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  • ASBAREZ Online [04-04-2006]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    04/04/2006
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    1) System Of A Down to Launch Washington, DC Campaign for Armenian Genocide
    Recognition
    2) EU Presses Turkey on Military Reform
    3) Greek Telecom Giant Plans to Sell ArmenTel
    4) Young Armenians against Normalization of Relations with Turkey And
    Azerbaijan
    5) Kurdish Groups Organize Demonstration against Turkey's Brutal Policies

    1) System Of A Down to Launch Washington, DC Campaign for Armenian Genocide
    Recognition

    LOS ANGELES--Serj Tankian and John Dolmayan of the Grammy Award-winning band
    System Of A Down will travel to Washington, DC on April 24 for a three-day
    campaign to urge Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert and other Congressional
    leaders to end their complicity in Turkey's ongoing denial of the Armenian
    genocide.
    On the evening of Monday, April 24, starting at 5:00 PM, band members will
    join with the Armenian National Committee of America and Armenian Youth
    Federation in leading a grassroots demonstration outside the gates of the
    Turkish Embassy at 2525 Massachusetts Ave, in Northwest Washington, DC. The
    Turkish government, through its Embassy in Washington, spends millions of
    dollars each year to bully, threaten, and blackmail the US government not to
    recognize the Armenian genocide.
    The band members will devote Tuesday, April 25 to providing interviews to the
    political media in Washington, and, in the evening, hosting a Congressional
    screening of "Screamers," a new documentary by filmmaker Carla Garapedian
    about
    the band's worldwide campaign for Armenian genocide recognition.
    On Wednesday April 26, System will meet with key Members of Congress to urge
    them to allow a vote on legislation recognizing the Armenian genocide, and at
    5:30 PM will participate in the annual Capitol Hill commemoration of the
    Armenian genocide. This event, now in its 11th year, is regularly attended by
    over 30 Members of Congress, diplomats, ethnic community leaders, human rights
    activists, genocide prevention advocates, and Armenian Americans from across
    the country.
    Beginning on April 24, 1915, the Ottoman Turkish government began a centrally
    planned and systematically executed campaign to annihilate the Armenian people
    from their ancient homeland. By 1923 over 1.5 million Armenians were killed
    and hundreds of thousands deported, in what constituted the first genocide of
    the 20th century. Congressional legislation recognizing this crime (HR 316 /
    HCR195 / SR320) has broad bipartisan support, but has been blocked from coming
    to a vote by Congressional leaders, despite the fact that, five years ago, US
    House Speaker Dennis Hastert promised to allow Members to vote on this human
    rights measure.
    In September of last year, Serj Tankian and John Dolmayan from the band
    traveled to the Speaker's hometown of Batavia, Illinois to lead a rally urging
    him to allow a vote on the Armenian genocide legislation. During the rally,
    Tankian delivered a personal and powerfully worded message calling on the
    Speaker to do the right thing, and stressing that "historical truths should
    never be denied in a democracy--especially one with such a proud heritage of
    freedom."
    Speaker Hastert has it in his power to accomplish one of System's
    goals--official US recognition of Turkey's destruction of 1.5 million
    Armenians
    between 1915 and 1923. By allowing Congress to vote on this legislation,
    Speaker Hastert can end US denial of this crime and open the doors to
    justice--to the restoration, reparation, and restitution owed to the
    victims of
    genocide. By continuing to block a vote on this legislation, Hastert
    effectively joins in the denial of this crime against humanity, and the denial
    of justice to an entire nation.
    The members of System Of A Down, Serj Tankian, Daron Malakian, John Dolmayan,
    and Shavo Odadjian all personally lost family members and family history to
    the
    Armenian genocide. "Because so much of my family history was lost in the
    Armenian genocide," said Malakian, "my grandfather, who was very young at the
    time, doesn't know his true age. How many people can say they don't know how
    old they are?" Tankian, Dolmayan, and Odadjian all identify their
    grandparents'
    memories as the only links they have to their respective family histories, as
    most of their families were obliterated during the Armenian genocide.
    "It's important for people to be aware of the Armenian genocide," explained
    Tankian, "and that those actions continue to be covered up by the Turkish
    government, the US State Department, Turkey's allies in the defense and oil
    industries, and by our present US Administration. Had the Armenian genocide
    been acknowledged as a crime against humanity as it was, Hitler might not have
    thought he could get away with the Jewish Holocaust. History does and will
    repeat itself, unless we stop that cycle."

    2) EU Presses Turkey on Military Reform

    BRUSSELS (UPI)--The European Union has urged Turkey to beef up efforts to keep
    its military under civilian control, as the country faces its worst civil
    unrest in years.
    Although Turkey, which is a candidate for membership of the Brussels-based
    club, is rapidly changing to meet the bloc's exacting standards, a senior
    European Commission official told a conference in Brussels that the "pace of
    change of Turkey's reform has slowed down in the last year."
    According to the Defensenews.com Web site, Alessandro Missir De Lusignano
    said
    Ankara still had to make the military's budget more transparent and
    accountable
    to the Turkish parliament. Another point on Brussels' wish list is to see the
    military's presence in civil society diluted and the military courts' ability
    to try civilians abolished.
    The 25-member bloc has also voiced concern about the violence in the Kurdish
    part of the country, urging Ankara to protect the minority's cultural rights
    and fight poverty in the region.
    Last week, violent riots broke out in the predominantly Kurdish southeast of
    the country and this week several people have been killed in Istanbul in
    clashes between Kurds and Turkish security forces.

    3) Greek Telecom Giant Plans to Sell ArmenTel

    YEREVAN (AFP)--Greece's Hellenic Telecommunications Organization (OTE) said
    Tuesday it was examining options to sell its 90 percent controlling share in
    Armenian operator ArmenTel.
    "Following consultation with the Armenian government, (OTE) has begun a
    procedure of examining options to sell its 90 percent stake in ArmenTel's
    share
    capital," the Greek telecom giant said in a statement.
    "OTE has decided to focus on the Balkans... ArmenTel is now a healthy
    company... and there is a rather large interest from Russian companies and
    funds," said Michalis Tsamaz, managing director of OTE International.
    HSBC Bank PLC has been selected to advise OTE in the procedure, the company
    said.
    Armenia's main telecom operator, ArmenTel in 2005 posted a net income of 45.8
    million euros ($55.4 million), an increase of 56.8 percent over the equivalent
    period in 2004, and had operating revenues of 119.1 million euros. OTE
    purchased its ArmenTel stake in 1997 at a cost of 120 million euros, Tsamaz
    said.
    Partially controlled by the Greek state, the OTE group, which comprises the
    profitable Cosmote Greek mobile telephony unit and subsidiaries in Bulgaria,
    Serbia, and Romania in addition to Armenia, in 2005 posted a net loss of 216.8
    million euros.

    4) Young Armenians against Normalization of Relations with Turkey And
    Azerbaijan

    YEREVAN (Armenpress)--A survey conducted by Sociometer polling center revealed
    that the overwhelming majority of young Armenians are against normalization of
    relations with Turkey if this requires giving up Armenians' territorial claims
    to Turkey and without Turkey's acknowledgment of the 1915 genocide.
    According to the Sociometer poll, 90 percent of respondents said they were
    against the improvement of relations with Turkey in that way.
    The percentage of those who would seek economic and other ties with Turkey
    before it recognized the Genocide and met other Armenian demands was only 4
    percent, while 6 percent were undecided.
    Also 91 percent said they were against establishment of normal relations with
    Azerbaijan without the final settlement of the Karabagh issue. Only 2.9
    percent
    said they would welcome it. The survey was conducted in order formulate
    Armenia's national youth policy.

    5) Kurdish Groups Organize Demonstration against Turkey's Brutal Policies

    (KNC)--Several Kurdish American organizations have organized a demonstration
    against Turkey's oppressive and brutal policy toward Kurds. The demonstration
    will take place on Wednesday, April 5 from 12:00 to 2:00 PM in front of
    Turkish
    Consulate General of Los Angeles.
    While Turkey is preparing to join the European Union, it continues to oppress
    and violate the rights of its Kurdish people.
    Over the last week, 15 people, three of them children, have been killed in
    the
    worst violence Turkey has seen in a decade. The violent protests erupted after
    the Turkish army killed fourteen Kurdish fighters on March 25 in Mush province
    of Northern Kurdistan.
    Many people were also harshly beaten and arrested by the police during the
    Kurdish New year (Newroz) celebrations.
    Despite pressure from the EU, the Turkish state persists in its aggressive
    behavior toward Kurds.
    Kurdish groups have organized the Los Angeles demonstration to remind the
    world that the behavior of the Turkish state indicates it is not ready to be
    part of the democratic and free world. They also pledge their support to the
    Kurdish people in their peaceful struggle for freedom and democracy in
    Anatolia.
    The protest organized by the Kurdish National Congress of North America,
    Kurdish Human Rights Watch, Kurdish Community Center in Southern California,
    and Kurdish American Culture Center will take place Wednesday, April 5 from
    12:00 to 2:00 PM in front of Turkish Consulate General at 6300 Wilshire Blvd.,
    Los Angeles, CA 90048. For more information contact KNC at
    [email protected].


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