Club Day

CLUB DAY
Sasha Santacruz

Valley Star
10/8/08
CA

Valley College had its first club day of the fall semester on
Wednesday. The area was tranquil except for some students walking
around with a clipboard asking, "Are you registered to vote?"

On the small piece of Monarch Square that isn’t under construction,
students set up their tables for others to learn about their
organization.

The Child Development department set the scene with a banner, flyers,
doughnuts and orange juice. The club is an advocate for parents and
children and also promotes early childhood education.

"We are not only representing our club," said Annalace Hillinger. "We
also are giving out flyers for the Family Resource Center."

The Lesbian,Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Questioning Club gives students
the opportunity to come together and speak about current issues or
to simply meet others like themselves.

"We had a late start last year, but it’s getting better" said James
Hart, president of the club. "We got about three new people just
within this last hour."

Some clubs had food and refreshments for sale, giving students a great
opportunity to get an on-the-go breakfast or simply get hydrated on
what was a scorching day.

A student, sitting on a bench, watched the event while eating her
food. When finished, she walked over to the child development club
to purchase a cup of orange juice and then walked away.

The Armenian Student Association, which quickly had students showing
interest, put an emphasis on collecting donations for foster children
in Armenia.

The Movmiento Estudiantil Chicano/a de Aztlan (M.E.Ch.A) set up their
table a little late, but made sure they had salsa and chips out for
students. The club is working on a fundraiser to hold a state-wide
conference so they can touch basis on particular topics.

"A lot of people ask what it [M.E.Ch.A] stands for," said Dulce
Medina. "It’s a window shopping experience for people."

A day for clubs to promote themselves changed quite a bit this
year. With the election only a month away, many clubs were focused
on the task of getting students registered to vote. Within the first
hour, an Associated Student Union member reported having more than
fifty new voters.

"It’s been awesome collecting a lot of registrations," said student
Fernando Alvarez. "It feels great being active in voting."

At the end of the affair, the organizations came together and helped
one another get more registrations. If interested in a particular
club or would like more information, students may go to the ASU office
located in the Campus Center.

A City Of Great Contrasts

A CITY OF GREAT CONTRASTS
Kaelen Wilson-Goldie

The National
October 08. 2008 2:04PM UAE
United Arab Emirates

Cafes in downtown Beirut are enjoying a renaissance. Sipa Press /
Rex Features

Why go Luxurious and low-key, quaint, sophisticated and stubbornly
provincial, Beirut is a city of wild contradictions and criss-crossing
influences. It balances a languid, sun-kissed Mediterranean lifestyle
with the punishing pace of a hyper-capitalist city that has endured
a tragically tumultuous history. Destroyed by fire, earthquake and
wars too numerous to name, Beirut always recovers, and does so in
style. Its resilience has become intrinsic to its appeal.

A visit to the National Museum, first completed in 1937 and beautifully
renovated in 1997, offers a quick study in Lebanon’s history. The
artefacts on view date from the Bronze and Iron ages; the Hellenistic,
Roman and Byzantine periods; and the years of Arab conquest up through
the Mameluke era. Highlights include a marble sarcophagus illustrating
the legend of Achilles.

Political instability hasn’t slowed development in Beirut, such that
to wander around the city today is an endless exercise in what was
and what will be. One thing that hasn’t changed since the go-go days
of the 1960s, however, is the Sporting Club, a concrete beach of
consummate charm that juts out into the sea from Ras Beirut.

But to truly experience the here and now, head to the cafes of Hamra
Street, which are enjoying a renaissance, or to the restaurants of
the city centre, which are again buzzing with activity, or to the
clutch of cute nightlife joints that have multiplied all the way down
the main drag of Gemmayzeh and into Mar Mikhael. Drop in on Beirut’s
rigorously contemporary art scene along the way, or simply follow
the sounds of the city’s many live music venues, which range from
traditional tarab to experimental jazz and the steady thump of techno.

Where to stay Luxury Situated in the upscale neighbourhood that
is clustered around Abdel Wahab al-Inglizi Street in Achrafieh,
the Hotel Albergo offers 33 elegant, individually designed suites
detailed with Bohemian crystal chandeliers, Briare porcelain, Carrare
marble and antique furniture. Guests can choose from the Oriental,
Mediterranean, Colonial and European rooms, or go all out for the
presidential or royal suites. The Albergo’s rooftop terrace – a
verdant, jasmine-scented reprieve from the chaotic urban density below
– boasts a casual restaurant, a swimming pool and 360-degree views
of the Beirut skyline. The more formal and stately Al Dente, located
on the ground floor, serves exquisite Italian cuisine and invites
Michelin-starred chefs to create new tasting menus for travellers and
neighbourhood diners alike. Standard suites begin at Dh1,032 per night,
including tax and breakfast. (+961 1 339 797, )

Mid-range The ultra-modern Monroe Hotel overlooks the marina in the
heart of Downtown Beirut’s hotel district, with the iconic Phoenicia,
St Georges and Holiday Inn on one side and the new Platinum and
Marina Towers on the other. More sleek and Scandinavian in style
than opulent or oriental, the Monroe includes 49 rooms and suites,
three restaurants, an outdoor swimming pool, a beauty salon and
a spa. Standard rooms begin at Dh496 per night. (+961 1 371 122,
)

Budget A favourite among visiting artists, writers, foreign
correspondents, humanitarian aid workers and travellers who value a
down-to-earth stay over exuberant ostentation, the Mayflower Hotel is
a long-standing local favourite, with 85 rooms. It recently celebrated
its 50th anniversary, which makes it ancient by Beiruti standards, and
its fabled history includes giving shelter to the writer Graham Greene,
the notorious spy Kim Philby and the formula one champion Graham Hill,
all of whom have suites named for them now. Situated in the middle
of the cosmopolitan Hamra Street district, the Mayflower offers few
frills but can’t be beat for location. Single rooms begin at Dh294
per night, not including tax. (+961 340 680, )

Where to eat Back in the 1960s, politicians used the spill out of
late-night parliament sessions to dine with the luminaries of Lebanese
arts and letters at the restaurant Al Ajami in downtown Beirut. Al
Ajami opened in Souq al-Tawile in 1920, and, after the neighbourhood
was levelled by years of civil war and reconstruction, decamped to
Ramlet al-Baida in 1998. The new location may be sleepy compared to
Al Ajami’s raucous heyday, but one thing that remains the same is the
food, an expansive and delectable selection of mezze, meats and sweets
that carry Lebanon’s long and intricate culinary history in every dish.

In Beirut, the fiercest of epicures seek out Levantine twists on
the delicacies of Armenian cuisine. The restaurants Al Mayass, in
Achrafieh, and Mayrig, in Gemmayzeh, are the most famous. But the
most authentic is the closet-sized Varouj, tucked into an alleyway
in Bourj Hammoud. Prepare for a marathon feast and make sure you try
the soujouk, batrakh dressed in garlic, spiced kafta drenched in red
cherries and, if you can handle it, asafeer (small roasted birds that
you pop into your mouth and crunch).

For outdoor dining, head to the gardenia- and jasmine-edged garden
at Centrale. The menu is refreshed every season, and the summer
selections include a succulent lobster salad with coriander and
ginger. The restaurant Casablanca, on the upper floor of an old Ottoman
villa in Ain al-Mreisseh, is Beirut’s best-kept dining secret, with a
long list of loyal regulars who make reservations a requirement. The
menu mixes a little of east with a little bit of west, the kitchen
benefits tremendously from the owner Johnny Farah’s organic farm,
and the daily specials are to die for.

How to get there Middle East Airlines (MEA), Etihad, and Emirates
daily to Beirut from Abu Dhabi and Dubai.

www.albergobeirut.com
www.monroebeirut.com
www.mayflowerbeirut.com

I On Politics

I ON POLITICS

Western Queens Gazette
October 8, 2008
NY

Term Limits Issue Turns Into A Real Dogfight

Well, nobody ever said changing the term limits law was going to
be easy.

The mayor is looking for an easy way out by merely letting the City
Council vote on extending limits to 12 years in all, from two to three,
four-year terms for all citywide officials and all councilmembers.

There is, however, strong support among a number of councilmembers
for making the change through a referendum, voted on by the city’s
electorate. One of the leaders pushing this proposal is Councilmember
David Weprin (D- Hollis); another is John Liu (D- Flushing).

Other than there being differences on how the change should be made,
still another group of councilmembers doesn’t want to change the term
limits law at all.

Besides this, Ronald Lauder and the mayor have differences on changing
term limits. While the mayor is holding out for a permanent change,
Lauder would go along with changing term limits only for the 2009
election, because the economy is so bad generally and particularly
because the city’s situation is horrendous. Given these circumstances,
the mayor should remain in office for another term because he’s
uniquely qualified to lead the city through these unsettled times.

SENIORS GREET GIULIANI, MALTESE: For his part, Maltese wasn’t just
sitting on his hands last week and had a big name talent helping his
campaign. Former Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, who scored impressively
in Queens in his two mayoral victories, was back in the borough
last week to campaign with Maltese and Councilmember Anthony Como,
both of whom are running for re-election. The former mayor and the
candidates visited senior centers in Republican strongholds Glendale
and Ridgewood. Maltese also announced another endorsement by a police
line organization, the Police Conference of New York (PCNY), which
represents 229 Police Benevolent Association chapters plus eight
regional conferences, for a total of 25,000 officers throughout
the state. Previously, Maltese had been endorsed by the Detectives
Endowment Association and the Bridge and Tunnel Officers’ Benevolent
Association. Maltese has also gotten major endorsements from District
Council 37 (DC 37), the 1.1-million-member municipal workers union, the
Public Employees Federation, the Civil Service Employees Association,
and the state AFL-CIO.

However, there are those who object to the notion that there
aren’t any other people qualified to lead the city through a
perilous period. Among them are Congressmember Anthony Weiner (D-
Queens/Brooklyn), city Comptroller William Thompson and Councilmember
Tony Avella (D- Bayside), all of whom are Democrats and all of whom
have indicated that they plan to run for mayor even if Bloomberg gets
a chance to run for a third term.

Weprin, who had long planned to run for city comptroller when his
second term ended next year, has led the call for making changes in
the term limits law by referendum only with a citywide vote. His
position is backed by good government groups and others. All feel
that the original term limits law and one other subsequent vote on
the issue were both brought about by the entire city electorate,
so the same method of approval or disapproval must be followed.

Liu said in a statement, "I’ve never supported term limits. I think
it makes sense to extend them, but not this way by a city council
vote. The term limits were enacted by referendum and confirmed by
another referendum. So if we are going to tinker with this law,
it should go back to the people."

Public Advocate Betsy Gotbaum also backs Weprin’s bill.

Others speaking out on the issue were Councilmembers Peter Vallone
Jr. and James

Gennaro and Comptroller Thompson. Thompson stated: "First and foremost,
the will of the people should not be ignored. I am opposed to any
extension of term limits by legislative fiat. The voters have spoken
twice and any attempt to disregard their voice sends a message that
democracy has

taken a back seat."

On a similar note, Gennaro said, "The issue of extending term limits
has gone to the people twice through public referendum, and any
revisiting of the issue should go back to the people. If brought before
the council, I would go with the will of the people and vote no."

Vallone stated:

"The earthquake that hit Wall St. this week has caused us to consider
new ways to shore up our political foundation. Mayor Bloomberg is a
great choice for the New Yorkers to have during these trying times,
and I will therefore take a serious look at any term limits legislation
that comes across my desk."

DEM BACKERS SHOW UP FOR ADDABBO: As the election calendar showed the
start of the final month of the 2008 campaign, City Councilmember
Joseph Addabbo Jr. turned his campaign for state senator against
incumbent Senator Serphin Maltese up a couple of notches.

At one of his biggest rallies of the campaign, the Ozone Park/Howard
Beach lawmaker was joined by City Comptroller William Thompson,
Congressmember Anthony Weiner and other Democratic Party supporters,
as well as members of several labor unions who have endorsed him
and pledged to hit the pavement for him from now to Election Day on
November 4.

All told, about 300 Addabbo supporters showed up at the Ridgewood
Democratic Club to start the countdown to Election Day. To Addabbo,
the large turnout represented the "people power" component of the
campaign, and when the day ended, the labor union volunteers had
accomplished one of their missions: ringing some 3,000 doorbells to
pass the word about Addabbo’s candidacy.

Thompson and Weiner, who both plan to run for mayor next year, gave
pep talks to the energized crowd, both hitting the same theme about
the need for change in Albany.

Addabbo also promised to "deliver for all New Yorkers" and to keep
the pressure on until Election Day.

DIVERSE $UPPORT FOR GENNARO: In the other hot state senate race in the
borough, in which Democrats hope to make inroads against Republican
control of the state senate, Councilmember James Gennaro is challenging
incumbent Senator Frank Padavan in Northeast Queens.

Gennaro reports that he has raised more than $723,000 for his campaign
and has more than $400,000 of that still on hand.

But beyond the numbers, Gennaro emphasizes, "The contributions come
from a diverse array of supporters, including the Asian- American
community, the Jewish community, the environmental community and
progressive activists interested in seeing the Democratic Party take
control of the state senate for the first time in four decades, a
situation that would materialize with just two Democratic victories
in November."

However, Padavan has faced serious challenges in the past and it will
be interesting to see how this one turns out.

GIANARIS SPEAKER AT GREEKAMERICAN OBAMA EVENT: Assemblymember
Michael Gianaris was the special guest speaker at a fundraiser for
the Obama/Biden ticket in New York City attended by more than 100
Greek-American supporters. The Astoria lawmaker, stressing the
importance of political activism for young Hellenes, recounted
how his involvement in the 1988 Michael Dukakis campaign served
as his springboard into political life and his election as
an Assemblymember. He urged those who were present to journey
to battleground states like Pennsylvania and Florida to help
the Obama/Biden team make its final push toward victory in
November. Gianaris also recounted his meeting with Barack Obama
previously at a Chicago fundraiser.

At the September 25 event at the Olympic Tower Atrium Cafe in Manhattan
other guests present were Democratic Party activist Angelo Tsakopoulos;
r. Dean Lomis, former chair of the American Hellenic Institute, and
event host Jeff Kurzon, who is affiliated with Armenians for Obama and
Obama NYC. The fundraiser co-hosts were Dean Sirigus and Olga Alexakos.

CROWLEY HAILS US-INDIA CIVILIAN NUCLEAR PACT: The three-year effort
to forge an agreement between the United States and India to authorize
the transfer of U.S. civilian nuclear technology scaled a major hurdle
when Congress approved the historic link up, Congressmember Joseph
Crowley announced.

Crowley, House Chief Deputy Whip, who supported the agreement
throughout that period both in Congress and in the Indian- American
community which is included in his district, hailed the pact’s passage.

"Today’s passage of the final agreement is an historic moment, and
the agreement’s impending enactment will cement a critical partnership
that I hope will continue for decades," he declared.

Crowley (D- Queens/The Bronx), a member of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee and former chair of the Caucus on India and Indian Americans,
is a key leader on South Asian affairs in Congress. The Elmhurst
lawmaker helped to broker the U.S.- India nuclear pact, which now
goes to the Senate for approval.

REAL GRASSROOTS CAMPAIGN: For almost three decades, the Enchanted
Florist & Greenhouse, at 65-10 Grand Ave. in the heart of the Maspeth
shopping district, has been owned and operated by Tony Nunziato.

On a recent Saturday, he temporarily converted part of the shop’s large
storefront into campaign headquarters for his run as the Republican
candidate for the 30th Assembly District seat held by Assemblymember
Margaret Markey, the Democratic incumbent.

Nunziato plastered the upper part of the building with large signs
announcing his campaign, and in a news release was just as outspoken
in making renewal of the commuter tax his key issue. Nearly 10 years
ago, the tax on Long Islanders and surburbanites north of the city was
repealed, denying the city $4 billion in revenue each year. Markey,
Nunziato pointed out, was one of the members of the Assembly Democratic
majority that voted to end the tax. Nunziato’s name will also be on
the Conservative and Independence Party lines. The district includes
Maspeth, Woodside, and portions of Long Island City, Middle Village,
Astoria and Sunnyside.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Karsh Treatment

KARSH TREATMENT
By Chris Bergeron

Watertown TAB & Press
Wed Oct 08, 2008, 11:11 AM EDT
MA

Boston – When taking his world-famous portraits, Yousuf Karsh sought
to reveal his subject’s "hidden" character by capturing ephemeral
emotions concealed beneath the mask of celebrity.

Combining a courtly demeanor with darkroom brilliance, the Armenia
native photographed royalty and despots, starlets and artists,
transforming their public faces into iconic images.

In celebration of the 100th anniversary of Karsh’s birth, the Museum of
Fine Arts is exhibiting a broad sampling of memorable black-and-white
photographs that display his eye-catching artistry throughout the
arc of his career.

Pablo Picasso gazes with penetrating eyes past a vase bearing the
figure of an amply endowed nude. Regal yet reserved beneath her
crown, Princess Elizabeth stands at rest in her royal gown. Pale as a
corpse, a cadaverous Andy Warhol holds a paintbrush in his delicate,
hairy hands.

The just-opened exhibit, "Karsh 100: A Biography in Images," comprises
about 100 images including famous personalities and lesser-known
landscapes, experimental shots and photos of Canadian laborers and
landscapes that show another side of the artist.

Organized by curator Anne Havinga, the exhibit presents a balanced,
visually pleasing portrait of one of the 20th century’s great portrait
photographers.

Born in 1908 in the former Eastern Ottoman Empire, now present day
Turkey, Karsh achieved international recognition following decades of
diligent preparation. After relatives were killed during the Armenian
genocide, his family moved to Syria and Karsh was sent in 1924 to live
in Canada with an uncle who was a professional photographer. Impressed
by his nephew’s ability, his uncle sent Karsh to Boston to serve as
an apprentice with John Garo, an experienced photographer who became
his mentor.

During his formative years in Boston, Karsh hones his signature style.

Karsh’s best-known work, a portrait of a defiant Winston Churchill
that launched his career, resulted from a fortunate mix of the
photographer’s determination and instinctive professionalism, Havinga
said. Allowed only two minutes to photograph Churchill, who was
visiting Canada just weeks after the bombing of Pearl Harbor, she
said Karsh "respectfully" plucked a cigar from his lips, prompting
an expression of indomitable will that came to represent British
resistance.

Opening the exhibit, Estrellita Karsh said her late husband
photographed "people who mattered, people who left their mark on
the world."

"I hope this exhibit shows what kind of person Yousuf was," she
added. "I think it shows the intertwining of his personality and work
because they are one and the same thing."

Shedding a different sort of light on Karsh’s personal and technical
approach, the exhibit also includes one of his large-format cameras,
preparatory studies for his portraits and a revealing transcript of
a conversation with Albert Einstein during a 1948 photo session that
clearly intended to put the great man into a pensive mood.

In a revealing back-and-forth, Karsh asked Einstein about possible
connections between music and mathematics, the likelihood of Russian
imperialism and whether he felt optimistic about the future during
the atomic age.

Throughout the mid-20th century, Havinga said, "Karsh’s name became
synonymous with the highest level of photographic portraiture and being
‘Karshed’ was an honor for sitters."

Visitors to the show will feel as if they’re viewing a cavalcade
of 20th century stars such as Audrey Hepburn, Ernest Hemingway,
Jacqueline Kennedy, Mother Theresa, Rudolf Nureyev, the Duchess of
Windsor, Harry Truman, Georgia O’Keeffe and Ronald Reagan.

Jerry Fielder, who served as a consultant for the show, praised Karsh
for his meticulous preparation for each photo session and expertise
editing his images. The curator and director of Karsh’s estate,
he explained the artist typically shot with a large-format camera
that used an 8-by-10-inch negative that captured his subjects in
remarkable detail.

Karsh usually shot about 15 negatives for every two-hour
session. "Yousuf researched his subjects for talking points during
the session," Fielder said. "And he had an extraordinary control of
light. In the dark room, he was the master of light and composition."

Karsh’s images became so ingrained in the popular mind that viewers
passing through the galleries may have the curious sensation of seeing
famous people who looked just like they thought they would.

Sitting beneath a horned elk skull, a black-clad Georgia O’Keeffe
resembles a monk meditating in an austere cell. Wearing a dark burnoose
and white hood, Ibn Abdul Aziz Faisal, who became king of Saudi Arabia,
appears to be lost in deep thought. Practically spilling out of her
gown, sexy Swedish starlet Anita Ekberg purses her lips and closes
her eyes in a seemingly private rapture.

Shot in extreme close-up, Fidel Castro’s deep-eyed gaze exudes a
somber gravitas. Boris Karloff sits pensively, looking tired rather
than monstrous. Appearing atypically nervous in a strapless gown,
28-year-old Jacqueline Kennedy looks quizzically into the camera.

In a memoir titled "Portfolio," Karsh wrote of photographing the
famous: "The endless fascination of these people for me lies in their
inward power… It is part of the elusive secret that hides in everyone
and it has been my life’s work to catch on film. The mask we present
to others, and too often to ourself, may lift only for a second —
to reveal that power in an unconscious gesture, a raised brow,
a surprise response, a moment of repose. This is the moment to record."

"Karsh 100: A Biography in Images" The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Admission: $17 Call: 617-267-9300

Levon Chilingirian: A Cypriot Violinist

LEVON CHILINGIRIAN: A CYPRIOT VIOLINIST

Londra Toplum PostasÄ
8 Ekim 2008, CarÅ~_amba 18:05
UK

Levon Chilingirian OBE (born 28 May 1948, Nicosia) is a Cypriot
violinist based in the UK. The founder of the Chilingirian Quartet,
he is also a professor at the Royal College of Music in London and is
musical director of Camerata Nordica, a Swedish chamber orchestra. He
is also artistic director of the Mendelssohn on Mull festival.

Born to Armenian Cypriot parents in Cyprus, Chilingirian began playing
the violin when he was five, being taught by his uncle. He came to
Britain when he was 12 and studied at the Royal College of Music. He
won first prize in the BBC Beethoven and the Munich Duo competitions
in 1969 and 1971 respectively.

In 1971 he founded the Chilingirian Quartet, which has developed a
particularly strong association with a number of composers, including
John Tavener and Michael Berkeley. He was also one of the first
members of The English Concert, and played in their first London
concert in 1973.

In addition to teaching, playing and recording, Chilingirian’s interest
in the work of Edvard Grieg led to his own edition of the composer’s
incomplete Quartet in F major.

In the New Years Honours 2000, Chilingirian was awarded the Order of
the British Empire for services to Music.

–Boundary_(ID_/CZfanVDEFDaOlzJYRU6TA)–

Commentary: Irrelevance Threatens All Of Us

COMMENTARY: IRRELEVANCE THREATENS ALL OF US
By Joseph J. Honick

HNN Huntingtonnews.net
olumns/081008-honick-columnsirrelevance.html
Oct. 8, 2008
USA

The greatest single danger to America may not be terrorists, housing
foreclosures or the many, many other media reported catastrophes. More
than any of those is the reality of how we are becoming irrelevant
in the minds and decisions of other nations important to us — and
the roles key PR firms and advisers may well be playing in all of this.

Were it not for our wealth, natural resources and military power,
all of which are being squandered at a record pace, it is hard to
believe very many other nations would pay much attention to us with
reference to their own major decisions.

It does not take much to observe realities of key nations virtually
thumbing their noses at us as they form alliances with hardly a
consult with America.

Russia and Iran wind up as nuclear sweethearts and arms partners even
as we publicly try to figure out how or whether we need to think
about attacking Iran in retribution for alleged smuggling of arms
and other help to our enemies in Iraq.

North and South Korea figure out how to cooperate in a manner we could
not work out with our former enemies. Japan says it has had enough
of the Iraq mess and starts the pullout of the cooperation with us
there with cries of "no more American wars." Then North Korea and
Syria are found unabashedly dancing together with apparent nuclear
cooperation until, that is, Israel took action similar to its efforts
in 1981 against Iraq, and knocked out the Syrian site.

We have made common cause in vast commercial investment, diplomatic
and other means with Communist North Vietnam which had killed about
58,000 of our armed forces even as we could not find a path toward
diplomatic relations with Cuba only 90 miles from our shores, now
warning that nation about its means of succession at the top.

But these are only a few examples of how, in only a few years, we have
lost the power and dignity of presidents from Franklin Delano Roosevelt
to Bill Clinton, including even the disgraced Richard Nixon who, in
his better days, had accomplished significant diplomatic successes
in China and elsewhere.

In short, few if any nations seem to give a tinker’s dam about our
opinions on most any international major concern. One of the more
recent shockers was the report in the reliable Financial Times of
London that China will help out GE by building a research laboratory
in that country.

Our relationships with Turkey have so deteriorated that this nation
has had to determine whether to invade Iraq to beat back Kurdish
agitation, even as some in Congress want to pass a resolution to
condemn allegations of Turkish genocide of Armenians nearly 100 years
ago. However justified or otherwise that charge might be, the timing
once more reveals how fragile national leadership is.

These are only a few examples of the realities. What most Americans
do not think about or even figure on is how so many of these actions
can be accomplished with little or no action by our own leadership
which seem virtually impotent in the face of these events.

It is imperative to determine what all of this implies for the future
no matter who replaces George W. Bush. The question remains: is the
United State still relevant on the horizon of world affairs?

But where will you find this concern framed in the media or political
discourse anywhere. Answer: virtually nowhere.

Much of this is revealed in the direction our economy is taking at
the same time as our dollar takes a nose dive further discouraging
investment from abroad. There was a time, and not very long ago, that
such international disruptions would have to include our leadership in
very profound ways. Today we have our own Secretary of State putting
together enough air miles rotating around the world to develop a
thousand first class flights on all airlines combined — but with
little to no progress at any single and major point.

Underneath all of much of these realities are the results of some of
the world’s largest and most powerful public relations firms or the
work of many former high level operators within the federal government
or the Congress who are influencing events.

For instance, Robert D. Blackwill, once the Iraq director for the
National Security Council, pushed to have a tough, secular Shiite Ayad
Allawi made Prime Minister of the "new" Iraq. That didn’t work out but
has not stopped Blackwill’s efforts to make things tough for Nuri Kamal
al-Maliki,ultimately the victor in free elections. He and his firm,
Barbour Griffith & Rogers, received $1.4 million to promote a nuclear
deal between the United States and India, oil contracts with Kurdistan.

What stands out in the abbreviated array of much broader ventures is
the shadow impact on American foreign policy that not only confuses
that much of the public who actually cares but also our theoretical
friends who are not part of these efforts and, ultimately decide either
to throw up their hands in frustration or simply ignore us altogether.

Among other things, the results of this increasingly profitable public
relations representation for any and all comers with the money to
pay for it raises questions that extend well beyond ordinary limits.

So it should not be at all surprising that the White House propaganda
chief Karen Hughes recites the confusion of nations around the world,
or, as she reportedly told PR Society, "People around the world aren’t
just sitting around to hear from America anymore," especially with
our involvements in an endless war. What she did not say, however,
was how much of the confusion is developed by influences from public
relations firms and former high level American officials.

It is not naive to be raising these points since we all understand
the logic of going after business to help influence opinions that
count for clients. What all of us as professionals and Americans
must understand and calculate very carefully is how this expanding
influence has already contributed to our nation’s irrelevance abroad
even as it may accomplish the ends of international, corporate and
special individual clientele in an increasingly complex world at what
some call the "Tipping Point."

* * *

Honick is president of Bainbridge Island, Wash.-based GMA International
Ltd, the consulting and public relations firm he formed in 1975 to
help companies broaden their business abroad especially in China and
Japan. He also contributes to a variety of publications on public
policy issues. This article was originally published Oct. 31, 2007
in O’Dwyer’s PR Report.

http://www.huntingtonnews.net/c

The Adoption Scam

THE ADOPTION SCAM
Beth Hawkins

Minneapolis City Pages
Published on May 23, 2007
MN

Reaching Arms International claimed to specialize in placing European
orphans. But prospective parents say they’ve been left heartbroken.

Chad and Julia Sandstrom had two biological children of their own,
but they wanted to adopt a third. Julia was drawn to the idea because
her father was adopted, while Chad thought it was a good way to avoid
contributing to the overpopulation problem.

Kris Drake Unlike many adoptive parents who have their hearts set on
an infant, the Sandstroms wanted an older orphan. "I wanted to give
a child a family," says Julia Sandstrom.

After family friends played host to an orphan visiting from Russia, the
couple knew their time had come. In January 2005, they went to a party
hosted by the local adoption agency their friends had used. Located in
New Hope, Reaching Arms International specialized in placing Eastern
European children. The Sandstroms came away impressed by the passion
of RAI’s founder, Nila Hilton, who had dedicated her life to working
with orphans.

Julia Sandstrom checked out other agencies on the internet, but
they liked the fact that Reaching Arms was just 30 miles from their
Stillwater home. "We could drive to do business there," she says. "It
felt more real and safe."

So in February 2005, the Sandstroms visited the office to meet their
caseworker and hear about Reaching Arms’ programs in Russia, Ukraine,
and Armenia. They chose Armenia. It was cheaper than Russia, and easier
than the Ukraine. The Sandstroms came through their home study with
flying colors and quickly won the Armenian government’s approval.

But then months came and went. The following January, their caseworker
told them the delay was because older children were harder to find. The
Sandstroms asked Reaching Arms to broaden its search to include any
healthy female children under the age of four.

In May 2006, they got news that a four-month-old girl had been
found. Because Eastern European orphans are at high risk for
retardation and fetal alcohol syndrome, the Sandstroms asked the
University of Minnesota’s International Adoption Clinic to look at
their prospective daughter’s case file. It offered precious little
information–the pictures were blurry and the only medical information
was that the baby was born 10 weeks premature.

The Sandstroms asked the caseworker for help getting more details. A
week later, Nila Hilton called. Hilton told Julia Sandstrom that
the clinic had misdiagnosed other orphans and could not be trusted,
the Sandstroms say. Hilton also warned that Armenian officials would
be offended if the Sandstroms turned down the baby.

"Mrs. Hilton’s telling us we have to make a decision right away,"
Julia recalls. "Meanwhile, the U is saying this could potentially be
a very serious medical issue."

The couple stood their ground, and a checkup with an outside doctor
and new pictures proved the girl healthy. Then the family got another
shock: They had been told the fees for the Armenian part of the
process would come to $8,000, but now Hilton said they’d have to pay
$17,000-$20,000. When the Sandstroms questioned her about the increase,
Hilton said adopting an infant was more expensive than an older child.

"At that point, we had no bargaining room," says Julia. "Her room
was ready, her clothes had been purchased, her picture had been shown
to family."

Two weeks before the Sandstroms were supposed to go to Armenia, their
caseworker called and said she’d left the agency. Julia couldn’t get
Hilton on the phone, so she drove to Reaching Arms. The building had
been put up for sale.

"It looked like they were ready to cut and run," she says. "We were
left high and dry."

In 1991, Nila and Bill Neumiller went on a church trip to Russia and
toured a number of orphanages.

"She came back a changed person," recalls Bill Neumiller (now her
ex-husband). "She went to minister to orphans, and saw the conditions
in which they lived and saw the hollowness in their eyes. And it
really affected her."

Both Neumillers were deeply religious, and both were sure Nila was
being called to save orphans. Back in Minnesota, she quit her job,
enrolled in ministerial training at her Charismatic church, and
started looking into opening an adoption agency.

The Neumillers installed a drafting table and a second phone line
in their basement, and Nila got to work. To get a state license to
place children, she would need to be supervised by a licensed social
worker. She met one at lunch a few days later, and the woman agreed
to help for free. Nila Neumiller also stumbled upon several Russian
immigrants who had good contacts back in the home country.

In 1995, Reaching Arms placed its first orphans, three Russian
sisters. Before long, the agency was placing 60 children a year. After
homes had been found for 100 children, the Neumillers organized a
reunion picnic. The memory still makes Bill Neumiller choke up.

"We noticed how many of the children came from the same orphanage
and knew each other," he says. "They ran up and hugged each other
and then pointed out their parents."

Over the next decade, the agency placed some 800 to 900 children,
Bill Neumiller says. Its newsletters were peppered with stories of
families moved to accept not chubby-cheeked infants, but children
who are notoriously difficult to place: older kids, children with
serious disabilities, and groups of siblings.

"Nila was the visionary," Bill Neumiller says. "She would see things
and I would say, ‘What do you see?’ And then we would work together
to establish bricks and mortar."

Kris Drake Her passion was contagious, agrees a former employee who
asked to be identified by only her first name, Angela.

"She made a lot of dreams come true for a lot of people," Angela
says. "Plenty of times she would put her own money, her reputation,
and her energy on the line to get into a country. I think it was
because she had a blind faith she would get into these countries."

In 1996, the Neumillers adopted a fifth child, a six-year-old Russian
girl. Ten months earlier, Reaching Arms had placed the girl with a
New Jersey family who now wanted to send the girl back.

"Our hearts were broken," Bill Neumiller says. "Because of this
situation, we didn’t have to choose, we just had to react."

In 1999, Reaching Arms opened an orphanage in Ukraine. Friends from
the Neumillers’ church sent blankets, clothes, and toys and then
traveled to the Ukrainian home. Back home, Nila Neumiller spoke
frequently about her work to Rotary clubs and other groups.

"The word ‘charisma’ always comes up with her," Angela says. "Nila
naturally attracted people who are energetic and fun-loving, who like
to take life seriously, people who don’t just blend in."

But she had no patience for the details, according to Angela
and another former employee interviewed as a part of the state
investigations. According to their sworn statements, and to City Pages’
interview with Bill Neumiller, both donations and fees paid by adopting
families got deposited into a single bank account. Families’ payments
for future services paid for the most pressing bills, regardless of
which adoption they were for.

It was a constant struggle to pay the bills, Bill Neumiller
says. "There was hardly any money to begin with," he says. Add to
that the difficulty of working in many countries. "If the process
wasn’t changing, the government was changing."

"I think Nila tried to hold everything together by a very thin thread,"
Angela adds. "I think her vision was strong and good and I think she
got misdirected by her own weaknesses."

Today, Reaching Arms is out of business. In March, the state Department
of Human Services, which oversees adoption agencies, revoked its
license after finding dozens of violations of Minnesota’s adoption
rules. At the state attorney general’s request, the agency’s books
are undergoing a court-ordered audit. According to investigations
conducted by both state agencies, Reaching Arms asked for tens of
thousands of dollars from families even before determining they were
qualified to adopt. Human Services investigators also concluded that
the agency charged fees that weren’t disclosed up front, increased
fees months into the adoptions, falsified documents, and threatened
to halt the adoptions of families who complained.

According to affidavits on file in the attorney general’s case, several
families were ordered to undergo spiritual and psychological counseling
with the husband of the agency’s director and founder, who is not
a licensed psychologist. One family was given a contract to adopt
a child from Kenya, even though Reaching Arms was not authorized to
perform Kenyan adoptions. Another family had its credit card charged
without its knowledge.

Some of the families eventually managed to adopt the children they
were offered, albeit through different agencies and at the cost
of additional tens of thousands of dollars. Others never got their
children.

Nila Hilton–she has been divorced and remarried and was running
Reaching Arms with her new husband, Tom Hilton, before it was
shut down–declined to be interviewed for this story, as did
Tom Hilton. Their attorney didn’t return several calls requesting
comment. The Hiltons did provide a written statement saying the agency
has been wrongly portrayed.

"Part of the reason [Reaching Arms] has remained silent to this point
is to protect the confidentiality of our clients," the statement
reads. "If we were free to openly discuss the facts involved we
strongly believe the negative publicity would not have painted such
an ugly picture."

Ann and Andrew Spurbeck live in a yellow farmhouse on top of a ridge
overlooking a thick swath of topsoil that’s rotated between corn and
soybeans. There’s a picturesque horse farm across the road, complete
with whitewashed split-rail fences, and not far beyond that, pristine
Lake Waconia.

The couple’s three biological children, ages 11, 13, and 15, sweep
in and out of French doors that lead onto a wide wrap-around porch,
trailed by a gaggle of friends. They’re chasing the dog, which is
fetching muddy golf balls knocked into the yard from a golf course
on the other side of the ridge.

The Spurbecks don’t have as much money as the spread suggests. Ann is a
stay-at-home mom and Andrew works in tech support at SuperValu. They’re
frugal, and the land under the house has been in the family for years.

Still, they feel blessed. And that sense of gratitude is why they
wanted to bring an orphan to live in the sprawling, sunny farmhouse.

In February 2005, the Spurbecks began checking into several adoption
agencies. Reaching Arms placed the kind of kids they wanted–Eastern
European children between the ages of four and seven–but it also
appealed to them for other, more spiritual reasons.

"They promoted themselves as a Christian and humanitarian agency,
and that meant a lot to me," Ann says.

Kris Drake So the couple borrowed $25,000 against their home equity
and began the complicated process. The Spurbecks spent six months
getting approved, but then a shakeup in the Ukrainian government
put a stop to all foreign adoptions. When the country finally began
allowing adoptions again 13 months later, the Spurbecks scrambled to
update their immigration documents.

Last fall, the Spurbecks were finally told to get ready. They went
to the Reaching Arms offices and paid $4,100 to cover their fees
and expenses in Ukraine. Nila Hilton took their check and left,
promising to wire it to Reaching Arms’ Ukrainian intermediary right
away, the Spurbecks say.

Their caseworker told them the money would pay for a number of expenses
in Ukraine, including the intermediary who would serve as their guide
and translator. The guide would first take them to the government
adoption bureau, where they would see pictures of available girls,
then to orphanages to meet the kids they were most interested in.

The caseworker told the Spurbecks to take their time deciding, Ann
recalls. They shouldn’t take on a child with whom they didn’t feel
a bond, and under no circumstances should they pay a bribe.

Ann had heard the same thing over and over from families who’d been
through the adoption process: You get a picture, or meet a child,
and you just know. The tens of thousands of dollars, the months of
forms and checklists and snafus recede, replaced by the certainty
that this child should join your family.

But when the Spurbecks arrived in Kyiv last December, they felt
like characters in a Kafka novel. For starters, their money never
arrived. At the state Department of Adoption, they were shown into a
bare room where three women sat at desks. A woman in her late 20s
showed them pictures of sibling groups, then of four individual
girls–the only orphans in the country eligible for adoption, she
insisted. The Spurbecks were told they had one hour to choose a child.

When the couple pressed to see more files, the woman jumped
up and grabbed a three-ring binder from the top of a filing
cabinet. She stabbed a finger at the photos and hissed, "Has cerebral
palsy. Invalid. Can’t eat. Can’t sit up." Then she looked up at the
couple and sneered: "You must not be ready to adopt if you cannot
make a decision."

Feeling like they had no choice, the Spurbecks agreed to meet the girl
the officials were pushing the hardest. A 12-hour train trip brought
them to Tourez, where the orphanage was located. An old coal-mining
city, it was desolate. When Ann asked to use a bathroom at the
orphanage, a cleaning lady led her to a tiny room that contained a
toilet with no seat. The tub was filled with brackish water and the
cleaning woman was washing clothes in it.

The Spurbecks had been told they’d see their prospective daughter as
part of a larger group of children, to keep her expectations down in
case the couple decided not to adopt her. Instead, the orphanage staff
brought a single girl into the office. "Daddy, Mommy," she cried,
jumping into Andrew’s lap and throwing her arms around his neck.

The Spurbecks stayed for several hours, waiting to feel a bond with
the girl, but it never materialized. As the Spurbecks were leaving,
the orphanage director told their translator they should give him
$600 cash and wire an additional $1,000 to his bank account if they
wanted to complete the adoption. They refused.

Back in Kyiv, the guide went back to the Department of Adoption and
argued for another chance. The officials claimed to be insulted, but
eventually said the Spurbecks could come back in 12 days and look at
more pictures. But Andrew was already almost out of vacation time,
and back home in Waconia, relatives were caring for their three
biological children with Christmas just days away.

They called Nila Hilton for guidance. But when they finally got
through to her, Ann says, Hilton didn’t offer any suggestions, just
told them she hoped they would choose a child. "She said, ‘Well,
I hope you can open your hearts to an orphan,’" Ann recalls.

When the Spurbecks arrived back home, Ann called Hilton and asked her
to return the $4,100 that was never sent to Ukraine. They arranged to
meet, but when the Spurbecks showed up at Reaching Arms, the lights
were off and the only person there was a secretary. "I said, ‘Do you
even know who we are?’" Ann recalls. The secretary was apologetic,
and looked shocked as the Spurbecks explained the reason for their
appointment.

The couple stopped for dinner on their way home. While they were
eating, Hilton called and accused Ann of abusing her staff. "She said,
‘I’m not going to take this verbal abuse from you,’" Ann recalls. "She
said I needed to deal with my emotional outbursts before we could
talk about returning the money." The Spurbecks never heard from
Hilton again.

"It’s taken a toll on us," Ann says. "I was imagining a little one,
you know?"

Kris Drake At their first meeting with Reaching Arms, Beth and Brad
Kantor were offered a baby boy from Guatemala, they say. The couple
hadn’t filled out a single form before Nila Hilton stuck her head
into the meeting and showed them a picture of a three-month-old boy.

They had two biological children and wanted another, but Beth wasn’t
anxious to go through another pregnancy. Besides, they liked the idea
of taking in a child that might not otherwise find a good home.

"The thought of children out there with no one, no parent to love them,
breaks my heart," Beth Kantor says. "That’s not the case in our family,
we find it so easy to love them."

By the summer of 2005, the Kantors finally had the money to begin
the adoption process. They wanted to adopt from Guatemala because
the children are relatively healthy, alcoholism rates are low,
and the money they sent to the country would go toward taking care
of orphans. Beth drove back to Reaching Arms with the completed
paperwork and a check for $15,300. They were told the baby would be
home by Christmas.

They quickly realized it wouldn’t be that simple. For the first month
after they signed the contract, the Kantors’ caseworker wouldn’t
return Beth’s calls. When the couple finally reached her, she blew up,
saying that they asked too many questions and needed to "stay in line."

Nila and Bill Neumiller had separated earlier in the year, and Nila
had remarried. Her new husband, Tom Hilton, started working at Reaching
Arms. In October 2005, the agency sent a letter to current and former
clients offering Tom Hilton’s counseling services.

"Families may continue to need counsel and support in dealing with
difficult issues long after the adoption," the letter stated, according
to the state licensing investigation. "You may be in relationship to
RAI through ways other than adoption. We welcome you and your family
to also benefit from [Tom Hilton’s] counsel."

Tom Hilton was a licensed drug and alcohol addiction counselor,
but not a psychologist. But Beth Kantor knew none of this when she
called Nila Hilton to complain about her calls not being returned. Tom
Hilton called Beth back and asked her to come in for a meeting. When
she got to the agency, Beth says, Tom Hilton grilled her.

"He asked about my sex life with my husband, my sexual history," she
says. "Did I believe in Jesus? Yes. Did I believe in the devil? I
said I had some problems with the devil. He said, ‘You’re going to
have problems with your adopted child if you don’t cast the devil
out of your family.’"

The devil’s hold on them was the reason she couldn’t get pregnant,
Tom Hilton continued. Beth didn’t bother setting him straight about
their biological kids. Instead, she tried to get out of the meeting
without upsetting him.

"We were repeatedly told that if we were difficult, they would
disrupt our adoption," Beth says. "We decided to lay low, to not ask
so many questions."

A few weeks later, Tom Hilton again told the Kantors to undergo
"mandatory spiritual counseling" with him, the couple says. Beth asked
if they could see their own minister or counselor. Tom Hilton replied
that the agency could put their adoption on hold if they didn’t come
to counseling.

One day, Beth went to Reaching Arms’ New Hope office to turn in some
paperwork. The caseworker needed her husband’s signature on several
different Guatemalan powers of attorney. Beth said she’d drive back
with the signed form, but the caseworker said not to bother, Beth
recalls. "She said, ‘Just hold it up against a window [and trace the
signature], that’s what I do.’"

In February, the Kantors received a form letter from Nila Hilton asking
for donations. Reaching Arms was on "the brink of ruin," she wrote,
because of "uncertainties that come with international adoptions."

Terrified, the couple hired an attorney, who advised them to
immediately terminate their contract with the agency. When they tried,
the Hiltons again threatened to stop their adoption, Beth says. This
time, the couple ignored the threat: They were already talking to
Reaching Arms’ Guatemalan agent, who agreed to take their paperwork
to another agency.

But Reaching Arms had one more surprise for the Kantors: The agency
withheld their home study and sent a letter to the Department of
Human Services saying the pair had refused to attend the mandatory
counseling sessions, Beth says. And because their tempers had been
called into question on the record, the Kantors’ second home study
was extremely thorough.

"We had to pay for a new home study and make sure it was ironclad,"
Beth says. "We had to spend extra time proving we didn’t have anger
issues."

It was another six months before their adopted son, who was then 17
months old, finally came home.

Rick Spaulding and Tinia Moulder thought it was strange that Reaching
Arms offered them a baby just days after they signed a contract with
the agency in November 2005.

Depart D’Une Delegation Parlementaire Suisse Vers L’Armenie

DEPART D’UNE DELEGATION PARLEMENTAIRE SUISSE VERS L’ARMENIE

Nouvelles d’Arméni
jeudi9 octobre 2008
France

ARMENIE

Sur invitation de son groupe homologue auprès de l’Assemblée
nationale arménienne, une délégation de sept personnes du Groupe
parlementaire Suisse-Arménie, présidée par les Conseillers nationaux
Ueli Leuenberger et Dominique de Buman, s’est envolé mardi soir vers
la République d’Arménie pour une visite jusqu’au 13 octobre.

Le but de la visite est de renforcer les liens politiques économiques
et culturels entre les deux pays. Pour l’occasion, les députés
seront accompagnés par des personnalités de la diaspora arménienne
de Suisse, par des représentants de l’économie privée suisse et
par des représentants des médias. La délégation s’intéressera
tout particulièrement a la situation politique et économique
de l’Arménie, ainsi qu’au nouveau contexte géo-stratégique
sud-caucasie n.

La partie officielle du voyage, accompagnée par l’Ambassadeur de
Suisse en Arménie avec siège en Géorgie, comprend des rencontres
avec le Président de la République, Monsieur Serge Sarkissian,
ainsi qu’avec plusieurs responsables gouvernementaux, dont le
Vice-Premier Ministre, Monsieur Armen Gevorgian, le Ministre de
l’Ã~Iconomie, Monsieur Nerses Yeritsyan, et le Vice-Ministre des
Affaires étrangères, Monsieur Arman Kirakossian.

La délégation rencontrera le nouveau Président de l’Assemblée
nationale, Monsieur Hovig Abrahamian, et le Groupe parlementaire
d’amitié Arménie-Suisse, présidé par le Professeur Ara
Babloyan. Les Parlementaires suisses auront l’occasion de mieux
connaître la situation interne du pays et les aspects liés au
développement démocratique de l’Arménie. Ã~@ ce propos, la
délégation assistera a une présentation d’experts au Caucasus
Institute et rencontrera aussi des représentants de l’opposition,
notamment du Congrès national arménien (CNA) et du Parti
Jarangoutioun (Héritage).

En outre, la délégation rencontrera les représentants du
Haut Karabakh auprès de la Mission permanente du Karabakh a
Ã~Irévan. Les Parlementaires suisses se rendront aussi au mémorial de
Tsitsernagarbérd, où ils déposeront une couronne a la mémoire des
victimes du génocide des Arméniens de 1915. La visite de plusieurs
projets liés au développement durable de l’Arménie, dont certains
soutenus par la DDC, ainsi que la visite a d’importantes institutions
scientifiques du pays sont également agendées. Un riche programme
culturel complètera le profil de ce voyage.

Une conférence de presse conjointe des deux groupes parlementaires
(arménien et suisse) est prévue a la salle de presse de l’Assemblée
nationale de la République d’Arménie, le vendredi 10 octobre,
a 16:30, heure locale (soit a 13:30, heure suisse).

–Boundary_(ID_1HUNBRo/m5Kv6OKXyLLNzA)–

Representatives Of Oppositional Armenian National Congress And Ameri

REPRESENTATIVES OF OPPOSITIONAL ARMENIAN NATIONAL CONGRESS AND AMERICAN EXPERTS MEET

ArmInfo
2008-10-10 13:21:00

ArmInfo. Representatives of the oppositional Armenian National
Congress met the American experts who arrived in Yerevan to assist
to the Interim Parliamentary Commission on investigation of March
1 events. To note, these experts were members of the Commission of
US Congress on investigation of the circumstances of September 11,
2001 terrorist act in New York.

As the Armenian National Congress told ArmInfo, the members of
ANC discussed the issue of creation of a commission on collection
of facts related to March 1 events and emphasized that only the
commission, which includes equal number of the power and oppositional
representatives, may find the society’s credence. The American experts
familiarized ANC members with their experience on investigation of
circumstances of September 11 terrorist act.

Representative of ANC’s Central office Levon Zurabyan, responsible for
foreign relations Vladimir Karapetyan, member of the central office,
former Minister of National Security of Armenia David Shahnazaryan,
ex-Minister of Internal Affairs Suren Abrahamyan, former Defense
Minister of Armenia Andranik Kocharyan took part in the meeting.

EAFJD Skeptical About Turkey’s Caucasus Pact

EAFJD SKEPTICAL ABOUT TURKEY’S CAUCASUS PACT

PanARMENIAN.Net
09.10.2008 15:15 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Peter Semneby, the EU special envoy to the South
Caucasus, and Hilda Tchoboian, the Chairperson of the European Armenian
Federation, held a meeting on 24 September in the framework of the
regular consultations that take place between the Euro-Armenian NGO
and EU institutions, the EAFJD told PanARMENIAN.Net.

The main focus of their talks was the recent geopolitical unrest in the
South Caucasus, the renewed interest in improvement of Turkey-Armenia
relations, and the challenges faced by Georgia’s ethnic Armenian
population.

Both Tchoboian and Semneby reiterated their common interest in
eventually seeing the normalization of regional cooperation in South
Caucasus, particularly in the wake of the Georgian crisis. The
President of the European Armenian Federation, however, informed
Mr. Semneby of her organization’s skepticism about Turkey’s proposed
"Caucasian Platform for Stability and Cooperation," noting that, until
now, Turkey has primarily been a destabilizing factor in the region,
as evidenced by its blockade of Armenia and its pro-Azerbaijani bias
in the Karabakh conflict.

"In the context of the emergence of a new balance of power in Caucasus,
Turkey is seeking assert for itself a role as an intermediary between
Europe, Russia and the Caucasian States" stated Hilda Tchoboian. "But
it’s hopes are clearly not supported by the facts on the ground –
which include recent statements by its Minister of Foreign Affairs
stressing Turkey’s intention to make Armenia pay dearly for the
opening of the border, in particular, by stopping the international
process of Armenian Genocide recognition," she added.

Many observers consider the apparent goodwill displayed recently by
Turkey toward Armenia to be driven primarily by the domestic power
struggle between Kemalists and Islamists and their competing efforts
to assert primacy in guiding their nation’s foreign affairs, not any
sincere interest in materially improving relations with Armenia.

With regard to Georgia, the Federation’s President shared with Semneby
the urgent concerns voiced by the country’s Armenian minority.

"After their defeat in South Ossetia, we need to be mindful that
nationalistic elements of Georgian society and the Georgian power
structures could target the ethnic Armenians community as scapegoats"
explained Hilda Tchoboian. "Georgia has compelling interest in moving
toward a policy of respect for the rights of minorities – especially
those of the ethnic Armenians of Javakhk – as per its commitments to
the Council of Europe. Trying to build a centralized, unitary state
in the 21st century is simply unrealistic for a diverse, multiethnic
country such as Georgia" concluded the chairperson of the European
Armenian Federation.

The Federation holds that the EU has a vital role to play
in implementing confidence building programs in Georgia. Ethnic
Armenians represent the main minority of Georgia (roughly 10% of the
whole population), principally located in Tbilisi and in the southern
region of Javakhk. Since the fall of USSR, they have endured forced
assimilation and discriminatory policies (linguistic, administrative,
and religious) as have the other minorities in the country. Perhaps
most notably, Armenians Churches are regularly "converted" into
Georgian churches. Despite this official and unofficial discrimination,
ethnic Armenian in Georgia, are not advancing irredentist claims. They
do, however, demand that their collective, democratic, and regional
rights are fully respected within the framework of a decentralized,
pluralist, and tolerant Georgian state.