Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ASBAREZ Online [10-04-2005]

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ASBAREZ Online [10-04-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    10/04/2005
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ.COM

    1) France Says Turkey Needs to Change to Join European Union
    2) Armenia Hopes EU Membership Process Will Tame Turkey
    3) Members of Congress Urge President Bush to Support Karabagh's Aspirations
    4) System Of A Down Rally Attracts International Media Attention

    1) France Says Turkey Needs to Change to Join European Union

    BRUSSELS (AP)--French President Jacques Chirac said on Tuesday that Turkey
    must
    undergo a `major cultural revolution' before entering the European Union (EU),
    and reiterated that France would hold a referendum on admitting Ankara to the
    bloc.

    Chirac's comments represented the tough road ahead in Turkey's membership in
    the 25-nation EU. It took last-minute wrangling after two days of arduous
    talks
    between EU foreign ministers to overcome Austrian objections to start the
    negotiations.
    The entry talks are expected to last for at least 10 years before the EU can
    absorb Turkey and stretch its borders to the Middle East. There is broad
    opposition among Europeans to admitting the poor, predominantly Muslim nation
    of 70 million people.
    `Will it succeed? I cannot say. I hope so. But I am not at all sure,' Chirac
    said at a news conference in Paris.
    It will be `a considerable effort' for Turkey,' he said. `It is a major
    cultural revolution,' that will take `at minimum 10 to 15 years.'
    He reiterated that Turkey's membership would need to be approved by the
    French
    in a referendum. Austria also plans such a vote, and other countries may also
    decide to hold one.
    `The French will have the last word, as it should be in a democracy,' he
    said.
    `We will see when the time comes.'
    In Turkey, the only reaction to Chirac's comments, which aired on Turkish
    television, was from the Culture Minister Atilla Koc's office saying he was
    reviewing them. Akif Beki, spokesman for Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan,
    was not immediately available for comment.
    British Prime Minister Tony Blair, who currently holds the EU presidency,
    also
    said negotiations would take a long time, and would mean a `very big change'
    for the Europe and Turkey.
    `It will be an issue of controversy for years to come,' he told reporters in
    London.
    European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso said Turkey's entry is
    `neither guaranteed nor automatic.'
    `Turkey must win the hearts and minds of European citizens. They are the ones
    who at the end of the day will decide about Turkey's membership,' he said.
    Although the EU held a middle-of the night ceremony in Luxembourg to formally
    start the talks with Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, it will take
    nearly
    a year before the real technical negotiations get under way.
    On Octoer 20, EU experts will start a broad `screening' of Turkey's rule
    policies to see whether they meet minimum requirements to start specific talks
    in 35 areas--everything from food safety rules to minority rights.
    Turkey then faces a final review from all EU governments who have to
    unanimously approve talks to begin in these policy areas.
    The negotiating mandate says that if the EU finds `a serious and persistent
    breach... of the principles of liberty, democracy, respect for human rights, and
    fundamental freedoms and the rule of law,' the EU may suspend the
    negotiations.
    One significant political issue that remains unresolved is Cyprus. Turkey
    does
    not recognize EU member Cyprus, and is the only country to recognize a
    breakaway Turkish Cypriot state in the north of the divided Mediterranean
    island.
    Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi, appearing at the Paris news conference
    with
    Chirac, said shutting the door to Turkey would have been unpardonable--like
    rejecting a suitor.
    All EU members had agreed in December to launch entry talks with Turkey on
    Oct.
    3. But last week, Austrian Foreign Minister Ursula Plassnik suggested a
    `privileged partnership' instead, questioning the EU's ability to absorb
    Turkey.
    Ankara furiously threatened to walk away from the EU rather than accept
    negotiations leading to a lesser partnership.
    Plassnik eventually accepted language in the EU's terms for membership
    stating
    that `the shared objective of the negotiations is (Turkey's) accession.'
    Although Turkey belongs to NATO, the Organization of Economic Cooperation and
    Development and the Organization for Cooperation and Security in Europe, its
    shaky human rights record and poor economic past have kept it from becoming a
    full EU member. Ankara recently has introduced key political and economic
    reforms, and now wants the EU to make good on its promise to bring it into the
    bloc.


    2) Armenia Hopes EU Membership Process Will Tame Turkey

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--Armenia expressed hope late Tuesday that Turkey will be more
    interested in normalizing relations with Armenia and recognizing the Armenian
    genocide after the difficult start of its membership talks with the European
    Union.
    `Armenia hopes that the start of the EU accession process will prompt
    [Turkey]
    to open the border with Armenia as soon as possible and to make real
    efforts to
    protect minority rights and uphold freedom of speech and other democratic
    values and standards in the country,' Foreign Ministry spokesman Hamlet
    Gasparian said in a statement.
    `We also hope that during the process Turkey will recognize the Armenian
    genocide, something which the European Parliament deemed a precondition for
    Turkey's membership of the EU in its latest resolution,' said Gasparian.
    The resolution adopted on September 28 `calls on Turkey to recognize the
    Armenian genocide' and `considers this recognition to be a prerequisite for
    accession to the European Union.' It also urges Ankara to drop preconditions
    for improving its strained ties with Yerevan. The demands were rejected by
    Turkish leaders, with Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan pledging to
    `continue
    on our way.'
    Armenia has repeatedly urged the EU make Turkish membership conditional on
    genocide recognition and the lifting of the Turkish blockade imposed in 1993.


    3) Members of Congress Urge President Bush to Support Karabagh's Aspirations

    On the occasion of the 14th anniversary of Mountainous Karagagh Republic's
    (MKR) independence, over fifty Members of Congress joined Congressional
    Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ) and Joe Knollenberg
    (R-MI),
    in sending a letter to President Bush.
    The September 28 letter outlines the difficult road taken by the people of
    Karabagh to secure freedom, build a democratic and economically viable
    country,
    and to establish peace.
    Citing parallels between the US and Mountainous Karagagh, the letter also
    says
    that Karagagh `is a country of proud citizens committed to the values of
    freedom, democracy and respect for human rights. We, as Americans cherish and
    defend these same values at home and internationally.' It also urges the
    Unites
    States to `unequivocally support' the right of the people of Mountainous
    Karagagh to decide their fate.
    `We thank our congressional friends for defending the values of freedom,
    democracy, and prosperity,' said MKR Representative in the US Vardan
    Barseghian. `These universal values are dear to the people of Artsakh
    [Karabah]
    as we continue building a rule-of-law, democratic country, contributing
    meaningfully to peace and stability in the strategic South Caucasus region.'
    `We call on the United States and other nations to recognize the independence
    of the Mountainous Karagagh Republic, thereby affirming the right of the
    people
    of Artsakh to live in freedom without fear of violence, oppression, and
    persecution,' stressed Barseghian.
    The Office of the Mountainous Karagagh Republic in the US is based in
    Washington, DC and works with the US government, academics, and the public, in
    representing the official policies and interests of the Mountainous Karagagh
    Republic.


    4) System Of A Down Rally Attracts International Media Attention

    Multi-Platinum Band Calls for Vote on Armenian Genocide Resolution

    New York Times, BBC, and MTV Join Local ABC, FOX, and WB stations and Area
    Newspapers in Covering Event outside the Batavia, Illinois Office of Speaker
    Dennis Hastert

    WASHINGTON, DC (ANCA)--The pro-Armenian Genocide Resolution rally last
    week by
    System Of A Down outside the Batavia, Illinois office of House Speaker Dennis
    Hastert (R-IL) received extensive media coverage--both internationally and
    within the Speaker's local suburban Chicago media market.
    The September 27 event was organized by the multi-platinum band System Of A
    Down, along with the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), Axis of
    Justice, and the Armenian Youth Federation. Over two hundred fans, including a
    large number of Armenian Americans from Chicago, attended the rally to urge
    the
    Speaker to schedule a vote on legislation pending before Congress that would
    recognize the Armenian Genocide. At the rally, the band delivered a letter
    asking the Speaker to allow the legislation to move forward.
    Speaker Hastert pledged to allow the full House to vote on Armenian genocide
    legislation in August of 2000, but retreated from this promise in October of
    that year, citing pressure from the White House. On September 15 of this year,
    the House International Relations Committee overwhelmingly approved
    legislation
    recognizing the Armenian Genocide.
    The highlights of the media coverage included:
    * Over 560,000 households in the Chicago area watched video from the rally
    via
    ABC channel 7 News (Nielsen Audience: 310,980), WGN-WB (Nielsen Audience:
    231,385), and WFLD-FOX (Nielsen Audience: 22,726).
    * The New York Times covered the rally, as did three area newspapers read by
    Speaker Hastert's constituents: The Beacon News, The Daily Herald, and The
    Kane
    County Chronicle.
    * News of the rally was broadcast on radio internationally via The World
    (BBC)
    and locally by Chicago Public Radio.
    * The rally received excellent coverage in the entertainment media via
    stories
    on the websites of MTV (two stories), VH1, Rolling Stone, and a range of other
    media outlets.

    Links:
    --New York Times (September 26, 2005, Arts Section)
    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/26/arts/26arts.html

    --ABC channel 7 news
    http://abclocal.go.com/wls/story?section=loca l&id=3483619

    --WLS-ABC CHICAGO, IL SEP 27 2005 5:00PM CT Nielsen Audience: 310,980

    --ABC 7 News at 5, WGN-WB CHICAGO, IL SEP 27 2005 9:00PM CT Nielsen Audience:
    231,385

    --News at Nine, WFLD-FOX CHICAGO, IL SEP 28 2005 5:00AM CT Nielsen Audience:
    22,726

    Fox News at 5AM

    --MTV.com: (Pre-Rally coverage)
    http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1510380/20050926/elliott_missy.jhtml?headli
    nes=true

    --MTV.com: (Post-Rally coverage)
    http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1510609 /09282005/system_of_a_down.jhtml

    --VHI http://www.vh1.com/artists/news/1510609/20050928/s ystem_of_a_down.jhtml

    --TheWorld.org (a radio program in done in co-production with the BBC)
    http://www.theworld.org/latesteditions/09/20050926.shtml

    --Rolling Stone:
    http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/_/id /7670574/bobice?pageid=rs.Home&pa
    geregion=sin gle1

    --The Beacon News
    http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/beaconnews /top/batchAU28_HASTERT_S1.htm

    --The Daily Herald
    http://www.dailyherald.com/search/searchsto ry.asp?id=98941

    -Kane County Chronicle:
    http://www.kcchronicle.com/MainSection/ local/330582937821598.php

    --PR Newswire
    http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories .pl?ACCT=109&STORY=/www/story/09-26
    -2005/0004 131979&EDATE
    --Los Angeles Daily News
    http://www2.dailynews.com/glendale/ci_3065073

    --Blabbermouth.com:
    http://www.roadrun.com/blabber mouth.net/news.aspx?mode=Article&newsitemID=42
    101

    --Yahoo News
    http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/050926/nym190.htm l

    In the two weeks since that vote, thousands of System fans have sent free
    ANCA
    WebFaxes urging Speaker Hastert to hold a vote on the Armenian Genocide
    Resolution:
    http://capwiz.com/anca/mail/oneclick_compose/?alertid=8041966


    All subscription inquiries and changes must be made through the proper carrier
    and not Asbarez Online. ASBAREZ ONLINE does not transmit address changes and
    subscription requests.
    (c) 2005 ASBAREZ ONLINE. All Rights Reserved.

    ASBAREZ provides this news service to ARMENIAN NEWS NETWORK members for
    academic research or personal use only and may not be reproduced in or through
    mass media outlets.
Working...
X