Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ASBAREZ Online [02-10-2005]

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

  • ASBAREZ Online [02-10-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    02/10/2005
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ.COM

    1) Armenian Businessman Denies Turkish Newspaper Report
    2) Famous Turkish Author Urges Recognition of Turkish Atrocities
    3) Turkey Ignores Armenian Calls for Joint Renovation of Historical Monuments
    4) Absenteeism in Armenian Parliament

    1) Armenian Businessman Denies Turkish Newspaper Report

    YEREVAN (Armenpress)--Arsen Ghazarian, the chairman of the Union of
    Manufacturers and Businessmen, denied reports by the Turkish newspaper Zaman
    that he, along with the head of the Youth Party of Armenia Sarkis Asatrian,
    met
    on Wednesday with Ankara Trade Chamber president Sinan Aygun in Ankara.
    According to Zaman, Aygun told the two Armenians that turning incidents of
    the
    past into a blood feud brings no benefit. "Now, Turkey is a democratic country
    and we have forgotten these incidents,'' he was quoted as saying.
    But Ghazarian, on Thursday, adamantly denied that a delegation visited
    Turkey,
    much less met with Aygun. "The report in Zaman is another concoction of the
    Turkish press and it is not the first instance when I have to deny its
    reports.
    This proves, once again, that one should not take seriously what Turkish
    newspapers write," he said.
    Zaman, meanwhile, quoted Asatryan as saying that Armenians do not want
    anybody
    to intervene in Turkey-Armenia relations: "Third countries like the United
    States, France, Azerbaijan, Uruguay, and China should not intervene in
    relations between Turkey and Armenia."


    2) Famous Turkish Author Urges Recognition of Turkish Atrocities

    ISTANBUL (Combined Sources)--In Turkey's Hurriyet newspaper, renowned Turkish
    author Orhan Pamuk discussed the necessity to speak truthfully of the massacre
    of one million Armenians and 30,000 Kurds.
    "This topic should stop being taboo," Pamuk stressed. He said that though
    many
    avoid discussion of the topic, he is ready to speak.
    "State leaders consider that there is no need to address it, as there is a
    problem in relations with Armenia… I am not interested in the issue of state
    relations with Armenia. Many people were annihilated here," he said.
    In his latest book, Snow, Pamuk deals with the theme of clashes between
    civilizations and the role of Islam. A young Turk named Kerim Alakusoglu
    returns to Istanbul for his mother's funeral. In a dangerous political
    atmosphere, the truth concerning Kerim and the snow-covered old world city of
    Kars is revealed.
    Pamuk, one of Turkey's leading novelists, began to write regularly in 1974.
    Five of his books have been published in English: Beyaz Kale (The White
    Castle,
    1991), Kara Kitap (The Black Book, 1995), Yeni Hayat (New Life, 1997), My Name
    Is Red (2001), and Snow (2004). His work has been translated into more than
    twenty languages.
    Though Pamuk's views have been condemned by various circles in Turkey,
    Turkish
    historian Hilal Berktay, praised Pamuk as an honest and decent intellectual
    for
    having the courage to address an issue many avoid.
    Berktay recalls similar criticism when he expressed his views on the Armenian
    genocide, in 2001.
    "I think that we must get rid of the taboos that surround the events of
    1915,"
    Berktay had written in the French weekly L'Express, adding, "For decades
    Turkish public opinion has been lulled to sleep by the same lullaby. And yet
    there are tons of documents proving the sad reality."
    "As more and more honest and sincere historians and public intellectuals of
    integrity keep speaking up, this dam will be breached, this dam of silence
    will
    be breached...this will be a fundamental dimension of internal democratization
    of Turkish society," Berktay said.


    3) Turkey Ignores Armenian Calls for Joint Renovation of Historical Monuments

    YEREVAN (Armenpress)--Armenia's Culture Ministry revealed on Wednesday that
    Turkey has not responded to Armenian initiatives to create a cultural corridor
    between the medieval Armenian city of Ani (now in Eastern Turkey, close to the
    Armenian border) and Armenia.
    Although the idea was put forth in 2001 by various international
    organizations, including UNESCO, only a verbal agreement has been reached so
    far.
    Ani, the ancient, walled capital of the kings from the Bagradit dynasty who
    ruled Armenia from the 9-11 centuries AD, was in its heyday a millennium ago
    and a rival to Constantinople, Baghdad, and Cairo. Despite earthquakes and
    Mongol raids, much of Ani's immense, fortified walls, as well as the city's
    citadel, caravansary, cathedral, and six churches still stand well preserved,
    their stone facades a testament to a well-developed level of craftsmanship.
    Today, Ani is a ghost town, deserted except for the presence of Turkish border
    guards and the occasional tourists.
    "Making Ani a cultural center remains a focus of Armenia's foreign policy, as
    Armenia is firmly committed to improved relations with Turkey; cultural
    dialogue is one of ways to do this," deputy minister of culture Gagik Gurjian
    said.
    The ministry has forwarded to Turkey's cultural ministry, proposals on joint
    Armenian-American excavations in Akhtamar and Van, and a draft for continuing
    research; however, both proposals have remained unanswered.
    According to Gurjian, Turkey has appealed to the European Parliament to
    provide funding for the restoration of several monuments in Eastern Anatolia,
    including the ancient Armenian cities of Van and Igdir. If funding is
    approved,
    the Armenian ministry would attempt to include Armenian monuments in these
    regions involved in the project.


    4) Absenteeism in Armenian Parliament

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--Widespread absenteeism among fellow lawmakers nearly
    disrupted the start of the National Assembly's spring session on Wednesday.
    The 131-member assembly was forced to delay a planned debate by two hours
    after failing to make a quorum in the morning. It was also largely deserted on
    Tuesday, even though its electronic voting system indicated the presence of
    more than 66 deputies.
    Deputy parliament speaker Vahan Hovhannisian said, "Many deputies have had
    their sense of responsibility weakened or simply lack it. They just don't come
    to work."
    The spring session began on Monday in the absence of parliament speaker Artur
    Baghdasarian and several other deputies of the Orinats Yerkir Party, who are
    currently accompanying Baghdasarian on an official visit to several Gulf Arab
    states and will not be back until Friday.
    Also contributing to poor attendance is the continuing boycott of parliament
    sessions by 23 deputies representing the National Assembly's two opposition
    factions. The Artarutyun bloc and the National Unity Party (AMK) had earlier
    indicated that they will end the year-long boycott if President Robert
    Kocharian and his loyal parliament majority accept their proposals on
    constitutional reform. The presidential camp effectively rejected those
    conditions last week.
    "The Artarutyun alliance, therefore, finds its participation in parliament
    sessions pointless," a spokeswoman for the bloc said.
    Hovannisian, meanwhile, called for tougher sanctions against absenteeism. The
    parliament's existing regulations already stipulate that a deputy who fails to
    take part in most parliament votes during a semi-annual session can be
    stripped
    of their mandate.
    The provision could have been applied to the boycotting parliamentarians;
    however, the majority has so far avoided enforcing it.


    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.

    --Boundary_(ID_e8477wF7mUdCxUAIGdlscA)--
Working...
X