BAKU: Two Armenian soldiers killed in exchange of fire – Azeri TV

Two Armenian soldiers killed in exchange of fire – Azeri TV

ANS TV, Baku
22 Mar 05

[Presenter] The Armenian armed forces are continuing their offensive
on the Agdam section of the front line.

Two soldiers of the Armenian army were killed and several wounded in
an exchange of fire at about 2000 [1600 gmt] on 21 March.

Our soldier Ruslan Racabov, who was killed in an attempt to repel an
offensive mounted by Armenian servicemen on Agdam’s village of Mirusen
on 20 March, was buried in Lankaran today. May he rest in peace.

Sahin Rzayev of the ANS Karabakh bureau reports more details of the
situation on the front line:

[Rzayev over phone] Starting from 0600 today [0200 gmt], the Armenian
armed forces fired from their positions in Agdam’s occupied villages
of Sixlar and Qarvand on the positions of the Azerbaijani army in the
villages of Mirusen and Gulabli in the same district and then on the
villages themselves. The firing from assault rifles and machine guns
lasted for over an hour. The Azerbaijani forces opened retaliatory
fire to silence the enemy. The Armenian side sustained casualties.

The Armenian army again fired from the same positions on our positions
in the village of Mirusen at about 1300 [0900 gmt]. The shooting
lasted for 15 minutes this time.

We can hear sporadic gunshots on the front line at the moment, but
there is no intensive shooting.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Azeris expect OSCE prove Armenia’s involvement in resettlement

Azeris expect OSCE prove Armenia’s involvement in resettlement in Karabakh

ANS TV, Baku
21 Mar 05

[Presenter] Azerbaijan has a strong army to liberate the territories
under occupation, [Azerbaijani] Defence Minister Safar Abiyev has
said, while Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov does not rule out that
regular violations of the cease-fire by Armenia could be a calculated
act of sabotage.

[Correspondent, over video of Mammadyarov outside the Foreign Ministry]
Mammadyarov is pleased with the report of the OSCE fact-finding
mission on the settlement of Armenians in Nagornyy Karabakh. He
said that official Baku would issue a statement on 22 March over
the findings of the mission. Despite considering the report to be
objective, the minister said he is unhappy with some points.

[Mammadyarov, captioned, shown speaking to ANS] There are a few
points in the report that we cannot accept. It is stated there
that official Yerevan does not deal with this issue [settlement of
Armenians in Nagornyy Karabakh and occupied districts of Azerbaijan].
But we have information that it does. Now, the fact-finding mission
must continue its work and prove that official Yerevan actually deals
with the illegal settlement.

[Correspondent] The minister also commented on the recent frequent
cases of violation of the cease-fire. Mammadyarov did not rule out
that the breach of the cease-fire could be in the interests of the
Armenian leadership.

[Mammadyarov] We have already expressed our position. We think that
some provocation will be in place as long as negotiations are under
way. We think that the violation of the cease-fire is provocation.

[Correspondent] However, the foreign minister does not believe that
the violations could affect the course of the talks.

In turn, Safar Abiyev says that measures are being taken to minimize
casualties. On the kind of measures, the defence minister said that
it is their business.

[Safar Abiyev, captioned, speaking to journalists] The war will
continue as long as our lands are under occupation.

[Correspondent] Who knows, maybe the real name of the cease-fire,
which is accompanied with frequent violations, is war indeed.

Eldaniz Valiyev, Ali Ahmadov, Hikmat Asgarov for ANS.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Mehmet Ali Birand: Go to Damascus,but also decide on =?UNKNO

Turkish Daily News

Today is Tuesday, March 22 2005 12:39 pm GMT+2 updated at 12:00 P.M.

Mehmet Ali Birand: Go to Damascus, but also decide on Ýncirlik
Tuesday, March 22, 2005

I will be in the United States this week. I was invited by the famous Emory
University. I will make a few speeches, while listening to Americans. In
other words, I will be sharing with you my impressions of America. However,
I need to say that all does not seem well

Mehmet Ali BIRAND
I left Istanbul last weekend. I visited New York and then went to Atlanta.
I was invited by one of the most respected universities in America, the
Emory University. I will attend conferences for four days. Turkey will be
the dominating topic in meetings held with academics and students. I will of
course also meet with a friend from CNN in Atlanta.

I will not be the only one who will talk, but I also intend to get a sense
of what Americans are thinking.

As you know U.S.-Turkish relations are experiencing some trouble again.

The state of affairs is not that good. The time of “misunderstandings” is
over. As Milliyet daily’s Sami Kohen, who recently returned from Washington,
wrote, Turkey is no longer the “trusted and loyal ally.” Kohen has the best
sense in these matters. He does not exaggerate and always tries to put a
positive spin on the issues.

The tension in bilateral relations is not one sided. Both Ankara and
Washington are to blame. Let’s first look at Turkey.

Disagreeing with Washington and not doing what we are told may gain one
some domestic credibility, or even sympathy. But if this is kept up for too
long and the necessary precautions are not taken, we will be forced to pay a
price.

If it continues unchecked, all of a sudden we come to realize that our
relations with the IMF are not like it used to be. One sees that they are
not as forgiving as they were and international banks charge higher interest
rates for loans.

The time comes and one notices that the White House is not as enthusiastic
in defending Turkey when the Armenian bill is submitted to the U.S.
Congress. If the Armenian genocide allegations are passed by the Congress,
Turkey’s power to resist these claims decreases significantly.

You may also see that you are pushed out from all the developments going
on in the Middle East. You realize that everywhere you go you are the
outsider and the unwanted guest, whose advice is not wanted.

Turkey does not need to do acquiescence to every U.S. wish. This is not a
debate about “submissiveness or revolt.”

The problem we are faced with is Ankara’s failure to display the necessary
sensitivity on matters important to Washington. This failure may be
intentional. Unfortunate statements, unnecessary comments and strange
stances are angering the George W. Bush administration and the State
Department.

The U.S. Ambassador to Turkey Eric Edelman coming out and making a
statement that implies, “It would be good for President Ahmet Necdet Sezer
to cancel his trip to Syria,” is no coincidence. The ambassador making it
clear that he is uncomfortable with the anti-American statements made by
high officials, especially politicians, does not happen every day. We
shouldn’t be surprised to see American journalists, who were briefed by the
U.S. Embassy in Ankara, writing harsh articles.

What all this means is that the relations are deteriorating rapidly and if
the necessary precautions are not taken, the situation can become very
serious.

It’s easy to resolve this problem:

If we are willing to put a stop to this vicious circle, it is very easy to
repair relations between the two countries. A little more sympathy and
caution may be enough.

Americans are saying that it’s about time Turkey chose one side.

When the Turkish government accuses Israel of conducting state terrorism,
delays issuing friendly warnings to Damascus to withdraw from Lebanon and
even then tries to use covert means to do that, supports Iran and alleges
that American troops in Iraq are guilty of genocide, Washington naturally is
up in arms.

They don’t want Turkey to be too friendly with such countries. They want
good relations with Turkey to continue and for it to become a force for good
in the region. However, Ankara fails to do either.

Make up your mind on Ýncirlik:

The state of the Ýncirlik military base is often cited as an example.

For the past few months, Turkey has been asked to broaden the use of
Ýncirlik for humanitarian reasons. Ankara has failed to make up its mind.
The government says the military is in charge, while the military says it is
the government’s responsibility. No one seems to be able to do something due
to doubts felt against the United States.

The tension mounts while nothing is being done.

However, we need to do something soon.

If the president is to go to Damascus, let him. However, his stance there
needs to reflect a policy. The Ýncirlik issue should not be pushed to the
sidelines. It is also important for the members of the ruling Justice and
Development Party (AKP), from the very top to the very bottom, to learn to
keep their tongues in check.

We don’t have any other option but to choose a side and initiate our
policies. In other words, some fine tuning is called for.

However, as I said earlier in the article, Ankara is not the only side to
blame. The Bush administration is also to blame for the current state of
affairs. I will write about that tomorrow.

Let’s not forget that the clock is ticking.

–Boundary_(ID_ShWGx7XHcyZoUWzISvKJTw)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Antelias: =?UNKNOWN?Q?Charg=E9e?= d’Affaires of U.S. Embassy of Leba

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V. Rev. Fr. Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

CHARGÉE D’AFFAIRES OF THE AMERICAN EMBASSY

VISITS HIS HOLINESS

Chargée d’Affaires of the American Embassy of Lebanon visited His
Holiness on March 19 on behalf of Ambassador Jeffrey Feltman, who
was away from the country. The two discussed the current political
situation of Lebanon.

Right after this meeting, His Holiness met with representatives of
the Lebanese opposition. His Holiness and the delegates discussed
the challenges Lebanon faces currently.

In light of his long meeting with the president of the republic,
His Excellency Gen. Emile Lahoud, and driven by his desire to bring
Lebanon out of its current situation, His Holiness emphasized the
importance of the full application of the Taef Accord, the formation
of a national unity government and the use of dialogue as a means of
solving problems.

##

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates
of the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the
history and the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer
to the web page of the Catholicosate, The
Cilician Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is
located in Antelias, Lebanon.

–Boundary_(ID_j/xzLFP73smpn3Ota1W7ww)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

UCLA AGSA welcomes alumni for March 31st panel on careers in law

MONDAY, March 21, 2005
IMMEDIATE RELEASE

UCLA Armenian Graduate Students Association
Graduate Students Association
c/o Armenian Graduate Students Association
Kerckhoff Hall Room 316
308 Westwood Plaza
Los Angeles, CA 90024
Contact: Haig Hovsepian
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

UCLA AGSA hosts UCLA School of Law alumni for panel discussion on careers in law

LOS ANGELES, CA – This month the UCLA AGSA will once again reach out
to its law student constituency. However, in doing so it will also be
reaching out to the alumni of the UCLA School of Law. On Thursday,
March 31st, the UCLA AGSA will host over a dozen UCLA alumni for a
panel discussion on careers in law. It will be hosted in the renown
UCLA Charles E. Young Grand Salon at 6:30pm.

The event is geared towards current law students and those who will
be matriculating this coming academic year. However, the event is
open to all students and alumni interested in learning more about
career paths and opportunities as related through the experiences of
the alumni panelists.

“This is a great opportunity for us at the UCLA AGSA to build stronger
ties with our law alumni, but more importantly it is a wonderful
opportunity for us to serve our constituency… the students and the
campus by holding such an event,” remarked Haig Hovsepian, a graduate
student at UCLA and project director for the organizing committee.

“The response from the alumni has been quite positive and supportive.
I cannot thank them enough for taking the time to share with their
counterparts and successors the knowledge they have gained though
working ‘in the real world’.”

Law students from the Los Angeles area are invited to join the
UCLA AGSA for this event. Panelists featured come from a variety
of backgrounds from large firm to small firm, private practice to
government positions. The event is free and open to the public.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.studentgroups.ucla.edu/agsa

What’s coming up

What’s coming up

DetNews.com, MI
Tuesday, March 22, 2005

Detroit Armenian Women’s Club’s 75th anniversary benefit luncheon is
11:30 a.m. April 16 at the Oakland Hills Country Club in Bloomfield
Hills. The event will feature antique gowns from the ’40s, ’50s and
’60s, entertainment and a silent auction. Tickets are $45. Information:
(248) 855-0605.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Forum On Karabakh Problem Decides To Develop Action Program

FORUM ON KARABAKH PROBLEM DECIDES TO DEVELOP ACTION PROGRAM

YEREVAN, MARCH 21, NOYAN TAPAN. “The Karabakh problem is unduly
politicized, unsuccessful negotiations are continuing, making
it possible for Azerbaijan to falsify the history,” chairman of
the Democratic Party of Armenia Aram Sargsian said at the March 18
forum on the Karabakh problem. According to him, as a result of this,
Nagorno Karabakh is considered an “occupied territory”, the Armenians
of Karabakh living in their cradle are qualified as “secessionists”,
while the Armenian people and the Armenian statehood as “aggressors
and invaders”. The speaker noted that in recent years the essence of
the Karabakh problem has been distorted at international instances,
and at various discussions it is presented as just a territorial
dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The forum , which was
organized by the steering committee “For Defence of NKR” and attended
by representatives of the public and a number of political forces,
adopted a resolution on behalf of the Armenian public. It is noted
in the resolution that certain high-ranking officials continue to
assert with a dangerous and unreasonable optimism that “nothing has
happened, there is no threat to Artsakh.” “The Armenian public does
not share such a dangerous position,” the document says. The forum
participants demand that a summary documemt (diplomatic note) on the
essence of the problem and the state position on it be presented on
the official level to the international community and the intermediary
states and organizations. The historical and legal bases, as well as
unquestionable arguments for the NKR formation in accordance with the
norms of international law and its independence from Azerbaijan should
be laid out in the document. The forum participants also considered
it necessary, for ensuring the participation of the whole Armenian
people in the solution of the Karabakh problem, to develop a concept
and implement an action program, for which purpose a center should
be set up to coordinate the program implementation. The RA National
Assembly is proposed it should recognize the NKR’s total independence
based on the legal and international norms.

Armenian Diocese In Georgia Requests That Acts Of Vandalism andOffen

ARMENIAN DIOCESE IN GEORGIA REQUESTS THAT ACTS OF VANDALISM AND OFFENSE TO THE DEAD BE PUT AN END TO

TBILISI, MARCH 21, NOYAN TAPAN. The conflict surrounding the Armenian
Church Norashen is gaining new momentum and the frontiers of trust,
it seems, are being left far behind. After the attention it attracted
in relation to the “fake tombstones with Georgian inscriptions”,
which are still not taken away from the church’s yard, Georgian
Church officials convincingly assured the Armenian Diocese that the
Georgian Patriarchate had best intentions for a positive resolve of
the Norashen question and that the actions of Father Tariel were
very much his own. However, according to the Armenian Diocese in
Georgia, just a few days later, Father Abgar, Deputy Head of the
Armenian Diocese in Georgia, witnessed the undertaking of new works
by the Georgian clergy and handymen in front of the Armenian Church
Norashen (digging of holes, planting of trees etc.). Despite the
earlier agreement, the appropriation efforts aimed at the Armenian
Church of Norashen continue secretly, probably with the intention to
put the Armenian Diocese in front of a fait accompli. The Georgian
priest Tariel (the same who had destroyed famous frescoes from the
Hovnatanyan school and Armenian khatshkars) stated: “The land is ours,
hence the church is ours and we do what we want and what I have been
told. Leave us in peace, you are getting on our nerves…” Against the
backdrop of the Norashen problem, the Armenian Diocese in Georgian
is worried about a growing anti-Armenism in Georgia (where according
to official figures from 1989 about 500.000 Armenians live), which
finds expresses in the form of anti-Armenian propaganda in Georgian
mass-media, such as in the Georgian Times of 24.02.2005: “Armenians
do anything to undercut the formation of Georgia as a state… and
this is why it is necessary to create a one-nation-state”, “if the
Armenians had the material means, they would destroy our language”,
“I don’t remember one single time, when Armenians did something good
for Georgia”, “a Georgianised Armenian can never become a Georgian,
he will always strive to power. The clearest example for this is
the Georgian President himself”. The Diocese is furthermore worried
about the continuous acts of vandalism that Armenian cemeteries are
subjected to in Georgia. The century old cemetery of Vera, in Tbilisi,
has been almost completely destroyed in the past 17 years. The graves
of well known politicians, generals, professors and poets, who were
not just Armenians but who played an important role in historical
Georgia are being annihilated. And the latest horrendous news, reaching
the Press Office, are from Dusheti (a provincial town in Georgia),
where yet another Armenian cemetery has become the victim of acts
of vandalism. The Armenian Diocese in Georgia requests that acts of
vandalism and offense to the dead be put an end to. It asks not to
impede the fruitful dialogue between the Georgian Patriarchate and the
Armenian Catholicosate, which is undercut by the unqualified actions
of Father Tariel, resulting in a negative impact on the century old,
brotherly relationship between the two churches. The Diocese hopes to
attract the attention of the international community to this situation.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

CIS Foreign Ministers Reject Azerbaijan’s Proposal To IncludeProvisi

CIS FOREIGN MINISTERS REJECT AZERBAIJAN’S PROPOSAL TO INCLUDE
PROVISION ON SEPARATISM IN DECISIONS ON FIGHT AGAINST TERRORISM

MINSK, MARCH 21, NOYAN TAPAN. The delegation headed by the RA Deputy
Foreign Minister Gegham Gharibjanian paricipated in a regular sitting
of the Council of Foreign Ministers of the CIS member states in Minsk
on March 18. The sitting was chaired by the RF Foreign Minister,
Chairman of the Council Sergei Lavrov. The process of the work on
imrovement and reforms of the CIS structures was under discussion.
The document submitted was approved, a decision was made to continue
this process. According to the RA Foreign Ministry Press and
Information Department, during the discussion of the draft decision
on the concept of CIS member states cooperation in the fight against
terrorism and other violent manifestations of extremism, as well of the
draft decision on the program of CIS member states cooperation in the
fight against terrorism and other violent manifestations of extremism,
the Azeri side proposed to include a provision on “separatism” in the
documents, in which it was joined by the delegations of Ukraine,
Moldova and Georgia. The Armenian delegation’s head suggested
adopting the document in the version previously agreed by the
experts. He explained the Armenian position using the argument that
there is no internationally recognized notion of “separatism”. The
proposal of Azerbaijan was not accepted by the other CIS states and
was formulated as a reservation by the delegations of the 4 above
mentioned states. At the CIS Foreign Ministers’s Council sitting, the
RF delegation officially submitted a draft memorandum on the CIS member
states cooperation in the humanitarian sphere. After being dicussed in
the states, the draft will be submitted for discussion at an unofficial
summit of the heads of the CIS states to be held in Moscow on May 8.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Nagorno-Karabakh’s defense chief blames Azerbaijan for tensions

Nagorno-Karabakh’s defense chief blames Azerbaijan for tensions

The Associated Press
03/21/05 15:39 EST

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) – The military chief of the disputed enclave
of Nagorno-Karabakh on Monday accused Azerbaijan of fomenting tension
along a volatile buffer zone.

Seiran Oganian said that Azerbaijani forces had tried repeatedly to
advance their positions, but were rebuffed. “Neither us nor Azerbaijani
people need these provocations,” Oganian said.

Azerbaijan and Armenia have blamed each other for the skirmishes that
have intensified recently along the buffer zone.

Nagorno-Karabakh has been under the control of ethnic Armenians since
the early 1990s, following fighting that killed an estimated 30,000
people. A cease-fire was signed in 1994, but the enclave’s final
political status has not been determined, and shooting breaks out
frequently between the two sides, which face off across a demilitarized
buffer zone.

The Armenian forces also hold some territory adjacent to
Nagorno-Karabakh.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress