwide to preserve genealogical
records and to add them to its enormous database of names. In return,
host recordkeepers are given a copy of the microfilm.
Mormons place great emphasis on genealogical research so that living
members may undergo baptismal rites on behalf of deceased ancestors,
a practice known as posthumous or “vicarious” baptism.
But the practice has come under fire. In amassing names from town
halls, churches and government files, millions of names not connected
to church members have been collected – from Jewish Holocaust victims
to Catholic popes to 18th-century Russian Orthodox and Armenian
Christians. Millions of those have been baptized as Mormon.
“For them to come in and baptize deceased relatives without the
family’s permission is very unbecoming, is un-American, is illegal
and could lead to a court case. I think it is invading territory that
is private, and unless they get permission from the family, it is
none of their business,” said Rabbi Harry Sky of Temple Beth-El in
Portland.
“If my family had wanted to be baptized, they would have done it
centuries ago. They decided to remain Jewish, so don’t do it to us
now,” Sky said.
THE CHURCH
The genealogical society’s 6 million names on digitized and
microfilmed copies of records from more than 100 countries are stored
in a climate-controlled vault beneath 700 feet of solid granite
outside the church’s headquarters in Salt Lake City, Utah. It is
available on certain Web sites – for a fee – or can be seen at
computer banks at Family History Centers in Mormon churches.
“The primary purpose is to preserve vital records worldwide and make
it available to everyone,” said church spokesman Paul Nauta. He says
published reports about the extent of the baptism-by-proxy practice
are overblown.
“Members of the church are encouraged to identify their ancestors as
part of our doctrine because we believe families are eternal and ties
and bonds exist beyond death,” he said.
Nauta said if deceased who are not related to living Mormons have
been baptized, it was done unintentionally by a small number of
overzealous church members out of a caring expression of faith. He
said it was difficult to police all proxy baptisms but regardless, a
change of religion is not forced on anyone.
“If you believe in the doctrine of immortality, those individuals can
accept or reject it in the hereafter just as they would in this
life,” he said.
1995 AGREEMENT
In 1995, the Mormon church came to an agreement with Jewish leaders
that it would stop posthumous baptisms of anyone known to be Jewish.
It also agreed to remove the names from the International
Genealogical Index of about 6 million names if they are presented to
church officials.
According to The New York Times, however, as late as April 2004,
Jewish names were still in the database. Independent researchers have
found lists of Jews killed in the Holocaust that had been extracted
from memorial books, Jewish notables including Anne Frank, Albert
Einstein, Theodore Herzl – the founder of Zionism – as well as Roman
Catholic popes and saints, and members of Armenian Christian and
Russian Orthodox parish churches in Europe.
The Catholic Church does not recognize the validity of Mormon
baptisms, but the problem is that it constitutes a denial of the
baptism that already has taken place, the Rev. Ronald Roberson,
associate director of the Secretariat for Ecumenical and
Interreligious Affairs of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops in
Washington, told the Associated Press in January.
But he understood that people “certainly have reason to be upset,” he
said.
In Maine, many small county probate offices still have paper files of
the assets and estates of the deceased. According to the
Christensens, each has been contacted by a Mormon volunteer with the
offer of free microfilming. The church just completed Oxford County’s
documents, and Kennebec County’s were done several years ago, but
Somerset and Cumberland counties maintain their own microfilm
records, according to probate court officials.
In Cumberland County, the busiest probate office north of Boston with
2,000 cases a year, Probate Register Alfred E. Piombino said he had
been contacted by different Mormon couples three times in the past 15
months with requests to make duplicates of his originals. He told
them there would be a fee, as for any member of the public, and they
never came back.
“I did not think the taxpayers would be pleased if we allowed a
religious group to come in and make carte blanche duplicates of all
our microfilm records for their own purposes,” he said.
Piombino said as a custodian of public records, he feels that if he
allowed one group to have free access, he would have to allow all
users the same privilege. Probate clients include abstract companies,
genealogical research companies, lawyers and private detectives as
well as individuals.
RECORDS PRESERVED
The Christensens have temporarily moved into an apartment in Wilton
while they work at the Franklin County courthouse until the task is
done. “So far, we have gone through 133,000 pieces of paper here and
are about one-third through,” Jeanette Christensen said.
“We are going to every state and every place where there are people,”
said Donald Christensen.
Jeanette Christensen said she has been told not to discuss the
church’s religious use of the names.
Franklin County Register of Probate Joyce Morton said the microfilm
offer means she can finally preserve her records, some so brittle
they are turning to dust.
“This is being done at no cost to the taxpayer. If we had to pay to
have it done, we would need a specialist and have a staff person tied
up with the project,” she said.
Probate Judge Richard Morton said the records are public. “Anyone can
come in and use them for any lawful purpose. We are not providing
special access to anyone that we are not providing to anyone else.
And the service we are receiving in return is an extraordinary
savings to the county.”

BAKU: Erdogan Blames Yerevan for Worsening of Turkish-Armenian

Baku Today, Azerbaijan
June 28 2004
Erdogan Blames Yerevan for Worsening of Turkish-Armenian relations
Baku Today 28/06/2004 15:44
Armenia can hope for a betterment of its relationship with Turkey
only in the event the country normalizes its relations with
Azerbaijan and gives up genocide claims, Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan said on Monday, ANS reported.
`The Armenian Diaspora is still sticking to its so-called genocide
claims. Turkey and Turks will never accept this. It is impossible to
forge relationship under these conditions,’ Erdogan said in a meeting
that was also attended by U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell and
British Prime Minister Tony Blair.
Erdogan also said Armenia is the occupier of Azerbaijan’s territories
and that Yerevan’s aggressive policy toward its neighbors is the only
reason leading to the current deterioration of the Turkish-Armenian
relations.
`Turkey and Azerbaijan are for peace and Armenia is against it,’ ANS
quoted Erdogan as saying. However, the Turkish premier noted that his
government is not against a betterment of the Turkish-Armenian
relationship, which Armenia needs more.
`We know quite well in what conditions the Armenian people live,’
Erdogan said.
He also voiced dissatisfaction to the Armenian President Robert
Kocharian’s absence in the NATO’s summit that opened in Istanbul on
Monday. `There is no justification for this [behavior],’ Erdogan
added.
Turkish-Armenian borders are officially closed off and there is no
diplomatic relationship between the two countries. For establishing
of diplomatic relationship and opening of the borders, Turkey demands
that Armenia withdraw Azerbaijan’s occupied territories, give up
territorial claims against Ankara and stop propagating the so-called
genocide of Armenians by Turks in early 20th century.