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  • ASBAREZ Online [06-02-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    06/02/2005
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    1) Time Magazine European Subscribers Get Turkish Take on Armenian Issue
    2) Influential Senator Praises Armenia Reforms
    3) Russia Reassures Azerbaijan on Weapons Transfer to Armenia
    4) Hai Tahd Council to Convene in Armenia
    5) Dynamic Exhibit of Armin Wegner's Works Kicks-off in Moscow

    1) Time Magazine European Subscribers Get Turkish Take on Armenian Issue

    ANKARA (Marmara)--According to the Turkish press, Time Magazine, one of the
    leading US news magazines, has distributed a Turkish documentary CD on
    Turkish-Armenian relations to its 494 thousand subscribers in Europe.
    "The project's target is not to respond to allegations of Armenians, but to
    give appropriate information about both the history of Turkish-Armenian
    relations and the Armenian issue. We aim to prevent distortion of historical
    events,'' the chairman of the Ankara Chamber of Commerce (ATO), Sinan Aygun,
    told a news conference.
    The documentary, titled "Blonde Bride," is reportedly sponsored by the ATO.
    According to Aygun, the 210 minute documentary has been prepared in Turkish,
    Russian, English, German, French, Spanish, and Arabic. He also revealed that
    the ATO has been working five months to pitch the "ad" to Time Magazine.
    "This documentary CD is proof of Turkish pride, and we were able to secure
    funding for the approximately 1 million dollar venture purely through
    donations," Aygun said.
    ATO said that Time Magazine has an additional 116 thousand copies of the CD
    for distribution.


    2) Influential Senator Praises Armenia Reforms

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--An influential US senator praised on Thursday political and
    economic reforms carried out in Armenia but said more needs to be done to
    democratize its political system.
    Chuck Hagel, a Republican from Nebraska, visited Yerevan at the head of a US
    government delegation of senior military officials.
    "I have been very impressed with the democratic reforms that have taken place
    in Armenia, the economic development, the rate of economic growth, the
    prosperity that's developing," Hagel told a news conference after talks with
    President Robert Kocharian and Defense Minister Serge Sarkisian. "I think it's
    very good news for Armenia and the region."
    Hagel, the second member of the Senate to visit Armenia this week, singled
    out
    the country's robust economic growth. "I have seen and heard about the
    significant progress made in Armenia since 1998," he said. "It's important for
    Armenia to continue democratic reforms that always anchor democracy, enhance
    freedom and therefore enhance growth and development."
    "That means fair, free and open elections," he added.
    Norm Coleman, another Republican senator, in Yerevan on Tuesday said that
    Washington is trying to foster democratic elections in Armenia through an
    "aggressive" support for economic reforms. He argued that economic development
    will create a "better atmosphere for a free and democratic process."
    Hagel's delegation arrived in Armenia from Azerbaijan as part of its tour of
    Turkey, the South Caucasus and other regions which the senator said are
    "critical" for the US It includes the deputy commander of the US troops in
    Europe, General Charles Wald, and senior officials from the Pentagon and
    Congress. Wald paid a separate visit to Yerevan last April.
    Kocharian, according to his press service, discussed with the visiting US
    officials ways of "expanding US-Armenian relations." He was reported to have
    welcomed their "dynamic development."
    The US delegation also visited the Yerevan headquarters of a special
    peace-keeping battalion of the Armenian armed forces. Dozens of its servicemen
    are currently involved in the US-led missions in Kosovo and Iraq.
    Hagel, who sits on four Senate committees and chairs two of their
    subcommittees, was also asked to comment on the transfer of Russian military
    hardware from Georgia to Armenia which has prompted protests from Azerbaijan.
    "This is an issue between the governments of Russia and Armenia," he said. "I
    have always believed that sovereign nations not only must act but will act in
    their own self-interests."
    But Hagel went on to indicate that the US government, which pushed for the
    closure of Russian military bases in Georgia, has serious misgivings about
    continued Russian military presence in Armenia. "I think it has always been
    the
    policy of the United States--and I think it's good policy--that military
    presence of other nations in sovereign nations isn't helpful in the regions of
    the world that we are trying to bring peace and prosperity and settle very
    serious conflicts like Nagorno-Karabakh," he said.


    3) Russia Reassures Azerbaijan on Weapons Transfer to Armenia

    (AP)--A Russian diplomat sought to assuage Azerbaijani concerns about the
    relocation of weapons from Georgia to Armenia, saying Thursday that the arms
    and equipment would remain under Russian military control and would not
    destabilize the region.
    Azerbaijan has voiced fears about Russia's plan to move weaponry from Georgia
    to Armenia, which has been locked in a conflict with Azerbaijan over the
    disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh. Armenia is a staunch ally of Russia.
    Pyotr Burdykin, Russia's acting ambassador to Azerbaijan said Thursday that
    the weaponry was being relocated under pressure to speed up the Russian
    military withdrawal from Georgia. "We initially talked about returning all
    these weapons to
    Russia in normal conditions, but Georgia and other nations have insisted on
    speeding it up and applied very strong pressure," Burdykin told reporters in
    Baku.
    Russia agreed to begin withdrawing from two Soviet-era bases in Georgia by
    the
    end of the year and complete the pullout over the course of 2008.
    "This transfer isn't directed against any third country, and it's not
    going to
    affect the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement," Burdykin said. "There is no sense in
    blowing it out of proportion."
    But Tahir Tagizade, a spokesman for Azerbaijan's Foreign Ministry, said
    moving
    the weapons to Armenia would compromise Russia's role as one of the
    international
    mediators to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. "We will insist that Russia listen
    to our concerns," he said.
    Mountainous Karabagh Republic's (MKR) military on Thursday denied Azerbaijani
    reports that an Azerbaijani soldier was killed Wednesday in a skirmish on the
    border. Also, the head of the MKR election commission, Sergei Nasibian,
    defended plans to hold parliamentary elections on June 19.
    "Azerbaijani's concerns that the parliamentary elections would be an obstacle
    to peaceful settlement of the Mountainous Karabagh conflict are unfounded,"
    Nasibian said.


    4) Hai Tahd Council to Convene in Armenia

    YEREVAN (Yerkir)The Armenian Revolutionary Federation's (ARF) Hai Tahd
    Council,
    which is involved in promoting Armenian issues worldwide is scheduled to hold
    its meeting in Yerevan, Armenia on June 3 and 4, reported the ARF Bureau's
    press service.
    The meeting will bring together members of the ARF Bureau in charge of
    related
    activities, heads of the European and US Hai Tahd committees, directors of Hai
    Tahd offices in Washington, DC, Brussels, Moscow, and Beirut, and the Yerevan
    central office, as well as representatives of the ARF Supreme Body of Armenia,
    and ARF Artsakh Central Committee.
    The Council will discuss formulating strategy in the light of recent
    international and regional developments, and will develop an action plan for
    Hai Tahd offices worldwide.
    Council representatives on Tuesday met with Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan
    Oskanian to review emerging issues.


    5) Dynamic Exhibit of Armin Wegner's Works Kicks-off in Moscow

    MOSCOW (ANI/PanArmenian.net)--The exhibit "Armin Wegner and the Armenian
    Genocide" opened in Moscow on Tuesday at the Russian Cultural Institution, in
    commemoration of the 90th Anniversary of the Armenian genocide.
    The exhibit is based on the book by Italian historian Giovanni Guaita, "A Cry
    form Ararat: Armin Wegner and the Armenian Genocide," which was recently
    republished in Moscow.
    Russian State Duma Deputies, prominent scholars, representatives of the
    Serbian, Kurdish, Assyrian, and Tatar communities of Moscow were all on
    hand at
    the opening ceremony.
    Senator Nikolay Ryzhkov noted the importance of denouncing the massive crime
    that has been silenced by world powers, and urged non-Armenians to join the
    fair struggle of the Armenian people.
    International law specialist Professor Yuri Barsegov said recognition of the
    Armenian genocide should be achieved via International Law, and must follow
    with reparations.
    A Cry form Ararat: Armin Wegner and the Armenian Genocide," is Guaita's third
    work on Armenian issues.
    He said that he undertook the project of presenting eyewitness Wegner's rich
    archive in order to remind humanity of history's cruel pages. Guaita is now
    working on his fourth project on Armenians.
    The Russian-Armenian Cooperation Organization, which sponsored the exhibit,
    said that the exhibition will travel to various Russian regions.
    Armin T. Wegner, whose photographic collection documents conditions in
    Armenian deportation camps in 1915-1916, was born in Germany in 1886. At the
    outbreak of World War I, he enrolled as a volunteer nurse in Poland during the
    winter of 1914-1915, and was decorated with the Iron Cross for assisting the
    wounded under fire. In April 1915, following the military alliance of Germany
    and Turkey, he was sent to the Middle East as a member of the German Sanitary
    Corps. Between July and August, he used his leave to investigate the rumors
    about the Armenian massacres that had reached him from several sources. In the
    autumn of the same year, with the rank of second-lieutenant in the retinue of
    Field Marshal Von der Goltz, commander of the 6th Ottoman army in Turkey, he
    traveled through Asia Minor.
    Eluding the strict orders of the Turkish and German authorities (intended to
    prevent the spread of news, information, correspondence, visual evidence),
    Wegner collected notes, annotations, documents, and letters and took hundreds
    of photographs in the Armenian deportation camps. With the help of foreign
    consulates and embassies of other countries, he was able to send some of this
    material to Germany and the United States. His clandestine mail routes were
    discovered and Wegner was arrested by the Germans at the request of the
    Turkish
    Command-and was put to serve in the cholera wards. Having fallen seriously
    ill,
    he left Baghdad for Constantinople in November 1916. Hidden in his belt were
    his photographic plates and those of other German officers with images of the
    Armenian Genocide to which he had been a witness. In December of the same year
    he was recalled to Germany.
    Wegner was deeply moved by the tragedy of the Armenian people to which he had
    been eyewitness in Ottoman Turkey. Between 1918 and 1921, he became an active
    member of pacifist and anti-military movements while dedicating his literary
    and poetic output to the search for the truth about himself and his fellow
    man.
    On February 23, 1919, Wegner's "Open Letter to President Wilson" appealing for
    the creation of an independent Armenian state was published in Berliner
    Tageblatt.
    A man of conscience who protested his country's responsibilities in the
    Armenian Genocide, Wegner was also one of the earliest voices to protest
    Hitler's treatment of the Jews in Germany. He dedicated a great part of his
    life to the fight for Armenian and Jewish human rights.
    In 1968 he received an invitation to Armenia from the Catholicos of All
    Armenians and was awarded with the Order of Saint Gregory the Illuminator.
    Armin Wegner died in Rome at the age of 92 on May 17, 1978.


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