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  • ASBAREZ Online [06-22-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    06/22/2005
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    1) Pavel Manukian Takes Beating at MKR Defense Ministry Headquarters
    2) Barroso Urges 'Frank' Debate on Turkey's EU Entry Bid
    3) Gul Warns Norway Genocide Museum to Consider Turkey's Feelings
    4) Armenian and Russian Presidents Meet in Kremlin
    5) IUSY Istanbul Meeting Adjourns

    1) Pavel Manukian Takes Beating at MKR Defense Ministry Headquarters

    STEPANAKERT--The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) of Mountainous
    Karabagh Republic, in a press released issued on Wednesday, revealed that
    Pavel
    Manukian was taken to a military hospital in Stepanakert on June 20, after
    sustaining heavy injuries. After gaining consciousness, Manukian said that he
    was beaten during a visit to MKR's Defense Ministry.
    Manukian, who was a candidate on the ARF/Movement-88 ticket in last Sunday's
    parliamentary elections in Karabagh, said that Defense Minister Seyran Ohanian
    started the beating, along with Deputy Defense Minister Samuel Garabedian,
    before being joined by other senior military commanders present in the room.
    Manukian's military and political affiliates, along with friends and
    relatives, gathered at the hospital, where MKR President Arkady Ghukasian,
    also
    visiting the patient, promised a thorough investigation of the incident.
    The Central Committee of ARF Artsakh demanded the resignation of Karabagh's
    top military commanders who participated in the beating of Manukian.
    They also asked that President Robert Kocharian ensure an impartial inquiry
    into the matter.
    Late on Tuesday, ARF Artsakh representative Grisha Hairabedian and
    Movement-88
    president Vitaly Balasanian held an urgent meeting with President Ghukasian
    who
    pledged to thoroughly investigate the violent incident and punish the guilty.
    The ARF release also states that they have appealed to the Armenian Ministry
    of Health to send a team of "independent medical experts" to would examine
    Manukian's condition and certify the cause of his injuries.
    Manukian's injuries are not life threatening, and he remains in stable
    condition.


    2) Barroso Urges 'Frank' Debate on Turkey's EU Entry Bid

    BRUSSELS (Bloomberg/AP)--European Commission President Jose Barroso called for
    a "frank discussion" of Turkey's prospects of joining the European Union,
    saying opposition to Turkish membership helped defeat the EU constitution.
    Resistance to admitting an overwhelmingly Muslim country with a standard of
    living about a quarter of the EU average played a role in French and Dutch
    voters' rejection of the constitution, designed to strengthen the EU's global
    voice.
    "We should discuss seriously the signals that were sent by the electorate
    regarding Turkey," Barroso told a Brussels press conference on June 22. "We
    need to have a frank discussion on that matter."
    The commission will outline its strategy on June 29 for entry talks with
    Turkey, a decade-long process due to start Oct. 3. All 25 EU countries will
    have to approve the negotiating road map.
    Barroso said that "for the time being," the EU governments have not altered
    the bloc's commitment to Turkey. Polls in Germany suggest Chancellor Gerhard
    Schroeder will be ousted in an election in September by Angela Merkel, who
    favors a "privileged partnership'' with Turkey that stops short of full
    membership.
    Turkey has a population of 70 million people, almost equal to the total of
    the
    10 countries that joined the bloc last year.
    Romano Prodi, who as Barroso's predecessor championed Turkey's entry, has
    changed his mind about Turkish membership, according to an interview with the
    Gazzettino newspaper.
    "I now believe that there are no longer the conditions for Turkey to join the
    EU in the short or medium-term,'' Prodi told the daily newspaper. "We need to
    rethink things."
    French President Jacques Chirac on June 17 urged the EU to re-examine the
    planned enlargement, calling for a special summit on how the process can
    continue "without having the institutions capable of making the enlarged union
    function efficiently."
    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged Europe's politicians to
    fulfill its promises to Turkey.
    "The negotiations must start on Oct. 3," he told his deputies in a speech at
    the Ankara-based parliament. "We are implementing the steps that we
    promised. I
    believe that the EU will overcome the current problems that it's
    experiencing."

    The US and Britain have urged the EU to embrace Turkey to help democracy in
    the Middle East, which Turkey borders.
    Meanwhile, Olli Rehn, the EU commissioner overseeing the expansion plans,
    told
    the European Parliament's foreign affairs committee "We need to pace ourselves
    after last year's big bang when the 10 new states joined the union."
    Concerns over further EU expansion were believed to be one of the reasons why
    French and Dutch voters rejected the EU constitution.
    Rehn made it clear that the EU hopefuls will not be able to join the Union
    before they have fully met the requirements for membership.
    For Turkey to begin accession talks in October, Rehn urged it to address the
    Armenian genocide issue. "Turkey has problems tackling the truth, which is
    always the basis for reconciliation," he said.
    He also stressed that Turkey must first enforce legislation aimed at
    significantly improving human rights in the country and sign a protocol
    extending its existing customs agreement with the EU to all new member states,
    including Cyprus.
    The European Commission warned Tuesday it would postpone EU membership for
    Bulgaria and Romania if they failed to introduce essential reforms, and said
    the European Union must 'pace itself' after 10 new members joined last year.
    "My message to (Romania and Bulgaria) is to fulfill the conditions of
    accession to the letter," said. "I hope that they will make it in time, but I
    would not hesitate to recommend a postponement of their membership."
    Romania and Bulgaria are scheduled to join Jan. 1, 2007, while Croatia's
    membership has been postponed because a fugitive former general wanted by the
    war crimes tribunal remains at large.


    3) Gul Warns Norway Genocide Museum to Consider Turkey's Feelings

    ANKARA (Armenpress)--Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul "warned" Norwegian
    State Secretary Kim Traavik about the inclusion of an Armenian genocide
    exhibit
    in a museum to be inaugurated on August 30 in Oslo. The prime minister
    expressed that "the museum will deeply hurt the Turkish people."
    Turkish-based Milliyet newspaper wrote that in response to Gul, Traavik said
    the museum will be funded by a private foundation, rendering the government no
    right to interfere. Milliyet also reported that the museum will open on the
    initiative of a history professor at Bergen University. The museum, which will
    open on Turkey's Victory Day, will present exhibits on the Armenian
    genocide in
    1915 and the Holocaust.


    4) Armenian and Russian Presidents Meet in Kremlin

    MOSCOW (RFE/RL)--President Robert Kocharian met his Russian counterpart
    Vladimir Putin in Moscow Wednesday ahead of a Collective Security Treaty
    Organization (CSTO) summit where several former Soviet republics will focus on
    common defense and economic cooperation.
    They both expressed satisfaction at the current state of Russian-Armenian
    ties, with Putin saying that they have become "more active" of late.
    Kocharian agreed but noted that there are issues that still "need to be
    clarified" by the two governments. "I would like to single out issues related
    to the energy sector and investments," he said, hinting at Armenia's concerns
    about the slow implementation of a bilateral agreement that cleared Yerevan's
    $100 million debt to Moscow.
    Putin, for his part, praised Kocharian for taking part in the Moscow
    summit of
    the Eurasian Economic Community (EurAsEC), a Russian-led grouping of five
    ex-Soviet states. Armenia has so far declined to join the EurAsEC, opting
    instead for an observer status.
    "The fact that you as a head of state take part in the EurAsEC's
    activities on
    the permanent basis is a positive signal," Putin told the Armenian leader.
    "Although Armenia has an observer status in the organization, I am confident
    that it will help develop interaction between all our countries."
    The EurAsEC countries and Armenia are also signatories to the Collective
    Security Treaty (CST), a Russian-led military pact. A separate CST summit will
    also take place in Moscow.
    Preparations for it were discussed on Wednesday by the defense ministers and
    top diplomats from the member states, where the Armenian delegation was led by
    Defense Minister Serge Sarksian.
    "I continue to believe that membership in the Collective Security Treaty
    Organization is one of the integral parts of Armenia's national security," he
    said. "We have deepened our relations with NATO and the United States in
    recent
    years. And I am convinced that our relations with the CST organization in no
    way impede our cooperation with NATO and vice versa."


    5) IUSY Istanbul Meeting Adjourns

    YEREVAN (YERKIR)--The International Union of Socialist Youth (IUSY) Black Sea
    Area Cooperation conference adjourned on June 18 in Istanbul, Turkey, the ARF
    Youth Office reported.
    Delegates from Georgia, Russia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Bulgaria,
    Moldova, Serbia, Sweden etc. participated in the meeting titled, "We all are
    Minorities."
    The Armenian delegation consisted of Armenian Youth Federation (AYF)
    members.Karen Mnatsakanyan and Zinavor Meghryan (Armenia), Talline Tachdjian
    (France) and, Khatchik Mouradian (Lebanon).
    The AYF delegation members participated in the "Self-determination Right and
    Minorities" and "Minorities and Wars" commissions. In both commissions, the
    AYF
    delegates raised the Artsakh and Armenian genocide issues. The Artsakh issue
    spurred debates between the Armenian and Azeri delegates.
    At the closing of the conference, in a speech on behalf of the AYF
    delegation,
    one of the Armenian youth said, "In your speeches you stressed the fact that
    this conference was very well organized and you thanked the hosts for that.
    For
    the AYF delegation, the success of this conference has yet another dimension.
    Our organization is participating in an event in Turkey for the first time, 90
    years after the Armenian genocide, which the Turkish government denies and
    falsifies to this day.
    We spoke freely and openly about the Armenian genocide and they were good
    listeners, I would like to thank our hosts for their openness to discussion.
    Currently, there is a movement in Turkey that calls for challenging the
    official government stance on the Armenian genocide. The time has come for
    Turkish youth not only to be tolerant when this issue is raised, but also to
    join forces with that movement and help Turkey face its history. Dialogue has
    started but the road to reconciliation starts at the crossroads of truth."
    After the speech, the delegates distributed booklets on the Armenian genocide
    and Turkish denial--causing the Turkish delegates to protest.
    The meeting was officially closed by IUSY General Secretary Enzo Amendola.
    AYF delegates returned to their countries on June 21. The delegates from
    Armenia will conduct a news conference on June 23 at 1 p.m., at the Congress
    hotel in Yerevan.


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    (c) 2005 ASBAREZ ONLINE. All Rights Reserved.

    ASBAREZ provides this news service to ARMENIAN NEWS NETWORK members for
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    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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