Category: EU Members

European Council decided to open accession negotiations with Turkey on 17 Dec. 2004

  • Viewpoint: EU enlargement woes

    Viewpoint: EU enlargement woes

    The economic crisis is fuelling opposition to further EU enlargement. Yet the price of delay could be instability and deepening poverty, Katinka Barysch, Deputy Director of the Centre for European Reform argues.

    This is part of a series of opinion pieces ahead of the June European elections.

    The queue for EU membership keeps getting longer. The 27-nation EU has accepted Turkey, Bosnia-Hercegovina, Croatia, Serbia and other Balkan countries as potential candidates. Recession-battered Iceland may follow.

    Former Soviet countries such as Ukraine and Georgia have been told that they need to improve a lot before the EU will consider them as candidates.

    To celebrate the fifth anniversary of eastward enlargement, the EU’s Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn released a report in February that explained how both the new members and the “old” EU have gained from integrating with each other.

    Thanks to enlargement the EU is now the single biggest market in the world, and certainly a force to be reckoned with in the forthcoming G20 talks about how to fix the world economy.

    Eastern progress

    Over the last decade, the nimble, fast-growing East European countries also added a degree of dynamism to an EU economy that looked sluggish and sclerotic at the time.

    The biggest winners have been the new members themselves.

    Turkey's long-standing EU bid faces numerous hurdles

    Nothing quite focuses politicians’ minds like the goal of joining the EU. The bloc is demanding: applicants have to open up their economies, tackle political favouritism and corruption, and adopt the EU’s accumulated legal rules. In return, they can expect booming trade with the EU’s 13 trillion-euro single market and large amounts of foreign investment.

    Since 1973, when the UK joined what was then known as the European Community, the EU has welcomed new members on average every eight years.

    Most recently, Bulgaria and Romania joined in 2007. They had missed the “big bang” enlargement of 2004 when 10 – mostly ex-communist – countries had joined the club.

    Stumbling blocks

    But even the candidate countries are stuck at the moment.

    There are well-known reasons why enlargement is now proceeding slowly. Many of the current applicants are poor and backward; some, such as Bosnia, have yet to build a functioning state; Kosovo has not even been recognised by all current EU countries.

    Turkey poses special issues. Because of its 70 million population, proud politicians and predominantly Muslim religion, many people in Austria, France, Germany and elsewhere question whether it should join the EU at all.

    Moreover, many people in the EU are still struggling to digest the impact of the last enlargement.

    Fears that eastward enlargement would lead to political gridlock and economic hardship have not materialised. Nevertheless, the current EU-wide recession has aggravated concerns that taking in more countries would bring more low-cost competition at a time when jobless queues are getting longer everywhere.

    The economic instability seen in some of the new eastern member countries, such as Latvia and Hungary, now will make voters in the West even warier of further enlargement.

    At a recent meeting of foreign ministers, Germany and the Netherlands effectively blocked the application of Montenegro, a Mediterranean country of 620,000. If Montenegro made progress, they may have reasoned, Albania, Bosnia and Serbia would hand in their official applications this year as well, thus putting pressure on the EU to act.

    Even before the foreign ministers’ meeting, there were signs of trouble.

    Bilateral disputes

    Various existing EU members have been holding the enlargement process hostage to bilateral spats they are having with some applicant or other. EU governments have always thrown their specific worries or pet projects into accession negotiations. What is new is the boldness with which some now hold up the entire process, to get what they want.

    The most blatant example is Slovenia’s dispute with Croatia over a stretch of Mediterranean coastline.

    Croatia was hoping to wrap up its accession negotiations this year so that it can join in 2010. But while 26 EU countries (and the European Commission) wanted to open 10 new “chapters” in the negotiations in 2008, Slovenia vetoed all but one.

    Since then, the political atmosphere between Ljubljana and Zagreb has become so poisonous that the EU has called in Nobel Prize-winning diplomat Martti Ahtisaari to find a way out.

    Greece is holding Macedonia’s application hostage to its long-running dispute over the country’s proper name.

    Cyprus is blocking several chapters in Turkey’s accession talks, probably in the hope of gaining leverage in the peace talks on the divided island. France is also holding up the talks, but for more profound reasons: since President Nicolas Sarkozy prefers a “privileged partnership”, he argues that Turkey need not bother with those chapters of the acquis – the EU rulebook – that are only relevant for full members.

    These small-minded vetoes are dangerous. The East European and Balkan region has been hit hard by the economic crisis. These countries would find it a lot easier to get through the crisis if they had the prospect of EU membership to guide them.

    EU governments need some vision here. They should conclude a “gentlemen’s agreement” about not vetoing accessions because of bilateral grievances. They need to find a way of keeping Turkey’s accession process alive, even if no breakthrough is achieved in Cyprus this year. And they should allow the applications of the Balkan countries to proceed.

    The alternative could be a region full of political instability, economic turmoil and disgruntled people dreaming.

    The Centre for European Reform is a privately-funded think-tank, based in London, that favours European integration while pushing for EU reform.

    Source:  news.bbc.co.uk, 16 March 2009

  • A Christian Traveler from Sweden to Eretz Yisrael 280 Years Ago

    A Christian Traveler from Sweden to Eretz Yisrael 280 Years Ago

    In the 17th and early 18th centuries Sweden was the most feared “superpower,” as unbelievable as that sounds today. The young King Charles XII, who had ascended to the throne at age 16, was in possession of all the states bordering on the Baltic Sea after winning some stunning military campaigns. He even defeated Peter the Great at Narva. However, that battle was his undoing, because Peter the Great retrenched his army and a few years later delivered a decisive defeat to Charles at Poltava. The Swedish king barely saved his life by escaping on horseback to his ally in Turkey.

    This incident highlights a long-standing alliance between the northernmost and southernmost kingdoms of Europe, forged together by their mutual enmity with Russia. This alliance had, in fact, been cemented by a Jewish ambassador of Sultan Mohammad IV, Moshe ben Yehuda Bebri, or, by his Turkish title, Aslan Aga, who had twice visited Charles’ father, Charles XI. On his voyage back to Turkey, he died in Amsterdam, where his monumental marble tombstone can still be seen today in the Portuguese-Jewish cemetery. (I recently published a study on this forgotten Jewish hero).

    At the beginning of his reign, Charles XII demonstrated his interest in the Middle East, by sending Sweden’s leading professor of Oriental languages, Michael Eneman, on an exploratory trip to Turkey, Palestine and Egypt. Eneman’s report, written in Old Swedish, and covering the years 1711 and 1712, is a gold mine of information about an era from which we have only few eye witness accounts by neutral observers. It was never published in English until I translated it and published it a few years ago, together with my friend, Professor Zvi Werblowsky, of the Hebrew University.

    Here are some excerpts from Eneman’s report on the Jews of Smyrna, Turkey: “They number 5,000, and have the freedom to enter any trade, although they are despised by the Moslems. There is great unity among them, and in case of any controversy they turn to their own judge, Rabbi Israel ben Benveniste, of Spanish origin. His salary is the equivalent of 300 Swedish ‘Riksdaler.’ He is assisted by Rabbi Elija HaCohen, and by Rabbi Jacob. Jews will not accept food or wine from a non-Jew, partly for hygienic, partly for religious reasons. Therefore they have their own butchers and wine producers, even though they have to pay a higher price that Turks and Christians.

    “Smyrna recently saw the appearance of a man, Sabathai Zevi, who claimed to be the Messiah. Jews from everywhere — Holland, Italy and the Orient — had perfect faith in his mission since they were sure that the time for G-d’s redemption of his people had come. They sold their belongings and sailed to Smyrna. Large groups of Jews arrived, which worried the Sultan. But instead of putting an immediate stop to these arrivals, he figured out a way to make money on this phenomenon. The Sultan imprisoned Sabathai Zevi near the Dardanelles. Thereupon he charged up to 10 Riksdaler from every Jew who came to visit Sabathai Zevi.

    “A controversy among the Jews broke out. A Rabbi Nehemia Cohen claimed that there must be two Messiahs, one from the tribe of Ephraim, and one from the house of David. He himself aspired to being one of them. But Sabathai Zevi refuted him, claiming that only one Messiah has to come, from the house of David, and that he himself was that one. Rabbi Nehemia Cohen was angry at this, and traveled to Adrianapolis to denounce Sabathai Zevi to the Deputy Grand Vizier as a rebel against the throne of the Sultan. The Sultan thereupon called for Sabathai Zevi, and offered him a choice of either the death penalty or conversion to Islam. Zevi chose the latter, to the utter shock and shame of his Jewish followers. Despite all subsequent attempts to mediate in this scandal, no Jew was willing to accept a Messiah who wore a Moslem turban.”

    Here follows part of Eneman’s report on the Jews of Jerusalem: “They still suffer from the punishments which the prophets of the Bible pronounced for abandonment of the laws of the Torah. Yet the Jews are inalterably attached to the city of Jerusalem, mainly in order to be buried there, so that they will be promptly resurrected when their Messiah comes (whom we Christians do not believe will ever come). So they prefer suffering all kinds of degradation and humiliation at the hands of the Moslems than to live in great honor in any other part of the world.

    “They also adore the holiness of the ‘Kothel Mearabi’ (the Western Wall) where they are sure the ‘Shechina’ (Divine Presence) still dwells. They pray there incessantly, especially chapters 122 and 126 of the Psalms. When I asked one Jew what the wall has to do with the delayed coming of the Messiah, he answered with the verse from the Song of Songs, chapter 2, verse 9: ‘Behold he standeth behind our Wall, he looketh forth at the windows, showing himself through the lattice.’ This shows, the Jew said, that the Messiah will first appear at the wall.

    “The Jews also believe that the Ark and the Cherubim are buried under the Temple Mount, because G-d opened the mountain to swallow them up when the Temple was destroyed, and he will bring them forth again in due time. Therefore, no Jew will set foot on the Temple Mount, where a large Moslem Mosque, or ‘Dgiamesi,’ has been built, because they would die if they step on such divine treasures. Therefore, the Turks are happy since they know that no Jew will come to desecrate their Mosque.

    “The Jews have two synagogues, one is for the German Jews, and the other is for the French, Italian, and Spanish Jewish refugees. Both synagogues send out emissaries abroad to collect charity and alms, especially for the Jews in Jerusalem, Hebron, Safed and Tiberias. Sometimes these emissaries come back with 10-20,000 Riksdaler. Yet many of them are imprisoned by the police for non-payment of their debts. When I visited the German synagogue I only saw eight men there, in tatters, while the other synagogue is well attended by men who are very well dressed inside the synagogue, but who wear rags in the street, to avoid attention by the authorities as to their riches. As is well known, when the Crusaders captured Jerusalem in the year 1099, all the Jews were slaughtered by them, but now they are allowed back again, but in very limited and crowded quarters.”

    Such an eye witness account by a Christian gives us many important details of an historic nature. It should be remembered that no Jews were allowed to live in Sweden until about 50 years after Eneman’s trip, so he had no advanced knowledge of either Jews nor of Judaism. His keen observations are therefore especially praiseworthy.

    Source:  www.manfredlehmann.com

  • 2009 ANNUAL DUES, DONATIONS and Book Sales

    2009 ANNUAL DUES, DONATIONS and Book Sales

    2009 MEMBERSHIP DUES AND YOUR DONATIONS ARE NEEDED TO CONTINUE OUR POSTED PROGRAMS WITH OUT INTERUPTION

    THE FOLLOWING LINKS WILL TAKE YOU TO THE DUES AND DONATIONS PAGE

    ÜYE AİDATLARI, BAĞIŞLAR VE KİTAP SATIŞLARI

    Dear Friends,

    The Turkish Forum (TF) is the GLOBAL organization with branches and working groups COVERING 5 CONTINENTS, working with many regional Organizations in the America, Europe, Asia, Africa, Australia and Turkey.  TF’s mission is to represent the Turkish Community in in the best way possible, to empower the people of Turkish origin and friends of Turkey to be active and assertive in the political and civic arenas, to educate the political establishments, media and the public on issues important to Turks, and cultivate the relations between the working groups located an five continents, serving the Turkish Communities needs.

    In order to achieve these goals we have performed many activities and completed many projects, THEY ARE ALL LISTED IN THE WEB PAGES OF TF, . You have been informed about these activities and projects, many of you participated voluntarily and contributed heavily and still contributing to these activates and projects. As the events happen and the major steps taken the information always reaches to you  by the TF Grassroots DAILY NEWS Distribution Service.  Needless to say, each activity and project requires a large amount of human and financial resources. TF has a  completely volunteer board, none of the board members receives any compensation or salary or even a small reimbursement. TF also has many volunteer committee members, WELL ESTABLISHED ADVISORY BOARD and project leaders. In addition to our large volunteer pool, please see them an https://www.turkishnews.com/tr/content/turkish-forum/ TF sustains Permanent Offices in New England, Germany and in Turkey and has a number of professional staff to upgrade its systems, and to solve the technical problems.  Please check our website at https://www.turkishnews.com/tr/content/turkish-forum/

    As the 2009 did begin we kindly ask you to support TF by becoming a member, if you are not already one.  You can also contribute a donation if you wish to upgrade your regular membership  to a higher level. Your financial support is critical to TF in order to pursue its mission in a professional manner. Needless to say, it is the financial support that we receive from our members and Friends of Turkey  is the backbone of our organization. As long as this support is continuous we can achieve our objectives and work for the communities across the globe.  Your contribution is tax-exempt under the full extent of the law allowed under Internal Revenue Code 501(c) (3).

    Becoming a member and making an additional contribution are easy: You may become a member online at http://www.turkishnews.com/dagitim/lists/?p=subscribe&id=3

    I thank you for your belief in TF, and look forward to another successful year with your uninterrupted support.

    Sincerely,
    Kayaalp Büyükataman

    Dr. Kayaalp Büyükataman, President CEO
    Turkish Forum- World Turkish Coalition

  • POOR RICHARD’S REPORT

    POOR RICHARD’S REPORT

    Poor Richard’s Report                                                                        

     

                                                                                                    Over 300,000 readers

    My Mission: God has uniquely designed me to seek, write, and speak the truth as I see it. Preservation of one’s wealth while providing needful income is my primary goal in these unsettled times. I have been given the ability to evaluate, study, and interpret world and national events and their influence on the future of the financial markets. This gift allows me to meet the needs of individual and institution clients. 

    March 10, 2000 the stock market topped out.

    March 10, 2009 the stock market bottomed. 

    This does not mean it is going to run back up. The leaders of past bull markets do not lead the charge in new bull markets. This bear market has been the second worst in our history and probably the worst ever in other countries. It will be 5, 10, maybe 15 years before the averages make new highs- that is, if they do not change the components too much. Stocks bottom when the future looks the bleakest. So I believe we are near or at the bottom of a major cycle. It is a market of stocks not a stock market.

                 I have written that the market has bottomed, but the recovery is going to be long and painful for some. We have to institute new global regulations and retrain ourselves to be more frugal. We buy a home because we love it and want to live in it, not to turn a quick profit. We buy a stock because the company has a good product, provides a necessary function for the good of the community, and over a period of time will grow.

                Countries and consumers are tapped out. The ratio of household debt to Gross Domestic Product (GDP) rose from 66% in 1997 to 100% in 2007. We are not alone. In the United Kingdom it was an even bigger jump.

                In the US the overall debt reached 350% of GDP. Only 85% is private. This figure was 180% in 1980. The next bubble to burst will be credit cards and then, if we are unlucky, we will have a debt implosion. Individuals and corporations will do their best to reduce debt. They will be shut out from borrowing because of the massive borrowing the US Government will have to do. This will be true for many other countries also.

                Today there is a debate between Socialists and their foes that want less government intervention in their daily lives. I believe the truth lies in the middle. We can not be all things to all people. In the past we have borrowed on the future and it is now pay back time. We have to downsize our dreams and expectations or we could find ourselves in the same straight jacket that the Germans found themselves in 1930’s. The American spirit is that of a “can do will try for it” attitude. Today, while you are reading this letter, there is someone trying to figure out a cheaper source of energy. Until the discovery is achieved we will have a slow recovery. I believe that day will come from an area we least expect. Have faith.

                    With a slow recovery major corporations will wallow in the mud. Medium size companies that can move and change quickly and do not have a built in bureaucracy will become the new leaders. It has been my observation that the pinnacle of leadership lasts about 10 years. That leadership is attained because the new hires believe in the company. Later hires join because of the name and it’s safety. Competitors multiply and the growth rate slows down. As Andrew Carnegie was fond of saying “shirt sleeves to shirtsleeves in three generations” can apply to this corporate sequence.

                If you want to participate in this new bull market you must change your thinking. The averages mean nothing today. The market is made up of individual securities. You will want to know how your stock is doing. Not the market. Some stocks are going to drift lower because they are still over priced or because they have had a good run in the past and accounts are now overloaded with a past leader. These stocks should be sold. Taking a loss is really a good deal. First you limit your loss and you have given yourself liquidity. Liquidity means you have constant funds for your next purchase. The losses you accumulate can be used to reduce your taxes by $3,000 per year. This applies, as of 3/10/2009, before Obama changes the system. 

                Now lets say you have taken $25,000 in losses. Smile! You have just set yourself for the future. I am not referring to the next 8 years of  $3,000 worth of deductions. Let’s say two years from now that you have taken $20,000 gains in various trades and you face a monster tax bite. You can now use the remainder of your tax loss carried forward, which could be $19,000. Now your tax bite is only $1,000. This is why taking a loss is smart. More money has been lost by investors not doing a trade because of “taxes”.

                Now initially in this new market preferred stocks that have the 85% tax credit should do well, especially if it is selling below its call price. If they call it from you, you stand to make a gain. Corporate debt that is selling below par of strong companies will represent good value. Companies that hired a key person for the future while others have been downsizing is a big tip off.

                Gold is an investment for caution. The President’s strategy is to have a little inflation to support the housing market. Incidentally, the European Union and world leaders are debating over what should happen.  Some of the foreign politicians that carry a big stick are as follows: Wen Jiabao, 66, the Chinese prime minister who is under fire at home because he “put the brakes on too fast”. Angela Merkel, 54, the Chancellor of Germany who favors a “new global constitution” for financial markets. Nicolas Sarkozy, 54, President of France who regards himself as de facto leader of Europe given Gordon Brown’s domestic, political, and economic woes and Angela Merkel’s cumbersome coalition.  Gordon Brown, 58, UK prime minister who was the former Chancellor of the Exchequer and believes he is ideally equipped to tackle the crisis. He will host the Group of 20 summit of industrial and developing nations in London on April 2.

                Central bankers include the following: Jean-Claude Trichet, 66, President, European Central Bank who believes politicians and central bankers must do their utmost to shore up economic confidence. Zhou Xiaochuan, 61, Governor, Peoples Bank of China who has held that position since 2002 and is considered a principal supporter of faster market reforms. Fluent in English he can hold his own among economists. A sleeper is Mario Draghi, 61, Chairman, Financial Stability Forum and governor, Bank of Italy who is a US educated economist, former Goldman Sachs executive, and a respected transatlanticist.

                Regulators of note are: Adair Turner, 53 of the UK. Sheila Blair, 54 Chairman of the FDIC. Mary Shapiro, 53, Chairman of the SEC.

                Economists include: Robert Shiller of Yale. Montek Singh Ahuwalia, 65, Deputy Chairman, Indian Planning Commission. Robert Zoellick, 55, President, World Bank. Pascal Lamy, 61, who is Director General of the WTO. Paul Volcker, 81, Chairman, Economic Advisory Board. Fed Chairman in 1979-1987. He warned early and powerfully about subprime mortgages. Paul Krugman, Professor at Princeton University and columnist, NY Times. He has carved out a niche as the democrats’ liberal conscience. Then we have Leszek Balcerowicxz, 62, Professor of economics, Warsaw School of Economics.  

                Bankers to watch are: Lloyd Blankfein, 54, Goldman Sachs chief executive. Jamie Dimon, 52, Chairman of JP Morgan. Stephen Green, 60, Chairman of HSBC since 1962. He has voiced strong views about the need for reform of banking.  A lay preacher and author of a book about reconciling religion with free markets, he has criticized the industry’s excesses during the boom along with Peyton Patterson, Chairman, President, and Chief Financial Officer of NewAlliance Bank.  

                At the top of the list is President Barack Obama, 47, the revues on his economic rescue plan are mixed, but much detail is awaited.  In the meantime, the president is pressing ahead with radical domestic reform agenda encompassing healthcare, the environment, and education. As promised, it has a strong whiff of both audacity and hope. Then we have Ben Bernanke, 55, Chairman of the US Federal Reserve who is a scholar of the Great Depression. He has knowledge of measures that the central banks can use at times of great crisis and he has had ample opportunity to put his theories into effect, using an expanding range of tools too try to arrest the slide.”

                With this list of partial names one can see that this is a global problem; global problems need global answers. This will take time and patience. This is why I recommend the sales mentioned above and a hefty cash position. Sure, the market is trying to bottom, but the prudent way in the 21st century is to wade in step by step. One should also check in with a professional – like me.

     Cheerio !!!

    Richard C De Graff

    256 Ashford Road

    RER       Eastford Ct 06242     

    860-522-7171 Main Office  

    800-821-6665 Watts

    860-315-7413 Home/Office

    rdegraff@coburnfinancial.com

     

    This report has been prepared from original sources and data which we believe reliable but we make no representation to its accuracy or completeness. Coburn & Meredith Inc. its subsidiaries and or officers may from time to time acquire, hold, sell a position discussed in this publications, and we may act as principal for our own account or as agent for both the buyer and seller.

     


     

    This analysis is courtesy of the Financial Times and this assessment is by Lionel Barber, editor.  March 11,2009 page 7

  • Army chief condemns ‘callous killers’

    Army chief condemns ‘callous killers’

    The head of British forces in Northern Ireland has paid tribute to the two “magnificent” servicemen shot dead by Real IRA gunmen outside an Army barracks. Skip related content

    Brigadier George Norton condemned the “callous and clinical attack” outside the Massereene Barracks in Antrim on Saturday in which Sapper Mark Quinsey, 23, from Birmingham, and Sapper Cengiz Azimkar, 21, from Wood Green, London, were killed.

    “These were magnificent individuals, and we mourn their loss,” he said.

    He also rejected claims that security at the front of the base was lax, and said: “The Army is living in Northern Ireland as part of the community.

    “We have to lead as normal a life as possible, and ordering pizzas of an evening is something everybody does around the community, as indeed do people leave and enter their houses routinely.

    “Are there other ways we can go about doing these things? That is something we will be looking at at the moment.”

    The dead soldiers from 38 Engineer Regiment were wearing desert fatigues and taking delivery of pizzas before leaving for Afghanistan. Two other servicemen and two pizza deliverymen were also seriously injured.

    At one stage the killers stood over their victims and fired a second volley. Security chiefs believe the gunmen were prepared to murder all six in front of the main gates of the barracks.

    Prime Minister Gordon Brown has visited the army base and met servicemen and military commanders.

    He is now holding talks with Northern Ireland police chief Sir Hugh Orde and political leaders at Stormont.

    The shooting has sent shockwaves through the province and has shaken the peace process.

    The Real IRA, which has claimed responsibility and branded the pizza deliverymen as British “collaborators”, is the same organisation that killed 29 people, including a woman pregnant with twins, in the bombing of Omagh, Co Tyrone, in August 1998.

    All sides in Belfast denounced the shooting, and even though republican party Sinn Fein’s condemnation stopped short of expressing sympathy for the soldiers and their families, Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness, a former IRA leader in Londonderry, demanded the dissidents call off their campaign.

    He said: “I was a member of the IRA, but that war is over now. The people responsible for last night’s incident are clearly signalling that they want to resume or re-start that war. Well, I deny their right to do that.”

    Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams added that the perpetrators had no support and he urged party members to help the police investigation.

    The MP said: “The attack was an attack on the peace process. It was wrong and counter-productive.

    “Sinn Fein has a responsibility to be consistent. The logic of this is that we support the police in the apprehension of those involved in last night’s attack.”

    The Real IRA “South Antrim unit” claimed responsibility in a phone call to the Sunday Tribune paper in Dublin.

    In a statement, the paper said: “The caller said he made no apologies for targeting British soldiers while they continued to occupy Ireland and also said he made no apologies for targeting the pizza delivery men who, he said, were collaborating with the British by servicing them.”

     

    ITN

  • Khojaly Genocide commemorated in EP

    Khojaly Genocide commemorated in EP

     
     

    Brussels. Viktoria Dementieva – APA. Event on the 17th anniversary of Khojaly Genocide was held with support of Heydar Aliyev Foundation in the European Parliament on March 3.

    Members of the European Parliament, representatives of diplomatic corps accredited in the European Union, mass media, research centers in Brussels, nongovernmental organizations and Azerbaijani community attended the event.

    Press service of Azerbaijani embassy in Belgium told APA that the participants of the event familiarized themselves with the photo exhibition on Khojaly Genocide prepared by Heydar Aliyev Foundation. Head of Azerbaijani representation to the European Union, Ambassador Emin Eyyubov made a keynote speech at the event.

    Following this, member of the European Parliament Gisela Kallenbach called the participants to commemorate the Khojaly victims with a minute silence. Senior Fellow of Jamestown Foundation Vladimir Socor shared his views on Khojaly genocide.

    The participants were informed about the international campaign “Justice for Khojaly” initiated by Leyla Aliyeva, Coordinator on Intercultural Dialogue of OIC Youth Forum, the campaign was supported with signatures.

    The event finished with the screen showing the names of Khojaly Genocide victims.