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  • ASBAREZ Online [02-23-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    02/23/2005
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
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    1) Regional ANC Office to Be Established in Middle East
    2) Wall Street Journal Article about Turkey Causes Waves of Shock
    3) Georgia and Russia at Impasse Says New Premier
    4) Senior Official Arrested on Corruption Charges

    1) Regional ANC Office to Be Established in Middle East

    YEREVAN (Yerkir)--The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Bureau has
    decided to establish a regional Armenian National Committee office in the
    Middle East to meet the challenges of ensuring continuity and success of
    efforts commemorating the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide.
    A fundraising banquet will be held on February 26 in Paris, chaired by
    Catholicos Aram I, where upcoming projects will be presented. Public figures
    and dignitaries from Armenia, Russia, Europe, and the Middle East have been
    invited to attend.


    2) Wall Street Journal Article about Turkey Causes Waves of Shock

    ISTANBUL (Armenpress)--As the Turkish Daily "Zaman" reported recently, Robert
    L. Pollock's article titled "The Sick Man of Europe--Again," which appeared in
    the February 16 issue of the Wall Street Journal, has sent shock waves
    throughout the Republic of Turkey. Given the Journal's friendly stance towards
    Turkey during the past five decades, and its senior editorial page writer's
    personal attitude about the country--Pollock described himself as a friend of
    Turkey during an interview--the Turkish newspaper speculates that the article
    can only indicate a major shift in American sentiment toward the republic.
    In the article, Pollock states that during a recent visit to Turkey he
    discovered "a poisonous atmosphere--one in which just about every politician
    and media outlet (secular and religious) preaches an extreme combination of
    America- and Jew-hatred that...voluntarily goes far further than anything
    found
    in most of the Arab world's state-controlled press. If I hesitate to call it
    Nazi-like, that's only because Goebbels would probably have rejected much
    of it
    as too crude."
    Pollock fills his American audience in on the various rumors spread by
    Turkish
    newspapers regarding US's presence in Iraq. "Yeni Safak," which Pollock states
    is Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan's favorite, has unveiled a number of
    "scoops," including reports detailing the rape and murder of Iraqi women and
    children by US forces, the deployment of 1000 Israeli troops in Iraq, and the
    harvesting of the innards of dead Iraqis for the eventual sale on the US
    "organ
    market."
    Referring to US Ambassador Eric Edelman's difficulties in light of such
    attitudes, Pollock notes, "Never in an ostensibly friendly country have I had
    the impression of embassy staff so besieged. Erdogan's office recently forbade
    Turkish officials from attending a reception at the ambassador's residence in
    honor of the 'Ecumenical ' Patriarch of the Orthodox Church, who resides in
    Istanbul. Why? Because 'ecumenical' means universal, which somehow makes it
    all
    part of a plot to carve up Turkey."
    After describing several other such examples, Pollock ends his article
    with an
    ominous warning: "Turkey could easily become just another second-rate country:
    small-minded, paranoid, marginal and--how could it be
    otherwise?--friendless in
    America and unwelcome in Europe!"
    According to "Zaman," Armenian- and Greek-Americans have provided significant
    support to Robert L. Pollock, in response to his views on Turkey. A
    Greek-American organization, according to "Zaman," has also distributed copies
    of Pollock's article to members of Congress.
    Among the many postings on the Wall Street Journal's website, was one by a
    reader named David Govett, who wrote: "Turkey cannot be the sick man of Europe
    because it has never been a part of Europe. Ataturk's initiatives to modernize
    Turkey were as successful as Crazy Peter's Westernization attempts on Russia."


    3) Georgia and Russia at Impasse Says New Premier

    By Arkady Ostrovsky

    TBILISI--Relations between Russia and Georgia have reached a stalemate that
    jeopardizes Georgia's efforts to restore stability and its territorial
    integrity, Zurab Nogaideli, the country's new prime minister, has told the
    Financial Times.
    Georgia's 15-month-old government, installed after a popular uprising ousted
    president Eduard Schevardnadze, is struggling to regain control over the
    break-away regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia--both backed by Russia.
    US President Bush told European leaders this week that Georgia was one of the
    countries that needed assistance in developing democracy.
    But Russia, which still has military bases in Georgia, has strongly opposed
    Tbilisi's efforts to establish control over South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Moscow
    has also used combative language in relation to Georgia, accusing it of
    harboring terrorists from neighboring Chechnya.
    In his first interview since taking office, Nogaideli said a recent visit by
    Sergei Lavrov, Russia's foreign minister, had failed to achieve a breakthrough
    in the relationship between the two countries, which has turned increasingly
    sour during the past year.
    Nogaideli, former finance minister in the government of Zurab Zhvania, who
    died of carbon monoxide poisoning this month, had said: "For us the most
    important problem in the relationship with Russia is the resolution of
    conflicts on our territory. We want to solve the issue of territorial
    integrity
    peacefully. But everyone understands that without Russia's good will, it will
    be impossible."
    Lavrov's visit was overshadowed by a diplomatic spat after the Russian
    foreign
    minister declined an invitation to lay flowers at the memorial for Georgian
    soldiers who died in a military conflict with Abkhazia in the early 1990s.
    However, in an interview on Russian television last weekend, Lavrov indicated
    that Russia no longer considered Georgia to be under his country's hegemony.
    Both Ukraine and Georgia, he said, were "absolutely sovereign, absolutely
    equal
    states in the new geopolitical architecture."
    Georgian politicians said there was a risk that Russia would test its strength
    against Georgia to compensate for its failings in Ukraine.
    One senior official said: "There is a real danger that Georgia will become a
    foreign-policy Yukos for Russia, designed to demonstrate its strength."
    Russia suffered a humiliating defeat when it failed to influence the outcome
    of Ukrainian elections last year and its tough stance towards Georgia is seen
    as part of the Kremlin's efforts to prove its influence in the former Soviet
    space.
    However, while the official relationship with Moscow has been difficult,
    Georgia has managed to attract Russian investment. "We find talking to Russian
    investors easier than talking to the Russian government," Nogaideli said.


    4) Senior Official Arrested on Corruption Charges

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--A former high-ranking official at the Armenian Finance
    Ministry who was in charge of overseeing the use of public funds by various
    government agencies has been arrested on corruption charges, state prosecutors
    announced on Wednesday.
    The spokesman for the Prosecutor-General's Office, Gurgen Ambarian, said that
    Levon Shahinian, who headed the ministry's financial oversight department, was
    charged the previous night with large-scale fraud that allegedly allowed
    him to
    pocket about 40 million drams ($85,000). He said the money was meant to be
    paid
    to two private auditing firms.
    Under Armenia's Criminal Code the accusations carry between four and eight
    years' imprisonment.
    Ambarian alleged that Shahinian forged "financial agreements, reports and
    other documents" to defraud the auditors, but refused to detail the
    accusations. It was also unclear if the suspect has pleaded guilty to the
    charges.
    Shahinian, who headed the Finance Ministry department since 2001, was
    relieved
    of his duties a week ago "at his own request," according to a ministry
    spokesman.
    The department inspects ministries and other government agencies that are
    financed through the state budget. Some of them are audited by private firms
    contracted by the government.


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