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  • ASBAREZ Online [05-30-2006]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    05/30/2006
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    1) Armenia Celebrates Independence Day
    2) Azerbaijan Blocks Armenian Participation in CIS Defense Meeting
    3) Representative Pallone Condemns Firing of Ambassador Evans
    4) Genocide Denial Bill to Be Introduced in Dutch Parliament
    5) 21 New Members Join The Ranks of The ARF

    1) Armenia Celebrates Independence Day

    YEREVAN (Yerkir/Armenpress)--Armenian President Robert Kocharian, Prime
    Minister Andranik Margarian, Catholicos Karekin II, Yerevan Mayor Yervand
    Zakharian, and other officials and diplomats visited the Sardarabad
    memorial on
    May 28 to pay tribute to the soldiers who were killed during the famous battle
    for independence. The event also marked the 88th anniversary of the
    establishment of the Armenian Republic.
    Kocharian took the opportunity to congratulate the Armenian people in a
    letter, saying that May 28 marks a milestone in Armenia's nation-building,
    freedom, and democracy.
    "Independence was a centuries-old goal for the Armenian people, which came
    true because of the national liberation struggle and especially because of the
    heroic battles in May 1918," said the letter.
    "The First Republic of Armenia inspired the people with strength. It was the
    basis, on which Soviet Armenia and the current state were founded."
    Independence Day celebrations continued all day in Yerevan and ended with a
    concert and salute in Victory Park.

    2) Azerbaijan Blocks Armenian Participation in CIS Defense Meeting

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL/Yerkir)--Armenia said on Tuesday that Azerbaijan has prevented
    it from participating in this week's meeting in Baku of high-ranking defense
    officials from the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS).
    The one-day session of the CIS Council of Defense Ministers is scheduled to
    open in the Azeri capital on Wednesday. Yerevan said last week that Defense
    Minister Serge Sarkisian will not attend it, because Azeri authorities failed
    to guarantee the security of the Armenian delegation.
    In a statement, the ministry said it has been informed by the Moscow-based
    Secretariat of the CIS structure that the Azeri authorities have refused to
    guarantee the security of the Armenian participants. It condemned the move,
    accusing Azerbaijan of failing to honor its international obligations.
    "This fact again confirms that Azerbaijan is not able to meet its commitments
    to secure participants of international meetings in its territory," said the
    statement. "The Council Secretariat has to create equal conditions for all
    participant states of the meeting."
    "We expect an official response from the CIS Council of Defense Ministers to
    the incident," added the statement.
    A spokesman for the Azeri Defense Ministry confirmed that Baku is against
    Armenian participation in the meeting.
    Previously, the Azeri Government also refused to allow a group of Armenian
    army officers to take part in a NATO-led military exercise that had been
    due to
    take place in Azerbaijan in September 2004. NATO officials responded by
    canceling the multinational drills.

    3) Representative Pallone Condemns Firing of Ambassador Evans

    WASHINGTON, DC--The controversy surrounded the firing of US Ambassador to
    Armenia John Marshall Evans continued to grow this week with a powerful
    statement by the Co-chairman of the Armenian Caucus, calls for Congressional
    hearings, and a series of as yet unanswered inquiries from the national media
    during the State Department's daily press briefing, reported the Armenian
    National Committee of America (ANCA).
    In a May 25 statement on the House floor, Congressman Frank Pallone (D-NJ)
    forcefully condemned the Administration for forcing Ambassador Evans to vacate
    his post for publicly affirming the Armenian genocide. He voiced his "fear
    that the Government of Turkey may have played a role in this unfortunate
    event. I strongly believe they have expressed concern to the White House over
    Evans' remarks last year. In fact, immediately following his remarks, Evan
    issued a "correction," all too seemingly at the behest of the Administration.
    We must not allow a third party to interfere in US diplomacy and refrain from
    declaring the truth in order to promote relations with Turkey."
    Congressman Pallone noted that he has yet to receive an explanation from the
    State Department, despite having written a letter to the Secretary more than
    two months ago requesting a thorough description of the reasons behind the
    Ambassador's recall. Commenting on similar unanswered letters and questions
    posed during Congressional hearings regarding this controversy, he noted that,
    "now, the White House has made an 'official' announcement but still has not
    given an explanation." He closed by expressing his "hope that the
    newly-appointed US Ambassador to Armenia, Richard Hoagland, will not play the
    word games of the White House, and comply with Turkey's campaign of genocidal
    denial."
    The White House made the recall of Ambassador Evans official this week with
    the public announcement of his replacement, Richard Hoagland.
    As he has repeated over the past several months, the State Department
    spokesperson, Sean McCormack, again avoided answering a direct question last
    week about the reasons for Ambassador Evans' recall. In response to
    persistent
    questioning, he limited his remarks to generically praising Ambassador Evans'
    service, noting his replacement, and repeating the stock-phrase that he and
    other senior Administration officials "serve at the pleasure of the
    President."
    The ANCA has called for Congressional hearings to investigate the firing of
    Ambassador Evans. Using the ANCA website, activists can send their
    legislators
    a free ANCA WebFax asking them to call for hearings of both the Senate Foreign
    Relations Committee and the House International Relations Committee. These
    letters call for a full hearing, featuring testimony from all the key figures
    involved in this situation, as well as a thorough examination of the role of
    the Turkish Government in exporting its suppression of speech to the United
    States.
    The ANCA WebFaxes state, in part, that, "Ambassador Evans is, in effect,
    being
    punished for honoring his President's pledge to properly recognize the
    Armenian
    genocide--a promise that George W. Bush made on the campaign trail in February
    of 2000 but abandoned once in the White House. Ambassador Evans should be
    praised, not dismissed, for rejecting 'gag-rules' imposed by the Turkish
    Government on the discussion of the Armenian genocide by America's leaders at
    home and diplomats abroad."
    The letters close by expressing outrage that the "Administration has lacked
    the courage to speak honestly--either to Congress or the American
    people--about
    its reasons for firing Ambassador Evans. Hopefully, these hearings will
    provide the transparency that we, as citizens, have the right to expect of our
    government."
    Earlier this week, sixty Members of Congress, led by Representative Ed Markey
    (D-MA), sent a letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice asking for
    clarification of the reasons behind Ambassador Evans' recall. Prior to this
    letter, Representative Pallone, Adam Schiff (D-CA) and Representative Grace
    Napolitano (D-CA) each independently called on the State Department to explain
    reports that Ambassador Evans was being recalled because of his speech on the
    Armenian genocide. They have yet to receive any response to their inquiries.
    Following his statements last February, Ambassador Evans was forced to
    issue a
    clarification that his references to the Armenian genocide were his personal
    views and did not represent a change in US policy. He subsequently issued a
    correction to this statement, replacing a reference to the genocide with the
    word "tragedy."
    The American Foreign Service Association, which had planned to honor
    Ambassador Evans with the "Christian A. Herter Award," recognizing creative
    thinking and intellectual courage within the Foreign Service, reportedly
    rescinded the award following pressure from the State Department a few days
    before Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan traveled to Washington, DC
    to meet with President Bush.

    4) Genocide Denial Bill to Be Introduced in Dutch Parliament

    The Christian Union party of The Netherlands will introduce a bill
    criminalizing denial of the Armenian genocide and other crimes against
    humanity
    to the Dutch Parliament during a press conference on Thursday, June 1. The
    bill specifically refers to the Armenian genocide as one of the crimes against
    humanity covered by the law.
    Christian Union parliamentarians Tineke Huizinga and Andre Rouvoet will give
    the press conference along with representatives from the April 24 Committee of
    the Federation of Armenian Organizations in the Netherlands (FAON), Center for
    Information and Documentation of Israel (CIDI), and Dutch Anti-racism
    Organization (LBR).

    5) 21 New Members Join The Ranks of The ARF

    At the official initiation ceremony Saturday, twenty-one youths joined the
    ranks of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) by taking an oath. The
    new
    members took their oath at the Homenetmen Ararat Center in Glendale in
    front of
    about 100 ARF members.
    The "Gnkahayr" of the ceremony was Professor Rubina Peroomian, who led the
    oath-taking ceremony and initiated the new members.
    In her message, she said that this year's ceremony coincides with May 28, the
    day on which the Armenian people established their independence in 1918. She
    stressed that to be an ARF member means to struggle for the rights of the
    Armenian people.
    In his closing remarks, ARF Western Region Central Committee Representative
    Hovig Saliba told the new members, "With your participation, our struggle will
    become more powerful. Within the ranks of the ARF, you will find new
    ideological allies, which you will never find anywhere else."
    He added that we should all continue the struggle until the establishment
    of a
    unified Armenia.
    After the ceremony, an event organized by the ARF Zavarian chapter was held
    for Independence Day. Karnig Sarkissian, and Harout Chekerian sang traditional
    and patriotic songs, as those in attendance celebrated Armenian independence.

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