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  • ASBAREZ Online [04-26-2006]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    04/26/2006
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
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    1) Two Swedish MPs Honor The Victims of The Armenian Genocide
    2) Rice Warns Turkey to Keep Out of Iraq
    3) Armenians in Georgia Mark Genocide
    4) Azeri Troops Breach Ceasefire, Wound Armenian Servicemen
    5) Western Prelacy Organizes Book Presentation Event

    1) Two Swedish MPs Honor The Victims of The Armenian Genocide

    The Armenian community in Sweden held several commemorative events throughout
    the country to mark the 91st anniversary of the Armenian genocide, during
    which
    several Members of Parliament (MP) honored the victims and pledged to raise
    the
    issue in the Swedish Parliament (Riksdag).
    In Uppsala, several Swedish MPs attended an event organized by Armenian
    organizations including Raffi Cultural Association, Armenian Relief Society,
    Homenetmen Sweden, and the Armenian Church.
    Michael Oscarson, a Christian Democrat MP who participated in the Genocide
    commemoration, said that people are not aware of the terrible suffering and
    loss of life Armenians experienced 91 years ago.
    "We need to work together so that this very important humanitarian tragedy is
    captured by the public," he said.
    "Together with my colleagues I will raise the question of Armenian
    genocide in
    the Riksdag," said Oscarson, promising to "address the Foreign Minister and
    demand an explanation on what the Swedish government is doing concerning the
    denial by Turkey."
    "My party and I supported those resolutions, and continue to recognize them
    today," he added.
    Oscarson also spoke of a visit to Turkey last year, saying: "Every time I met
    my colleagues in the Turkish Parliament I took up the issue of the Armenian
    genocide, but I was shocked to be met by a wall of silence. And I was even
    more
    shocked when one of them replied, 'We the Turks are the victims, we were the
    ones who were submitted to genocide."
    Another Swedish MP, Rezene Tesfazion, spoke on behalf of the Social Democrats
    and said that we must never forget the lessons of history, because "this is
    our
    duty as human beings."
    "I join with you today in remembering the past I encourage you to continue
    honoring your forefathers," he said.
    Tesfazion also made a pledge to the Armenian people, saying, "Together
    with my
    colleague Miss Tone Tingsgaard I will try to raise the issue in the Riksdag."
    In March 2000 the Swedish Parliament adopted a motion acknowledging the
    Armenian genocide. The motion reads: "An official statement and recognition of
    the Genocide of the Armenians is important and necessary. In 1985 the UN and
    the European Parliament established the fact that the Ottoman Empire had
    committed genocide against the Armenian people in the beginning of the 20th
    century. The Standing Committee [on Foreign Affairs] is of the opinion that
    the
    greater openness Turkey demonstrates, the stronger Turkey's democratic
    identity
    will be. It is therefore important that unbiased independent and international
    research on the genocide committed against the Armenian people be carried out.
    It is of great importance that an increasing openness and historical
    understanding of the events of 1915 and thereafter be developed. An
    improvement
    in this respect would also be of importance for the stability and the
    development in the whole Caucasus region."

    2) Rice Warns Turkey to Keep Out of Iraq

    ANKARA (International Herald Tribune)--Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
    assured Turkish leaders on Tuesday that the United States would step up
    efforts
    to stop the infiltration of Kurdish insurgents from Iraq into Turkey, but she
    warned the Turkish government not to send troops into Iraq to do the job.
    Addressing what has become a new irritant in relations with Turkey, Rice
    acknowledged that the problem of infiltration by Kurdish rebels into Turkey
    from Kurdish regions in northern Iraq had been allowed to grow.
    The Turkish foreign minister, Abdullah Gul, said there had been a surge in
    such infiltration in recent weeks.
    The country's press has been filled with reports of thousands of Turkish
    troops massing on the border of Iraq, and there has been speculation that
    Turkey might intervene in Iraq.
    Rice, without speaking directly to that threat, clearly sought to discourage
    the Turks from doing anything on their own.
    "Of course we want anything that we do to contribute to stability in Iraq,
    not
    to threaten that stability or to make a difficult situation worse," Rice said,
    referring to the presence of Turkish troops. "That is why a cooperative
    approach on this problem--cooperation between Iraq and Turkey and the
    coalition
    forces--is very important."
    Gul spoke of the Kurdish rebel situation in blunt terms, saying that the
    Kurdish Workers Party, which is known as the PKK, had turned Iraq into "a
    training ground" and that "like every country, Turkey will take her own
    precautions" to deal with the problem.
    He said, however, that Turkey had "no claim on anybody's soil or any
    neighborly country's soil."
    Rice spoke during her trip through the region, starting in the morning with
    meetings in Athens, where a few thousand anti-American protesters thronged the
    streets downtown.
    A couple of dozen protesters turned violent, throwing Molotov cocktails and
    burning storefronts and bus stops.

    3) Armenians in Georgia Mark Genocide

    (A-Info/Civil Georgia)--The southern Georgian region of Javakhk
    commemorated on
    April 23 and 24 the 91st anniversary of the Armenian genocide.
    Members of the community marched on Sunday through the streets of Akhaltsikhe
    and Ninotsminda, in an event organized by the Zori Zoryan youth association.
    The next morning, on April 24, Javakhk's churches held a requiem mass for the
    1.5 million victims of the Genocide. Representatives of the community, local
    officials, and several organizations placed wreaths in honors of the
    victims at
    a memorial dedicated to the Armenian genocide.
    Representatives of the Armenian community in Georgia also gathered outside
    the
    Turkish Embassy in Tbilisi on April 24 to demand recognition of the Genocide.

    4) Azeri Troops Breach Ceasefire, Wound Armenian Servicemen

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL/Armenpress)The Armenian Defense Ministry reported Wednesday
    new
    ceasefire violations by Azerbaijan along their border, which have left at
    least
    three Armenian soldiers seriously wounded.
    According to the Defense Ministry in Yerevan, one of the soldiers came under
    automatic gunfire from Azeri army positions in Nakhichevan, bordering
    Armenia's
    southeastern Syunik province on Wednesday. The two other servicemen were shot
    and hospitalized late Tuesday along the westernmost section of the
    Armenian-Azeri border, in Ijevan.
    "The condition of the servicemen is satisfactory," said a statement released
    by the Ministry. "In both instances, the Armenian side did not return fire."
    Seyran Shahsuvarian, a spokesman for the Ministry, said that Armenians did
    not
    violate the ceasefire. He said the Armenian party did not return fire and
    added
    that Azeri media reports claiming that Armenians violated the truce were a
    lie.
    The mountainous area adjacent to Georgia as well as the main Armenian-Azeri
    line of contact east of Karabagh has seen an upsurge in ceasefire violations
    starting in February.

    5) Western Prelacy Organizes Book Presentation Event

    The Western Prelacy Public Relations Committee, under the auspices of His
    Eminence Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate, has organized a book
    presentation event to be held at 6:00 PM on Sunday, April 30, at the Armenak
    Der Bedrossian Hall of St. Mary's Church in Glendale. The book, "From the Book
    of One Thousand Tales: Stories of Armenia and its People, 1892-1922," was a
    lost manuscript of Diana Apcar, Ambassador of the Republic of Armenia to Japan
    during the first Armenian Republic (1918-1920).
    Besides her diplomatic career, Diana Apcar was a renowned writer and
    author of
    several books. In the 1920's, the building she lived in collapsed in an
    earthquake and the manuscript for the aforementioned book was lost in the
    rubble. Many years later, the manuscript was found and published by her
    granddaughter Lucille Apcar.
    The Western Prelacy Public Relations Committee has invited Lucille Apcar to
    Los Angeles to present her grandmother's recovered manuscript and to tell the
    public more about her grandmother's role in and service to the Armenian
    community from the far away land of Japan.
    Following the official program there will be a reception and book signing.

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