Chakhoyan Gets Life Ban

CHAKHOYAN GETS LIFE BAN

Eurosport, France
April 5 2007

Former world champion weightlifter Sergo Chakhoyan has been banned for
life after a second doping offence, the Australian Sports Anti-Doping
Authority (ASADA) announced on Thursday.

ASADA said Chakhoyan had tested positive for the banned stimulant
benzylpiperazine (BZP) during the Commonwealth, Oceania and South
Pacific championships at Melbourne in October 2005.

Chakhoyan, 37, had previously been suspended for two years after
testing positive for the anabolic steroid stanozolol at the 2001
Goodwill Games in Brisbane.

Under world anti-doping rules, a second offence incurs an automatic
life ban.

"This was a case where the athlete took a prohibited substance
immediately prior to or during a competition without any apparent
regard as to whether the substance was prohibited in competition,"
the Court for Arbitration in Sport (CAS) said in a statement released
by ASADA.

"When viewed in the totality of the circumstances and taking into
account the criteria for no fault or negligence the respondent’s
fault or negligence was significant."

Chakhoyan was born in Armenia but moved to Australia in 1997 and
competed for his adopted country at the 2000 and 2004 Olympics. He
won the 85 kilogram world title in 2003.

Chakhoyan is one of four Australian weightlifters to test positive
for benzylpiperazine in the last 18 months, prompting ASADA to launch
an investigation into weightlifting in Australia.

/sport_sto1140069.shtml

http://www.eurosport.com/weightlifting

Weightlifter Chakhoyan Banned For Life After 2nd Doping Offence

WEIGHTLIFTER CHAKHOYAN BANNED FOR LIFE AFTER 2ND DOPING OFFENCE

Reuters , UK
April 5 2007

SYDNEY (Reuters) – Former world champion weightlifter Sergo Chakhoyan
has been banned for life after a second doping offence, the Australian
Sports Anti-Doping Authority (ASADA) announced on Thursday.

ASADA said Chakhoyan had tested positive for the banned stimulant
benzylpiperazine (BZP) during the Commonwealth, Oceania and South
Pacific championships at Melbourne in October 2005.

Chakhoyan, 37, had previously been suspended for two years after
testing positive for the anabolic steroid stanozolol at the 2001
Goodwill Games in Brisbane.

Under world anti-doping rules, a second offence incurs an automatic
life ban.

"This was a case where the athlete took a prohibited substance
immediately prior to or during a competition without any apparent
regard as to whether the substance was prohibited in competition,"
the Court for Arbitration in Sport (CAS) said in a statement released
by ASADA.

"When viewed in the totality of the circumstances and taking into
account the criteria for no fault or negligence the respondent’s
fault or negligence was significant."

Chakhoyan was born in Armenia but moved to Australia in 1997 and
competed for his adopted country at the 2000 and 2004 Olympics. He
won the 85 kilogram world title in 2003.

Chakhoyan is one of four Australian weightlifters to test positive
for benzylpiperazine in the last 18 months, prompting ASADA to launch
an investigation into weightlifting in Australia.

Iranian Author Tells Her Tale ‘From The Land Of No’

IRANIAN AUTHOR TELLS HER TALE ‘FROM THE LAND OF NO’
By: Lea Kahn, Staff Writer

Lawrence Ledger, NJ
April 5 2007

Author Roya Hakakian spoke to the Adath Israel Women’s League in
Lawrence last week.

Despite Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s pledge to wipe Israel
off the face of the earth, Jews have lived mostly peaceful lives in
Iran for 3,000 years – the Hakakian family of today, being among them.

Author and journalist Roya Hakakian, who was born in Iran, said her
family had lived there since the 15th century. Ms. Hakakian’s three
brothers immigrated to the United States in the late 1970s to study
in American colleges, and she and her parents moved in 1985.

The author of "Journey From the Land of No: A Girlhood Caught in
Revolutionary Iran," Ms. Hakakian read some passages from her 2004
book to Adath Israel’s Women’s League at its March 25 spring brunch
at the Greenacres Country Club, on Lawrenceville Road.

When the Iranian revolution occurred in 1979 and the Shah of Iran
was overthrown, most young Iranian Jews welcomed the change, said
the 40-year-old Ms. Hakakian, who now lives in Connecticut. They were
hoping for a democratic country, she said.

"We believed things were going to improve (after the revolution),"
Ms. Hakakian said. "When did it become clear to me, when did I realize
things were going in the wrong direction?"

She realized there would be changes when the bell rang at the Jewish
high school that Ms. Hakakian attended and a woman in a black veil,
worn by devout Muslim women, walked into the room and announced
herself as the school’s new principal.

"The new principal gave us a speech and tried to convince us to
convert to Islam. (But) whoever appointed her to the task must not
have auditioned her," Ms. Hakakian said, because the principal failed
to convince any of the Jewish girls to convert.

Nevertheless, the Iranian Jewish community felt relatively safe, she
said. Representatives of the Jewish community approached the Ayatollah
Khomeini, who assured them they would not be harmed. He made the
distinction between "our own (Iranian) Jews" and "the blood-sucking
Zionists" who populate Israel, Ms. Hakakian said.

President Ahmadinejad cannot be bad to Iranian Jews because his
mentor, the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, made that promise to the
country’s Jewish community shortly after the 1979 revolution, she said.

Many wealthy Jews left Iran in the 1970s and 1980s for economic
reasons, and the middle class followed them, Ms. Hakakian said. The
Jewish community that remains – about 20,000 people – is "really
wedded" to Iran, she added.

However, during the early 1980s, there was a ban on Jews leaving the
country, Ms. Hakakian said. When she and her mother applied for new
passports, the documents were confiscated. There was an emigration
quota, based on religion.

Ms. Hakakian said that she and her mother, through some bribery,
received permission to leave Iran by posing as Armenian Christians.

Mr. Hakakian was smuggled out of the country into Pakistan, and the
family made their way to the United States.

Genocide Starts With Bullying, Coloroso Says

GENOCIDE STARTS WITH BULLYING, COLOROSO SAYS
By Carolyn Blackman – Staff Reporter

Canadian Jewish News, Canada
April 5 2007

TORONTO – Ask parenting expert Barbara Coloroso if writing a book about
genocide is a giant leap for her, and she’ll immediately say "no."

Speaking about her new book, Extraordinary Evil: A Brief History
of Genocide, Coloroso, author of such books as Kids are Worth
It, Parenting Through Crisis, and The Bully, the Bullied and the
Bystander, said it’s "actually a short walk from bullying to hate
crimes to genocide."

A former Franciscan nun, and mother of three, Coloroso, 58, will
speak about her new book on April 17 at Beth Tzedec Congregation at
an evening sponsored by the Anne and Max Tanenbaum Community Hebrew
Academy of Toronto’s parent association.

Other sponsors include Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust
Studies, Hillel of Greater Toronto, UJA Federation of Greater Toronto’s
Holocaust Centre of Toronto, and federation’s Latner Centre for Jewish
Knowledge and Heritage.

In a phone interview from her home in Colorado, Coloroso said that
she began examining the Holocaust, as well as the Armenian and Rwandan
genocides, after seeing Elie Wiesel’s book Night while walking through
an airport.

"I had never studied the subject, and he brought it to the fore for
me. I began to realize how much I didn’t know."

She found a parallel between behaviours exhibited in bullying and
those exhibited in genocide.

"They both share the dehumanization of the victims and a routinization
of cruelty. The premise I take on bullying is that it is not about
conflict or anger, it is about contempt for another human being,"
Coloroso said.

"Once you make another person a cockroach or a rat, you can do anything
to them without shame or compassion. Bullying is a hostile act that
is intended to harm. When one group determines that another group is
‘it,’ they can do or say anything."

Conflict, she noted, is often used to mask genocide.

"The United States and Canada got involved in World War II to stop the
war, not to stop the genocide. They didn’t see the genocide through
the fog of war," she said.

"If there is a war going, genocide can be diverted. Hitler needed
war to complete his genocide."

Coloroso, who has visited Rwanda three times to work with orphans and
to lecture at the university there, said that "[genocide] is a very
short walk from anyone saying ‘You’re less than me.’ When a student
calls another student a name, that is step one.

"Boys and girls do verbal bullying very well, and other kids laugh."

What they’re showing, she said, is that the person who is bullied is
not worthy of being treated with dignity and regard. "He’s a loner
and a loser."

Every bully incident has a bully and a bystander, Coloroso said,
"and there are no innocent bystanders. You could not have not the
Holocaust without Hitler, but you also would not have it without the
bystanders. The bully needs support, and cheering on. Bystanders get
pleasure from seeing the pain of others."

The challenge is to raise kids with a sense of "I am unique, you are
unique, and together we can create ‘we,’" she said.

"Deep caring is as much caught as it is taught, so kids have to see
you behave with deep caring. Let them see what you do when you hear
a racist joke, let them see how you treat hired help, and let them
see you act with compassion and loving kindness."

Coloroso said she is "tragically optimistic" in that "I recognize
what is going on, and I’m not wearing rose-coloured glasses.

"However, we can make a difference. We can get a group of people to
step in and do the right thing. Deep caring always out-trumps dogma.

[The challenge] is not to cut people out of the circle of concern."

asp?id=11517

http://www.cjnews.com/viewarticle.

ANKARA: French Socialists Pledge To Pass ‘Genocide’ Bill In 2007

FRENCH SOCIALISTS PLEDGE TO PASS ‘GENOCIDE’ BILL IN 2007
AlÝ Ýhsan Aydin Paris

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
April 5 2007

The French Socialist Party (PSF) vowed yesterday that a bill
criminalizing the denial of Armenian genocide claims would be passed
in Senate this year if the party wins in the upcoming elections.

The bill, already approved by the lower house of the French Parliament
last year, has angered Turkey, which categorically refutes charges
that Armenians were victims of a genocide campaign at the hands of
the late Ottoman Empire.

PSF Secretary-General Francois Hollande, speaking at an election
campaign meeting with French-Armenians in Paris, said that his party
would introduce the bill to the Senate for final parliamentary approval
in October if it emerges victorious from the elections.

Hollande also said that in order to become a member of the EU, Turkey
must recognize the alleged genocide.

Segolene Royal, the PSF presidential candidate, said she was opposed
to parliaments writing history, but nonetheless insisted on Tuesday
that the bill criminalizing the denial of the alleged genocide must
definitely become law.

Reminded at a press conference of the divided position among French
historians on the subject, Royal declined to comment and referred
similar questions to Jean-Louis Bianco, her right-hand man and leader
of her election campaign.

Bianco said Royal was not taking sides by taking an affirmative
position on the parliamentary function of writing history, but he
added that she was looking forward to the referral of the "Armenian
genocide" issue to the Senate.

"We are facing up to the process of denial, despite the efforts from
a group of historians, both Turkish and Armenian. We cannot accept
what happened in the past. And there are people who are denying
historical facts in France," said Bianco. He further claimed that
nobody had the right to speak falsely. Recalling the Gayssot Act,
Bianco said the act had been put in place in order to punish those
who denied the Holocaust.

Leading names from the PSF say that opinion on the bill is divided
among members of their party. Jacques Lang, former minister of
education and a leading figure in the party, said there has not been
enough discussion of the issue during the election campaign.

Lang, who opposes the bill, said he would do anything to stop it from
getting approval in the Senate.

Another with concerns about the draft is Jean-Marc Ayrault, president
of the PSF parliamentary group, who said the Parliament was unwilling
to make decisions on a matter of history.

–Boundary_(ID_Gq0Cirsyr7DpbobMpgDDrw)–

NAIROBI: Artur To Wed Winnie

ARTUR TO WED WINNIE
By Cyrus Ombati and Douglas Okwatch

The Standard, Kenya
April 5 2007

Mr Artur Margaryan (right) and an associate, lift an unidentified
woman at their residence in Runda Estate, Nairobi, after a party.

Miss Winnie Wangui Mwai and Mr Artur Margaryan have lifted the lid on
a love affair whose script reads like a soap opera with spontaneous,
dramatic confessions.

With this, the piece that has been missing from a jigsaw puzzle
of high society dinners, booze, guns and fast cars in which Winnie
appeared to be always at the centre finally fell in place – romance.

Both were miles apart. But the moonstruck couple did not disappoint
with their stunning admissions.

And both confirmed on Wednesday that the nuptials would be just a
matter of time.

"I love her and I trust her very much. She is the only person who
has not betrayed my loyalty," Margaryan, whose accounts in a book he
is writing, and is due for publication in early next month, could
ruffle feathers by exposing the "who-is-who" that visited the posh
Runda address he shared with his alleged brother, said of his love
life in an exclusive interview with The Standard.

The book, ‘The Artur’s X-Files’, is being co-authored with a British
and Kenyan journalist, a female whose identity Margaryan declined to
reveal. It would reportedly put to ‘utter shame’ some ministers in
the Kibaki Government, who Margaryan says, he gave hefty bribes to
stay on and do business.

"I used to call him James and I would like to be called Mrs James or
Mrs Margaryan after the marriage is formalised," encapsulates Winnie’s
desire and leaves no doubt as to how far she is prepared to go with
the relationship.

No more speculation

She used the interview with a local FM radio station to call on the
Government to clear her boyfriend’s name, which was the subject of a
commission of inquiry that drew harsh criticism from anti-Government
elements over the manner in which it went about picking witnesses.

Its findings largely remain unknown, even though the President had
promised to expedite action.

The admissions end almost a year of grapevine and speculation over
whether indeed Margaryan – who Interpol categorises as an international
fugitive on the run – and Winnie, the daughter of Narc-Kenya activist,
Ms Mary Wambui, were lovers.

Winnie chose a local radio station to bare it all. Margaryan, in a
telephone interview from an undisclosed location with The Standard –
which he claims is his favourite media house although some matters
regarding this preference are still a subject of investigation –
confirmed Wangui’s expose.

It is unlikely, however, that the couple could tie the knot in Nairobi,
the capital which is Margaryan’s honeymoon destination of choice. This
is because Margaryan and his introverted, less flamboyant sibling,
Artur Sargasyan, are supposed to have been deported from the country in
June last year, after a security rumpus at Jomo Kenyatta International
Airport. The Rambo-like Margaryan reportedly drew a gun on airport
security officials.

They meet often

Winnie told the FM radio station that her life’s desire was to marry
Margaryan, whose real identity and that of his brother is a subject
of controversy.

On Wednesday, speculation was rife that marriage to the daughter
of one of the most influential women in Kenya today, could offer
Margaryan a safe passage back.

"I see him quite often. He is my boyfriend and I will get married to
him soon here in Kenya. Watch me," said Wangui.

Moments after delivering the sensational radio interview, Margaryan
was on phone from his hideout talking to The Standard and expressing,
in his staccato accent, how he yearns to be united in matrimony with
his Kenyan lover.

"She comes to see me very often, we are together a lot of the time.

Before she went to give the interview (on radio) she spoke to me
to say she loved me," Margaryan, who drove in unmarked cars, told
The Standard. At the height of their notoriety, police recovered
GK plates and deadly weapons, including AK-47 rifles and shotguns,
in his compound.

"In a week’s time, she will join me," Margaryan intimated, without
saying exactly where.

On her part, Wangui occasionally broke into laughter during the
animated morning interview.

They were not criminals

Asked her how she fell in love with Margaryan, she said: "You know
the beginning is normal, as you have to take your time with the person
you have met to know him more.

"I never saw him as arrogant and rough as claimed. He was a
good-hearted and honest person. We became very close of course but
I don’t want to get into details because it will be messy."

Wangui who said she has never picked up her suspension letter from the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, where she works, told of how desperately
she tried to stop the ejection of the brothers.

"I tried to stop it (deportation) through my lawyer, who I also sent
to the Kiruki Commission to show his other side of life. I know they
were not criminals," she said.

It was the first time yesterday that Wangui, who has always been
linked to the Arturs, spoke publicly about his involvement with the
men said to be Armenians. The two left the country in controversial
circumstances.

The official line is that they were deported, to which Margaryan once
again responded thus: "They (read authorities) put me on a top class
airline to where I chose to go. That’s not being removed".

Wangui wants children with Artur

In the radio interview, Wangui spoke of a grand weddding to Margaryan,
probably before the end of the year.

Wangui, a Government employee, was among 10 civil servants suspended
last June over the infamous Artur brothers saga. Their exploits are
said to have caused bad blood between former CID boss Mr Joseph Kamau
and Police Commissioner Maj-Gen Hussein Ali.

Winnie rekindled that chapter in a breakfast interview, when she spoke
of her relationship with Margaryan. She denied common speculation
in sections of the media that she was expecting Margaryan’s baby,
but said she would like to have children with him.

She defended Margaryan against accusations that he and Sargsyan were
international crooks.

"I know they are not criminals and they did not draw guns at the
airport as it was reported. The issue was blown out of proportion by
those who claimed were witnessess. No one knew the truth about them
and I wanted to tell it in vain".

Wangui spoke of how she met the men she described as good-hearted
and honest businessmen in Dubai while on a trip.

She said she was introduced to the two sometime in 2005 by a friend
who she did not name and told they were potential investors and
decided to do business with them, through Kensington Holdings.

The firm was owned by the Arturs, Ms Wangui, Julius Maina Mwangi and
Aloise Otieno Omita, the Kiruki Commission was told last year.

Lawyer Gibson Kamau Kuria represented her at the commission and could
at times defend the Arturs as good people.

She talked of difficulties she went through when the commission
started the hearings on the activities of the Armenians, describing
it as a very "difficult time".

Said she: "Friends desert you at a time of need. But my mother stood
by me all that time".

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

NAIROBI: Margaryan Is The Love Of My Life, By Winnie

MARGARYAN IS THE LOVE OF MY LIFE, BY WINNIE
Story by NATION Reporter

Daily Nation , Kenya
April 5 2007

Ms Winfred Wangui, daughter of businesswoman Mary Wambui, is in love –
with deported Armenian Artur Margaryan. And, according to her, their
wedding bells will be ringing any time.

In an exclusive interview with Easy FM Wednesday morning, Ms Wangui
defended Mr Margaryan and his alleged brother, Mr Artur Sargsyan,
saying they were not criminals but "good and honest businessmen". The
interview was to be aired by NTV last evening.

Winnie, as she is popularly known, admitted that she has been having
a love affair with Mr Margaryan and was optimistic that they will
settle down and raise a family once they are married.

She said the two brothers were "innocent" of all the charges leveled
against them and expressed confidence that they will eventually be
cleared. The two were hastily deported last year after a serious
security breach at the Jomo Kenyatta International Airport when
they allegedly manhandled security officers and drew guns at customs
officers to avoid their luggage being checked.

President Kibaki subsequently appointed a commission of inquiry
headed by former police commissioner Shedrach Kiruki to investigate
the brothers and their dealings in Kenya.

The airport incident was the final straw in a series of incidents
revolving around the brothers who first came to the limelight when
Lang’ata MP Raila Odinga claimed they were mercenaries brought in to
assassinate key opposition leaders.

Ms Wangui, who at the time was a ministry of Foreign Affairs official,
was one of the civil servants interdicted in the wake of the airport
drama. During the inquiry, she was alleged to have used her office
to get protocol officers at the airport to offer VIP treatment to
the Artur brothers.

Other officials suspended included police and customs officials who
were caught up in the airport saga, as well as the deputy managing
director of the Kenya Airports Authority, Ms Naomi Cidi, who was
accused of procuring airport security passes for the brothers.

In the Easy FM interview, Ms Wangui said that her full name was
Winfred Wangui Mwai. But she declined to discuss her relationship
with the First Family, saying that "those who know the truth will
stay with the truth."

And she revealed that she was still a civil servant as she has never
been relieved of her duties. However, she spends most of her time
travelling and trying out her hand in business. She did not disclose
whether she is still drawing a Government salary.

For the first time since the Artur saga broke, Ms Wangui reveals how
she met the brothers through a mutual friend during a 2005 holiday
in Dubai. They got to know each other, went into business together –
which she described as "general trading" – and the working relationship
eventually blossomed into a love affair with Mr Margaryan.

And according to her, the airport gun drama and the alleged fracas
at the Panari Hotel either did not happen or were misreported and
blown out of proportion.

The Kiruki commission, however, did find in its report – which was
presented to President Kibaki last August – that the brothers were
suspicious characters of uncertain nationality and identity who should
have been arrested. In his evidence before the Inquiry, Immigration
minister Gideon Konchellah described them as international criminals.

When receiving the report, President Kibaki promised swift action on
the recommendations. But nothing has been done so far and the report
has never been made public.

The following are excerpts from yesterday’s interview:

EASY FM: Are you still working for the civil service?

WANGUI: I’ve never seen a letter of sacking.

You’ve never been sacked?

I’ve never been sacked. Of course last year we were all suspended and
everybody keeps getting their letter at different times. So that is
what we are waiting for.

But you’ve never bothered to go and check?

No.

Where did you first meet (the Armenians)?

In Dubai. When I was on holiday, year 2005.

Margaryan has been gone for nearly a year. Do you still keep in touch?

Of course.

Are you dating him?

Yes. I see him.

Is he your boyfriend?

Yes he is.

You and Margaryan are not planning to get married?

We will one day.

Who will give you away?

Somebody always gives the bride away.

But you will have children with him

Of course if we get married we will have children, God willing.

mgcontententry.asp?category_id=1&newsid=95269

http://www.nationmedia.com/dailynation/n

Fresno: ‘I Am Armenian’

‘I AM ARMENIAN’
By James Guy / The Fresno Bee

Fresno Bee , CA
April 6 2007

Elementary school’s new Clovis location won’t change its
Armenian-English curriculum.

– All Job Categories – Accounting Admin & Clerical Automotive1
Banking1 Biotech1 Broadcast – Journalism1 Business Development
Construction Consultant Customer Service Design Distribution –
Shipping Education Engineering Entry Level Executive Facilities
Finance General Business General Labor Government Health Care Hotel –
Hospitality Human Resources Information Technology Insurance Inventory
Legal Legal Admin Management Manufacturing Marketing Nurse Other
Pharmaceutical Professional Services Purchasing – Procurement QA –
Quality Control Research Restaurant – Food Service Retail – Grocery
Sales Science Skilled Labor – Trades Strategy – Planning Supply Chain
Telecommunications Training Transportation Warehouse

Holding high the Armenian tricolor, Careen DerKalousdian and Razmig
Markarian, both 3, recited the poem, "Hye Em Yes" (I am Armenian),
in a performance that seemed to capture the spirit of the Armenian
Community School of Fresno.

The elementary school, which is proud of its bilingual Armenian-English
curriculum and its ranking on achievement tests, is the only Armenian
school between the Bay Area and Los Angeles.

It’s also on the move — a Tower District fixture since 2001, the
school plans to relocate to Clovis in the fall because St. Therese
Catholic Church is renovating church grounds, leaving no room for
the school.

The school’s new location won’t mean a change of academic direction,
Principal Rosie Bedrosian said; instilling an appreciation for the
Armenian culture is an essential element of the school’s goals.

"We want them to know their roots and where they came from so they
don’t forget who they are," she said.

The school does that through the classroom, celebrating important
dates in Armenian history and through talent shows like the one in
which the preschoolers recited the poem.

About 90 students attend Armenian Community, which has classes from
preschool through sixth grade. Students spend about an hour a day
studying the Armenian language and heritage in addition to regular
elementary school subjects.

School officials tout the school’s academic performance: each year,
grades one through six collectively rank in the upper 20th percentile
on the Stanford Nine Achievement test, which measures aptitude in
reading, language arts, math, science and social science, according
to Randy Baloian, chairman of the school board.

Kindergarten teacher Jackie Chekerdemian credits much of that to
small class sizes.

"There is lots of one-on-one teaching, because there are only 11 in
the class," she said of her students.

In Chekerdemian’s class, Michael Mazman, 5, recently focused on an
Armenian alphabet workbook.

"Look at my writing," he said proudly to a visitor.

Asked to choose between which of two alphabets he enjoyed more,
English or Armenian, Michael did not hesitate.

"I like the Armenian," he said.

The 36-letter alphabet was developed by Mesrob Mashdots in the late
fourth century, language teacher Maral Markarian said. Two more letters
have been added to the modern alphabet. Like Michael, other students
at the school said they liked the alphabet’s elegant flowing letters.

"Armenian is more fun to write in," said Arthur Basmajian, 9.

"It’s more challenging," said Nareg Apkarian, 8.

The various backgrounds of students at Armenian Community are a
reflection of the Armenian diaspora. Some of the students’ parents
were refugees from the Lebanese civil war between warring Christian
and Muslim factions in the 1970s.

Other students’ parents arrived from Iran after the overthrow of the
Shah in the late 1970s. Still another wave of students came to the
U.S. in the aftermath of a catastrophic 1988 earthquake in Armenia
that killed nearly 50,000 and left 500,000 homeless.

Other students come from families who arrived in the first Armenian
migration in the early 20th century.

Since the children come from different parts of the world, the students
become familiar with two different dialects. Those from Lebanon and
the Middle East speak the western dialect. Those from Armenia speak
the eastern.

The circuitous routes leading to Fresno are also reflected in faculty
histories. Principal Bedrosian’s Russian family was among Armenians
on the Black Sea coast who were forced by German occupiers during
World War II to become forced laborers in Germany. After the war,
her family came as refugees to Fresno.

Markarian, the language teacher, is a survivor of the Lebanese
Civil War.

"We were caught in the middle," she said. "We suffered a lot."

She said the school carries on an Armenian tradition that has led to
Armenian churches in far-flung locations such as Singapore. "Wherever
Armenians go, the first thing they will do is build a church and a
school," she said.

One of the first poems Markarian teaches is based on the history of
St. Vartan, a hero to the Armenian people. Historically, Persians and
Armenians enjoyed fraternal relations, but when a Persian emperor
demanded Armenians renounce Christianity and adopt Zoroastrianism,
Armenians under Vartan refused.

Vartan was slain in the ensuing battle and the Armenians were defeated
by an overwhelming force of Persians equipped with war elephants. But
the Armenians were able to keep their Christianity.

The poem proclaims, "I am Armenian. I am Armenian. I am the grandson
of Brave Vartan."

A relocation of the school to Clovis would be the fourth move since
the school began in 1976 in the basement of Holy Trinity Armenian
Apostolic Church on Ventura and M Streets in downtown Fresno. Four
years later, it moved to Fresno Street and Weldon Avenue, then to
the St. Therese site in 2001.

Baloian, of the school board, said the Clovis location is on a
21/2-acre lot near Herndon and Willow avenues. Plans call for placing
temporary school classrooms on the site. School officials also hope
to eventually offer seventh- and eighth-grade classes as they once did.

l

http://www.fresnobee.com/263/story/40179.htm

State Program For Tourism’s Development In 2007 Adopted In NKR

STATE PROGRAM FOR TOURISM’S DEVELOPMENT IN 2007 ADOPTED IN NKR

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
April 6 2007

The Nagorno-Karabagh Republic government has adopted a State program
for the tourism’s development in 2007.

According to the information DE FACTO got at the NKR government’s
press office, the program is targeted at the stable development of
the traveling sphere, improving the traveling services’ quality,
ensuring the branch’s competitive ability.

Attendance of the Nagorno-Karabagh by foreign tourists is to be
increased by 20% as compared with 2006. The program is also to
improve the branch’s legislative base and stimulate the process of the
Nagorno-Karabagh’s integration in the international traveling market.

Stepan Grigoryan: Armenia Must Try To Influence US Position

STEPAN GRIGORYAN: ARMENIA MUST TRY TO INFLUENCE US POSITION
Marlena Hovsepyan

"Radiolur"
06.04.2007 16:40

"The release of British sailors will weaken the US-Iran tension and
will reduce the possibility of military actions," political scientist
Stepan Grigoryan considers. According to him, Ahmadinejad’s step will
be positively taken by the European countries. The United States will
not launch military actions without Russia and Europe.

"In my opinion the threat of military actions always exists, but
today it’s not that big. It is hard to ignore the opinion of a number
of countries on the issue, particularly the stances of US Security
Council member states, primarily Russia and China," he said. Despite
the harsh resolutions adopted, the UN s inclined to solving conflicts
within the framework of diplomatic relations.

"Sine the issue refers to our immediate neighbor and touches our
interests, it is important that Armenia clarifies its position,"
says Stepan Grigoryan.

He is confident that we need to activate our diplomacy: even if
local military actions are launched, it will be a blow to Armenia’s
security system.

We are implementing large-scale economic programs especially in
the energy sphere, and the possible war will jeopardize our energy
security: "If among other countries Armenia expresses the opinion that
the launch of military actions is not wanted, it will be taken into
consideration by both the United States and the European Union. Every
country should try to resolve the issue in a peaceful way."

The UС forgives Armenia what it would not forgive any other
country. "It is connected with the fact that according to the
decision of the US Congress, Armenia is a country in blockade and
that is why the US allows us implement energy projects with Iran,"
says the political scientist.

A year ago Georgia uselessly tried to do the same during the tension
of Russian-Georgian relations: the US did not allow our neighbor
develop relations with Iran.

Taking into consideration the positive attitude of the United States
towards our country, Armenia can try to have certain influence on
the decisions of the superpower on some issues. "We should not use
our lobbyist opportunities in the US only for the recognition of the
Armenian Genocide. Today we must use these opportunities to prevent
military actions in Iran," Stepan Grigoryan says.

According to him, our interests on the Iran issue overlap with those
of Russia, since this superpower does no want reinforcement of the
positions of the West in our region.

–Boundary_(ID_lsi/T+/mBI3VabyMZyvang)–