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  • ASBAREZ Online [06-25-2004]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    06/25/2004
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
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    1. Gorky Family Representative Expounds Family's Decision
    2. House Panel Vote Maintains Parity in US Military Aid to Armenia and
    Azerbaijan
    3. Poll Shows Universal Rejection of Karabagh's Return to Azerbaijan
    4. Kocharian Delivers Powerful Message to PACE

    1. Gorky Family Representative Expounds Family's Decision

    On behalf of Arshile Gorky's family, son-in-law Matthew Spender recently
    explained to Asbarez that although the chances of transferring Gorky's remains
    to Armenia are small, the Gorky family would review a formal request.
    In May of this year, the family was stunned by the announcement of the
    Yerevan-based Arshile Gorky Foundation, that efforts were underway to
    transport
    and bury the remains of the artist in Armenia, so as to carry out Gorky's
    greatest dreams "to return home and to be one with the soil of Armenia."
    Spender had responded saying that neither Gorky's daughter Maro, her mother,
    nor sister had been informed of the plan, and were against the idea. "Gorky's
    resting place in Connecticut is final," emphasized Spender.
    In a June 23 letter, Spender explained that a similar attempt had been made
    many years ago by Gorky's nephew Karlen Mooradian, but was rejected by the
    family. "The confidence with which the present group has been raising money
    for
    the scheme has also created a bad impression, as you can imagine," Spender
    told
    Asbarez. "But it is only fair to give the proposal a hearing."
    Addressing the point of Gorky's remains being at one with the soil of
    Armenia,
    Spender explained that Gorky's relationship to Armenia is unclear. "Vartoosh
    and her husband returned there in 1935 and had a terrible time. It was only
    with difficulty that Gorky, through a US relief agency (to which he remained
    eternally grateful), was able to bring them back to the United States."
    In fact, Spender says that Gorky never really mentioned the Republic of
    Armenia, except in one letter in which he "seemed diffident," about it.
    "Regarding what one might guess to have been his feeling on the subject, it
    would make more sense to translate his remains to Van than to Armenia. But
    that, of course, is out of the question," concludes Spender.
    Spender is the author of the 1999 Gorky biography, From a High Place: A Life
    of Arshile Gorky.


    2. House Panel Vote Maintains Parity in US Military Aid to Armenia and
    Azerbaijan

    WASHINGTON, DC (ANCA)--A key House Appropriations Subcommittee, voted on June
    23 to maintain parity in US foreign military financing (FMF) assistance to
    Armenia and Azerbaijan. The decision counters President Bush's FY 2005 budget
    proposal, which would have broken an earlier agreement between the
    Administration and Congressional leaders to ensure balanced military
    assistance
    to the two countries.
    The House Foreign Operations Subcommittee, chaired by Arizona Republican Jim
    Kolbe, voted to allocate $5 million in military assistance to Armenia and
    Azerbaijan, respectively, as opposed to President Bush's request of $8 million
    for Azerbaijan and $2 million for Armenia. The Committee also supported a hard
    earmark of $65 million in US assistance to Armenia, and $5 million for
    Mountainous Karabagh. By contrast, the Bush Administration had requested $62
    million for Armenia and had not specified any funds for Mountainous Karabagh.
    The Subcommittee's decision would effectively reduce US assistance to Armenia
    by $10 million from FY 2004 levels. The reduction reflects an overall
    reduction
    of US assistance to former Soviet countries.
    In the months leading up to the Subcommittee mark up of the foreign aid bill,
    Armenian American activists from across the country participated in ANCA
    WebFax
    campaigns calling attention to potential repercussions to breaking US military
    assistance parity between Armenia and Azerbaijan. In February, activists noted
    that the brutal murder in Hungary of 26-year-old Armenian Lieutenant Gurgen
    Markarian during a NATO language course underscored the dangers posed by
    adopting President Bush's policy. That tragedy was followed by disturbing
    rhetoric by the Azerbaijani leadership threatening to resolve the Mountainous
    Karabagh issue militarily. As Armenians and Azerbaijanis were marking the 10th
    anniversary of the Mountainous Karabagh ceasefire on May 12th, Azerbaijani
    President Ilham Aliyev announced that, "We [Azerbaijan] must increase our
    military potential. Our army is able at any moment to free our territory."
    Aliyev went on to note that military expenditures have grown over the past
    several years and "it will keep increasing in the future."
    In a briefing paper faxed to House and Senate members earlier this year, the
    ANCA noted that "a tilt in military spending toward Azerbaijan would
    destabilize the region, emboldening the new Azerbaijani leadership to continue
    their threats to impose a military solution to the Mountainous Karabagh
    conflict. More broadly, breaching the parity agreement would reward the
    leadership of Azerbaijan for walking away from the OSCE's Key West peace
    talks,
    the most promising opportunity to resolve the Mountainous Karabagh conflict in
    nearly a decade."
    Members of Congress concurred with this assessment, with over 30 House
    members
    cosigning a February 24th letter to President Bush, initiated by Congressional
    Armenian Caucus Co-Chair Frank Pallone (D-NJ), stating that they "strongly
    believe that providing unequal military assistance to Azerbaijan and Armenia
    will contribute to instability in the region and could unintentionally tip the
    military balance." Earlier that month, on February 11, Representatives
    Thaddeus
    McCotter (R-MI), Grace Napolitano (D-CA), Adam Schiff (D-CA) and Brad Sherman
    (D-CA) pressed Secretary of State Colin Powell to explain the Administration's
    reasoning for the proposed break in Armenia-Azerbaijan military parity in
    spoken and written statements submitted during his testimony before the House
    International Relations Committee.
    In April, Rep. Pallone and New York Republican John Sweeney initiated a
    letter
    to Foreign Operations Subcommittee Chairman Jim Kolbe and Ranking Democrat
    Nita
    Lowey (D-NY) urging that military parity be maintained. Foreign Operations
    Subcommittee member and Congressional Armenian Caucus co-Chairman Joe
    Knollenberg (R-MI) was outspoken in his efforts to maintain a balance in
    military assistance to the two countries. During the ANCA Capitol Hill
    Observance of the Armenian Genocide, Rep. Knollenberg stated, "every single
    time we have gotten the federal government's dollar numbers for Armenia, they
    have always been down and we've always had to bring it up. And we aren't
    going
    to stop fighting to bring it back and to ensure there is parity on the
    military
    issue."
    The foreign aid bill will likely be considered by the House Appropriations
    Committee on July 9, followed by a full House vote thereafter. The Senate
    version of the bill will follow a similar path.


    3. Poll Shows Universal Rejection of Karabagh's Return to Azerbaijan

    YEREVAN (ACNIS/RFE/RL)An opinion poll publicized by the Yerevan-based think
    tank on Friday shows that less than only one percent of Armenians support
    Mountainous Karabagh's return to Azeri rule as part of a possible peaceful
    settlement.
    The Armenian Center for National and International Studies (ACNIS) said
    nearly
    60 percent of some 2,000 people around the country recently interviewed by its
    researchers want Karabagh to formally become a part of Armenia, while 39
    percent of them would agree to its independence. The pollsters said only about
    a third of those surveyed are against the return of the Armenian-controlled
    territories in Azerbaijan proper under any circumstances, the others being
    ready to trade them for Karabagh's independence or a lasting peace.
    According to the poll, thirty percent of ordinary Armenians view Russia as
    the
    most trustworthy of international mediators and only three percent believe the
    United States tends to have a pro-Armenian stance on the issue.
    This perception contrasts sharply with the findings of a separate poll
    conducted by the ACNIS among 50 political and public policy analysts. Eighteen
    percent of them said US interests in the region are good for a pro-Armenian
    solution to the Karabagh dispute. Only ten percent mentioned Russia in that
    regard.
    The ACNIS survey confirms the strong Armenian opposition to any deal that
    would restore Baku's control of Karabagh. It comes amid a fresh international
    push to end the conflict.
    Since the raising of the Karabagh question (1988-2004), 82% of respondent
    experts consider the greatest achievement to be independence and sovereignty,
    8% guarantees of physical security, 4% confidence in our own abilities, and 4%
    enhancement of territory. As for the public survey, 49.7% think that the most
    important accomplishment is independence, 6% guarantees of physical security,
    10% confidence in one's own abilities, and 12.8% enhancement of territory. 54%
    of responding specialists see the status of Mountainous Karabagh as a part of
    Armenia, 32% as an independent and sovereign republic, while 10% find it
    acceptable for Karabagh to be an autonomous part of Azerbaijan. Among the
    broader public, these figures are 59.7%, 38.6%, and 1.1%, respectively.
    All 50 professionals who took part in the focus poll are from Yerevan. 90% of
    them are male, and 10% female; 8% are 30 years of age or below, 40% 31-40, 42%
    41-50, and 10% 50 or above. All of the experts surveyed have received higher
    education: 20% are candidates of science (PhD), 76% hold a Master's degree,
    while 4% have earned solely a Bachelor's degree. As for the 1,950 citizens
    polled, 50% of them are male and 50% female; 30.5% are 30 years of age or
    below, 45.2% 31-50, 20.6% 51-70, 3.7% 71 or above. 45.7% of the responding
    citizens have received higher education, whereas 11.2% incomplete higher,
    17.3%
    specialized secondary, 21.6% secondary, and 2.4% incomplete secondary
    training.
    Urban residents constitute 60.7% of the citizens surveyed, and rural residents
    make up 39.3%. 34.3% are from Yerevan, and 65.7% from all of Armenia's
    regions.


    4. Kocharian Delivers Powerful Message to PACE

    STRASBOURG (PACE)--In his speech to the Council of Europe's Parliamentary
    Assembly (PACE) on Wednesday, President Robert Kocharian addressed the
    domestic
    opposition's efforts against his administration, the Mountainous Karabagh
    conflict and Armenia's relations with Turkey. The 20-minute speech was
    followed
    by a question-and-answer session. The two PACE parliamentarians representing
    the Armenian opposition boycotted the speech and were not on hand to pose
    questions. Azeri and Turkish lawmakers, however, attempted to grill the
    president. Asked by one of the Azeri parliamentarian whether he had any
    role in
    the war over Mountainous Karabagh, Kocharian replied, "Yes, I took part in the
    war. My children were hiding in a basement for three years and had no
    childhood. I am proud of my participation in the war."
    The following are excerpts from the speech:

    Mr President, members of the Parliamentary Assembly and ladies and gentlemen,
    it is an honor and pleasure to address you. The last time that I addressed the
    Assembly was on a very significant day for Armeniathe day of our accession to
    the Council of Europe.
    There have been three demanding years of reforms since then that have touched
    upon all domains of life in our country and necessitated the full-time
    employment of all our efforts. Today I am here to announce proudly that
    Armenia
    has fulfilled the vast majority of its accession commitments. For the few
    outstanding ones, there is a timetable agreed, with a deadline for conclusion
    fixed at the end of this year. If I were asked what the single greatest
    achievement was, I would definitely point to the perception Armenian society
    has about its own future. The people of Armenia are now more involved in the
    everyday life of the country. There is more attachment to the values of
    freedom
    and democracy and the formation of the civil society is burgeoning.
    Does this mean Armenia has achieved the desirable level of democratic
    freedoms? The obvious answer is no. Democracy has a long way to go in any
    country that has a high poverty rate. To assure the peoples' full
    participation
    in the democratic process, it is essential to have at least minimal social
    guarantees. This is precisely why we strived to synchronize reforms in the
    economy, political system, the judiciary and the social field. In essence,
    Armenia has completed the process of dismantling the former centralized system
    of power and economy, which allowed for total control over the society.
    The Armenian economy has undergone radical transformation both in terms of
    diversifying areas of economic activity and of liberalizing property law and
    regulations. The scope and depth of the reforms allowed for a full-scale
    enactment of the market economy. At present over 85% of Armenia's GDP is
    produced in the private sector and over 38% of it in small and medium
    enterprises. Annual GDP growth has averaged 12% for the last three consecutive
    years, despite the blockade implemented by two fellow members of this very
    Organization.
    Our biggest problem is the unacceptable difference in levels of income in our
    society. Our dynamic economic growth has allowed us to develop a long-term
    poverty elimination strategy. For the first time in Armenia, this governmental
    program was developed in close co-operation with international financial
    institutions and the wide involvement of society. That strategy now guides us
    in political decision-making and in choosing our budget priorities.
    Fighting corruption is yet another important step towards effective
    democracy.
    The Government of Armenia sees corruption as a systemic evil, which cannot be
    eradicated merely through rhetoric or model prosecutions. We concentrate on
    the
    systemic change aimed at ruling out the sources of corruption. That is exactly
    why we have joined the Greco groupthe Group of States Against Corruptionwhere
    we can learn from the experience of other states on combating corruption.
    Through a wide discussion including the Organization for Security and
    Co-operation in Europe, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund, we
    have developed a comprehensive anti-corruption strategy. A few weeks ago I
    established an Anti-Corruption Council. We count on the international
    community
    to help us combat this scourge.
    Ladies and gentlemen, I know many of you wonder: what was happening in
    Armenia
    last spring? What fostered the activity of the opposition to replace
    parliamentary work with revolutionary rallies? You are right to wonder, since
    you have been all informed by the monitoring group of rapporteurs, who had
    visited Armenia only very recentlyin Januarythat there have been significant
    advances in fulfilling the commitments accepted at our accession. Most of
    those
    dealt with advancing democracy. Recently, Resolution 1361 of the Assembly was
    adopted, setting out the extent to which Armenia has fulfilled its
    commitments.
    Expert evaluations of Armenia by international financial institutions are more
    than optimistic. Double-digit economic growth figures and budgetary surpluses
    are not fertile ground for revolution. Moreover, there are three full years
    before the next parliamentary elections. Therefore, there were no internal
    factors that would explain the increase in political activity. So what
    happened?
    The answer is easy. The opposition, encouraged by the results of the `rose
    revolution' in neighboring Georgia, decided to duplicate it in the Armenian
    reality, which, however, had nothing in common with the Georgian one. They
    disregarded the fact that Armenia's economy, as opposed to Georgia's, is
    undergoing dynamic advance. Our government is efficient and our democratic
    achievements are safeguarded by institutional structures, including a law
    enforcement system capable of protecting public order.
    History has often demonstrated that inspiration from foreign revolutions
    never
    results in positive outcomes. Unfortunately, learning often comes only from
    people's own mistakes. That also happened in our case. The opposition left the
    parliament and organized rallies in the streets. They openly declared their
    goal was to destabilize the situation in the country, attract the maximum
    possible number of participants to street action, surround the building of the
    Presidency and force me to resign.
    Once the opposition witnessed the lack of public interest in their action,
    they decided to increase the tension, most probably to attract attention. They
    blocked the busiest boulevard of the city of Yerevan. That resulted in
    disruption of traffic and prevented the normal functioning of the National
    Assembly, of the Administration of the President and of the Constitutional
    Court. In the area they blocked off, there are four embassies, the National
    Academy of Science and one of the biggest schools. The organizers called on
    the
    public to undertake civil disobedience. The police were left with no choice;
    public order was restored quickly, without any significant damage to the
    health
    of the participants.
    Calling on the police for such operations is always regrettable. Still,
    authorities have to protect the society from political extremists. That is
    particularly important in young democracies, which still lack the advanced
    traditions of the political and legal culture, and even more so when part of
    the population lives in poverty and can be easily manipulated by populist
    rhetoric.
    I would particularly like to mention that the parties comprising the ruling
    coalition have many times offered co-operation to the opposition.
    Unfortunately, those offers were rejected. The opposition probably thinks that
    co-operation would undermine the revolutionary temper of their supporters. Our
    proposals were announced in the press and on television and were made in
    writing and orally but they were rejected.
    Our country is at an important stage of its advancement, and I am confident
    that there are many things that need to be done jointly. We have offered to
    work together with the opposition on the most important issues: constitutional
    reform and the new electoral code. The offer is still valid; however the
    discussions must be held in parliament, not in the street.
    I would not refer to all this but for the last Parliamentary Assembly
    resolution on Armenia. I regret that the Assembly was dragged into the
    discussion. I am convinced that the Council of Europe is not the best forum in
    which to clarify relations between the domestic authorities and the
    opposition;
    that should be done in one's own parliament. I regret that, and I felt
    duty-bound to comment on what has been happening in Armenia.
    Let me now turn to one of the priority interest issues for Armenia. At the
    time of accession Armenia undertook to take steps towards peaceful settlement
    of the Mountainous Karabagh conflict. We have done so because we greatly
    appreciate the necessity of friendly relations among neighboring states.
    However, the ability to secure a long-lasting solution requires a deep
    understanding of the essence of the conflict. I would like to outline two
    important characteristics of the Karabagh conflict.
    First, Karabagh has never been part of independent Azerbaijan. At the time of
    the collapse of the Soviet Union two states were formed: the Azerbaijani
    Republic on the territory of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic, and the
    Republic of Mountainous Karabagh on the territory of the Mountainous Karabagh
    autonomous region. Establishment of both these states has similar legal
    grounds. The territorial integrity of Azerbaijan henceforth has nothing to do
    with the Republic of Mountainous Karabagh. We are ready to discuss the
    issue of
    settling that conflict in the legal domain.
    Secondly, the war of 1992-94 was launched by the aggression of the Azeri
    authorities, which attempted to implement ethnic cleansing of the territory of
    Mountainous-Karabagh with the purpose of its annexation. The situation in
    place
    today is the result of a selfless fight of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh
    for survival on their own land. It is a classic example of both the
    implementation of the right to self-determination and misuse of the
    `territorial integrity' concept as a justification for ethnic cleansings.
    The people of Karabagh have prevailed in their striving for independent life
    in an egalitarian society. Independence of Karabagh today has sixteen years of
    history. An entire generation grew up there that can think of no other status
    for the country. The Mountainous Karabagh Republic today is an established
    state, in essence meeting all the Council of Europe's membership criteria. It
    is the reality which cannot be ignored. That is exactly why we insist on
    direct
    participation by Mountainous Karabakh in the negotiations, in which Armenia
    actively participates.
    The solution will emerge from the substance of the conflict, not from the
    perception of the possible strengthening of Azerbaijan through future `oil
    money." The `oil money' approach is the formula of confrontation and not of
    compromise. Armenia is ready to continue and advance the ceasefire regime. We
    are ready for serious negotiations on a full-scale solution for the conflict.
    That is exactly why we have accepted two last formulas of solution offered by
    the international mediators, which, unfortunately, were rejected by
    Azerbaijan.
    I want to comment on Armenian-Turkish relations, or rather on its absence.
    Those relations are shaded by the memories of the past: the Genocide, its
    consequences and the lack of repentance. Nowadays the situation is worsened by
    the blockade of Armenia by Turkey. I would like to outline two principles
    which
    in my view are crucial to finding the way out of this impasse.
    First, the development of practical ties and deliberations over the inherited
    problems must take place in different dimensions, and one must not influence
    the other. Secondly, Armenian-Turkish relations must not be conditioned by our
    relations with a third country. No prizes for guessing that I am referring to
    Azerbaijan. Any precondition terminates all positive expectations.


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