Armenian Reporter - 3/3/2007 - Front section (15 exclusive articles)
March 04, 2007 12:36:21
ARMENIAN REPORTER PO Box 129 Paramus, New Jersey 07652 Tel: 1-201-226-1995 Fax: 1-201-226-1660 Web: http://www.reporter.am Email: letters@reporter.am
March 3, 2007 -- From the front section All of the articles that appear below are exclusive to the Armenian Reporter
1. With new law, Armenia allows dual citizenship Dual citizens can vote; men must serve in armed forces by Tatul Hakobyan
2. U.?S. Army Specialist Carla Babayan is laid to rest in Hollywood Hills 37-year-old soldier was killed during a tour of duty in Iraq
3. Turkey continues its fight against H. Res. 106 Members of Congress decry Turkey's threats as "outrageous" by Emil Sanamyan
4. Freedom of expression advocates urge Turkey to abolish 301 Article 301 prosecutions continue after Dink's murder
5. A look at the Azerbaijani military: More money, more problems? News analysis by Emil Sanamyan
6. Mass burial debate continues by Talin Suciyan
7. A joint Armenian-Turkish study on the Genocide is proposed - but will it go forward? by Chris Zakian
8. Armenia is preparing for clean elections International IDEA is training the trainers
9. Give us this day our daily bread Armenia at Work by Armen Hakobyan
10. Rep. Sherman says the vote on the Genocide resolution is up to the Speaker And Karabakh's future status is up to Armenians
11. Commentary: Karabakh: Between the status quo and reforms Whom will Artsakh choose as its new president this summer? by Hrachya Arzumanian
12. Commentary: A month of flowers Living in Armenia by Maria Titizian
13. Paul Chaderjian joins the Armenian Reporter as Features Editor Will lead new California Bureau
14. A letter from the Editor: A new format for the Armenian Reporter by Vincent Lima
15. Editorial: USC Trojans show the way
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1. With new law, Armenia allows dual citizenship Dual citizens can vote; men must serve in armed forces
by Tatul Hakobyan
YEREVAN - On Monday, February 26, Armenia's National Assembly adopted a bundle of laws allowing dual citizenship.
Under the new laws, citizenship is available to any individual over the age of 18 who has been a permanent resident of Armenia for the past three years, can express himself or herself in Armenian, and is familiar with Armenia's constitution.
A simplified procedure is available to people of Armenian origin, people married to Armenian citizens, the parents of Armenian citizens, people whose parents were once Armenian citizens, and those who voluntarily renounced their Armenian citizenship after January 1, 1995. Individuals in these categories also must be familiar with Armenia's constitution.
Citizenship can also be bestowed without any conditions on individuals who have made an exceptional contribution to Armenia.
The Armenian constitution adopted in 1995 prohibited individuals from being citizens of Armenia and other states at the same time. This meant that Armenian citizens who moved abroad could not take on a new citizenship without facing the loss of their Armenian citizenship.
The constitution also promised individuals of Armenian origin "a simplified procedure" for acquiring Armenian citizenship. But the ban on dual citizenship meant that they would have to renounce their other citizenships in order to acquire Armenian citizenship.
A constitutional amendment adopted in November 2005 lifted the ban on dual citizenship. The constitution now says "The rights and responsibilities of citizens with dual citizenship shall be defined by law." Those laws were finally adopted this week.
The vote on February 26 was 66 in favor, 5 opposed, and 1 abstention. The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) and the Republican Party ` two of the three parties that comprise the governing coalition ` supported the measure. The United Labor Party, the third member of the coalition, voted against it, as its amendments had been rejected.
The opposition Orinats Yerkir and Justice parties, some unaffiliated members of parliament, and some members of the Republican bloc sat out the vote. The National Unity party did likewise.
* Obligations and rights
Men who have served in the armed forces of any country for 12 months, or have performed alternative service for 18, are exempt from conscription when they acquire Armenian citizenship. But present Armenian citizens who acquire citizenship and perform military service elsewhere are not exempted from military service in Armenia.
Dual citizens cannot run for the office of president in Armenia, nor for membership in parliament, nor can they serve as a member of the Constitutional Court. But they can serve in the government - even as prime minister.
The bundle of laws was proposed to parliament by the government. But the Republican Party, which is the largest member of the governing coalition, was in favor of a number of amendments. Some Republicans were opposed to granting dual citizens voting rights; others insisted that dual citizens should have to live in Armenia a certain number of years before having the right to vote.
"A person votes to decide his or her own fate. People whose fate is tied into another country's processes - how can they vote on other people's fate?" asked Tigran Torosyan, chairperson of the National Assembly during the days between the first and the second, final reading of the bills.
Mr. Torosyan did not believe that people who are citizens only of Armenia and people who are citizens of Armenia and other countries should have equal rights. He offered two reasons.
"First, Armenia exists today thanks to the people who live here and bear all the difficulties," Mr. Torosyan said. "We should never forget that as representatives we are obligated to the people who live in Armenia, and that should be reflected in the laws we pass.
"Second, when people vote, that has to do in the first place with deciding their fate. The process in Armenia decides the fate of those people who live in Armenia. The right to vote is the right to determine one's own fate and one's own process, and there should be a difference in this sense."
Under existing law, however, Armenian citizens who live abroad do retain the right to vote, which they can exercise at Armenian consulates in foreign lands.
The Republicans say that they are not opposed to dual citizenship, but want to be clear about the rights and obligations of dual citizens. Representative Gagik Minasyan, for example, said that dual citizens should not be deprived of the right to vote, but the Republican Party proposed that the right should be limited to dual citizens who spend at least 183 days a year in Armenia, "so the voter is led not only by emotions but also feels the influence of the elected officials on his or her skin."
The only Republican who voted to abstain was Samvel Nikoyan. He said: "They say that before we vote on this bill we should know how we are going to look our diaspora Armenian relatives in the eye. But we are much more obligated, and it is much more important to ask, how we are going to look [native] Armenian citizens in the eye."
In one of his speeches, Mr. Torosyan said that no one is opposed to dual citizenship. "People are under the impression that there is tension in this hall between the ARF and the other members of the coalition. There is no such tension. First, recall that the ARF did not propose this law; the government [as a whole] did. Second, the disagreements are about details, which are important, but there is no disagreement on the fundamental issue."
The deputy chair of the National Assembly, ARF Bureau member Vahan Hovanissian, agreed that everyone is in favor of dual citizenship and that the debate is about the details. He added that the government cannot end up with "some illogical percentage" of dual citizens as ministers when the elected officials who determine the composition of the government - the president and the members of the National Assembly - cannot be dual citizens.
In private conversations, Republicans leave the impression that they are strictly opposed to dual citizenship. It is also well known that the ARF prepared the framework for dual citizenship. To avoid the impression that the law is only in the party's interests, the coalition made an internal decision to present it in the name of the government, in the person of Justice Minister Davit Harutiunian.
Mr. Harutiunian, who just recently joined the Republican Party, spoke repeatedly of what he termed an "historic opportunity": "We mustn't lose the historic moment. If the National Assembly supports this bill, it will take an important step toward restoring historical justice, and will add to the number of Armenian citizens, which will speak only to making our country more powerful," he told the National Assembly.
Gurgen Arsenyan, leader of the coalition-member United Labor Party, and the members of his bloc say that they consider the rights of people who are citizens of Armenia alone to be primary. Dual citizens should not be able to serve as prime minister or minister, he said. "We find this to be a partial retreat from Armenia's self-Â - determination."
Grigor Harutiunyan of the Justice bloc argued that dual citizens should not have voting rights. "People who live abroad should not have the right to determine the fate of people who live on Armenia's soil," he said, adding that he agrees with Mr. Arsenyan that dual citizens should not be part of the government. He said his bloc was not opposed to dual citizenship in principle, however.
* The right to vote
The law that was adopted allows dual citizens who are registered as residents of Armenia to vote like any other citizen. (All residents of Armenia are required to register with the authorities.) Dual citizens who are not registered will not be allowed to vote.
Almost all of the proposals made by the ARF were included in the final package. The party voted in favor of the law. But it remained dissatisfied. In particular, it argued that the requirement that voters who are dual citizens be registered at a specific residence is unconsititional. It promised to make such a case in the Constitutional Court.
Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, who became a citizen of Armenia in 1998 (and under the law at the time, renounced his original citizenship to do so), is in favor of the law - and more. "I am for Armenian citizens and all dual citizens to have the right to vote under our law," he said. "In granting dual citizenship, we mustn't create new categories, giving more rights to some, and fewer rights to others. For all, we must create a level playing field in terms of rights and obligations."
Former Foreign Minister Raffi Hovannisian, likewise a foreign-born Armenian who adopted Armenian citizenship, is in favor of dual citizenship with clear cut definitions of rights and responsibilities. "The dual citizen should have the same rights and obligations as other citizens; he must carry out his obligations to his fatherland through compulsory military or alternative service. For the right to vote or get elected, a certain minimum residency requirement must be set. I am in favor of the introduction of dual citizenship as a citizen, as a lawyer, and as a former diaspora Armenian," Mr. Hovannisian said.
Another former foreign minister, Alexander Arzumanian, is concerned that many Armenian citizens will become citizens of Russia and owe allegiance to that state.
(At a forum on dual citizenship organized last June by the Armenian International Policy Research Group (AIPRG), Professor Andranik Migranyan of the Moscow State University of Foreign Relations (MGIMO) addressed this concern. He pointed out that up to 2.5 million Armenians already live in Russia. The fact that they faced loss of citizenship did not deter young Armenian men from taking Russian citizenship all these years, he noted. Why insist on a deterrent that does not work? Professor Migranyan asked.)
Mr. Arzumanian dismissed the view that dual citizenship will increase the investments of diaspora Armenians. "It is the mentality of the orphan. The diaspora is a cow to milk, yes? The diaspora has helped all this time, but using it more means what? We should do nothing and say, Let the diaspora come give us money?"
And what does the regular citizen of Armenia think?
Armen Vartanyan, 37, most of whose relatives live abroad, is dead-set against dual citizenship. "Under the constitution, the citizens of Armenia must be equal. The institution of dual citizenship violates that principle, because unlike me, the dual citizen can vote in the elections of two or more countries. The dual citizen makes me live according to laws of his choosing and goes to live abroad. My parents and grandparents made their choice in favor of the fatherland. In the difficult 1940s, they left Greece and Egypt and moved to Armenia. Every Armenian should have the right to live and vote in one country. Dual citizenship assumes irresponsibility," he said.
Another Yerevan resident, historian Armen Manvelyan, takes the opposite position. Dual citizenship is a necessity for Armenians and the Armenian state borne of Armenian history.
"We could say it is 'forced' on us by our history, and to reject it is to be afraid to look our reality in the eyes. It is to deny the existence of the diaspora. The Armenian state can be strong and survive in our territories only if these two components, Armenia and the diaspora, work together and in unity. Dual citizenship is a component of that unity, and it should be accepted and help Armenia become stronger," Mr. Manvelyan concluded.
** SIDEBAR: Special residency status
Armenia has for over a decade offered a special status to ethnic Armenians who are not citizens of Armenia. They may apply for special residency status, renewable every 10 years, which confers to them most of the rights of citizens. They may enter the country for any length of time without a visa; they may accept employment; and they may buy and sell land. The main rights they do not have are the right to vote and be elected in national elections, and the right to form, join, and finance political parties. They are not subject to conscription in Armenia. The fee for the special status is just over $300.
** SIDEBAR: Setting the bar At a forum on dual citizenship organized last June by the Armenian International Policy Research Group (AIPRG), Peter Spiro, Dean and Virginia Rusk Professor of International Law at the University of Georgia, said that "the experience of other states shows the virtues of liberalizing dual citizenship policy¦. The diaspora can contribute, and dual citizenship is an important tool."
But the diaspora is in a position of strength, Professor Spiro warned. They generally don't need citizenship; they have a desire, but not a need. "For most of the diaspora, a formal connection with the state is of little material value. For them, dual citizenship is a strictly optional proposition." It may have important symbolic value, but that is unlikely to balance out against high or even moderate cost, especially if the citizenship offered is second class, i.e., excludes voting rights.
"These are people who can continue to call themselves Armenian, go to church, be active, visit the country, etc., without being citizens." Citizenship is something the state can use as a tool to strengthen itself. But if the cost is too high, the diaspora will not do it.
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2. U.S. Army Specialist Carla Babayan is laid to rest in Hollywood Hills 37-year-old soldier was killed during a tour of duty in Iraq
GLENDALE, Calif. - Army  - Reserves Specialist Carla Babayan was a proud soldier. Proud to wear her country's uniform. Proud to serve in the military. Proud to be sent to Iraq.
The 37-year-old daughter of immigrant Armenians was supposed to return home to her family in Southern California this month. Instead, her life was cut short when her military vehicle accidentally overturned in Tallil, southeast of Baghdad.
Joining the military had been a lifelong dream for Carla. She and a friend met with an army recruiter right after graduating from Glendale's Hoover High School in the late 1980s, but they didn't follow through. They were not ready then.
Two years ago, Carla decided she was ready, and her goal was to serve the military in Iraq. She had studied mechanical drafting and worked for the structural engineering firm owned by her father, Edmond Babayan. And like her father, who had served as a Marine, she wanted to join the military before the cutoff age for the Army Reserves.
After finishing basic training in South Carolina, Carla was deployed to Iraq and assigned to deliver supplies, food, fuel, and equipment to combat soldiers. She was often seen atop Humvees and other military vehicles that she drove or protected as a gunner.
Carla was a Southern California native and grew up in Glendale. She studied ballet, took riding lessons, and loved animals, children, and nature. Her mother Emmy Aprahamian says she was a sweet soul who cared about doing good for everybody.
Her squad leader, Sgt. Frederick Moore, says she loved the Army, and was loved by her fellow soldiers for her optimism, serenity in the face of danger, and unflagging high spirits. "She was always first to help with the biggest of tasks, and always greeted you with the biggest smile."
Carla was laid to rest at Forest Lawn Memorial Park, and her funeral drew hundreds who were hoping to welcome her back home a few weeks from now.
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3. Turkey continues its fight against H. Res. 106 Members of Congress decry Turkey's threats as "outrageous"
by Emil Sanamyan
WASHINGTON - A barrage of Turkish threats, warnings and fears over the congressional resolution affirming the U.S. record on the Armenian Genocide (House Resolution 106) continues. But congressional proponents are standing fast in their support for the measure that has been endorsed now by 176 House members, but is still yet to receive formal congressional consideration.
The U.S. capital is continuing to bear the Turkish version of "human wave" attacks over the anticipated congressional action on the Armenian Genocide resolution. From the top general of the Turkish Armed Forces, to formally independent media, to local chapters of Turkish students' associations - there is an urgent effort to stop H. Res. 106.
The campaign is taking place in the context of an ongoing standoff between the mildly Islamist government of Prime Minister Recep Tayyib Erdogan and Turkey's nationalist-secular establishment, led by the Armed Forces Chief of Staff Gen. Yasar Buyukanit, and in effect backed by the former ruling political parties now in opposition.
The latter forces are arrayed against the anticipated bid by Erdogan for Turkey's presidency this May. Since Erdogan's party has a majority of seats in Parliament, which in Turkey elects the president, hardly anything short of a military coup could stop the election.
Erdogan's government is likely to be blamed if H. Res. 106 passes because of its cozying up to Iran and the Palestinians, and simultaneous distancing itself from the U.S. and Israel. But current relations between the U.S. and the Turkish military may be even rockier over developments in Iraq.
As a result, both Turkish political camps are fighting hard against the resolution to reaffirm their nationalist credentials in an election year. Visits to the U.S. by the foreign minister and armed forces chief are being followed by dozens of Turkish Parliament members.
In addition to lobbyists already on its payroll, the Turkish government is also encouraging businesses with interests in Turkey and other concerned groups to oppose H. Res. 106 as harming U.S.-Turkish relations.
* Jewish organizations reluctant 'to take on a losing battle'
The Turkish media and commentators continue to claim that both Israel and Jewish American organizations have promised to provide back-channel support against H. Res. 106.
Zeyno Baran of the Washington-based Hudson Institute claimed that "the American Jewish lobby¦will be helpful because if the resolution passes, many Turks will also blame them for not helping, and this can further deteriorate relations between Turkey and Israel."
According to the Jewish daily Forward, Turkey's officials gave Jewish American organizations a similar message during a February 5 meeting in Washington - that not only the U.S., but Israel too would suffer should the resolution pass.
But representatives of Jewish American organizations told the Forward that they made no commitment to fight the resolution, and that "the Jewish community is paying lip service to Turkey on this issue, since all the organizations agree that little can be done to block the resolution [and they] are reluctant to take on a losing battle."
* Administration distances itself from Congressional vote
At his February 16 press conference in Washington, Gen. Buyukanit said he was satisfied with the Bush Administration's opposition to H. Res. 106.
At the same time, the State Department began to distance itself from a potential congressional vote. Asked on February 7 if U.S.-Turkish relations would be harmed by the resolution, as Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul has argued, Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs Sean McCormack responded: "Well, that's his assessment."
McCormack added that while the Administration is conveying Turkey's "sensitivities" to Congress, "the Turkish government is well aware of our system of government, and they understand that Congress is an independent branch."
But H. Res. 106 is far from being the only or even the most contentious issue on the U.S.-Turkish agenda. There appear to be irreconcilable differences on Iraq. The Turkish military wants the U.S. to put pressure on Kurds in Iraq, and the U.S. can hardly afford to do that considering the difficulties the U.S.-led coalition is currently experiencing.
* Members of Congress protest "outrageous intimidations"
In a letter made public on February 8, co-chairs of the 148-member Armenian Caucus Rep. Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ) and Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) protested what they described as the "shameless threat" made by Turkish officials to cut off supplies to U.S. forces in Iraq should the resolution pass.
The letter decried Turkey's interference with U.S. congressional debate as "completely inappropriate," and urged congressional leaders and the Administration to reject such "outrageous intimidations."
The House Committee on Foreign affairs chaired by Rep. Tom Lantos (D-CA) has yet to schedule a hearing or a vote on H. Res. 106. Lantos, who met with both Foreign Minister Gul and General Byukanit, "has not yet made a decision regarding this resolution," said his spokeswoman Lynne Weil, as cited in the Forward on February 23.
The Forward further cited congressional sources as predicting that if "Rep. Lantos tried to block the genocide resolution in committee, [House Speaker Nancy] Pelosi would ask him to move it to the House floor for a vote and he would end up agreeing."
Rep. Lantos has a mixed record on affirmation. A Holocaust survivor, Rep. Lantos nevertheless has opposed affirmation measures in the past, citing Turkey's strategic importance. But in 2005, when a nearly identical resolution received Committee consideration, Rep. Lantos supported it, citing Turkey's obstructionism of U.S. policies.
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4. Freedom of expression advocates urge Turkey to abolish 301 Article 301 prosecutions continue after Dink's murder
PARAMUS, N.J. - Istanbul's Radikal daily reported on February 21 that in the last 21 months, 12 people had been sentenced under Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code, which criminalizes speech that is perceived to insult Turkish national identity. Another 18 cases are pending.
The first person sentenced under the law was Ibrahim Guclu, the spokesperson of Kurd-der, a Kurdish organization. His sentence was one-and-a-half years in prison.
The latest victim of the law is Aydin Engin, a writer for the Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos. He is being tried for saying, "I want to go to Paris and say 'there is no Armenian genocide' and return to Turkey to say an 'Armenian genocide was committed." The French legislature is considering a law that criminalizes the denial of the Armenian Genocide.
* Joint action statement
Meanwhile, the international freedom of expression community is circulaing a joint action statement. For the text and the names of the signatories, go to http://www.reporter.am or to http://www.ipa-uie.org
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5. A look at the Azerbaijani military: More money, more problems?
News analysis by Emil Sanamyan
Editor's note: This is a second article on the subject. The first column appeared in the Reporter's February 14, 2007, issue and focused on the relationship between Azerbaijan's growing oil production and its military spending.
WASHINGTON - Azerbaijan's military spending grew from $146 million in 2004 to an estimated $1 billion in 2007. Most of this money has officially gone toward raises in officers' salaries and improving soldiers' conditions of service. (A future column will discuss Azerbaijan's weapons acquisition.)
The purpose of spending over $2 billion in four years, in addition to the Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev's often-stated desire to overtake Armenia's total state spending, must be to improve the discipline, sense of purpose and fighting efficiency of the armed forces.
Azerbaijani officials and sympathetic observers boast that such improvements have taken place. President Aliyev and his lieutenants have for years claimed that Azerbaijani armed forces are superior to the Armenian military. In an effort to illustrate this point the Azerbaijani government helicoptered a group of Westerners to the Azeri side of the Line of Contact (LoC) in 2005.
Glen Howard of the DC-based Jamestown Foundation came back impressed that the Azeri officers he spoke with were educated "in the West, speak English, and are very bright." Speaking last October at Johns Hopkins University, Howard endorsed the Azerbaijani official view that the widely held perception of Armenian military supremacy was a "myth."
Like Mr. Howard, military journalist Scott Taylor of the Canadian Esprit d'Corps magazine never visited the Armenian side of the LoC. But he was on the Azeri side twice - in July 2006 and again last month. He writes that both Baku-based Western military attaches and former Azerbaijani soldiers are critical of the Azerbaijani army's readiness.
In one example, a 22-year-old who just completed his tour of duty told Mr. Taylor that he had "lack of respect for the [Azerbaijani] government and lack of confidence in [Azerbaijani] officers.?.?.?. We had only 40 days of basic training and then we manned the front lines for 18 months." (Armenian conscripts are deployed to the LoC after six months of training.)
These flaws in training, as well as reports of widespread corruption, may explain in part why the Azerbaijani press is inundated with negative coverage of developments in the military.
* Collusion with the enemy
Young Azeribaijans born in the 1980s, raised in the 1990s, and now being drafted into the military have experienced nauseating amounts of state propaganda about the "Armenian enemy."
Unlike members of older generations, hardly any of these young men has ever met an Armenian or even seen an Armenian on television. The Azerbaijani government regularly censors out "Armenian themes" from TV programs broadcast by foreign channels into Azerbaijan. Russian and even Turkish performers with suspected Armenian roots are barred from the country.
So it takes a special kind of desperation for young Azerbaijanis in uniform to seek relief from Armenians. Five Azerbaijani servicemen risked minefields and sentries to cross the Line of Contact in 2005 and all were imprisoned on "treason" charges upon their repatriation to Azerbaijan.
Nevertheless, three more Azerbaijani servicemen crossed over in December 2006. Two of these have since been repatriated and are now facing "treason" charges. The third is refusing repatriation and is reportedly seeking asylum.
According to findings published in the Baku newspaper Zerkalo, the Azerbaijani government reported or otherwise failed to cover up 35 peacetime deaths in 2004, 39 in 2005, and 48 in 2006 - the vast majority of these cases of fratricide, suicide, or "accident." In the first three weeks of 2007 there were eight additional fatalities.
Many more young Azerbaijanis are avoiding military service or paying bribes to be placed in what are known as "elite" units in the capital Baku.
* Elite unit corruption
One such "elite" unit is the 112th Security Brigade of the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry based in Baku and used to guard government buildings and other installations. Servicemen from this brigade have also served in U.S.-led peacekeeping operations in Kosovo, Afghanistan, and Iraq. Many of the officers have received at least some training in Western military colleges.
But this unit too has been gripped by scandals. According to the Turan news agency, the brigade first came under investigation over the case of one of its non - commissioned officers (NCOs) who served with the 150-person peacekeeping unit deployed as interior guards inside a perimeter secured by U.S. marines at a hydro - electric plant in Iraq. After this NCO converted to Christianity, he was "recalled to Azerbaijan, accused of treason, and fired from the army."
Last September, one of the brigade's senior officers, a lieutenant colonel, talked to investigators looking into the NCO's case, providing them with charges of widespread corruption. The officer was quickly demoted and shoved into a much less "elite" unit in one of the provinces. Last month, this officer went to the press. Apparently, some Azerbaijani commanders embezzle the salaries of their soldiers serving in Iraq. These salaries are underwritten by U.S. taxpayers to encourage as many countries as possible into the U.S.-led "Coalition of the Willing."
According to this and other brigade officers, the Azerbaijani "peacekeepers," some of whom bribed their way to serve in Iraq presumably to earn higher salaries, are engaged in looting of the Iraqis and even stealing from U.S. servicemen.
This is just one of dozens of allegations made by senior officers to become public in just the last two to three years - presumably the period of significant increases in these officers' salaries.
* Leadership problem?
Much of the Azerbaijani media commentary targets Defense Minister General Safar Abiyev as being at the root of problems in the military. Mr. Abiyev has been in his position for 12 years - longer than any defense chief in the region and possibly the world. While for years there have been rumors that Abiyev's dismissal is imminent, he has remained in the post, most likely because of his total loyalty to the ruling Aliyev family and possibly because there are few alternatives.
In these 12 years the Azerbaijani military has gone through a series of purges with thousands of senior military and security officials accused of disloyalty and imprisoned since the 1990s. The latest purge has been underway since 2003. Virtually none of the officers with any military credentials earned during the Karabakh war remains in the military or other security agencies.
Amid the current disarray, Zerkalo newspaper claimed recently that the Azerbaijani government would be inviting a senior Turkish military officer to straighten out the military. But Turkish generals have tried to fix the Azerbaijani military since 1992 with little to show for it so far.
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6. Mass burial debate continues
by Talin Suciyan
In October 2006 a mass grave was found in Dara/Nusaybin in Turkey. No investigation was done to identify the remains. After the mass media brought the matter to the attention of the public, Prof. Yusuf Halacoglu of the Turkish Historical Society (THS) claimed that the burial remained from Roman times, adding that THS is ready to form an international group of experts to conduct a site investigation. Meanwhile, Prof. David Gaunt of Södertörns University gave several interviews to the Turkish media, arguing that the remains may belong to Assyrians, Chaldeans, or Armenians. Mr. Gaunt based his argument on the historical incidents known to have happened in that area, and added that only a site investigation could determine the provenance of the bodies. Mr. Gaunt's presumptions were challenged by Mr. Halacoglu, who claimed they could not be correct.
As a response to Mr. Halacoglu's challenge, in January David Gaunt wrote a letter to the THS, stating that he would appreciate to be a part of an international researchers' group. Mr. Gaunt had three main requirements: First, researchers should have full access to any site that could have the probability of being a mass grave; second, to interview the local people concerning the mass grave; and third, to have full independence in investigating the burial and the area around it. Mr. Halacoglu accepted the requirements, and both sides were to set up dates for starting the research. A couple of days after this mail correspondence, Hrant Dink was killed and the process stopped.
On February 11, Yusuf Halacoglu was in the headlines of Hurriyet daily newspaper, announcing the cooperation between Sweedish and Turkish historians, after almost one month. Right after this, on February 13, another news item appeared in Hurriyet, this time concerning the dates proposed by Mr. Gaunt. He had proposed to start the field work between April 23 and 25, 2007. Hurriyet's title for the news item was, "Sweedish professor's cunning of 24 April."
After both news items appeared in Hurriyet, Mr. Gaunt issued a press release and wrote a letter to Mr. Halacoglu.
Mr. Gaunt's press release summarizes the process from October to this date and continues as follows:
"After the first news was spread, authorities cordoned off the cave and only some government agencies had access. Finally in December the site was closed off and the opening was buried. The head of the Turkish Historical Society (TTK), Professor Yusuf Halaçoglu challenged my suggestions and insisted that the bodies found were from Roman times. Thereafter he made many statements to the press challenging a Swedish delegation to investigate the site. This intensified after a debate in the Swedish parliament on December 12, 2006, which was based on reports in Turkish press (not upon my initiative, as some mistakenly believe).
"In mid-January 2007, I sent up a trial balloon to see if there was any substance to the TKK statements and I proposed to start negotiations on making a joint investigation. It was apparent that the only way any independent scientist would have to study the grave was through some sort of collaboration with the TKK. I am fully acquainted with its abysmal track record on the Armenian-Turkish issues and was, and still am, very hesitant. We had not progressed further than discussing the possible dates for an initial planning meeting, when Hrant Dink was assassinated. I immediately put these negotiations on ice. Apparently, however, the TTK is very hot to pursue this matter and today has gone to Hurriyet revealing the very small amount of progress we had up until the assassination and making some further provocative and totally inappropriate statements.
"This investigation of the mass grave must be seriously planned. If the TTK wants to rush in and do an incomplete job in a hurry, there will be no reason for me to continue negotiations. For the sake of legitimacy alone, the TTK cannot expect to do the investigation all by itself and use the independent researchers only for PR purposes in attempts to influence public opinion. I envision a long scientific investigation with international co-operation. This first meeting can only begin the process of identifying the long lost victims in that mass grave."
Further, Mr. Gaunt wrote a letter to Mr. Halacoglu and stated that there are very difficult issues, such as the budget, the size, the qualifications, and the composition of the investigation team, the cooperation of local universities for offices and for adequate storage of the remains during the investigation, the organization for the search for DNA among people whose ancestors might be in the grave. He wrote "Perhaps I overstate my position, but for clarity it will be impossible for us to call this a joint effort, and it risks the legitimacy of the whole enterprise, if the TTK takes on all responsibility for the investigative work and the independent researchers are kept at arms length, until there is a press conference."
Mr. Gaunt thinks that there have been previous investigations done by the Turkish government delegations and he wrote he would like Mr. Halacoglu to share the findings. "Please correct me if I am wrong, but I have reason to believe that there have been several Turkish government delegations that have already inspected the grave. You made statements yourself, so I assume the TTK participated. It would be very useful for our common planning if you could send over copies of whatever material there is in whatever form, which has already been assembled."
In the news item that appeared in Hurriyet, it was claimed that Mr. Gaunt initiated the debate in parliament on the mass grave in December 2006. In the letter, Mr. Gaunt points out that only members of parliament can initiate a debate, and as he is not a member of parliament, he cannot do so. It was the initiative of members who read the articles appeared in the media.
As far as the dates are concerned, Mr. Gaunt said to Nokta weekly magazine that he proposed April 22`26, including the arrival and departure dates, and for field work April 23`25. "I have managed to clear the time 22`26 April by cancelling some speaking engagements in the United States for which I already made preparations to be away from the university. That the dates include April 24 has to do with the nature of my research and the several speaking engagements which I have had to cancel in order to accommodate the Turkish Historical Society's insistence on meeting soon with me. If it was only a matter of a one-day meeting in a major city, then I could of course have suggested other times like a weekend."
Mr. Halacoglu has suggested that based on the outcome of the investigation, the ones whose statements proved to be wrong should publicly apologize. Mr. Gaunt reminded him that in scientific circles, new interpretations, new facts, new materials, new techniques, and unexpected results can always happen, and scientists learn from them and are not embarrassed by new knowledge. He underlined that as historians, they must first pay respect to the past and honor memory by identifying whoever is enclosed in these long-lost graves, whatever ethnicity they happen to have had.
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Talin Suciyan is a correspondent for Istanbul's Nokta magazine. She reports from time to time for the Armenian Reporter.
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7. A joint Armenian-Turkish study on the Genocide is proposed - but will it go forward?
by Chris Zakian
PARAMUS, N.J. - Last week may have seen the start of the first joint scholarly project by an Armenian historian and a Turkish historian who denies the Armenian Genocide. Though at this writing it is not certain that the joint venture will actually go forward, Ara Sarafian, of the United Kingdom's Gomidas Institute, and Dr. Yusuf Halacoglu, the head of the Turkish Historical Society, have both commented publicly that they would welcome the opportunity to collaborate on a historical investigation.
According to Mr. Sarafian, the possibility of a collaborative study was brought up during a March 2006 conference at Istanbul University, where Mr. Sarafian - a leading authority on the Armenian Genocide and editor of a critical edition of the British Parliamentary Blue Book, The Treatment of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire 1915`16 - was asked by Dr. Halacoglu about cooperating on joint projects regarding the events of 1915.
Mr. Sarafian agreed, but nothing further transpired. The subject came up again when Mr. Sarafian was interviewed in February 2007 by the Turkish journal Notka; he outlined the conditions for what he would consider a serious and rigorous study.
Last week the Turkish newspaper Sabah put the question to Mr. Halacoglu, who responded that he would accept such a proposal.
In a press release issued on February 26, Mr. Sarafian set forward the parameters for a study that would be acceptable to him and to disinterested scholars. Earlier, he had posed a question that the study could seek to settle. "The Turkish official thesis maintains that the deportations of 1915 were an orderly affair and all relevant records on those deportations can still be found in Ottoman archives in Turkey. According to the formal administration of deportations, there should be lists of all deportees, village by village, person by person, showing when people were deported, where they were sent, and how they were resettled. There should be records of their original properties and how they were compensated at their places of exile."
Mr. Halacoglu would have to produce these records.
The parameters of the study, as formulated by Mr. Sarafian would be the following:
First, Mr. Sarafian would present Mr. Halacoglu the relevant records that explain why he thinks the events of 1915 in Harput should be called "abuse," "massacre," and "genocide," and not simply a deportation program.
Second, Mr. Halacoglu would present Ottoman records that detail how deportations were implemented in Harput and its surrounding villages.
Third, both parties would critically examine the materials presented in each set of records, to see if either one can make a convincing case.
Transparency of the proceedings, and openness to the broader scholarly community, would be critical conditions of any collaboration, Sarafian underlined.
As of this writing, Mr. Halacoglu has not unambiguously given his assent to these basic parameters.
In the meantime, the prospect of such a joint collaboration has received mixed reactions - especially in Armenian quarters, where some insist that it could play into the hands of Genocide deniers who would relish the opportunity to claim that the historicity of the Genocide is in some sense an "open" scholarly question.
A balanced, though cautious, view was expressed by University of Michigan historian Professor Gerard Libaridian, who in reply to the inquiry of the Armenian Reporter wrote: "In principle, any effort to produce and exchange documents is welcome; this problem requires debate and exchange in a variety of formats. To succeed, however, any project requires clear - and usually modest - goals, lucid intellectual underpinnings, scholarly integrity, and teamwork."
Mr. Libaridian added: "We have seen a few such projects fail in the past. Halacoglu, for example, does not inspire confidence as a historian, while Sarafian seems to be taking on Halacoglu, i,e., the Turkish state, all on his own. This area has suffered tremendously from a number of problems. The most important of these is the confusion between the politics of Genocide recognition and scholarly pursuits."
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8. Armenia is preparing for clean elections
International IDEA is training the trainers
YEREVAN - In anticipation of Armenia's May 12 parliamentary elections, 28 professional trainer-facilitators are being trained in Armenia. Those who pass the two-week intensive course will be able to help the Central Electoral Commission train election workers.
The training program, which runs through March 2, has been undertaken by the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (International IDEA), an intergovernmental organization based in Stockholm.
Under a memorandum of understanding signed between the organization and the Central Electoral Commission in May 2006, IDEA's office in Armenia has also published a training manual. The training course and the BRIDGE Armenia Manual are adapted from an international BRIDGE curriculum created by the Australian Electoral Commission, IDEA, and the United Nations Electoral Assistance Division in 1999. BRIDGE is an acronym for Building resources in democracy, governance, and elections)
BRIDGE Armenia is focused specifically on the experience and needs of Armenia. It uses an activities-based adult learning method to build capacity and enhance professionalism. The training is global in scope and seeks to use comparative examples to illustrate options and best practices. Guiding principles for election administration such as impartiality, accuracy, and transparency are incorporated into the course activities.
Connect: http://www.idea.int/southcaucasus
** U.S. Embassy holds training on preventing, detecting, and investigating election fraud
For text, go to http://www.usa.am
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9. Give us this day our daily bread
** Introducing the series, "Armenia at Work"
Work is a way to make a living. But it is also a way to realize one's potential, a way to express oneself, a way to do something useful with one's life no matter one's nationality, religion, sex, and party affiliation. The expression, "peaceful, constructive labor" means a lot today in Armenia, a country still making the difficult transition from one economic system to another, a country still blockaded, a country that still has high unemployment, still suffering from the shock of the 1990s and the consequences of the war. Especially for our people.
The salt of our earth, working people. Working people with their quotidien concerns, their problems, their joys. In this series, we tell you their stories as they are.
** Give us this day our daily bread
by Armen Hakobyan
YEREVAN - The smell of lavash rises like a prayer from the mouth of the clay tonir. Earth, fire, and water tell their ancient tale. The tale of bread. Little bubbles swell on the thin layer of dough clinging to the hot wall of the tonir. One. Two. They don't escape Zoya's expert gaze. The bread is done. A second later, the piping hot sheet of lavash is lying on top of the others, adding to the appetizing aroma that seems to have permeated even the stones of the bakery.
Armanoush, Zoya's sister, has already used a rolling pin to flatten the next ball of dough. She hands the round layer of dough to her sister. Zoya takes it and plays with it like a juggler. One. Two. Three. Four. A miracle passed on from generation to generation. And the dough is a thin layer exactly the size of the board it will cover. With a practiced hand, Zoya drops it on the board and sprinkles some water on it.
"The tonir is still too hot. I sprinkle the water so the lavash doesn't stick to the wall of the tonir," smiles Zoya, and in one deft motion attaches the future sheet of lavash to the wall.
You feel like you're part of an ancient, mysterious ritual. There is a primeval, pagan, divine inspiration in all this. In Armenia, one of first places wheat was cultivated, lavash has always been baked. In the 5,000-year history of our national existence, there has been no change in the ingredients of lavash `flour, water, salt - nor in the way it is baked, nor in the simple joy of fresh-baked bread.
The ring of Zoya's cellular phone and the click of my camera suddenly dissipate the 5,000-year-old prayer and bring us back to the 21st century. "Yes, Mariam jan," Zoya takes the call. "She's already in the ninth grade. She does well at school," the proud mother says, adding that her daughter wants to study foreign languages in university. She sets the phone aside and quips, "I have become a remote-control mom."
She picks up another round of dough and the prayer is back: "Give us this day our daily bread."
For the rest of this heavily illustrated essay, go to http://www.reporter.am
************************** ************************************************* 10. Rep. Sherman says the vote on the Genocide resolution is up to the Speaker And Karabakh's future status is up to Armenians
On February 28, Rep. Brad Sherman (D.-Calif.) gave a quick interview to our Washington Editor Emil Sanamyan. Below is the transcript of that interview, followed by facts about the member of Congress.
Reporter: What are the chances for the Foreign Affairs Committee consideration of H. Res. 106 in the near term?
Rep. Sherman: I think ultimately it will be a decision made by Speaker Pelosi. If either Speaker Pelosi or [Foreign Affairs Committee] Chairman [Tom] Lantos want, [the resolution] goes forward.
Reporter: What is the indication of the position taken by Chairman Lantos?
Rep. Sherman: I think that the chairman's position is not known to me at this time. The Speaker - and she is obviously much more important to this process ultimately [for the resolution] reaching the House floor [to be voted on] - has been supportive of this resolution consistently in her term in Congress. I do know that the State Department is going to try to change Speaker Pelosi's mind.
Reporter: Technically, can this resolution go to the House floor without Committee consideration?
Rep. Sherman: I would think that if Speaker Pelosi made it clear that she wanted it on the floor the Committee would act first. Yet, if for some reason the Committee did not act and the Speaker wanted it on the floor, it will be on the floor
Reporter: What is your reaction to the threats made by Turkish officials over this resolution?
Rep. Sherman: I believe French-Turkish relations improved after France passed the Genocide resolution, and I can't imagine why the outcome would be any different for the United States.
Reporter: And your reaction to the Bush Administration's opposition to this resolution?
Rep. Sherman: History is history, and it doesn't change because certain [military] bases are strategically well-located. And if you want to be the world's only superpower, you have to stay true to the truth. If instead the truth is something you negotiate, it is hard to think that the world is going to acquiesce in [the United States] being the only superpower.
Reporter: You have long supported Armenian-American issues. What are the reasons for that support?
Rep. Sherman: Because the last act of genocide is genocide denial. Because those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it. Those who obscure it are doomed to repeat it. Because Hitler was able to turn to his inner circle and say, "Who remembers the Armenians?" And if we don't remember the Armenians, then Hitler will have correctly observed that ignoring the first genocide of the 20th century paves the way for other genocides. Finally, because the ultimate Turkish acknowledgement of the Genocide is good for Turkey.
Because, where would the United States be if we denied slavery? Or if we denied that we had committed genocide against quite a number of Native American peoples? I would hope that if not in the resolution itself, [then] in the mix of discussion about the resolution, this resolution will be a humble resolution. With the humility of an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting, where we stand up and say, look, the United States has committed great crimes in its past, and other countries have as well, and it is time to acknowledge what happened in the Ottoman Empire.
Not as if we who point it out do so out of a sense of overbearing smugness. We should not be passing this resolution in smugness. We should be passing it because it is the truth, and because there is a lot of truth about the United States that we also have to acknowledge.
Reporter: Turning to another issue on the minds of many Armenian-Americans - the Karabakh conflict. How do you see it eventually resolved?
Rep. Sherman: I am not aware of any earth-shattering developments regarding Artsakh. It was tantalizing when [the parties] came close to an agreement [in the past].
The United States has got to disabuse the Azeris of the view that they are going to pump a lot of oil and get a lot of power and somehow create new realities. We should be re-doubling our efforts to serve as an intermediary, to try to have this issue resolved.
I think that the people of Artsakh have made it plain that they want to live in an Armenian state. Whether that is an independent, second Armenian state, or whether it is fully incorporated into the Republic of Armenia - it is for the Armenians to decide.
Reporter: Is ongoing U.S. security assistance to Azerbaijan undermining regional stability, and should Congress take a closer look at these assistance programs to Azerbaijan?
Rep. Sherman: First and foremost, you should require parity [in security assistance to Azerbaijan and Armenia] at least, if not favoritism of Armenia, which I think has been far more willing to settle the conflict than Azerbaijan. Aid to the military of Azerbaijan could be a problem, and aid that did not at least enshrine parity would be worse. Given the fact that Azerbaijan is participating in the blockade of Armenia, I would like to see zero military aid. Certainly, military aid to Azerbaijan is not a good idea; but departing from parity is even worse.
** SIDEBAR: Facts about Rep. Brad Sherman
Constituency: Represents California's 27th district, located in the northern suburbs of Los Angeles, including parts of Sherman Oaks, Burbank, Northridge, Tarzana, Granada Hills, and Sunland.
Role in the 110th Congress: Chairman of the Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Terrorism, Non-proliferation, and Trade. Original co-sponsor of House Resolution 106, affirming the U.S. record on the Armenian Genocide.
Personal details: Born in 1954, in Los Angeles. Jewish. J.D. from Harvard University, 1979. Attorney, accountant. Single.
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11. Commentary: Karabakh: Between the status quo and reforms Whom will Artsakh choose as its new president this summer?
by Hrachya Arzumanian
STEPANAKERT, Nagorno-Karabakh Republic - From a distance, the ongoing campaign for the presidential succession in Artsakh may appear sluggish. But this is a false impression. The upcoming election, expected to take place in July 2007, may become a breakthrough of sorts in the political evolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, and it is already capturing the attention of Artsakh's society.
The two terms of President Arkady Ghoukasian were in effect a period of political transition. In this decade (1997 to 2007), the citizens of Artsakh were looking for ways out of the state of war and a degree of relaxation from the years of total mobilization of local resources.
Mr. Ghoukasian's presidency succeeded in softening this largely painless transition from postwar military rule - in itself an objective and unavoidable stage in Artsakh's development - towards a fledgling civil society. The military and security agencies have been eased out of politics and the economy, marking a return to a sense of peacetime normalcy.
The upcoming elections will to a great degree determine the future of Artsakh's statehood. And this is in large part the explanation for the mostly unnoticed tension in Artsakh's society that is growing from day to day. Artsakh is facing at least three scenarios.
The first scenario is the continuation of the status quo, with the local power elite maintaining the existing trends - which will likely result in stagnation and the gradual erosion of past achievements.
Another scenario would entail the rise of reformers who would be able to make the necessary policy changes - providing Artsakh's statehood with fresh momentum.
The third and, at this time, the least realistic option is a potential return to quasimilitary rule, which would result in a deterioration of the gains made thus far by Artsakh's civil society.
* The contenders
At this time, there are three main forces contesting for support of the Artsakh electorate: the ruling administration, the political opposition, and the largely nonaligned civil society.
The five individuals discussed here have yet to formally announce their intentions to seek the presidency, even though their names routinely top local opinion polls. It also cannot be ruled out that alternative candidates may emerge in the next several months.
Parliament Speaker Ashot Ghulian and National Security Service Director Bako Sahakian appear to be the most likely establishment candidates.
With his democratic image and potential, Ashot Ghulian has an opportunity to maintain the general trend toward democratization. At the same time he is seen as not sufficiently charismatic to be able to appeal to Artsakh's society and win the necessary support for reforms. Should Mr. Ghulian succeed in creating a professional team that can plan and carry out reforms - a challenge shared by all the candidates ` the "charisma deficit" may yet be compensated for. But in the absence of such a team, Mr. Ghulian may not be able to convince the society at large that he does in fact stand for progress, rather than for the status quo.
Unlike Mr. Ghulian, Bako Sahakian is not a public figure, but one who is acutely aware of the real mechanisms driving Artsakh's society. Should he emerge as a formal candidate, Mr. Sahakian would need to exert significant effort in image-building, particularly outside Artsakh, where he is largely unknown. But this is very much an achievable task. Should Mr. Sahakian succeed, this will present an opportunity for fast and popular reforms, along the lines of the achievements of Vladimir Putin's presidency in Russia. [Editor's note: While Putin may be unpopular in the West, he has enjoyed consistent popularity in Russia.]
The emergence of Deputy Foreign Minister Masis Mayilian as the preferred candidate of Artsakh's civil society represents a new and significant change in local politics. Mr. Mayilian has a real opportunity to become a public politician and is seen as having the best potential as a reformist candidate. He is charismatic, has the needed team-building skills, and maintains positive relations with most of the local power brokers. Mr. Mayilian's remaining challenge is to convince Artsakh's political establishment that he is the most promising candidate.
The opposition is represented by Parliament members Armen Sarkisian and Vitaly Balasanian.
Armen Sarkisian is one of the leaders in the local chapter of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF), but he appears to lack the personal characteristics that could make him a strong contender for the presidency. The ARF's political influence in Artsakh today is also insufficient to play the leading role this party once enjoyed in Artsakh. But its role remains significant when it comes to coalition-building - especially should none of the presidential candidates win outright and there is a second round.
Retired General Vitaly Balasanian is a respected combat officer who has a reputation for honesty and loyalty to Artsakh's cause. At the same time, Mr. Balasanian lacks the experience of public politics. And as a military man his attitudes may appear incompatible with existing trends in Artsakh. With military threats to Artsakh seen as not imminent, much of the electorate has no desire to return political power to the generals. As a result, the Balasanian candidacy is likely to suffer.
Certainly a vigorous political system is very much in evidence in Artsakh. All the candidates for the presidency will have to contend with this reality. The political competition in Artsakh is not solely a contest of individuals, but of political forces offering a variety of approaches to Artsakh's development, along with associated policies.
This is a relatively new phenomenon for the young Armenian state, and one for which President Ghoukasian deserves much credit. His endorsement of a specific candidate may play a decisive role in how Artsakh's political forces consolidate and build alliances ahead of the elections. These forces are now caught in anticipation of the administration's decision.
But the time for this decision is quickly running out. Unless the president makes the endorsement in the very near future, his decision may become irrelevant and be overtaken by the momentum of the election campaign.
In any case, the contest for the presidency of Artsakh is likely to be both dynamic and dramatic.
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Hrachya Arzumanian, PhD, an expert in national security and complex systems, lives and works in Stepanakert. This is his first contribution for the Armenian Reporter.
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12. Commentary: A month of flowers
Living in Armenia by Maria Titizian
A month of festivities and observances await women in Armenia. It all begins with International Women's Day on March 8 and culminates on April 7, Mother's Day. There will be the standard-issue round tables organized by nongovernmental and international organizations, conferences, art exhibitions, concerts, meetings, discussions, and debates. These events will attempt to raise public awareness, to address serious concerns about the lack of women's involvement in the political, economic, and social life of the country, to tackle the thorny reality of women's reproductive health, discrimination in the labor market, lack of access to productive resources, absence of women in the private sector and the list goes on. All of these events, however, will pale in comparison to the most important custom of the day - the passing out of flowers. This time-honored tradition is one that some women hang on to unabashedly. Any comment or suggestion that receiving flowers on International Women's Day, when women are absent from all or most decision making in the country is rather hypocritical comes at a great cost to she who dares question the mystique behind this flower-giving and flower-receiving practice. In the end, the real beneficiaries of this ritual are the flower vendors who set up shop on almost every street corner of the city during the heady days of celebration.
Being a woman in Armenia is tricky business. Being a diasporan Armenian woman can leave you scratching your head in disbelief.
Don't get me wrong. I like receiving flowers as much as anyone else and it doesn't grate my sensibilities when I receive flowers as a gesture of love, gratitude, friendship, or whatever. But the whole spirit of International Women's Day seems to get lost amidst the blooms. The country faces serious problems when it comes to gender issues. The culprit is not the constitution or the laws or the international agreements that the Armenian government has signed. In fact, under the law in all instances women are granted equal status to men. Women are not barred from education, are not required to wear burkas, nor are they paid less than men in the public sector. On the contrary, 60 percent of all those who hold graduate degrees are women, rates of women's enrollment in undergraduate studies are higher than men, and one just needs to stroll about the campus at Yerevan State University to see that freedom of dress is expressed much more freely than in most "developed" nations. There seems to be a something askew in the country's value system.
In a recent report on measures to improve the situation of women in the South Caucasus, the Committee for Equal Opportunities for Men and Women of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe found that Armenia comes in last, after Azerbaijan and Georgia, when it comes to the representation of women in parliament: the rates were 4.6 percent in Armenia (6 out of 131 members of the National Assembly) as opposed to 10.5 percent in Azerbaijan and 9.4 percent in Georgia. There is only one woman cabinet minister and a handful of women deputy ministers.
This same report also stated that there is a prevalence of violence against women, discussion of which, according to the report, is "still largely taboo." Currently there are no state statistics on domestic violence owing largely to the fact that in a majority of cases, the violence is not reported. Society does not yet want to come to terms with violence against women for an array of reasons stemming largely from cultural traditions, pride, and the sanctity of the family. I have trouble understanding this mentality, for if there is violence in the home, then what or whose sanctity are we protecting?
Unlike domestic violence, which at least is acknowledged to exist, widespread sexual discrimination is a nonissue. Abortion continues to be a measure of regulating fertility; one just needs to talk to any gynecologist to understand the severity of the situation. Many women are having multiple abortions during their childbearing years. A recent report by the World Bank regarding the reproductive health of women found that 55 percent of all pregnancies are artificially terminated.
Perhaps one of the most critical issues facing women in Armenia is poverty. The same World Bank report finds that 53 percent of all the poor in Armenia are women, 66 percent of the unemployed are women ` the highest percentage of female unemployment in the Caucusus. While both men and women in Armenia are at risk of poverty, the risk factor for women-led households is much greater. Today 30 percent of all Armenian households are women led, an exceptionally vulnerable segment of society, at risk of finding themselves in extreme poverty by 33%.
Women and business? Prepare to be astonished. Of all businesses, 0.3 percent are owned by women. Perhaps this is not so surprising, considering women did not benefit from privatization, and persisting rigid gender roles continue to dictate what productive resources men and women have access to.
As a woman who up until 6 years ago lived in North America, I never thought much about issues of equal rights, poverty, discrimination, or domestic violence. It was always somebody else's problem. Generations of women before me had laid the groundwork for the women's movement which placed these issues on the public agenda, and although they weren't always successful, they undeniably aided in the advancement of women in all areas of life.
As an Armenian living in North America I never thought much about these issues either because I existed in the insularity of community life which was concerned with prolonging Armenian language and culture and raising funds to build centers, churches, and schools.
However in Armenia if we do not have a serious and comprehensive public discourse by both men and women about the persisting gender imbalance, it will invariably have a negative impact on society in the long run. When half of society's potential is not utilized, when women do not have a voice in the country's decision-making bodies, when women do not have a role in public-development policies and in the development of economic strategies, then to expect a reduction in poverty, improvement in good governance, sustainable growth, or an increase in productivity is akin to settling for spring flowers to be delivered on International Women's Day.
There is an abundance of wisdom in the Armenian saying, "Spring will not arrive with a single flower." Wouldn't it be something if every flower given this year could represent one woman who has made a difference, who has taken the chance, who has demanded to be heard, who has dismantled stereotypes, who has made a sacrifice? It is true, a single flower will not bear the promise of spring, just as a single voice will not be heard over the din of rhetoric, but a bouquet of voices when arranged just so can not only move the heart, but can move mountains.
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13. Paul Chaderjian joins the Armenian Reporter as Features Editor Will lead new California Bureau
PARAMUS, N.J. - Paul Chaderjian has joined the editorial staff of the Armenian Reporter as Features Editor, the newsweekly's editor Vincent Lima announced. Mr. Chaderjian is responsible for the paper's new weekly Arts & Culture section. In addition, he heads up the Reporter's new California bureau.
"Since early December, readers have been exposed to Paul's fresh and lively writing, his talent for finding interesting people and telling their stories," Mr. Lima said. "He has also been recruiting the correspondents that have been enriching our coverage of the arts and of Armenian life in California. We are very excited to have him as a colleague."
For the past three years, Mr. Chaderjian worked in Yerevan as manager of English-language programming at Armenia TV. In addition to this role, he anchored a daily half-hour English-language newscast, hosted a daily English-language talk show called "Hotline," and regularly contributed to CNN's World Report.
Prior to his work with Armenia TV, Mr. Chaderjian was a news writer and producer for ABC News' "World News Now" in New York City and was a reporter and producer for television stations in Fresno, California.
"Thanks to Mr. Cafesjian, John Waters, Bagrat Sargsyan, Vincent Lima, and all of my colleagues at Armenia TV and the Armenian Reporter, all I have ever dreamed of doing in my career since childhood in film, television, broadcast and print journalism are now part of my daily work experience," Mr. Chaderjian said. "What makes this even more rewarding and gratifying is that the legacies of my late father, and my relatives and the ancestors we all lost during the Genocide will never disappear from the collective memory of humankind. Through our work in media, our stories will be passed on to future generations of Armenians, will become part of the collective history of humankind, and help Armenians around the world be part of a virtual community that only modern-day media technologies would make possible."
Mr. Chaderjian has a master's degree in journalism and mass communication from California State University, Fresno, and an undergraduate degree in cinema and television production from the University of Southern California. He is one of the hosts of the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund Thanksgiving Day Telethon and has regularly contributed to Armenian media outlets, including the Armenian Reporter, Asbarez, and Armenian International Magazine, where he served as managing editor.
"The Reporter is looking at California as a very significant market. Having someone of Paul's accomplishment and obvious talent there is very important to us," said  - Sylva Boghossian, publisher of the Armenian Reporter. "We are thrilled to have him on board."
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14. A letter from the Editor A new format for the Armenian Reporter
Dear Reader:
Managing Editor Chris Zakian and I were sitting in Paramus one Friday in early January. The paper had gone to press, and we could squeeze in some time to talk about the new format of the Armenian Reporter. In a touching gesture, Sona Boghosian, the sister of the newspaper's late founder Eddie Boghosian, had made us surj.
We were discussing headlines in the new format. Will we stick with the title style, as in, "Egoyan Awarded Oscar," or will we switch to sentence style, as in, "Egoyan is awarded an Oscar"? "The current format is crowded, so it needs the brevity and the capitals of the title style," Chris said. "But the cleaner lines of the new format will support sentence-style headlines."
Good. We're in agreement.
It's a week later, and I'm in Yerevan. They have delivered the round table - and the rest of the furniture - for the new Armenian Reporter newsroom there. On the table there are copies of the Guardian, the beautifully designed British daily, the Christian Science Monitor, and a few Armenian-American weeklies. I plunk a few colorful copies of the Reporter on top. These are samples printed in New Jersey by one of the printing plants we were testing.
Grigor Hakobyan, our art director, frowns. He pulls out a little magnifying glass and spends some time acting like a diamond appraiser. Does he think it's a cubic zirconia? Not quite. The black-and-white pages are crisp. A joy to behold. But the text on the color pages is fuzzy. We'll have to deal with that problem before the next trial run.
Nareh Balian, our layout assistant, is pleased. She came up with the logo that spans the top of the front page of the Community section, and it looks good.
Paul Chaderjian, our features editor, has gotten an electronic copy of the new arts section. He drops me an email. "vincent, it's so awesome. now i'm excited! ok. here are the missing captions."
I'm excited too. It has been nine months, and we're due.
We started planning this transition last June, in a conference call. Publisher Sylva Boghossian and then`Managing Editor Aris Sevag were in Paramus. John Waters, vice president of the Cafesjian Family Foundation, was in Minneapolis. I was in my apartment in Yerevan. We had just announced, in the first editorial after CS Media acquired the newspaper, "Our goal is to create a new era of Armenian journalism. To do this, we will offer a newspaper that is reliable in content, scrupulous in separating fact from opinion, and relevant to today's Armenian American, regardless of his or her age."
We were committed to better content. And we had to have a format that supported that content.
Over the gestation period, here's what we came up with.
* Use a new typeface - legible, elegant, and versatile - throughout the paper. Tradition calls for a different typeface for headlines, but we're breaking that rule.
* Stay with the tabloid (11 x 17 inch) format, except for the arts section, which is 8?½ x 11 inches.
* Make consistent use of five columns (on a 10-column grid) in the news pages, and four columns (on a 12-column grid) in the commentary pages. Some leeway in the arts pages.
* Print in full color the front, back, and center pages in the main and community sections; color throughout the arts section.
* Introduce a bold new flag (logo) for the paper.
* Front page. In addition to the top two stories of the week, the front page carries pointers to other interesting stories. Some of the pointers come with summaries of the story they point to; others with an image that captures your imagination.
* National and international news. After the front page, you will find articles on what is happening to Armenian interests in official Washington, in foreign capitals, and elsewhere. This is where you'll find most of the work of our Washington Bureau, led by Emil Sanamyan. Your elected federal officials, the Armenian lobby, the European Union, Turkey, Russia, oil and gas, think tanks, railways, and diplomacy - they're all here.
* Armenia news. In the middle pages of the front section, you will find our coverage of how people are living in Armenia and Karabakh: work, education, health care, family life, civic involvement. You'll find news and analysis on Armenia's relations with foreign governments and international organizations. This is where you'll find most of the work of our Yerevan office. One area of special interest is the state of the economy, business, and finance, Other areas of interest include energy, the environment, civil society, and the initiatives of Armenian-Â - American individuals and entities in Armenia.
* Commentary. Our opinion pages comprise the last part of the front section. You will find the editorial here, reflecting the publishers' opinion. In addition, you'll find a range of other views in commentaries and letters. We hope you'll share your views on these pages and contibute to vigorous and civil debate.
* Community news. The Reporter remains a community newspaper. We are increasing our community coverage in a few ways. First, we are sending reporters to more community events to bring you in-depth coverage. Second, we are asking you to let us know about births, graduations, weddings, promotions, accomplishments, and, yes, deaths, so we can let our community know too. Third, we are paying more attention to California, where so many Armenians have settled. And fourth, we are publishing a separate community section every week, with its own front page, to highlight the most important community news.
* Arts & Culture. Many of us still look at movie credits carefully, scouring them for an Armenian name. But we're getting used to seeing more and more of them. We decided we needed a colorful 16-page weekly section dedicated to books, music, theater, television, dance, fashion, language, cinema, sculpture - OK, to arts, culture, and entertainment. Now that we've been working on it for a while, we wonder whether 16 pages is enough.
Maybe we left something out. After you've had your surj with the paper, please drop us a line and let us know what you think. After all, this space is usually reserved for letters to the editor.
Very truly yours, Vincent Lima Editor
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15. Editorial: USC Trojans show the way
This week the University of Southern California Institute of Armenian Studies will honor Ambassador John Marshall Evans for his service, and above all for a choice he made: the choice to be undiplomatic, the choice to cut through the muck and double-talk that substitutes for honest discussion of the Armenian Genocide in the White House and the State Department.
Putting his career on the line, Mr. Evans gave the administration the opportunity to make a breakthrough, to take a step forward. Alas, the administration chose to take two steps back. It could not tolerate Mr. Evans' act of truth telling.
We join the USC Institute of Armenian Studies in its salute to a man of principle.
The institute deserves kudos for showing leadership in the matter, consistent with its stated mission to be engaged in the life of the Armenian-American community.
The institute, only two years old, is an excellent next step in institutional Armenian studies. USC obviously is not the first university in which a program in Armenian studies has been endowed. >From Harvard to UCLA, from Fresno State to Clark University in Worcester, Mass., there are such chairs at prominent instutions across the country. Nor is the USC institute the first institute engaged in modern Armenian studies - the Zoryan Institute, the Gomidas Institute, and the Armenian National Institute are among its predecessors.
The USC Institute of Armenian Studies is different in at least two important ways, however.
Endowing a university chair is meant to ensure that the university always has a professor specializing in the subject at hand, training a new generation of students at the university. Independent institutes, on the other hand, can work with scholars and others from a wide range of institutions, and they can pursue an agenda without the potential constraints of the traditional academic environment. Donors can set the agenda and expect accountability.
What Professor Richard Hrair Dekmejian has achieved at USC is to set up a hybrid, bringing together the best of both worlds.
Just as significantly, in setting its agenda, the institute has chosen a broad, encompassing definition of Armenian studies. It has chosen to be engaged in present-day issues facing Armenians in the United States, in Turkey, and in Armenia. Without compromising in its commitment to academic rigor and truth-finding, the institution refuses to isolate itself through purely academic pursuits.
The USC Institute of Armenian Studies is an invaluable meeting place for scholars and the community at large. Let us stand by this young initiative and help it grow and succeed.
Connect: armenian@college.usc.edu http:/ /www.usc.edu/schools/college/tradition_innovation/ leadership/armenian.html
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