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  • ASBAREZ Online [07-25-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    07/25/2005
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ.COM

    1) Geneva Grills Turk over Armenian Genocide Remarks
    2) Armenia, Georgia Mull Joint Efforts to Ease Hardship in Javakhk
    3) Homenetmen Games in Athens off to An Exciting Start
    4) Turkey Told Not to Pursue PKK in Iraq
    5) Mr. Postman, Is There A Letter for Me?

    1) Geneva Grills Turk over Armenian Genocide Remarks

    ANKARA (AFP/SwissInfo)--Swiss authorities questioned the leader of a minor
    left-wing Turkish party for saying that the killings of Armenians during World
    War I could not be classified as genocide, the Anatolia news agency reported.
    Dogu Perincek, the chairman of the Workers' Party (IP), was briefly detained
    in the Swiss town of Winterthur where he was taking part in activities marking
    the 82nd anniversary of the Lausanne Treaty, the founding accord of modern-day
    Turkey, the agency said.
    He was questioned by the city prosecutor for three-and-a-half hours before
    being released.
    Winterthur police spokesman Werner Benz was quoted by the agency as telling
    reporters that Perincek was questioned for saying "the Armenian genocide is an
    international lie," a remark deemed to be racist under Swiss law.
    "This assertion contravenes anti-racism norms and constitutes a crime under
    Swiss law," a Zurich police official said.
    Perincek already faces a complaint lodged in mid-July by the Swiss-Armenian
    Association following a speech he gave in May, when he said no genocide of
    Armenians ever took place.
    Turkey's foreign minister, Abdullah Gul, criticized Switzerland for detaining
    the Turkish politician. He described Saturday's questioning as "unacceptable"
    and "absolutely contrary to the principle of free speech."
    "It is not possible for us to accept these things to be done to the leader of
    a political party in Turkey," Gul was quoted in the Hürriyet newspaper.
    "Do these actions suit a country like Switzerland?" he asked.
    Two months ago, the Turkish press reported that judicial authorities in
    Winterthur had also launched an investigation against the head of the Turkish
    History Foundation, Yusuf Halacoglu, for rejecting claims that Armenians were
    the victims of genocide by Turks in a conference in the Swiss town last year.
    Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey had been scheduled to travel to
    Turkey in 2003, but Ankara withdrew its invitation after the parliament of a
    western Swiss canton recognized the killings of Armenians in Turkey as
    genocide.


    2) Armenia, Georgia Mull Joint Efforts to Ease Hardship in Javakhk

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--Prime Minister Andranik Markarian ended a two-day visit to
    Georgia on Monday that focused on joint efforts to improve the socioeconomic
    situation in the country's Javakhk region, which is predominantly populated by
    Armenians.
    Markarian met with President Mikhail Saakashvili and parliament speaker Nino
    Burjanadze in Tbilisi, after touring the impoverished area bordering Armenia
    and Turkey, together with his Georgian counterpart, Zurab Noghaideli.
    Noghaideli greeted Markarian on Sunday as he crossed the Javakhk section of
    the Armenian-Georgian border. The two men spent several hours visiting the
    regional towns of Ninotsminda and Akhalkalak, as well as several villages.
    Markarian described the joint trip as a "historic event" at one of the
    meetings with disgruntled local residents. "It is the first time in history
    that the prime ministers of neighboring countries meet on the border. I am
    sure
    that all problems will be resolved with our joint efforts."
    Javakhk's grave socioeconomic problems are compounded by the extremely poor
    condition of local roads that have hardly undergone major repairs since the
    Soviet collapse. Officials announced that the Georgian government will finally
    start to rebuild them in 2007 with financial assistance which it expects to
    receive under the US government's Millennium Challenge Account program.
    Armenia
    and Georgia are the only ex-Soviet states eligible for the scheme.
    "I think road construction should take between two and three years,"
    Noghaideli told reporters. "The Americans will start [financing it] from 2007.
    The road construction will be very intensive here."
    The two governments are also making plans for the reconstruction of local
    secondary schools that have long fallen into disrepair. Officials said a joint
    plan of actions will be finalized this September.
    However, road and school repairs alone would not address Javakhk's number one
    problem: unemployment. Scores of local residents have left for Russia and
    other
    parts of the former Soviet Union in search of jobs over the past 15 years.
    "Few
    young people are left here," an elderly man in the village of Gandza
    complained
    to Markarian. "They want to build a school but there are no students."
    "Things will get better, don't worry," the Armenian premier replied.
    The region's single largest employer, a Russian military base in
    Akhalkalak is
    to be closed in 2008 under a Russian-Georgian agreement signed recently. The
    government in Tbilisi has pledged to cushion the resulting loss of hundreds of
    jobs.
    Saakashvili said earlier this month that Javakhk farmers will become the
    principal suppliers of agriculture produce to the Georgian army.
    "We need to provide opportunities for economic development and we are doing
    that," said Noghaideli. "I think that in three or four years this region will
    change beyond recognition."
    Also on the agenda of Markarian's talks in Tbilisi were increasingly serious
    disputes over ownership of old churches claimed by the Armenian Apostolic and
    Georgian Orthodox Churches. One such dispute resulted in a violent clash last
    week between residents of a Javakhk village and a group of young Georgians
    that
    visited a nearby medieval church. The locals believe the visitors were intent
    on seizing the church.
    Speaker Burjanadze welcomed an Armenian proposal for the two governments to
    set up a commission that will look into the matter on a case-by-case basis.
    "All people in Armenia and Georgia, including Samtskhe-Javakhk, must realize
    that if they incite tension between the Armenian and Georgian populations,
    they
    will play into the hands of our enemies," she said without elaborating.
    Markarian, likewise, urged a group of Javakhk Armenians to be "prudent and
    realistic." "Do not think that everyone is our friend," he said. "We and the
    Georgian people will build our future and strengthen our states by
    ourselves."


    3) Homenetmen Games in Athens off to An Exciting Start

    ATHENSOn June 24, the 7th Homenetmen Pan Armenian Games officially kicked off
    in the historic and scenic city of Athens, Greece as over 2500 attended the
    opening ceremonies at the Olympic Softball Stadium. Various dignitaries,
    including high-ranking Greek government officials, were on hand to enjoy the
    festive atmosphere and cultural program. Greece's Vice Minister of
    Transportation opened the Games, while Prelate Bishop Khoren Doghramadjian
    presided over the ceremonies. With hundreds of athletes, coaches, and
    executive
    members from more than 12 countries, the games will run through July 31.


    4) Turkey Told Not to Pursue PKK in Iraq

    AMMAN (Reuters)--Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshiyar Zebari warned Turkey against
    military incursions to pursue Kurdistan Workers Party rebels using northern
    Iraq as a base, saying this could destabilize Iraq.
    Zebari said on Sunday that US forces in Iraq were poised to capture the
    rebels, who have waged a violent campaign against Turkey to win Kurdish
    self-determination for decades. "They are in regions outside the control of
    the
    central and Kurdish government. If they move the American forces could arrest
    them. We have an obligation to Turkey, and to control all non-Iraqi armed
    groups and prevent them from activities against neighboring countries," he
    said.
    "We refuse any regional military interference in Iraqi affairs, whether
    Turkish, Iranian or Arab, because it destroys confidence and shifts the focus
    when our priority is finishing the political process, improving the security
    situation and providing basic services," Zebari added.
    General Ilker Basbug of the Turkish General Staff said last week the United
    States had given orders for the capture of PKK rebels in Iraq, adding that
    Turkey had a right to enter Iraqi territory to attack them if no action was
    taken.
    Turkey on Monday said it had no plan to send troops into northern Iraq to
    hunt
    the Kurdish rebels but repeated its call to US forces to crush the guerrillas.
    "If there is a threat coming from another country, this threat must be
    banished," Government spokesman Cemil Cicek said.
    Cicek said the United States, Turkey's NATO ally, had blacklisted the PKK
    as a
    "terrorist organization."
    "If it's a terrorist organization, if it's disturbing Turkey, we expect steps
    to be taken and cooperation to be established. This is what has to be done
    between friendly and allied countries," he said.


    5) Mr. Postman, Is There A Letter for Me?

    BY SKEPTIK SINIKIAN

    This has been one of those Julys that make you think that Eskimos are the
    luckiest people on earth. It was 123 degrees in Las Vegas last week. 123
    DEGREES! One of the weathermen out there cooked a pizza on a sidewalk. The
    cheese melted in 15 minutes and the people who ate it said it tasted good. As
    for myself, I grabbed an empty cup of ice to put down my shirt and went to
    watch "March of the Penguins" which is a documentary on, what else, but
    penguins marching. I thought that the images of glaciers, icebergs, and
    penguins would have a psychological cooling effect. It worked up until I
    walked outside the theater and thought that I was in Hades.
    The reason I'm sharing all of this with you is to set you up for my piece
    this
    week. Needless to say, I didn't leave the house much. I stayed inside and
    read my emails from readers who, like a literary Ike Turner, used their words
    to beat me and then love me, all at the same time.

    Let's open up the mailbag and get started.

    Q: You sound like such an arrogant jerk in your columns. What make you think
    you can judge Armenians who listen to Arabic and Turkish music? I like rap
    and
    hip-hop. This don't [sic] make me a person that don't love my colture
    [sic].
    - [email protected], Pasadena, CA

    SS: Thank you for the letter CClass. I may sound like a jerk (Do I
    really? I
    get that a lot nowadays.oh well) but at least I don't sound like a fourth
    grader who failed grammar and spelling. It's called spell check and it's a
    standard feature on most computer word processing programs. It's that
    quiggly
    red or green lines underneath your writing that probably make most of your
    letters look like they're bleeding?
    Anyway, having said all of that, I'm now going to put this issue--from one of
    my June columns about weddings--to sleep once and for all.
    You might want to write this down. There is nothing is wrong with listening
    to Arabic or Turkish music. To me, it's all the same. If you speak Turkish,
    that's even better. The more languages and cultures you know, the more
    successful you will be in life. I truly believe that.
    What upsets me the most isn't people speaking Turkish, or Arabic, or Urdu, or
    Pig Latin, but the people who relish speaking those languages more than they
    do their own language. On the same note, I think it's sad that most Armenians
    are more willing to dance to the music of other cultures than their own. And
    you know why that is? Do you? CAN YOU HANDLE THE TRUTH? Anyway...the reason
    is because Armenians don't even know their own culture very well. Why is
    that? That's because they are afraid of being different.
    So in a nutshell, if you're listening to Turkish music along with Armenian
    music and you are simply appreciating it based on its artistic merits, then
    that's fine! It's not necessarily my cup of Armenian coffee but if a
    person is
    listening to rap, rock n' roll, Turkish, Arabic, or any other kind of music
    AND
    he or she doesn't know how to dance any Armenian traditional dances, doesn't
    know what the proper, age-old rituals of an Armenian wedding are, then that
    person is in denial of who they are.
    If you do happen to listen to all these or know these songs, and traditions
    but instead choose to have a different wedding out of personal tastes and
    preferences then that is understandable. But I'm willing to bet you a hundred
    dollars and a sidewalk baked pizza that most folks are clueless and in the
    dark
    as to what constitutes a traditional Armenian wedding. Most folks know one or
    two traditions and think that's all it takes.
    Anyway, I'm not sure if I made my point clearly, but that's my opinion in a
    large pistachio shaped nutshell.
    Hope this helps calm your nerves.

    Q: Hello Mr. Sinikian. Regarding your article in 07/15/2005 Asbarez "SILENCE
    OF THE TURKISH LAMBS," my research shows that the sheep were apparently upset
    at Turkey's Environment Ministry for changing of their names from "Ovis
    Armeniana" to "Ovis Orientalis Anatolicus." These were some hot headed
    Tigranagerdtsis just refusing to be Turkified, "Beeeetter to die then live as
    Turk (or Latin? not Armenian)". What do you think?
    -- Vatche A., (location unknown)

    SS: Interesting observation. I didn't give the sheep that much credit but
    you
    might be right. If your theory is correct, then our Tigranagertsi sheep have
    more guts than some of our own flesh and blood countrymen. So the real
    question here is "Who is the greater sheep? Is it the actual sheep that jumps
    off a cliff rather than live as something it is not, or is it the one who
    listens to rap and hip-hop and loves his "colture?" OK, I'll stop, lest I
    start sounding like a jerk again. I don't want to hurt anyone's tender and
    delicate feelings.

    Q: I s***** understand your view on June Armenian Event Madness. It's crazy,
    really. My month is July. I've never been so annoyed at being so busy. And
    none of them are torturous events or anything, just annoyingly packed in their
    sheer volume. And yes, I have been and am victim to the two major events on
    one day decision. Which will I enjoy more? Not going to which will come back
    to bite me...? Life is short, let me do what I want...
    Anyways, last thing I'll say here is that I HATE the "what will others think"
    mentality (I AM guilty of it though), ESPEACIALLY when it is the only motive
    driving one's actions. WHO are those others??? Seriously, it's always a
    different other. The only constant is the ridiculous self-consciousness in
    the
    Armenian community.
    Ahh. Who can blame us...I think some of our parents, are pros at this. How
    immune can we be to it, growing up in the same household? So before I go on,
    best wishes, Sinikian, for saving the world, one entertaining gripe at a time

    P.S. (My friend actually e-mailed a group of us that article w/ subject "From
    Asbarez--Hilarious!")
    -- Anonymous, (from the internet.)

    SS: Your comment about our parents raising us to believe in the "What will
    others think?" philosophy is absolutely true. It made me think of that
    ridiculous 80s anti-drug commercial where a Wall Street type father confronts
    his kid with a bag full of white powder and asks, "WHO TAUGHT YOU HOW TO DO
    THIS?" and the kid breaks down crying "YOU did. I learned it by watching
    YOU!" This answer is followed by a dumbfounded look and a fade-to-black
    screen
    telling viewers that parents who use drugs have children who use drugs. This
    was the precursor to the fried egg "This is your brain on drugs" commercial.
    (On an unrelated side note: waitresses at Denny's don't think it's funny when
    you order their Grand Slam Breakfast and ask for "two brains on drugs
    over-easy") Don't fret. Remember that only you can prevent such idiocy from
    continuing in our communities and have the power to change your surroundings.
    Thanks for the letter and dare I say it, but your friends sound like really
    cool people with great taste!

    Q: Recently a City Councilmember in Burbank, California was arrested on
    charges of possession of cocaine and having loaded firearms in her house in
    the
    reach of children. So far the people in Burbank have been supportive of her
    and she has said she'll come back to finish her term on the Council. Is it
    just me or had this happened in Glendale or to an Armenian, a lynch mob would
    have taken the Armenian Councilembmer to the town center, tar and feathered
    him, and then hung him by his feet?
    -- Peter, Burbank

    SS: Guns? Cocaine? Politicians? Burbank? I'm sorry I had to read that
    paragraph over again and then had to check all the facts of your letter but
    you're right. I just didn't believe it at first. Wow. This sounds more like
    Bogota, Columbia than Burbank, California. I'd pay top dollar to see this
    Councilmember at the next town hall meeting reach into her jacket pocket, yell
    out "SAY KHELLO TO MY LEETLE FRIEND!" and then pull out a gavel to start the
    meeting while wiping powder off her nose, the whole time laughing an insane
    drug induced laugh that sounds like a cross between Mozart in "Amadeus" and
    Eddie Murphy in "Raw." What the heck is going on??
    I hate to say it, but you're probably right. I think that sometimes when
    there's a crime to be solved and the suspect is a member of a minority group,
    the general public finds it easier to play the blame game. It's never
    society's fault, or the fact that s/he never watched enough 80s anti-drug
    commercials starring Nancy Reagan. It's almost like there's a strange
    reversal
    of law in America whenever a minority is accused of a crime as apposed to
    someone who is part of the mainstream. As soon as it's an African-American
    Mayor from DC, an Armenian official from Central California or whoever, the
    Napoleonic code of GUILTY until proven INNOCENT becomes the norm. Sad but
    true.
    All I can say is that this story just goes to show you that nobody's perfect
    and that drugs will ruin anyone's life no matter what race, color or creed a
    person is.
    Thanks to all my readers for all their comments, criticisms, questions and
    random thoughts. I love you guys for making this column fun for me to write
    and I couldn't keep doing it without you! I'll see you all next week.same Skep
    time.same Skep channel.

    Skeptik Sinikian would like to remind all his readers that drugs are bad and
    to be cool, don't be a fool, and stay in school! This message was brought to
    you by the Skeptik Sinikian School for Gifted and Talented Rappers and
    Hip-Hoppers. To enroll, email [email protected] or visit
    www.sinikian.blogspot.com.


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    (c) 2005 ASBAREZ ONLINE. All Rights Reserved.

    ASBAREZ provides this news service to ARMENIAN NEWS NETWORK members for
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