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  • ASBAREZ Online [03-31-2004]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    03/31/2004
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    1) Justice Minister Assures Punishment for Gyumri Disturbances
    2) ANCA Issues Report Card on Bush Administration
    3) US General Discusses Armenian Involvement in Iraq, Military Assistance
    4) Talabani: Kirkuk Sacred for Kurds

    1) Justice Minister Assures Punishment for Gyumri Disturbances

    YEREVAN (Armenpress)--Armenia's Justice Minister David Haroutounian announced
    in parliament on Tuesday that those responsible for the disturbances at last
    weekend's opposition rally in Gyumri, would be strictly punished,
    regardless of
    party belonging or their rank, and added that even authorities implicated in
    the incident will have to be responsible for their actions.
    According to RFE/RL, the Gyumri gathering was disrupted when some
    participants
    scuffled with several women who raised banners denouncing President Robert
    Kocharian's opponents. Shortly afterwards, several men charged towards the
    podium amid eggs thrown in the direction of the opposition leaders. The
    confrontation turned into a fistfight that ended with four opposition
    activists
    taken away by plain-clothes police officers.
    Prime Minister Andranik Margarian, also addressing parliament, announced that
    the authorities operate only under the rule of law, and responded to claims by
    opposition parliament member Hrant Khachatrian that "certain bodies have begun
    to hire paid combatants."
    Margarian, speaking of forces that safeguard internal security and stability,
    and the army that defends the country from external threats, stressed that, in
    spite of opposition claims, the government has no other troops and has not
    hired combatants.
    Emphasizing the government's support of any opposition activities within the
    framework of the law, Margarian said, "We have no right to limit political
    rights or rights of citizens; the consideration, however, is the method the
    opposition chooses to realize its goals. If those are outside legal
    limitations, then the government has a direct responsibility to protect
    internal security and the interests of the country."


    2) ANCA Issues Report Card on Bush Administration

    WASHINGTON, DC--The 2004 Armenian American Presidential Report Card, issued on
    Tuesday by the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), gave the George
    W. Bush Administration low marks for its record of broken promises, neglect,
    and opposition to more than a dozen issues concerning Armenian American
    voters.
    The ANCA Report Card covers fifteen broad policy areas, beginning with the
    President's broken campaign pledge to recognize the Armenian Genocide, and
    extending through more than three years of policy toward Armenia, the
    Caucasus,
    and the surrounding region. While highlighting certain positive steps by the
    Bush Administration, the Report Card, nevertheless, reveals an Administration
    that has fallen far short of the Armenian American community's expectations.
    "Armenian Americans were profoundly disappointed by President Bush's
    decision--only three months after taking office--to abandon his campaign
    pledge
    to properly recognize the Armenian Genocide," said ANCA Chairman Ken
    Hachikian.
    "Since then, sadly, the record shows that the President has broken other
    commitments to our community--most notably to maintain parity in US military
    aid to Armenia and Azerbaijan--and has actively opposed key issues of concern
    to Armenian Americans."

    ANCA PRESIDENTIAL REPORT CARD:

    BROKEN CAMPAIGN PLEDGE TO RECOGNIZE THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    Almost immediately after taking office, President Bush abandoned his campaign
    pledge to recognize the Armenian Genocide. Made in February of 2000 as Texas
    Governor, the promise was widely distributed among Armenian Americans prior to
    the hotly contested Michigan primary. It read, in part:
    "The twentieth century was marred by wars of unimaginable brutality, mass
    murder and genocide. History records that the Armenians were the first people
    of the last century to have endured these cruelties. The Armenians were
    subjected to a genocidal campaign that defies comprehension and commands all
    decent people to remember and acknowledge the facts and lessons of an awful
    crime in a century of bloody crimes against humanity. If elected President, I
    would ensure that our nation properly recognizes the tragic suffering of the
    Armenian people."
    Rather than honor this promise, the President, in his annual April 24th
    statements, has consistently used evasive and euphemistic terminology to avoid
    describing Ottoman Turkey's systematic and deliberate destruction of the
    Armenian people by its proper name--the Armenian Genocide.

    OPPOSITION TO THE CONGRESSIONAL GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

    The Bush Administration is actively blocking the adoption of the Genocide
    Resolution in both the House and Senate. This legislation (S.Res.164 and
    H.Res.193) specifically cites the Armenian Genocide and formally commemorates
    the 15th anniversary of United States implementation of the UN Genocide
    Convention. The Genocide Resolution is supported by a broad based coalition of
    over one hundred organizations, including American Values, the NAACP, National
    Council of Churches, Sons of Italy, International Campaign for Tibet, National
    Council of La Raza, and the Union of Orthodox Rabbis.

    FAILURE TO CONDEMN TURKEY'S DENIAL OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    The Bush Administration has failed to condemn Turkey's recent escalation of
    its campaign to deny the Armenian Genocide. Notably, the Administration has
    remained silent in the face of the decree issued in April of 2003 by Turkey's
    Education Minister, Huseyin Celik, requiring that all students in Turkey's
    schools be instructed in the denial of the Armenian Genocide.
    The State Department's 2003 human rights report on Turkey uses the
    historically inaccurate and highly offensive phrase "alleged genocide" to
    mischaracterize the Armenian Genocide. In addition, despite repeated protests,
    the Bush Administration's State Department continues to host a website on
    Armenian history that fails to make even a single mention of the Genocide.
    (http://www.state.gov/r/pa/ei/bgn/5275.htm)

    THE WAIVER OF SECTION 907 OF THE FREEDOM SUPPORT ACT

    The Bush Administration, in 2001, aggressively pressured Congress into
    granting the President the authority to waive Section 907, a provision of law
    that bars aid to the government of Azerbaijan until it lifts its blockades of
    Armenia and Karabagh. President Bush has subsequently used this authority to
    provide direct aid, including military assistance, to the government of
    Azerbaijan, despite their continued violation of the provisions of this law.

    REDUCTION IN AID TO ARMENIA

    In the face of the devastating, multi-billion dollar impact of the Turkish
    and
    Azerbaijani blockades on the Armenian economy, President Bush has, in each of
    the past three years, proposed to Congress that humanitarian and developmental
    aid to Armenia be reduced.

    ABANDONMENT OF THE MILITARY AID PARITY AGREEMENT

    The Bush Administration abandoned its November 2001 agreement with Congress
    and the Armenian American community to maintain even levels of military aid to
    Armenia and Azerbaijan. Instead, the Administration, in its fiscal year 2005
    foreign aid bill, proposes sending four times more Foreign Military Financing
    to Azerbaijan ($8 million) than to Armenia ($2 million). This action tilts the
    military balance in favor of Azerbaijan, rewards Azerbaijan's increasingly
    violent threats of renewed aggression, and undermines the role of the US as an
    impartial mediator of the Karabagh talks.

    MISTAKEN LISTING OF ARMENIA AS A TERRORIST COUNTRY

    The Bush Administration, through Attorney General John Ashcroft, sought,
    unsuccessfully, in December of 2002 to place Armenia on an Immigration and
    Naturalization Service watch list for terrorist countries. This obvious error
    was reversed only after a nation-wide protest campaign. Neither the White
    House
    nor the Department of Justice has apologized for the offense caused by this
    mistake.

    NEGLECT OF US-ARMENIA RELATIONS

    While the Bush Administration has maintained a formal dialogue with
    Armenia on
    economic issues through the bi-annual meetings of the US-Armenia Task
    Force, it
    has, as a matter of substance, failed to take any meaningful action to
    materially promote US-Armenia economic ties. Specifically, the Administration
    has not provided leadership on legislation, spearheaded by Congressional
    Republicans and currently before Congress, to grant Armenia permanent normal
    trade relations (PNTR) status. Nor has the Administration initiated any steps
    toward the negotiation of a Tax Treaty, Social Security Agreement, Trade and
    Investment Framework Agreement, or other bilateral agreements to foster
    increased US-Armenia commercial relations.
    The President neither visited Armenia nor did he invite the President of
    Armenia to visit the United States.

    FAILURE TO MAINTAIN A BALANCED POLICY ON MOUNTAINOUS KARABAGH

    The Bush Administration, to its credit, took an early initiative to help
    resolve the Mountainous Karabagh issue in the form of the Key West summit
    meeting in 2001 between Secretary of State Powell and the presidents of
    Armenia
    and Azerbaijan. After Azerbaijan's failure to honor its Key West commitments,
    however, the Administration failed to hold Azerbaijan accountable for
    unilaterally stalling the Karabagh peace process.

    INCREASED GRANTS, LOANS AND MILITARY TRANSFERS TO TURKEY

    The Bush Administration has effectively abandoned America's responsibility to
    link aid, loans, and arms transfers to Turkey's adherence to basic standards
    for human rights and international conduct. The most notable example was
    the $8
    billion loan package provided to Turkey in 2003 despite Turkey's refusal to
    allow US forces to open a northern front during the war in Iraq.

    TAXPAYER FINANCING OF THE BAKU-CEYHAN BYPASS OF ARMENIA

    The Bush Administration is supporting American taxpayer subsidies for the
    politically motivated Baku-Ceyhan pipeline route that, at the insistence of
    Turkey and Azerbaijan, bypasses Armenia.

    REFUSAL TO PRESSURE TURKEY AND AZERBAIJAN TO END THEIR BLOCKADES

    The Bush Administration has not forcefully condemned the Turkish and
    Azerbaijani blockades as clear violations of international law, nor,
    outside of
    occasional public statements, has it taken any meaningful steps to pressure
    the
    Turkish or Azerbaijani governments to end their illegal border closures.

    LOBBYING FOR TURKISH MEMBERSHIP IN THE EUROPEAN UNION

    The Bush Administration has aggressively pressured European governments to
    accept Turkey into the European Union, despite Turkey's consistent failure to
    meet European conditions for membership, on issues ranging from the
    blockade of
    Armenia and the Armenian Genocide to the occupation of Cyprus and human
    rights.

    DOWN-GRADING RELATIONS WITH THE ARMENIAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY

    Breaking with the tradition of the last several Administrations, the Bush
    White House failed to reach out in any meaningful way to our nation's one
    and a
    half million citizens of Armenian heritage. While the State Department,
    Pentagon and National Security Council maintained their long-standing
    policy-level dialogue with the Armenian American community leadership, the
    White House itself essentially neglected Armenian Americans as a political
    constituency. Perhaps the most telling example of this is that, during the
    course of the past three years, despite repeated requests, the President did
    not hold any community-wide meetings with the leadership of the Armenian
    American community, nor did his Secretary of State or National Security
    Advisor.

    ARMENIAN AMERICAN APPOINTMENTS

    The President appointed Joe Bogosian to an important Deputy Assistant
    Secretary position at the Commerce Department, John Jamian to a key maritime
    position in the Department of Transportation, and Samuel Der-Yeghiayan as a
    Federal Judge in the Northern District of Illinois.


    3) US General Discusses Armenian Involvement in Iraq, Military Assistance

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--A top US general in charge of troops in Europe, ended a
    two-day visit to Armenia on Wednesday, addressing expansion of US-Armenian
    military cooperation, and Armenian involvement in Iraq’s reconstruction.
    “The United States is proud to have Armenia as a friend in the war on
    terrorism and, in the future, in the recovery and reconstruction of Iraq,”
    Major-General Jeffery Kohler, director of plans and policy at the US European
    Command, said after talks with Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian and the chief
    of the Armenian army staff, Colonel-General Mikael Harutiunian.
    “Armenia has offered to provide a truck company and medical personnel [to
    Iraq]. Details of that deployment are being worked out right now,” Kohler told
    reporters before leaving Armenia, but gave no possible dates for the dispatch
    of the small Armenian contingent promised by the Armenian government last
    summer. The two sides have since been discussing practical modalities of the
    deployment which will be largely financed by the US government.
    Armenia did not endorse the US invasion of Iraq last year, and hopes military
    involvement now will make Armenian companies eligible for US-funded
    reconstruction contracts in the war-ravaged nation. Asked to comment on this,
    Kohler said: “I know that the US government has offered any nation that is
    supporting the effort in Iraq ability to come in and assist in the
    reconstruction.”
    Armenia initially announced readiness to commit a team of medical doctors and
    a platoon of de-mining experts for the for the US-led occupation force in
    Iraq.
    Deputy Defense Minister Artur Aghabekian said last month that Armenian
    military
    drivers are also trained to participate in the operation.
    Kohler said another purpose of his trip was to discuss further US assistance
    to a special peace-keeping battalion of the Armenian armed force. “The United
    States has already provided some equipment and training to the battalion
    and we
    are looking at ways to advance that and enable that to grow in the future,” he
    said.
    The US general, who is based in the German city of Stuttgart, praised a
    battalion from the platoon that joined the NATO-led peacekeeping force in
    Kosovo last month on Armenia’s first-ever military mission abroad. “The
    Armenian people should be very proud of how they perform,” he said.
    The US military assistance to Armenia was made possible by the suspension of
    the decade-long restrictions on US government aid to Azerbaijan following the
    September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The US Congress has allocated about $8
    million in military funding to Armenia. Most of the money will be used for
    upgrading communication facilities of Armenia’s Armed Forces.
    Although a similar sum has been budgeted for Azerbaijan, the parity will be
    broken based on the Bush Administration's 2005 proposed budget that calls for
    $8 million in military aid to Azerbaijan and only $2.3 million to Armenia.
    US Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage argued in Yerevan last week
    that
    Baku is entitled to a bigger share of the pie because it is already
    involved in
    US military operations in Iraq and Afghanistan.
    Responding to Armenian protests against the aid disparity, the US assured
    that
    it will not change the shaky balance of forces in the conflict over
    Mountainous
    Karabagh.
    Kohler also stressed that the US will almost certainly freeze its military
    cooperation with both nations should the Karabagh war resume. “Although it is
    not up to the US European Command, I can almost guarantee that if there is
    conflict from either side, our Congress will impose those sanctions again,” he
    said.
    Kohler added that he will soon pay another visit to Armenian at the
    request of
    Sarkisian. “The minister of defense has ordered me in many ways to come back
    and visit very soon,” he said without elaborating.


    4) Talabani: Kirkuk Sacred for Kurds

    CAIRO (UPI/PUK.org)--Iraqi Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani said the oil-rich
    center of Kirkuk is as important for Kurds as East Jerusalem is for Arabs and
    Muslims.
    In an interview with the Cairo daily al-Ahram on Wednesday, Talabani said,
    "Kirkuk is a sacred city for Kurds as much as Jerusalem is for Muslim and we
    have been struggling for it for more than 40 years."
    Talabani, whose Patriotic Union of Kurdistan has been sharing control of
    Iraq's Kurdistan with Massud Barzani's Kurdistan Democratic Party since 1991,
    said past Iraqi governments were ready to recognize the autonomy of Kurdistan,
    excluding Kirkuk. "Historically and demographically speaking, Kirkuk was never
    part of Iraq but part of Kurdistan."
    Talabani stressed that Kurds do not seek to secede from Iraq but want the
    right of autonomy under a federal system to be recognized.
    While there is a consensus among most Iraqi political groups about the
    establishment of a federal form of government in the post-Saddam Iraq,
    there is
    disagreement about the nature of such federalism. Without exception, the
    non-Kurdish Iraqi majority favors the federalism of the provinces. Iraq is
    divided into 18 provinces and, according to this view, each province should
    have some degree of autonomy within a federal framework that leaves much of
    the
    power at the center in Baghdad. Since most provinces, including those in the
    north, have a mixture of ethnic groups including Arabs, Kurds, Turkmen,
    Assyrians, and Christians, this scheme will loosely limit the Kurdish control
    over at most three provinces--Sulaymaniyya, Erbil and Dhouk--that have enjoyed
    political autonomy since 1991.
    By contrast, the Kurds have insisted on regional federalism that would bring
    into one region, and one political framework, all the provinces with
    substantial Kurdish populations, including the city of Kirkuk. The additional
    Kurdish insistence to keep Kirkuk as part of the regional federation scheme
    stems from the argument that the city has undergone a process of "Arabization"
    under the Saddam regime. The idea of the federation of provinces is rejected,
    according to Talabani, because "throughout its history, the Kurdish people
    have
    struggled to prevent the separation of the Kurdish provinces from each other
    and to protect the integrity of the historical Kurdish borders."
    According to Mahmoud Othman, a Kurdish member of the Governing Council, the
    annexation of Kirkuk into a Kurdish region is not meant to "Kurdicize" the
    city
    but to remove the relics of its Arabization. According to Othman, the 1959
    census has shown a majority of Kurds in Kirkuk and that majority should be the
    sole criterion in determining its future.


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