FDA recalls bottled water from Armenian co. Jermuk

Water Technology Online, NY
March 8 2007

FDA recalls bottled water from Armenian co.

WASHINGTON – The US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is advising
consumers not to drink bottled water brands from Jermuk, an Armenian
producer of mineral water, according to a March 8 United Press
International report.

Three brands of Jermuk water were shown to have arsenic levels of 500
to 600 micrograms per liter; this exceeds the FDA’s standard for
quality bottled water, which allows for no more than 10 micrograms of
arsenic per liter.

The water being recalled is packaged in green bottles that carry any
of these labels: "Jermuk Original Sparkling Natural Mineral Water
Fortified With Natural Gas From The Spring;" "Jermuk Sodium Calcium
Bicarbonate and Sulphate Mineral Water;" or "Jermuk, Natural Mineral
Water Sparkling."

Jermuk, which distributes its water internationally, has been in
business since 1951.

p;N_ID=66695

http://www.watertechonline.com/news.asp?mode=4&am

Nobel prize winner Pamuk to tour Germany after all

Washington Post, DC
March 8 2007

Nobel prize winner Pamuk to tour Germany after all
Reuters
Thursday, March 8, 2007; 1:06 PM

BERLIN (Reuters) – Nobel-prize winning Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk
will embark on a book reading tour in Germany in May after he
canceled the visit at short notice five weeks ago amid concerns for
his safety.

Christina Knecht, a spokeswoman for Carl Hanser Verlag, Pamuk’s
German publisher, said the writer had always intended to meet his
commitments at some point.

"Nothing has really changed, he always said the tour was never
completely off. Now he’s suggested May, and we’re delighted that we
were able to find new dates with the organizers fairly quickly," she
said.

The safety of Pamuk, 54, became an issue after the murder in January
of the prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in Istanbul.
A key suspect in that murder, escorted by police into a court house,
had warned Pamuk to be careful.

"He canceled the tour without giving any reason, but I think it was
really more about the situation in Turkey, and that he was being
pursued for weeks there," Knecht said, adding that as far as she
knew, Pamuk was probably in the United States now.

Dink and Pamuk were both prosecuted under laws restricting freedom of
expression in Turkey, which wants to join the EU.

Pamuk was tried for insulting "Turkishness" after telling a Swiss
paper in 2005 that 1 million Armenians had died in Turkey in World
War One and 30,000 Kurds had perished more recently.

Pamuk, whose best-known novels include "Snow," in which the main
character is shot in Frankfurt, has a big following in Germany, home
to about 2.5 million people of Turkish descent.

He is due to open the rescheduled tour in Hamburg on May 2, before
visiting Berlin, Stuttgart and Cologne. The trip will end on May 8 in
Munich. While in Berlin, Pamuk is due to receive an honorary
doctorate from the city’s Free University.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Georgia: Orthodoxy in Schools

Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR), UK
March 8 2007

Georgia: Orthodoxy in Schools

Religious minorities say Orthodox creed is given unfair advantage in
schools.

By Fati Mamiashvili in Tbilisi (CRS No. 382 08-Mar-07)

Muraz Mirzoyev, an ethnic Yezidi, was a first form pupil at the
Davitiani Georgian private school, when his father forbade him to
attend religion lessons after he found out that Christian studies was
being taught there and Orthodox rituals practiced at the school.

`This form of schooling discriminates against other nationalities,’
said Muraz’s father Agit Mirzoyev, who is also head of the Georgian
Yezidi Kurds’ Union. `I don’t want my son to come under the influence
of some other religion. The management of the school understood my
decision.’

Yezidis are a small minority in Georgia and practice their own faith.
Told not to attend classes where Christianity is being taught, Muraz
went home during religious studies lessons or waited for them to end
in an adjoining classroom.

`Muraz felt uncomfortable, because he could not understand what was
going on at the lessons while he wasn’t there,’ said Mirzoyev. `This
one hour was enough to make him feel ill at ease.’

Muraz is now nine years old and a fourth-form pupil. He still skips
lessons in the history of religion and his father does not allow him
to go on outings with his classmates.

`I prefer him to stay at home instead of visiting Georgian cultural
monuments that are presented as symbols of the Christian religion,’
his father said.

Religious education is becoming a contentious issue for minorities in
Georgia. According to a law on general education passed in April
2005, religious studies is not a compulsory subject on the
curriculum, which means it is up to the schools themselves to decide
whether to provide lessons in Orthodoxy or not.

The education ministry has no exact figures on the number of schools
teaching the subject in Georgia, where Orthodox Christians comprise
around 80 per cent of the population. The ministry’s press office
said only that `most Georgian schools teach the history of religion’.

IWPR telephoned ten schools in Tbilisi and found that all of them had
the subject in their curricula.

In its 2006 International Religious Freedom Report, the US Department
of State struck a note of concern, saying that in contradiction of
legislation passed in 2005, `Teachers often began most courses,
including mathematics and science, by leading the class in a
recitation of Orthodox prayers. Those students who did not
participate were sometimes punished. `
The report said that Orthodox icons and religious pictures were often
hung in classrooms and some schools had chapels where students were
encouraged to pray.

Bella Tsipuria, deputy minister of education and science, denied
there was a problem.

`No one is going to make anyone attend religion lessons,’ she said.
`Pupils have the discretion to decide whether to attend the lessons
or not.’

However, language teacher Lamara Pashayeva told IWPR that those
pupils who missed religious studies lessons were suffering as a
result.

`One Yezidi boy who did not attend lessons on religion was often
beaten and bullied by his classmates,’ she said.

`Unfortunately, his family won’t make it public. I can only say that
the form-master asked me for help, because the religious studies
teacher did not resolve the conflict.’

Arnold Stepanian, chief of the Multinational Georgia organisation
which defends minority rights, said his organisation had recorded up
to 15 cases over the past two years where non-Georgian pupils had
their rights violated by classmates or religious studies teachers.

`During lessons, religious studies teachers called Muslims, Jews and
Kurds `henchmen of the Devil’,’ said Stepanian. `Unfortunately,
parents often don’t speak up.’

`The trouble is that many parents do not know their rights, thinking
that it’s normal for their children to have their rights violated for
the sake of Orthodoxy,’ said Beka Mindiashvili, an expert at the
Religious Tolerance Centre in the Georgian ombudsman’s office, who
himself used to teach religious studies in a school.

Tsipuria said her ministry had never heard of conflicts related to
the teaching of religion in schools.

`If there really is a conflict on religious grounds somewhere, this
violates the law on general education,’ said Tsipuria. `If these
facts are confirmed, the ministry’s inspectors will respond to them.’

However, the ombudsman’s office said the education ministry had
overlooked an incident that attracted a lot of attention last year in
the town of Vale in Akhaltsikhe district, which has a large Catholic
population.

`On April 13, 2006, the ombudsman’s office received a complaint from
Catholic pupils in Vale’s secondary school No.1, who accused their
teachers of religion, geography and Georgian language of a negative
attitude towards them,’ said a press release by the office.

`The religious studies teacher hurt a Catholic schoolgirl’s ear
because she had not made the sign of the cross the way Orthodox
Christians do,’ said Mindiashvili.

Gocha Khitarishvili, the father of the girl, told IWPR that things
improved after the ombudsman’s office intervened.

Levan Abashidze of the Georgian parliament’s research department
argues that `when a school decides voluntarily to teach religious
studies, the subject becomes compulsory for all pupils of the
school’.

`Schools should teach a history of various religions, while most of
the textbooks the schools use nowadays are trying to convert people
to Orthodoxy,’ said Abashidze.

Last year, the non-government Caucasus Institute for Peace, Democracy
and Development, CIPPD, held a series of workshops for teachers on
how religion should be taught in schools.

`It turned out that several of the teachers were intolerant towards
people of other faiths,’ said Bella Beradze of CIPDD. `The
participants themselves owned up to this.’

Evidence from Georgian schools confirms this.

Catholic priest Father Zurab Kikachishvili cited a case in which a
teacher of religious studies in a Gori school made an entire class,
including two Catholic pupils, receive communion according to the
Orthodox Christian rite.

Marta Samatashvili, who teaches religious studies in secondary school
No. 62 in Tbilisi, said, `Religion should be taught very carefully.’
She said that ethnic Georgian Orthodox Christians and Muslim
Azerbaijanis and Kists in her classes studied the history of
different religions and not just Orthodoxy.

`Each of us is free to choose his faith,’ she said. `The Orthodox
religion forbids violence against other religions.’

Lela Jejelava, coordinator of the inter-religious council of the
Georgian Patriarchate, said people who belonged to traditional faith
groups could ask to be taught their religion in schools, but there
was no legal requirement for this to happen.

Jejelava said the Roman Catholic Church, the Armenian Apostolic
Church, and the Jewish and Muslim communities had all refused to
register as legal entities because `they don’t want to exist as a
firm or foundation’.

She said teaching of other religions in schools would be out of the
question until these faiths obtained a legal status – leaving the
Georgian Orthodox Church in a dominant position in Georgia’s schools.

Fati Mamiashvili is a freelance journalist working in Tbilisi.

Armenian opposition divided ahead of election

EurasiaNet, NY
March 8 2007

ARMENIAN OPPOSITION DIVIDED AHEAD OF ELECTION
Emil Danielyan 3/08/07

Armenia’s leading opposition parties have failed to join forces for
upcoming parliamentary elections, in what most local commentators
view as good news for President Robert Kocharian and his political
allies. The multitude of opposition candidates and persisting mutual
mistrust among top opposition leaders are thought to make it easier
for the presidential camp to retain control of the Armenian
parliament.

The elections, scheduled for May 12, will be a rehearsal of a more
important presidential ballot due early next year. There are strong
indications that Kocharian, who is completing his second and final
term in office, plans to hand over power to his influential Defense
Minister Serge Sarkisian and remain in government in another
capacity. Victory in the legislative polls is seen as a key element
of this putative scenario. Analysts say a fragmented opposition will
have serious trouble thwarting its realization.

"In effect, the opposition has decided not to participate in the
elections, as participating independently means creating favorable
conditions for the reproduction of the current regime," the Yerevan
newspaper 168 Zham editorialized last week.

The leaders of the country’s three largest opposition parties think
otherwise. Those are Kocharian’s two main challengers in the 2003
presidential election, Stepan Demirchian and Artashes Geghamian, and
former Parliamentary Speaker Artur Baghdasarian, whose Country of Law
Party was expelled from Kocharian’s governing coalition last year.
[For details, see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Their conflicting
presidential ambitions are what seem to have precluded the
establishment of electoral alliances both among themselves and with
other major opposition groups.

Aram Abrahamian, editor of the Aravot daily, also sees "pragmatic"
motives behind their refusal to cooperate with other opposition
forces. "Those parties that think they can overcome the 5 percent
vote barrier [for entering parliament] are not interested in uniting
with anyone," he wrote on March 3.

Of all Armenian opposition politicians, former parliamentary speaker
Baghdasarian, 38, has clearly attracted the greatest interest from
the West, owing to his relatively young age, populist appeal and
increasingly pro-Western discourse. According to some opposition
sources, United States officials have encouraged him to team up with
other pro-Western opposition groups, notably the radical Republic
Party of former Prime Minister Aram Sarkisian (no relation to the
defense minister). Both Sarkisian and Baghdasarian visited Washington
in late February to meet US administration officials and lawmakers.
But the ambitious ex-speaker made it clear shortly before the trip
that his party will go it alone. "In artificial alliances, jealousy
is stronger than love," he explained at a news conference in Yerevan.

Demirchian, who claims to have been robbed of victory in the last
presidential election, showed greater readiness to form an alliance
with Sarkisian’s Republic and three other opposition parties, but on
conditions that were rejected by the latter. Those reportedly
included a demand that the would-be bloc pick Demirchian as its
undisputed leader and commit to endorsing his 2008 presidential bid.

In the event, the four parties failed to unite even without
Demirchian. Last-ditch attempts by their leaders to cut a
pre-election deal failed on February 27 for reasons that are still
not fully clear. The participants of the talks have refrained from
publicly blaming each other for the flop. But one of them, Armenia’s
US-born former Foreign Minister Raffi Hovannisian, is privately
accused by other oppositionists of scuttling the deal by staking a
leadership claim.

Vazgen Manukian, a veteran opposition figure who was also involved in
the talks, believes that contesting the elections in this situation
makes no sense. "It’s like taking on a regular army with a private
militia," Manukian told EurasiaNet just days after his National
Democratic Union, one of Armenia’s oldest opposition parties, decided
to boycott the vote. He argued that only a "broad-based opposition
movement" would have a chance to stave off what he expects will be
massive electoral fraud.

But Republic Party leader Sarkisian, the Kocharian administration’s
most uncompromising opponent, is far less pessimistic on this score,
while sharing Manukian’s disappointment with the opposition discord.
"There are real possibilities of achieving serious political changes
and tangible results in Armenia," Sarkisian said in a EurasiaNet
interview.

Sarkisian indicated that his party will be seeking not to win the
polls (which he, too, claims will be rigged) but to use them for
launching a campaign of street protests aimed at toppling the
government. "I don’t exclude that a number of opposition forces will
hold joint rallies right before and after the elections," he said.
"Those joint rallies will attract large numbers of people."

Sarkisian’s closest potential allies are supporters of former
President Levon Ter-Petrosian, most of them grouped around the former
ruling Armenian National Movement (ANM). They say a repeat of serious
fraud, which has marred just about every election held in Armenia
since independence, could lead opposition heavyweights like
Demirchian and Baghdasarian to join anti-government rallies. "At some
point, the opposition will be forced to unite," the ANM chairman,
Ararat Zurabian, told journalists on March 2.

But with many Armenians apathetic and cynical about politics, the
question is whether the opposition can mobilize a mass pro-democracy
movement. Its most recent attempt to emulate the 2003 "Rose
Revolution" in neighboring Georgia failed almost three years ago,
after a crackdown on street protests against the election of
President Kocharian. [For details, see the Eurasia Insight archive].

The Kocharian camp, meanwhile, looks increasingly self-confident,
buoyed by its overwhelming control of election commissions and the TV
airwaves as well as vast financial resources. The Republican Party of
Armenia, the biggest government force controlled by Defense Minister
Sarkisian, is already trying to capitalize on its grip on most
central and local government bodies in order to win the largest
number of parliament seats. Also eyeing a strong showing is the
Prosperous Armenia Party of Gagik Tsarukian, the country’s arguably
wealthiest businessman close to Kocharian. Over the past year,
Tsarukian seems to have attracted a substantial following thanks to
supposed charitable work which critics deem wholesale vote buying.

According to unconfirmed media reports, the two parties have already
agreed to form a coalition government after the elections. [For
details, see the Eurasia Insight archive].

Editor’s Note: Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
political analyst.

Switzerland: Verdict expected Friday in Genocide trial against Turk

AKI, Italy
March 8 2007

SWITZERLAND: VERDICT EXPECTED FRIDAY IN GENOCIDE TRIAL AGAINST TURK

Lausanne, 8 March (AKI) – The trial of Turkish politician Dogu
Perincek – who made comments in Switzerland denying the 1915 mass
killings of Armenians was genocide – continued in a Lausanne court on
Thursday, with statements from the defence and the prosecution. The
trial, which is due to conclude on Friday, is a test case for Swiss
anti-racism legislation. Prosecutor Eric Cottieri has called for a
six-month jail sentence for 65-year-old Perincek if he is convicted.

On the first day of the trial on Tuesday, Perincek, leader of the
nationalist Turkish Workers’ Party, reiterated remarks he made in a
2005 public speech in Lausanne describing the 1915 mass killings of
Armenians as "an international lie". Perincek told the court what
occurred were "killings on both sides," but that the Ottoman Turks
did not perpetrate genocide against the Armenian people.

The great powers of the day, especially Britain, had fuelled the
genocide theory and such "progaganda" is being used in present times
by the United States against Turkey, Perincek said. In statements
made earlier this week to the Swiss newspaper Le Matin, Perinck said
he had many World War I era documents from various countries that he
would use in court to prove that what happened in Turkey in 1915 was
not genocide.

An estimated 150 supporters of Perincek held a silent protest in
Lausanne on Tuesday to coincide with the start of the trial, the
Swissinfo website reported.

The Turkey daily Hurriyet newspaper reported that a large contingent
of Perincek’s supporters were barred from the courtroom and Turkish
journalists were also denied access to the trial on the grounds that
written accreditation had not been received beforehand.

Under the Swiss penal code any act of denying, belittling or
justifying genocide is a violation of the country’s anti-racism
legislation. Experts say the presiding judge at the district court in
Lausanne will have to negotiate some tricky legal waters. Twelve
Turks prosecuted in Switzerland on similar charges in 2001 were
acquitted. Although the Swiss parliament recognises the World War I
killings of the Armenians as genocide, neither the government nor the
Senate does.

Moreover, the case is set to test the already shaky relations between
Bern and Ankara.

In 2005, Turkey criticised the Swiss authorities’ decision to
investigate Perincek and later cancelled an official trip to Turkey
by then economics minister, Joseph Deiss.

The anti-racism legislation is itself a topic of debate in
Switzerland. Justice minister Christoph Blocher, leader of the
right-wing Swiss Popular Party, opposes the law, arguing it is
incompatible with freedom of expression. In a controversial move,
Blocher met his Turkish counterpart Cemil Cicek in Bern at the
weekend.

Armenians say 1.5 million of their people were killed in a genocide
by Ottoman Turks during World War I, either through systematic
massacres or through starvation. More than a dozen countries, various
international bodies and many Western historians agree that it was
genocide.

Turkey disputes the World War I mass killings of Armenians as
genocide. It acknowledges that many Armenians died, but says the
figure was below one million.

SMCM To Host 13th Annual Holocaust & Genocide Lecture Series 3/26

Southern Maryland Online, MD
March 8 2007

SMCM To Host 13th Annual Holocaust & Genocide Lecture Series March
26, 28
Posted on March 08, 2007:

13th Annual Holocaust & Genocide Lecture Series: "Armenia: The
Forgotten Genocide" March 26 and 28

ST. MARY’S CITY, Md. – The 13th Annual Holocaust & Genocide Lecture
Series at St. Mary’s College of Maryland (SMCM) explores "Armenia:
The Forgotten Genocide" with two lectures, on Monday, March 26 and
Wednesday, March 28 at 8 p.m. At the beginning of the twentieth
century, the government of the Ottoman Empire (present day Turkey)
massacred and forcibly removed an estimated one million Armenians.
Both events are free and open to the public.

The series begins on Monday, March 26 at 8 p.m. in Daugherty-Palmer
Commons, with Susan Vartanian Barba’s "Still Alive: The Story of My
Father, a Survivor." Vartanian will talk about her father’s fate as a
survivor of the Armenian genocide and also about their relationship.
Vartanian currently lives in New Jersey and is active in the Armenian
community. Her talk will be accompanied by a brief segment of a film
made about her father. This event will be introduced by Kate Norlock,
professor of philosophy.

On Wednesday, March 28 in the Campus Center’s Cole Cinema, Richard
Hovannisian, an international expert on Armenian history, will speak
on the political and historical context of the genocide. Hovannisian
is professor of Armenian and Near Eastern History at UCLA. Author of
multiple books on Armenian history and the genocide, he has also
recently served as consultant for National Geographic on a feature
article on Armenia. The talk is accompanied by a short video.

The deportations and massacres of the Armenian population in Turkey
mark the beginning of modern genocidal policies at the beginning of
the twentieth century. Responding to the decline of the Ottoman
Empire, a nationalist revolutionary group called the Young Turks
seized power in 1908 and followed a political ideology of an
exclusively Turkish state, in which Armenians were denied a place. An
estimated one million Armenians perished through brutal massacres,
killings, and death marches disguised as resettlement programs.
Hundreds of thousands became homeless and stateless refugees. By
1923, almost the entire Armenian population of Anatolian Turkey had
disappeared.

http://somd.com/news/headlines/2007/5538.shtml

FDA Warns About Jermuk Mineral Water

Post Chronicle
March 8 2007

FDA Warns About Jermuk Mineral Water
By Staff
Mar 8, 2007

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued a warning advising
consumers not to drink Jermuk brands of mineral water from Armenia.

FDA scientists say the recalled water, distributed nationally, might
be contaminated with high levels of arsenic, which is a known cause
of cancer.

FDA testing of the water revealed 500 to 600 micrograms of arsenic
per liter, exceeding the FDA’s standard for quality bottled water
that allows no more than 10 micrograms of arsenic per liter.

Teen Gamblers Racking Up Debts: The lure of easy money is tempting

Institute for War and Peace Reporting (IWPR), UK
March 8 2007

Teen Gamblers Racking Up Debts

The lure of easy money is tempting Armenian youngsters into the
capital’s betting shops.

By Karine Asatrian in Yerevan (CRS N0. 382 08-Mar-07)

Two teenage boys walk into a betting shop on the central street in
Yerevan and begin studying forms on a table covered with information
about upcoming football matches.

After a half-hour discussion, they mark their bets, pay at the cash
desk and leave. They have bet 1,000 drams – about two US dollars – in
hope of winning five times that amount.

`We hope to win something,’ said Vahagn, a football fan and at
16-years-old already a regular gambler.

There are several hundred betting shops in Armenia. By law, they are
not supposed to accept bets from under-18s and will lose their
license or face a fine if they do. But a visit to several in the city
centre suggests under-age gambling is common in Yerevan and that
teens are wagering and often losing large amounts.

Yerevan’s bookies open around noon, and the schoolchildren start to
arrive after classes. Most of the teenagers IWPR spoke to said they
were doing badly at school.

Fifteen-year-old Artak began gambling two years ago and has since run
up debts of 500,000 drams, some 1,400 dollars.

Like many gamblers, Artak started off well, winning up to 10 times
his initial wager. Then he started to lose and became obsessed with
where he would find money.

First he pawned his mobile phone, and then staff in one betting shop
gave him credit. When his debts got too high, Artak turned to his
parents. They pawned their television, video camera and jewellery,
but it still wasn’t enough.

Artak eventually earned enough money to reclaim his parents’
possessions, but rather than do that he headed for the betting shop
instead.

Asked when he would stop gambling, Artak said, `When I win enough
money to cover my debts and buy myself a good phone and a gold
chain.’

Karen is now 16, but was 14 when he started gambling. A keen football
fan, he felt he could predict the outcome of games. `At first I
almost always won, but then I began to lose,’ he said.

He owes 50,000 drams and paid off an earlier debt by stealing money
from his parents. He was caught and punished by them but says it made
no difference.

`Punishment and advice from my parents don’t help me any more,’ said
Karen. `I don’t know whether I’ll ever rid myself of this obsession.’

Some start even younger than Karen.

Residents of a Yerevan apartment block were concerned to see an
ambulance arrive for their neighbour, Marietta, who had always been
in good health. She developed heart problems when she discovered that
her 13-year-old son Vardan was a compulsive gambler.

It was a classmate of Vardan’s who told her that her son was making
money by betting on the outcome of football matches. She went looking
for him after classes and discovered him in a betting shop.

`Every day I found that money was disappearing from the house,’
Marietta told IWPR. `It didn’t occur to me to suspect Vardan. I
suspected everyone but him.’

Marietta gave up her job to try to cure her son of his addiction. At
first it was slow going, but she bought him a computer and says she
has managed to divert his mania for gambling into one for computer
games.

But parents have other ways of fighting back. Armenian law says
transactions carried out by minors under 14 are not legal. `Parents
can go to court any time, have the transaction declared illegal and
get back the money their children staked,’ said lawyer Karen
Tumanian.

There are some who say the authorities should be intervening more
directly.

Child psychologist Ruben Poghosian accuses the government of doing
nothing to fight Armenia’s teenage gambling problem. He says betting
shops are too easily accessible and `the children see that anyone can
make money there’.

`It’s also the thrill of gambling,’ said Poghosian. `It’s a trap
which even adults find hard to resist.’

He says gambling is part of a wider social problem and believes
teenagers need to find other ways of earning money- no easy task in
present-day Armenia. `Find them a distraction which is thrilling and
will bring a child a great deal of pleasure,’ he advised, suggesting
that they take part in sport themselves rather than gambling on it.

But with pawnshops sustaining the young gamblers by readily accepting
their valuables including mobile phones, diverting teenagers’
attention from gambling could be difficult.

`We don’t give out money to children for pawned items,’ said a worker
at a pawnshop in the Shengavit district of Yerevan – even though
several teenagers said that they had pawned their telephones there.

Meanwhile, the betting shops themselves deny any responsibility for
the problem.

Gagik Boyajian, executive director of the Vivaro betting agency, told
IWPR that his staff had been told `not once, not twice but dozens of
times’ not to accept bets from underage punters and that therefore
their `conscience is clean’.

`How can we check whether they are 18 or not? Should we ask for their
passport every time?’ said Boyajian.

As for the finance ministry, it told IWPR that if betting shops are
found accepting bets from teenagers they could be fined up to 100,000
drams, around 280 dollars.

But this seems a small deterrent compared with the large amounts the
gambling shops are making from their hundreds of underage clients.

Karine Asatrian is a reporter with A1+ television in Yerevan.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Boxing: Mexican Boxer Burgos Remains In Coma After Title Fight

MEXICAN BOXER BURGOS REMAINS IN COMA AFTER TITLE FIGHT

Xinhua, China
March 7 2007

MEXICO CITY, March 6 (Xinhua) — Mexican boxer Victor Burgos, 32,
remains in a coma on Tuesday, four days after an operation to remove
a blood clot from his brain caused by a Saturday fight in the city
of Carlson, in the United States state of California.

Burgos was beaten by Armenian boxer Vic Darchinyan, when after a
minute and a half of the 12th round, the referee declared a technical
knockout. He had been campaigning for the world International Boxing
Federation title.

Burgos, who was born in the Mexican state of Puebla, has been living
in Baja California Norte city of Tijuana, which borders the United
States. Doctors at the University of California Medical Center,
where Burgos is lying, have not given any news on his condition.

Burgos, known as El Acorazado (Ironclad), was the world champion of
the World Boxing Federation, after beating fellow flyweight in the
U.S. city of Las Vegas in 2003. His record is 39 wins, 15 draws and
two loses; and 23 of his wins have been knockouts.

Darchinyan’s has won 28 times, 22 of those via a knockout.
From: Baghdasarian

As Genocide Anniversary Approaches, Armenian Group Prepares Exhibit

AS GENOCIDE ANNIVERSARY APPROACHES, ARMENIAN GROUP PREPARES EXHIBIT
By Bev Wax/Correspondent

Dover-Sherborn Press, MA
March 7 2007

SHERBORN – Massachusetts is recognized in having one of the largest
Armenian-American populations in the country. In Sherborn, there are
just a few. But last Thursday, March 1, this small group gathered to
plan a monthlong exhibit at the town library focusing on the culture
and religion of their ancestors.

The informal "committee" will also strive to remind and educate local
residents about "The Armenian Genocide" that occurred in the early
1900s. The tragic event will officially be commemorated in late April.

That evening, approximately a dozen adults, many bringing along their
young children, met at the home of Nicole and Will Whittesley. While
his in-laws are of Armenian descent, Whittesley volunteered to run
the meeting while his wife was busy hosting and looking after their
own little ones.

Her parents, John and Barbara Berberian of Shrewsbury, were
there to support the group’s effort and, of course, babysit their
grandchildren. Both agreed on the importance of teaching history
through sharing family stories. Mrs. Berberian described how her
husband’s parents "miraculously found each other" in Watertown,
realizing they were raised in the same Armenian village. She said,
"They came to this country, were hard-working and extremely
appreciative that doors were opened to them."

More than 1.5 million Armenians died during the genocide which took
place between in Turkey between 1915 through 1918 and then again from
1920 to1923 when the country was under the control of the Ottoman
Empire. Several governments, including those of Turkey and the United
States, do not officially recognize the genocide.

Reportedly, eyewitness accounts have documented numerous acts of
state-sponsored massacres, adding further weight to the genocide
argument. Many Armenians were forced out into the surrounding dessert
in traveling to the Syrian town of Deir ez-Zor.

Lucy Almasian, Sherborn’s town clerk for numerous years, said,
"Many died in these death marches … but our parents never talked
about these massaces."

At the gathering, a coffee table was overflowing with her collection
of Armenian artifacts and books. One of these was a small "oud," a
pear-shaped stringed instument known to be played in Middle Eastern
music. Almasian brightened when she spoke of her relative, Will:
"He was the best oud player, truly one of the best."

The fact that the Turkish government ordered the evacuation of ethnic
Armenians at this time is not disputed. The claim of ethinic cleansing
is still debated. Those labeling the action as genocide claim the
Ottoman government provided no care for the Armenians during this
deportation and likened it to the Holocaust. The Republic of Turkey
said the Armenian deaths were a result of the turmoil, disease and
strife of World War I.

The issue is controversial and emotional. Most attending that night
recalled heartbreaking stories of a family member’s survival.

Attorney Anthony Barsamian mentioned he had met Hirant Dink, editor
of the bilingual Armenian/Turkish Agos newspaper, while attending an
international law conference last September. Dink was shot outside
his office on Jan. 19 of this year. Well known for speaking about
the Armenian genocide, Dink’s murder sparked worldwide protests.

Here in Massachusetts, the Assembly of Turkish Associations,
a lobbying group which works closely with the Turkish government
fighting against the recognition of the genocide, has filed a lawsuit
with the state. It is based on the argument that removal of genocide
denial sources violates First Amendment rights to free speech.

The ATAA calls for the inclusion of its Web site and others in a list
of educational sources that is provided as part of a teacher’s guide
of genocide education provided by the state. The Armenian National
Committee for the Eastern Region is confident its efforts will prevail
to counteract the ATAA’s effort to reinsert genocide denial materials
into the state’s human rights curriculum guide. Barsamian explained
there is a motion to dismiss currently being considered by Judge Mark
Wolf. However, this may take months, and all parties are patiently
waiting to hear the decision.

During its brief meeting, the informal "committee" decided the library
exhibit must include information on the genocide. Three original
letters from genocide survivors are planned to be on display. But the
group also intends to focus on the country’s rich, cultural heritage.

As one of the oldest and most historic civilizations in the world,
Armenia was the first nation to adopt Christianity as its official
religion. Although it is constitutionally a secular state, the roots
of the Armenian church go back to the first century. The exhibit
includes a miniature wooden "Khachkar," a state cross that often is
used at gravesites and commemorate events. They can range in height
from 2 to 11 feet.

Always keeping the children in mind, the exhibit includes a first and
second book of Armenian words. The alphabet consists of 38 letters
dating from 405 A.D. A wide collection of books about Armenia surrounds
the display case located near the first-floor entrance.

As part of the commemoration in April, Nancy Barsamian is also
hoping to air the independent documentary "Beautiful Armenians" by
Tamar Salibian on Sherborn’s community access channel. In "Beautiful
Armenians," Salibian reflects on the interrelation of culture, family
and memory. Part travelogue, part family chronicle, part meditation,
"Beautiful Armenians" starts in the United States and eventually
moves to the Middle East.