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  • ASBAREZ Online [05-09-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    05/09/2005
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    1) Liberation of Shushi, End of WWII Cause for Celebrations in Armenia
    2) Catholicos Aram I Calls on Germany Church to Back Genocide Recognition
    Efforts
    3) Army Head Warns Azerbaijan
    4) Armenian-Azeri Summit 'Could Break Karabagh Impasse'
    5) Bush Arrives in Georgia to Support Pro-West Drive

    1. Liberation of Shushi, End of WWII Cause for Celebrations in Armenia

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL, Armenpress)--Armenia officially marked on Monday the 60th
    anniversary of the end of the World War II, honoring and remembering hundreds
    of thousands of its citizens that contributed to the Allied victory over Nazi
    Germany.
    In two-day official celebrations, Armenia also marked the 13th anniversary of
    Mountainous Karabagh's ancient city of Shushi from Azerbaijan.
    `I think that if the Shushi operations had failed the Azerbaijanis would have
    easily occupied Karabagh,' Defense Minister Serj Sarkisian said on Monday,
    after visiting Yerevan's Yerablur military cemetery with other senior
    government officials and the top brass of Armenia's Armed Forces.
    The fall of Shushi was one of Azerbaijan's most serious military setbacks and
    proved vital for Armenian victory in the 1991-94 war. The anniversary was
    marked as a day of mourning in Baku.
    President Robert Kocharian issued a written address to the nation in
    connection to both victories:
    `In 1992, the Armenian people achieved a new victory after liberating the
    town
    of Shushi in Karabagh. In the war imposed on us we again proved that we are
    always ready to protect our people's right for peaceful life. Again
    congratulating all of us on the great date I wish all us peace. Our
    devotion to
    the fatherland should be displayed in the raising of the new generation and
    the
    building of a new state.'
    For Victory Day celebration, hundreds of gray-haired war veterans wearing
    wartime medals were joined by senior government officials as they paid tribute
    to their fallen comrades at the tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Yerevan's
    Victory Park. Thousands of younger Armenians laid flowers by its eternal fire
    throughout the day.
    The nationwide celebrations began with a military parade and ended with a
    concert and fireworks show at the WWII memorial in Yerevan. Separate
    wreath-laying ceremonies were also held by the statutes of the two most
    prominent and high-level Armenian participants of the war: Marshal Ivan
    Baghramian and Admiral Ivan Isakov.
    Praising the bravery of Armenian soldiers during WWII, President Kocharian
    told the nation, `Armenia's revival was made possible by that victory and
    [ensued] peace,' he said. `Armenians showed unique examples of bravery and
    sacrifice within the ranks of the Soviet army.'
    Kocharian issued the statement ahead of his departure to Moscow at the
    weekend. He was among nearly 60 heads of state and government and other
    international dignitaries who arrived in Russia to take part in the
    anniversary
    celebrations.
    Some 600,000 citizens of Soviet Armenia took part in what many people in the
    former USSR call the Great Patriotic War. Nearly half of them lost their
    lives--a catastrophic death toll for what was then a republic of less than two
    million inhabitants.
    Just over 19,000 war veterans remained alive as of May 2000.


    2. Catholicos Aram I Calls on Germany Church to Back Genocide Recognition
    Efforts

    ANTELIAS--In letter to the Chairman of the Evangelical Church in Germany,
    Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia Aram I asked Germany's churches to
    support Armenian genocide recognition efforts, so as to `restore the rights of
    the Armenian people, which have been held captive.'
    `We are deeply satisfied that in German political and academic circles,
    there is renewed interest and vigor in advancing the issue of the Armenian
    genocide,' His Holiness Aram I writes to Bishop Wolfgang Huber.
    The Catholicos praises all parties in the German parliament, which
    recently agreed to a resolution telling Turkey to "take historic
    responsibility" for the 1915 Armenian genocide. He also praised German
    Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder for reminding the leadership of Turkey, during a
    recent visit there, that it must come to terms with the issue of the Armenian
    genocide in order to join the European Union.
    Bishop Huber and Catholicos Aram I enjoy a lengthy professional
    relationship and personal friendship, including their work together on the
    World Council of Churches.
    Meanwhile the Conference of European Churches (CEC) on April 23 called on
    Turkey to recognize that it committed genocide against Armenians and urged
    reconciliation between Ankara and Yerevan.
    The CEC Presidium urged the Turkish government to initiate a process of
    reconciliation between the Turkish and the Armenian peoples, including as
    integral elements, `the recognition of guilt and the proclamation of the
    truth.'


    3. Army Head Warns Azerbaijan

    YEREVAN (Combined Sources)--The chief of the Armenian army staff,
    Colonel-General Mikael Harutiunian, said on Monday that there exist no
    tensions
    on the contact line established by the 1994 ceasefire agreement in the
    Mountainous Karabagh war, saying that hostilities have come only in the
    form of
    announcements by Azerbaijan's president, head of parliament, as well as
    defense
    minister. He stressed, however, that if Azerbaijan is bent on resuming the
    war,
    then they will pay dearly, and risk losing vast territories.
    Speaking during Victory Day celebrations and ceremonies marking the 13th
    anniversary of the liberation of the Shushi from Azerbaijan, Harutiunian said,
    `I would advise Azerbaijan's leadership to be reserved with their aggressive
    militaristic announcements, which adversely and mechanically affect servicemen
    and the military leadership, and heighten tensions.
    He also denied Azeri claims that dozens of Armenian soldiers have been
    killed there in recent weeks. `They wish we had lost many soldiers,'
    Harutiunian told RFE/RL. `There have indeed been a few cases of our soldiers
    dying or getting wounded. `But the figures cited by them are mere propaganda
    and blackmail.'
    Harutiunian also reiterated Armenian claims that Azerbaijani troops have
    been moving closer to Karabagh Armenian positions. `We see no point in moving
    our positions because we already control the main heights which we took ten
    years ago,' he said. `They probably need to do that because they had left
    their
    weapons behind and run away [during the war]. They probably felt that they
    need
    to improve their positions. In any case, we are taking adequate measures in
    response.'
    Meanwhile, three Azerbaijani soldiers that were captured the Armenians in
    northeastern Karabagh last February, after crossing the frontline, were handed
    back to the Azerbaijani military on Saturday. Azerbaijani media quoted
    officials in Baku as saying that they were not harmed during their detention.


    4. Armenian-Azeri Summit 'Could Break Karabagh Impasse'

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--The upcoming meeting between the presidents of Armenia and
    Azerbaijan could prove decisive for the success of the latest international
    push to resolve the Mountainous Karabagh conflict, Defense Minister Serj
    Sarkisian said on Monday.
    `I look forward to that meeting just as you do, because a lot depends on it,'
    Sarkisian told reporters. `We can probably say after that meeting whether the
    peace process is continuing or has entered a deadlock.'
    President Robert Kocharian and his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev are
    scheduled to meet on the sidelines of a Council of Europe summit in Warsaw
    next
    week. The two leaders will try to build on progress reportedly made by their
    foreign ministers during a series of internationally mediated talks over the
    past year.
    French, Russian and U.S. diplomats spearheading the peace process announced
    last month that the conflicting parties are close to making a `first step
    towards an agreement.'
    Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian said last week that further progress in the
    long and painful peace talks depends on the results of the
    Armenian-Azerbaijani
    summit.
    `The foreign ministers have done all they could possibly do and that the next
    step has to be taken by the presidents,' Oskanian said. He again insisted that
    no formal peace agreements will be signed at Warsaw.
    Aliyev and Kocharian could have come face to face in Moscow at the weekend on
    the fringes of a summit of former Soviet republics. However, Aliyev chose to
    boycott the summit on the grounds that it coincided with the 13th anniversary
    of the capture by Karabagh Armenian forces of the strategically important town
    of Shushi.


    5. Bush Arrives in Georgia to Support Pro-West Drive

    TBILISI (Reuters)--President Bush flew to the small ex-Soviet republic of
    Georgia on Monday for a visit being hailed as a pointed show of Washington's
    support for democratic freedoms in Russia's backyard.
    Bush, making the first visit to Georgia by a U.S. president, arrived aboard
    Air Force One from Moscow, where he took part in celebrations to mark the 60th
    anniversary of the defeat of Nazi Germany.
    At Tbilisi airport, decorated with Stars and Stripes flags, he was greeted by
    President Mikhail Saakashvili, the pro-Western leader catapulted to power 18
    months ago in a "Rose Revolution" who has since been trying to shake off the
    Kremlin's influence.
    Saakashvili boycotted the Moscow festivities because the Kremlin refused to
    bow
    to his demands for the immediate withdrawal of two Russian military bases on
    Georgian soil.
    Moscow has about 3,000 troops in the Soviet-era bases, which Saakashvili has
    likened to an "occupation" of his country. The United States has dozens of
    military trainers in Georgia.
    Georgia is in the turbulent Caucasus region, scene of a clutch of local
    conflicts that grew from the collapse of the Soviet Union. It is also on the
    route for a U.S.-backed pipeline linking the oilfields of the Caspian Sea to
    world markets.
    "This visit means a lot," Giga Bokeria, a Georgian parliamentarian and close
    Saakashvili associate, told Reuters.
    "It is a message that we are not alone in our struggle to become a decent
    democracy ... a sovereign country on which no one can impose their will. I am
    talking about Russia here," he said.

    SPEECH IN SQUARE

    The highlight of the 24-hour visit will be on Tuesday, when Bush addresses
    the
    Georgian people on Tbilisi's Liberty Square beneath a massive banner that
    reads: "Celebrating Democracy and Freedom."
    It was from that square in November 2003 that crowds of people marched on
    Georgia's parliament, forcing the resignation of veteran leader Eduard
    Shevardnadze.
    Georgia's peaceful revolution created the template for fellow ex-Soviet
    republics Ukraine and Moldova to turn their backs on Moscow and pursue
    integration with the West.
    The Bush administration has indicated it would be happy to see power change
    hands elsewhere in the former Soviet Union with Belarus--described by
    Washington as central Europe's last dictatorship--at the top of its list.
    In Georgia, a state of 5 million that saw its economy implode after
    independence in 1991, most people were eagerly awaiting the Bush visit. The
    new
    leadership is tackling corruption but economic reforms are proving painful.
    Tbilisi was soaked by rain on Monday but officials say if the weather
    improves
    more than 50,000 people will come to hear Bush speak on Tuesday.
    Lamp-posts along the city's main streets were decorated with Georgian and
    U.S.
    flags while crews have worked round the clock to repair the potholed roads.
    Policemen in fluorescent rain capes lined the streets in what locals said was
    the biggest security operation they could remember.
    "We are very pleased that such an important person is visiting us. The United
    States is Georgia's main partner and we hope America will help us solve our
    problems with Russia," said Lali Khestsuriani, a 42-year-old doctor.


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