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  • ASBAREZ Online [01-12-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    01/12/2005
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ.COM

    1) Oskanian Holds Press Conference after Meeting with Azeri Counterpart
    2) Schwarz Joins Congressional Armenian Caucus
    3) Turkey Criticized by Europe's Rights Court over Treatment of Journalist
    4) Kocharian, Vardanian Prioritize Social Sector

    1) Oskanian Holds Press Conference after Meeting with Azeri Counterpart

    YEREVAN (Armenpress/RFE-RL)--Foreign Affairs Minister Vartan Oskanian revealed
    during a press conference on Wednesday that 2005 could prove to be decisive
    for
    the resolution of the Mountainous Karabagh conflict.
    "The second phase of the Prague process will be qualitatively different from
    the previous phases," he said, referring to his face-to-face meeting with
    Azerbaijan's Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov on Tuesday.
    "A serious political will and consistency must be displayed here. The year
    will be quite intensive," he told a news conference Yerevan.
    Without divulging details about his meeting with Mammadyarov and separate
    talks with international mediators also held in Prague on Tuesday, Oskanian
    said that the conflicting parties have yet to reach a full agreement on "the
    framework of issues" that have been the main subject of their discussions
    since
    last spring.
    Noting that the Azeri press very often releases inaccurate information,
    Oskanian stressed, "We have entered a more serious round in the negotiation
    process and in order not to put the other side in a difficult position we must
    be careful in our statements."
    Mammadyarov was similarly reserved in publicly commenting about the meeting.
    "We are happy with the current level of discussions," Azeri media quoted
    him as
    saying. "The main result of the meeting is that the parties agreed to continue
    negotiations in a positive spirit."


    2) Schwarz Joins Congressional Armenian Caucus

    Detroit, MI (ANCA)--Newly elected Rep. John "Joe" Schwarz has become the
    newest
    member of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues. Schwarz's entrance into
    the Caucus brings its membership to over 140.
    During Schwarz's campaign for Congress last year, the ANC of Michigan
    played a
    key role in supporting the candidate by introducing him to members of the
    local
    Armenian-American community, as well as co-sponsoring a fundraiser with
    Armen-PAC and AAPAC of Michigan last June before Michigan's August primary
    election. Schwarz's 7th Congressional District stretches from Western
    Washtenaw
    County near Ann Arbor to Coldwater, near the Indiana border.
    With Schwarz's Caucus membership, Michigan's 15-member Congressional
    delegation will now have 13 Caucus members. "I am very appreciative for the
    superb support given to my candidacy for Congress by the Michigan
    Armenian-American Community, and I look forward to being an active Member on
    the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues," said Schwarz. "As a student of
    history, I have always been fascinated by the history, the great trials and
    tribulations, and the pride in heritage of the Armenian People."
    "We welcome Joe's membership in the Armenian Issues Caucus and look
    forward to
    working with him on a number of issues of special concern to his
    Armenian-American constituents," said Georgi-Ann Oshagan, ANC of Michigan
    chairwoman. "Joe promised us here in southeastern Michigan that he would
    immediately join the Caucus if elected, and he kept that promise."
    Schwarz is a practicing physician and served in Vietnam in the US Navy. He
    also worked for the Central Intelligence Agency. Schwarz was most recently a
    state senator from Battle Creek, and is a former city commissioner and
    mayor of
    Battle Creek.
    Founded in 1995, the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues is a bipartisan
    forum for the discussion of policies to foster increased cooperation between
    the United States and Armenian governments and to strengthen the enduring
    bonds
    between the American and Armenian peoples. It was founded by Congressmen Frank
    Pallone (D-NJ) and John Porter (R-IL) and is currently co-chaired by Rep.
    Pallone and Michigan Republican Joe Knollenberg.


    3) Turkey Criticized by Europe's Rights Court over Treatment of Journalist

    STRASBOURG (AFP)--Turkey was criticized by the European Court of Human Rights
    on Tuesday over its treatment of a journalist who reviewed books about the
    sensitive Kurdish southeast of the country.
    One of the books reviewed by Attila Halis in January 1994 was written by
    convicted Kurdish rebel leader Abdullah Ocalan, who for many years was
    Turkey's
    most wanted man. Ocalan was captured by Turkish undercover agents in Kenya in
    1999, brought back to Turkey, and sentenced to death. His sentence was later
    changed to life in prison.
    Rebels from the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) have been held responsible by
    Ankara for a 15-year civil conflict that claimed more than 30,000 lives in
    southeast Turkey.
    Halis was given a one-year jail sentence and a heavy fine in March 1995 for
    disseminating propaganda after a trial presided over by a Turkish military
    judge.
    After losing an appeal, Halis went on the run, but the Turkish police caught
    up with him in March 2002. His sentence was finally suspended in July the same
    year.
    The European court declared that Ankara had violated the European Convention
    on Human Rights in two areas: the right to freedom of expression and the right
    to a free and fair trial.
    "The applicants conviction was disproportionate to the aims pursued and,
    accordingly, not necessary in a democratic society," the court declared.
    The article was never actually published, as the January 2, 1994 edition of
    the paper, Ozgur Gundem, was seized before it was distributed.
    At a historic summit in Brussels in December, Turkey was invited by the
    European Union to begin membership talks in October; however, the country was
    advised that it must ensure that recent legislation adopted to improve human
    rights was applied at all levels.
    The president of the European Court of Human Rights Luzius Wildhaber recently
    declared that Turkey's once widely faulted legal practices were approaching
    European standards.


    4) Kocharian, Vardanian Prioritize Social Sector

    YEREVAN (Yerkir)--President Robert Kocharian and Labor and Social Affairs
    Minister Aghvan Vardanian discussed social sector reforms on Tuesday, and
    announced that their 2005 priorities include reforming the pension system.
    They
    proposed the introduction of a mixed system that combines public and private
    sources to finance pensions.
    Vardanian said the two also discussed the introduction of Social Security
    cards to the country, noting that 2.2 million people have applied, and 1.6
    million have already been issued cards.
    The Social Security Foundation was also reviewed at the meeting, the minister
    said, adding that beginning this year, the social security tax will be
    collected by the Tax Inspectorate.


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