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  • ASBAREZ Online [03-15-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    03/15/2005
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
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    1) AYF Calls on EU Member States to Recognize Armenian Genocide
    2) Armenia Ready for De-Mining Mission in Lebanon
    3) March for Humanity Reaches Final Preparation Stage
    4) Kasparov Quits Chess to Challenge Putin
    5) Saakashvili Pledges Jobs for Akhalkalak Armenians after Russian Base
    Pullout

    1) AYF Calls on EU Member States to Recognize Armenian Genocide

    YEREVAN (Yerkir)--Members of the Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) held a
    demonstration Tuesday in Yerevan outside the European Union office to call on
    EU countries to recognize the Armenian genocide and prevent Turkey's accession
    to the Union until it acknowledges the mass killing of Armenians as genocide.
    An appeal to EU member states was presented to the representatives of the
    office, stressing that the problem is not only about recognition, but also
    recovery of historical rights.
    The statement continues, `The aim of the first genocide of the 20th century,
    which took place in front of the whole world, was to destroy a nation which
    was
    one of the founders of the world civilization. The world was silent. But there
    were people who criticized the indifference of Great States towards the
    Armenian Genocide. Despite this, the Great States went on ignoring the
    Armenian
    Genocide until the second genocide of the 20th century took place.'
    It concludes by urging all EU member states `to convict the Genocide of
    Armenians so as to prevent the danger of crime against mankind. Let's not
    permit Turkey to enter EU with bloody hands.'


    2) Armenian Ready for De-Mining Mission in Lebanon

    YEREVAN (Armenpress)--Armenian sappers are prepared to leave for Lebanon on a
    de-mining mission in case Defense Minister Serge Sargsian issues such
    instructions, confirmed deputy defense minister Arthur Aghabekian.
    The request for an Armenian de-mining platoon was voiced Monday by Lebanon's
    ambassador to Armenia during a meeting with the Defense Minister Serge.
    Aghabekian said the Armenian defense ministry is able to carry out de-mining
    work in Lebanon, as it has a well-trained contingent of sappers thanks to a
    modern de-mining center established with the assistance of the US government.
    He said the center has all necessary equipment, including sniffing dogs.
    Several Armenian sappers are currently in Iraq joining multi-national
    occupational forces.


    3) March for Humanity Reaches Final Preparation Stage

    LOS ANGELES--Less than three weeks from the start of an unprecedented display
    of solidarity for the 1.5 million forgotten victims of the Armenian genocide,
    the organizing committee of March For Humanity reported Monday that it has
    completed the planning and organizing phase of the 215 mile walk.
    More than 40 Californians, 17 of which will walk the full 19 days, have
    registered as marchers, prior to the beginning of the main recruitment
    efforts.

    "People of all age groups and many different ethnicities have shown interest
    in marching the 215 mile course. This coupled with the outpour of moral and
    financial support from dozens of communities including Central California, the
    Bay Area, Washington DC, New York, and Boston gives us the confidence that the
    March For Humanity will become the march of all justice loving people," said
    Vicken Sosikian, director of March For Humanity.
    "The marchers' heartfelt sacrifices show that even after 90 years of deceit,
    denial, and distortion, the Turkish government must come to terms with its
    history and finally take genuine responsibility for the 1.5 million victims of
    the Armenian Genocide."
    The march, set to begin on April 2 in Fresno, will reach Sacramento on April
    21, where marchers, human rights activists, and Armenian American community
    members will gather for a rally organized to thank the California State
    Legislature and 36 other states' legislatures for officially recognizing the
    Genocide. The "Rally For Humanity" will also promote public involvement in
    securing justice not only for the Armenian genocide, but also for all
    unpunished crimes against humanity.
    "The interest generated about March For Humanity, on the internet alone, has
    already surpassed our pre-march expectations," said Serouj Aprahamian,
    coordinator of March For Humanity. "Thousands have visited
    www.marchforhumanity.org, the official site of the march. Hundreds have
    completed action alerts and websites, blogs, message boards, and discussion
    groups from as far as Europe, the Middle East, and Armenia have been buzzing
    with talk about the March For Humanity.
    Aprahamian, a full distance marcher, says that the Armenian people living in
    the Turkish Ottoman Empire suffered unspeakable and unimaginable horrors and
    that this is the least the youth can do to show its solidarity.
    For more information about the March for Humanity, visit
    www.marchforhumanity.org or call (818) 507-1933.


    4) Kasparov Quits Chess to Challenge Putin

    MOSCOW (news.telegraph)--Garry Kasparov, the world's leading chess player, is
    to give up competitive chess and devote his time to Russian politics in an
    attempt to bring down the increasingly despotic regime of President Vladimir
    Putin.
    The man many consider to be the best chess player ever seen is giving up the
    international circuit after winning the prestigious Linares tournament in
    Spain.
    Kasparov is already chairman of the opposition body Committee 2008, a
    group of
    liberals fighting to halt Russia's slide to autocracy and to ensure that Putin
    resigns when his second term in office ends in three years.
    The committee was set up amid growing fears that Putin and his allies,
    many of
    them placemen from the old KGB, will be reluctant to relinquish office and may
    try to manipulate the constitution to hang on to power.
    Since the committee was formed a little over a year ago, Kasparov has become
    one of the most outspoken critics of the Putin regime on the international
    circuit, lambasting its decision to clamp down on the media and its
    stranglehold over the courts and parliament.
    At a late-night news conference on Thursday, Kasparov finally took the plunge
    and declared he was leaving competitive chess for good. He said, "Before this
    tournament I made a conscious decision that Linares 2005 will be my last
    professional [tournament], and today I played my last professional game."
    He said his final games were "very difficult for me to play under such
    pressure, because I knew it was the end of the career which I could be proud
    of".
    In comments published on the website of the Russian weekly journal
    Yezhednevny Zhurnal, he said: "In chess I have done all I could and even more.
    Now I intend to use my intellect and strategic thinking in Russian politics.
    I will do all I can to oppose Putin's dictatorship. It is very hard to play
    for
    a country with undemocratic authorities. I will be tackling this problem with
    those who hold Russia dear and care about it."
    Kasparov, 41, has dominated international chess tournaments since
    becoming
    world champion at the age of 22.
    He said professional chess no longer held any challenges, but he would
    continue to play knock-outs and speed chess for fun.
    Born Garrik Vainshtein in Baku, Azerbaijan, in 1963 to a Jewish father
    and
    an Armenian mother, Kasparov began studying at the Soviet Union's most
    prestigious chess school at age 10. After the death of his father, Kasparov
    adopted his mother's surname. At 12, Kasparov became the youngest player to
    win
    the Soviet junior championship, and became a grandmaster on his 17th birthday.
    In 1985, after a 48-game marathon against the champion Anatoly Karpov
    ended inconclusively when Karpov's health failed, he won a rematch to become
    the youngest ever world champion.
    But Kasparov is often remembered for a rare defeat--against the computer
    Deep Blue, a moment many thought marked machine's superiority over man. Six
    years later he drew 3-3 against Deep Junior, which calculated three million
    moves per second.
    Shay Bushinsky, one of Deep Junior's two programmers, said Kasparov was
    "the closest thing to a computer that I know as a man. Sometimes I think he
    has
    silicon running in his veins.
    "Kasparov has the most incredible look-ahead and memory capabilities I
    have ever seen."
    But such skills may not serve him well in the cut and thrust of politics.
    Andrei Piontkowsky, a political analyst with the Strategic Studies
    Centre,
    said: "I have great respect for Kasparov but I do not believe he has a big
    future as a politician.
    "The qualities that helped him become the world's greatest chess player
    will only hamper his political career.
    "He is a fighter, he has defined his stance on the Putin regime and that
    is a good thing.
    "But considering the state of the democratic opposition a leader
    should be
    a great communicator and capable of compromises.
    "Garry couldn't even unify international chess, which is split into two
    federations."


    5) Saakashvili Pledges Jobs for Akhalkalak Armenians after Russian Base
    Pullout

    TBILISI (Armenpress)--Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili assured local
    residents of Akhalkalak, who are currently employed at the Russian military
    bases stationed there, that they will not be unemployed after Russian troops
    pull out from Georgia.
    `After the pullout of the Russian military bases from Georgia, we will help
    all the employees, including local residents of Akhalkalak, get jobs in the
    Georgian armed forces. Not a single high-skilled person will remain
    unemployed,' Saakashvili said while visiting the 11th Battalion of the Defense
    Ministry deployed in a town of Telavi in eastern Georgia on March 14.
    He also reiterated that no troops of any foreign country will be deployed in
    Georgia after Russia closes down its bases. Around 4,000 local residents of
    Akhalkalak, which is predominantly populated by ethnic Armenians, rallied on
    March 13 to protest the withdrawal of the Russian military base stationed
    there. Rally organizers said they are seeking to protect the local Armenian
    population of Javakhk, and are guided by security concerns and joblessness, as
    many locals are employed by the base.
    Armenian member of the Georgian parliamentarian Van Bayburdian said he
    believes the dissatisfaction of the Akhalkalak inhabitants is not of a
    political, but rather a social nature.
    According to Baiburtian, "the well-being of about one thousand Akhalkalak
    residents depends upon the Russian military base activity, and they fear job
    loss."


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