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Massis Weekly Online - Volume 26, NO. 50 (1300)

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  • Massis Weekly Online - Volume 26, NO. 50 (1300)

    Massis Weekly Online
    MassisWeekly.com
    VOLUME 26, NO. 50 (1300)
    SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 2007

    -- Breaking News --

    -The assassination of Istanbul Armenian journalist and intellectual
    Hrant Dink has shocked the Armenian nation all over the world.
    -Social Democrat Hunchakian Party Central Committee has issued a
    statement condemning Hrant Dinks assassination and calling it a
    terrorist act. ?The Turkish government has its share of responsibility
    in this brutal crime.? Declares the statement by the SDHP Central
    Committee.
    -Jointly organized by Armenian Assembly of America, Armenian Council
    of America and SDHP GAIDZ Youth Organization, Los Angeles community
    members held a candlelight vigil in front of the Turkish Consulate
    Friday night, January 19th.
    -On Friday hundreds of community members attended a requiem service
    held at the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church headquarters for
    the soul of Hrant Dink.
    -SDHP ?Sarkis Dkhrouni? Student association has called for a protest
    rally in Yerevan on Tuesday January 23th condemning Hrant Dinks
    assassination and commemorating the 17th anniversary of Baku pogroms.

    ---------------------

    - Armenia's Leadership Has Limited Respect for Political Rights and
    Civil Liberties
    - Upcoming Elections Should Mark ?a Turning Point? in Armenia?s
    Transition to Democracy
    - Joint Announcement
    - Senator Robert Menendez Again Blocks Hoagland Nomination
    - Former US Envoy to Turkey Predicts Armenian Genocide Resolution Will Pass
    - ARPA Institute Hosts Jan 25 Lecture by Harut Sassounian
    - Left Coast Galleries Presents Acclaimed International Artist Samvel
    Hambardzumyan


    - Armenia's Leadership Has Limited Respect for Political Rights and
    Civil Liberties

    NEW YORK -- Armenia remains a ?partly free? country because of its
    leadership?s ?limited respect for political rights and civil
    liberties,? a renowned U.S. watchdog said on Wednesday.
    In an annual survey of freedom around the world, Freedom House ranked
    Armenia among 58 nations which its believes are rife with corruption,
    lack free elections and rule of law, and are often dominated by a
    single political party.
    The Washington-based group again evaluated the state of political
    rights and civil liberties in each of the 193 countries surveyed on a
    7-point negative scale. It found no changes in these areas in Armenia
    over the past year, giving it 5 and 4 points in the two respective categories.
    ?Armenia?s scores are right on the border between a partly free and a
    not free country,? Christopher Walker, Freedom House?s director of
    studies, told RFE/RL. ?So it?s actually one of the weaker Partly Free
    countries in the global review.?
    ?This is a reflection of a weak performance in a number of key areas,
    including in the media and citizens? ability to express their
    participation in the political process in a meaningful way,? Walker
    said. He expressed concern about what he described as an ongoing
    ?oligarchization of politics in the country? and increased instances
    of violence against Armenian journalists reported in 2006.
    Freedom House underlined these concerns in a statement last November
    that urged the United States to withhold $235.6 million in promised
    economic assistance to Yerevan. It accused the administration of
    President Robert Kocharian of ?backsliding on promised reforms? and
    using ?multiple anti-democratic methods? to cling to power.
    The statement drew on two detailed country reports that were released
    by Freedom House earlier in 2006 and painted a bleak picture of
    democracy and rule of law in Armenia. The findings of those reports
    were dismissed by the Armenian authorities.
    U.S. officials say Washington will take into account Freedom House?s
    opinion in deciding whether to disburse the promised aid. But they
    indicated that its release is primarily conditional on the freedom and
    fairness of the upcoming Armenian parliamentary elections.


    - Upcoming Elections Should Mark ?a Turning Point? in Armenia?s
    Transition to Democracy

    YEREVAN -- The head of the election-monitoring arm of the Organization
    for Security and Cooperation in Europe wound up on Tuesday a two-day
    visit to Armenia that focused on its unfolding preparations for
    crucial parliamentary elections due in May.
    Christian Strohal, director of the OSCE?s Warsaw-based Office for
    Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR), discussed the issue
    in meetings with Armenian officials. Speaking to RFE/RL after a
    meeting with the chairman of the Central Election Commission, Strohal
    said Armenia is ?ready? to hold its first-ever national election
    judged free and fair by the international community. ?But we shall see
    after the elections themselves,? he said.
    The Armenian parliament?s press service quoted the Austrian diplomat
    as telling Torosian later in the day that there are ?good
    prerequisites? for making sure that the forthcoming vote meets
    democratic standards. Torosian was quoted as saying that it should
    mark a ?turning point? in Armenia?s transition to democracy and
    European integration.
    OSCE/ODIHR observers described as undemocratic the previous
    presidential and parliamentary elections in Armenia, giving weight to
    opposition allegations of massive vote rigging. The United States and
    the European Union have warned that a repeat of serious fraud would
    jeopardize Yerevan?s efforts to build closer ties with the West.
    Kocharian and other Armenian leaders have assured Western powers that
    they will do their best to ensure proper conduct of the next polls.
    Strohal?s talks in Yerevan specifically centered on their monitoring
    by the OSCE. Visiting the Armenian capital last fall, the U.S.
    ambassador at the OSCE headquarters in Vienna, Julie Finley, expressed
    concern about the Kocharian administration?s failure so far to
    formally invite the ODIHR to send long-term and short-term observer
    missions.
    Both Torosian and other leaders of the parliament majority assured the
    ODIHR chief that such an invitation will be extended immediately after
    Kocharian sets an official election date. According to the Armenian
    speaker, a corresponding presidential decree will be signed early next
    month.
    ?There will be invitations for both short-term and long-term
    monitoring missions,? Samvel Nikoyan, a senior lawmaker from the
    governing Republican Party, told RFE/RL. He said the OSCE will send a
    ?needs assessment team? to Yerevan later in February before beginning
    to deploy observers.
    ?This means long-term monitoring will last for approximately two
    months,? said Grigor Harutiunian of the opposition Artarutyun
    alliance. ?Given the political situation in the country, this is
    certainly not enough.? OSCE monitoring should have begun last month,
    he added.
    Strohal insisted, however, that European observers will have enough
    time to monitor the entire electoral process. ?I understand these
    elections might be in May, and it?s now January,? he said.


    - Joint Announcement

    The regional executive boards of the three Armenian political parties?
    the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, the Armenian Democratic League
    (Ramkavar Party) and Social Democratic Hunchak party?met in Altadena
    on January 9.
    During this consultative meeting the party representatives discussed
    issues of mutual interest to the community, especially the unfolding
    developments surround the Armenian Genocide issue, as well as the
    importance of presenting a united front on efforts to garner
    recognition of the Genocide.
    Similar meetings have occasionally taken place and have always served
    as a guide for our national aspirations and interests. We believe that
    such meetings will also benefit the strengthening of our independent
    homeland.

    SDHP Western US Executive Committee
    ARF Western US Central Committee
    ADL Western US Executive Board

    - Senator Robert Menendez Again Blocks Hoagland Nomination

    WASHINGTON, DC ? Senator Robert Menendez again blocked the
    congressional confirmation of President George W. Bush?s nominee to be
    the next U.S. ambassador to Armenia, citing the latter?s failure to
    publicly recognize the Armenian genocide.
    In a statement posted on his website, Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat,
    said he placed a second ?hold? on the nomination of career diplomat
    Richard Hoagland two days after it was reaffirmed by Bush. ?Given the
    circumstances and controversy surrounding Mr. Hoagland?s nomination, I
    believe that the best way to move forward would be for the president
    to nominate a new candidate for this ambassadorship,? he said.
    Menendez went on to attack the Bush administration for its refusal to
    use the term ?genocide? with regard to the slaughter of some 1.5
    million Armenians during the dying years of the Ottoman Empire. ?If
    there is any sincerity behind the Bush administration?s rhetoric about
    ?liberty on the march?? then American diplomacy should consist of
    nothing less than unvarnished honesty with our friends and enemies
    alike. And we must call genocide by its name,? he said.
    The previous U.S. ambassador in Yerevan, John Evans, is believed to
    have been recalled by the White House last year over his public
    description of the mass killings as genocide.
    Hoagland?s failure to do so during confirmation hearings in the Senate
    Foreign Relations Committee last summer angered the influential
    Armenian community in the United States. Senator Diane Feinstein of
    California has also expressed her concerns regarding the dismissal of
    former Ambassador Evans. The Senator is closely looking into the
    nomination of Richard Hoagland .

    - Former US Envoy to Turkey Predicts Armenian Genocide Resolution Will Pass

    Mark Parris, former U.S. ambassador to Turkey, said a resolution
    classifying the killings of Armenians at the hands of the Ottoman
    Empire as genocide is likely to pass in the U.S. Congress.
    ?It will be brought to the agenda 100 percent. The resolution is
    likely to pass in both the House of Representatives and the Senate.
    Turkey traditionally relied on the support of political actors in
    Washington but this support might weaken for some reasons.
    ...Democrats are sensitive about the Armenian question,? Parris,
    director of the 2007 Turkey program at the Brookings Institution, said
    in an interview published in daily newspaper Milliyet.
    In a nationwide congressional election in November, Armenians?
    Democratic allies won a landslide victory, taking over control of both
    the House of Representatives and the Senate.
    Both new Democratic congressional leaderships favor the Armenian
    position. ?Will the genocide resolution pass? Yes. Everyone sees that
    resolution will harden relations even more but this does not mean U.S.
    policy will change. The U.S. policy is not ready yet to use a certain
    terminology. No matter whether a draft resolution passes, it will not
    have a legal character because [U.S. President George W.] Bush
    strongly supports Turkey,? he added.
    Asked whether Washington would voice support for Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan in the presidential elections slated for May, Parris
    said he personally believed that the Bush administration would not
    give a signal for Cankaya.
    ?If it does so, it would be a surprise for me. Erdogan was at the Oval
    Office a couple of months ago.
    The U.S. president officially supporting Erdogan?s candidacy [for
    presidency] would surprise me,? he said. In comments on the U.S.
    approach in the event of a possible cross-border operation by Turkey to
    crack down on the outlawed Kurdistan Workers? Party (PKK) camps in
    northern Iraq, Parris said: ?This is an assumption. A crossborder
    operation is not an easy decision for Turkey. It will not be easy
    for the Bush administration to decide on how to approach [toward a
    possible Turkish decision on a cross border operation].?

    - ARPA Institute Hosts Jan 25 Lecture by Harut Sassounian

    SHERMAN OAKS, CA ? The ARPA Institute will present a Lecture/Seminar:
    ?Genocide Recognition, Turkey- Armenia Relations and the Role of the
    Diaspora,? by Harut Sassounian,
    on January 25, at the Merdinian School auditorium, 13330 Riverside
    Dr., Sherman Oaks.
    Sassounian?s lecture will cover several topics, followed by an
    exchange of views with the audience:
    ? Genocide recognition, is it really necessary?
    ? Should Armenians support or oppose the application of Turkey for EU
    Membership?
    ? Turkey-Armenia relations
    ? Diaspora-Armenia relations
    ? How best to organize the Diaspora?
    ? The firing of U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans
    ? The hold on the nomination of Ambassador-designate Richard Hoagland
    ? UAF?s assistance to Armenia and Lebanon
    ? Lincy Foundation?s infrastructure projects in Armenia and Artsakh
    Sassounian, the publisher of The California Courier newspaper, is the
    President of the United Armenian Fund which has shipped $460 million
    worth of humanitarian assistance to Armenia
    since 1989. He is also the Vice Chairman of The Lincy Foundation which
    has funded $230 million worth of infrastructure projects in Armenia
    and Artsakh.
    He worked for Procter and Gamble in Geneva, Switzerland, as an
    international marketing executive from 1978 to 1982. He served for 10
    years as a non-governmental delegate on human rights at the United
    Nations in Geneva, playing a key role in the UN recognition of the
    Armenian Genocide
    in 1985. He has a Master?s degree in International Affairs from
    Columbia University (NY) and an MBA from Pepperdine University.
    His book, `The Armenian Genocide: The World Speaks Out, 1915-2005,
    Documents and Declarations,? published in 2005, was republished in
    Arabic translation in Lebanon in 2006. He has been awarded the ?Anania
    Shiragatsi? medal of honor by the President of Armenia and has
    received numerous other awards for his leadership and community
    activities.
    For more information, call Dr. Hagop Panossian at (818)586-9660

    - Left Coast Galleries Presents Acclaimed International Artist Samvel
    Hambardzumyan

    STUDIO CITY, CA -- Left Coast Galleries will premier international
    award winning Armenian artist Samvel Hambardzumyan in his first solo
    show in three years, featuring never before seen masterpieces, along
    with a stunning collection of oils, etchings and monotypes. A
    reception for the artist will be held on Thursday, February 8, 2007
    from 6 to 9pm at 11324 Ventura Boulevard, Studio City, CA 91607.
    With a prestigious career, spanning over 30 years, complete with
    impressive biennial, triennial, and auction records, Samvel
    Hambardzumyan is a living master. An Armenian treasure, Samvel?s
    accomplished skill and talent encompass many of the visual art genres.
    He creates both bold and intimate works through his own unique sense
    of irony and romance, using integral composition to portray characters
    which seem both otherworldly and instinctively primal. Featured in the
    permanent collections of over 15 museums and galleries worldwide,
    Samvel has gained the respect and notice of the global art community.
    From the early 1980?s Samvel was leaving his indelible mark on the
    art scene in Europe, collecting medals and awards, among them ?Best
    Young Artist? in Armenia (1985), medals from the Lithuania
    International Art Conference (1984), and ?Best Art Work of the Year?
    in Armenia, an honor which Samvel repeatedly earned four times
    throughout the 1980?s to 2000. The late eighties began a long and
    distinguished run in 9 different Biennales and Triennales, where most
    recently in 2005; Samvel earned the award of the Lorenzo il Magnifico
    Medici medal at the Florence Biennale.
    2005 brought additional honors as Samvel?s work was auctioned and sold
    through ?Bonhams & Butterfields?. With pieces in the permanent
    collections of museums like the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow
    to the National Art Gallery of Armenia, and private and national
    collections spanning the globe, Samvel is an artist of enormous
    proportion. Despite these honors, the artist continues to plunge into
    the depths of his heart, soul and experience and create work which
    speaks to the senses through story woven thoughtfully and with
    deliberate composition.



    --
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