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ASBAREZ ONLINE [12-16-2004]

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  • ASBAREZ ONLINE [12-16-2004]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    12/16/2004
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    1) Chirac Gives a 'Yes, But' for Turkey's EU Membership
    2) Youth in Athens Convey Opposition to Turkey EU Membership
    3) Oskanian Commends European Parliament's Resolution as Joint Victory
    4) Karabagh Leader Calls for Stronger Ties with Population
    5) BRIEFS

    1) Chirac Gives a 'Yes, But' for Turkey's EU Membership

    PARIS (AP/AFP)--President Jacques Chirac, beset by opposition to Turkey's
    drive
    to join the European Union, told a divided France that the mostly Muslim
    country belongs in the EU--but that Paris will block negotiations if Ankara
    fails to meet membership conditions.
    "Does Europe, and particularly France, have an interest in Turkey joining it?
    My answer is, 'Yes, but,'" was how Chirac summed up his position on national
    television late Wednesday, explaining that adhesion could only occur after up
    to 20 years of negotiations and each current EU state, including France, could
    slam the door at any time.
    The French would have the "last word" in a referendum, he said, giving the
    three principle criteria as a commitment to peace and stability, democracy,
    and
    economic and social development.
    France also wants the issue of the massacre of Armenians in 1915-23 to be on
    the table during membership negotiations, although Foreign Minister Michel
    Barnier has said France will not demand official recognition of the
    killings as
    a condition for entry.
    Turkey vehemently denies its genocide of 1.5 million Armenians, under its
    Ottoman Empire.
    On Wednesday, the European Parliament called on EU leaders to open membership
    talks with Turkey "without undue delay." However, it urged Ankara to carry out
    more democratic reforms, move toward recognizing Cyprus and acknowledge the
    Armenian killings.
    The summit, gathering the leaders of the 25 member states of the European
    Union, was expected to give the green light to the start of negotiations with
    Ankara.
    But Chirac's ruling conservative UMP party has pronounced itself against EU
    membership for Turkey, a large, relatively poor Muslim country, and surveys in
    France show most of the public was also against.
    Chirac's support for Turkey's eventual membership has been met with grave
    misgivings among ordinary citizens worried about an influx of cheap labor to
    France, already stung by 10 percent unemployment. Many also question Turkey's
    human rights record.
    A poll published earlier this week by the newspaper Le Figaro suggests two in
    three French oppose bringing Turkey into the 25-nation bloc. The Socialist
    Party is divided over the issue, and Jean-Marie Le Pen, leader of the
    far-right
    National Front, insists Turkey is a country that "cannot be European."
    "Only a rejection of the European constitution can save the French from this
    trap," Le Pen said Wednesday. "This willingness to integrate an Asian and
    Muslim country, against the will of the European people, illustrates the
    noxiousness of Brussels' Europe."
    By throwing his support behind Turkey, Chirac also has broken ranks with his
    own party, the conservative Union for a Popular Movement, which favors a
    "privileged partnership" between the EU and Ankara that would fall far
    short of
    membership.
    Although Chirac favors full membership for Turkey, while conceding it could
    take up to 20 years, a skeptical Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin argues
    that the influence of Islam in Turkey would clash with Judeo-Christian
    European
    values.
    Confronting that argument head-on, Chirac contends that bringing the
    nation of
    70 million people into the EU is the best way to tamp down Islamic extremism
    and eliminate what some Europeans see as a threat
    Chirac had previously evoked a negotiating period of just 10 years.
    Suggesting
    talks could drag out twice as long with no certain result was latched upon by
    the French media Thursday.
    "Even though he was forced to steer a straight course, Chirac seemed hesitant
    sometimes to pull on the oars," the left-leaning newspaper Liberation said of
    the interview.
    It noted that Chirac's real reason for reiterating his position at such a
    crucial time was to save another referendum he has proposed for next year, and
    which he holds more dearly: a plebiscite on adopting the European Union's
    first
    constitution.
    The French president fears that though two-thirds of voters are in favor of
    the constitution, they may reject the constitution as a way of registering
    their opposition to Turkey's EU membership.
    In his interview, Chirac said that referendum "must not be distracted from
    its
    very important goal by considerations which have nothing to do with it."
    Le Figaro, a conservative daily that was the only national newspaper to put
    Chirac's interview on its front page, said that the event was forced upon the
    president because he was "completely out of step with his country's public
    opinion and isolated within his own camp."


    2) Youth in Athens Convey Opposition to Turkey EU Membership

    ATHENS (Aztag Daily)--Armenian youth picketed European Union offices in Athens
    on Wednesday to protest Turkey's aspirations to join the European Body.
    "Turkey's criminal past casts a shadow on it European dreams," read one of
    their placards, while another declared, "Recognition of the Armenian genocide
    is the only way to Turkey's EU membership."
    Organized by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Youth
    Organization, the protest drew more than three hundred, including the youngest
    of ARF youth, the "badanees."
    In conveying their message to the EU, the youth presented the head of
    Athens EU office a statement of protest.


    3) Oskanian Commends European Parliament's Resolution as Joint Victory

    YEREVAN (Arminfo)--Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian hailed the European
    Parliament's adoption of three strongly worded measures by the European
    Parliament calling on Turkey to properly recognize the Armenian genocide, lift
    its blockade of Armenia, and abandon it hostile policies toward Armenia and
    the
    Armenian people.
    In an interview with Public Television of Armenia, Oskanian stressed the
    political significance of the measures. Calling the resolution the joint
    victory of Armenia's diplomacy and the diaspora, particularly European
    Armenian
    organizations, Oskanian was cautiously optimistic. "If during the first stage,
    Turkey does not conform to the political criteria, including improvement of
    relations with Armenia, negotiations will not necessarily be broken off," he
    noted.
    The provisions were added on the eve of the December 17 vote of the European
    Council on opening membership talks with Turkey as amendments to a
    Parliamentary report on Turkey's progress toward accession to the European
    Union.


    4) Karabagh Leader Calls for Stronger Ties with Population

    STEPANAKERT (RFE/RL)--The president of Mountainous Karabagh Republic Arkady
    Ghukasian said on Thursday that his government has lost touch with its people.
    Meeting with a large group of government officials and public figures in
    Stepanakert, Ghukasian promised a cabinet reshuffle and other "resolute steps"
    to boost his administration's standing.
    "Government officials are often indifferent to citizens' problems. There is
    mistrust towards the authorities," he said.
    "Judges often hand down wrong verdicts for profit-making considerations," he
    said without elaborating.
    His criticism came amid the improving economic situation in the
    Armenian-populated territory. Ghukasian declared that the local economy is on
    course to expand by 30 percent this year on the back of growing foreign
    investment. He also said that the government will have more money at its
    disposal next year.
    At the same time, he noted that many Karabagh Armenians live in poverty and
    are unaffected by the positive change. He urged local business people to do
    more to help the poor.


    5) BRIEFS

    EU Talks 'To Settle' Cyprus Issue

    ANKARA (BBC)--As European Union leaders are set to hold accession talks at
    the
    two-day summit now under way in Brussels, commission head Jose Manuel Barroso
    urged them to reject any half measures during discussions of the membership
    bid.
    Asked about the latest progress on the Cyprus issue, Erdogan told
    reporters in Brussels it "will be resolved tomorrow," without elaborating.
    Barroso urged Turkey to "go the extra mile" and recognize Cyprus, which is an
    EU member. He asked what kind of message Turkey was sending if it did not
    recognize all the members of the club it wanted to join. Turkey, however,
    which
    occupies northern Cyprus, has said it will not bow to demands to recognize the
    country, calling the issue a "red line."

    Powell, Gul Discuss Turkey's EU Accession

    WASHINGTON, DC (AFP)--US Secretary of State Colin Powell spoke Wednesday with
    his Turkish counterpart, Abdullah Gul, on Turkey's EU accession. "The
    secretary
    spoke this morning with Foreign Minister Gul, just to check in and see where
    things are," State Department spokesman Richard Boucher said.
    "We'll continue to keep in touch with Turkish leaders on the subject,"
    he told reporters. The European Union is waiting to give its approval to
    Turkey's negotiated accession during a summit which opened late Thursday in
    Brussels.

    No Change in Ties with Armenia over Dispatch of Military to Iraq

    YEREVAN (Itar-Tass)--Speaker of the Russian parliament's lower chamber Boris
    Gryzlov, said on Wednesday that a possible decision by Armenia to send
    military
    specialists to Iraq will not change relations between the two former Soviet
    republics.
    "Armenia is a sovereign state and the decisions it makes are decisions of a
    sovereign state," Gryzlov told a press conference in reply to a query
    concerning Armenian authorities' intentions to send military specialists to
    Iraq.

    Gas Leak Kills Family in Armenia

    YEREVAN (RFE-RL)--A natural-gas leak from a homemade heater killed a
    family of
    five in Armenia, officials said Thursday.
    The accident Wednesday in the city of Echmiadzin killed a married
    couple
    and their three small children, the Prosecutor General's Office said. It said
    the heater was set up without regard for safety standards. The family was
    among
    a growing number of victims of accidents resulting from the improper use of
    homemade heaters and from insufficient oversight by officials charged with
    enforcing safety standards.

    OSCE to Send Monitoring Mission to Karabagh

    BAKU (Interfax)--The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
    (OSCE) will send a monitoring mission to Karabagh to check reports from Baku
    about Armenia's plans to establish settlements in the area, Azerbaijan's
    Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov told journalists in London.
    An agreement to organize a monitoring mission was reached with Armenia
    during talks between the Armenian and Azeri foreign ministers in Sofia and
    Brussels in early December, he said, adding that the co-chairman of the Minsk
    Group directly settling the conflict should join the monitoring mission.

    Exhibition Captures Essence of Childhood

    YEREVAN (Arka)--Photographer Zaven Khachikyan's latest exhibition, "We are
    all
    from Childhood," opened in Yerevan on December 16. Devoted to the 10th
    anniversary of UNICEF's efforts, Khachikyan captures the essence of the
    children's daily lives. He said, "In order to go forward, it is necessary
    to go
    back to childhood for some time and to see the reality of children's lives in
    Armenia in order to improve it in future." The exhibition, organized by the
    Armenian representative office of UNICEF and "West-East" center of
    photojournalism, will last until December 19.

    UN Food Program to Halt Food Aid for Azeri Refugees

    BAKU (Combined Sources)Food distribution for 140,000 Azeris displaced by the
    Karabagh conflict with Armenia a decade ago will come to a complete halt next
    month because of a $10 million shortfall in aid sought for the three-year
    operation by the United Nations World Food Program (WFP).
    WFP country director Rahman Chowdhury said the agency had halved rations for
    refugees last month in an effort to stretch food stocks. The WFP faces a $10
    million shortfall this year, he said, in part due to higher retail prices and
    rising gasoline and natural gas prices. "Most of the displaced are so poor
    they
    don't have the means to buy food. It's a dreadful situation, especially in
    winter, when temperatures drop to minus 20 degrees Celsius."


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