PM’s gift sparks jumbo controversy

Hindustan Times, India
Feb 1, 2005

PM’s gift sparks jumbo controversy

Press Trust of India
London, February 1

Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s intervention has been sought by an
international wildlife and animal welfare charity to prevent transfer
of a Bangalore based elephant to Armenia.

“The Born Free Foundation urges the Indian Prime Minister, Dr
Manmohan Singh to reconsider this gift and to call the move off,” its
CEO Will Travers said in London on Monday.

He said the Foundation, founded by actors Virginia McKenna and Bill
Travers, believed that there were many other ways of improving
relations between New Delhi and Yerevan which would not involve the
potential suffering and possible demise of animals.

Virginia McKenna, OBE, who starred in the classic 1966 movie Born
Free, said, “It is deeply disheartening that the custom of using
animals as diplomatic gifts still continues. Animals are not
inanimate objects and certainly deserve to be treated with due
respect for their nature and needs.

“The proposed removal of an elephant from Bangalore to Yerevan Zoo
highlights the urgent need for this issue to be addressed on an
international basis, and I can only hope that it is not too late to
change hearts and minds. Not only for this elephant, but in future no
more animals should be used in this way.”

According to information received by the Foundation, the elephant is
due to leave Bangalore and is destined for Yerevan. The exchange is
in the form of a diplomatic gift consigned by the Indian Prime
Minister to his counterpart in Armenia, the foundation claimed.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Ministry Says 23,000 Armenians Settled in Occupied Territories

Baku Today, Azerbaijan
Jan 30 2004

Ministry Says, 23,000 Armenians Settled in Occupied Territories

by Turan 30/01/2005 12:28

Armenia is directly involved in settlement of the occupied
territories of Azerbaijan, Deputy Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan told
reporters when commenting on the results of the meeting with the
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk group and the members of the
international mission.

According Azimov, the representatives of the Foreign Ministry,
Ministry of National Security, State Border Service, Land Committee
took part in the meeting.

During the meeting the Azeri side submitted the commission video- and
audio materials testifying settling of the occupied territories and
geographic maps.
`Settlement of the territories is taking place with direct
participation of Armenia,’ Azimov said. `Approximately 23,000 people
were settled there. The policy of settlement is taking place in
different forms.’

Azimov notes that settlement of the occupied territories does not
positively affect the course of the talks of settling the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict. The information on the use of the occupied
territories for illegal drug trafficking and organized crime was also
submitted to the commission.

According to Azimov, the commission will attend the occupied
territories in several days. First they will visit Kelbajar and
Lachin regions and then will visit the other regions, including
Shusha. The researches will last 20 days and on the basis of
materials they will prepare report which will be submitted to the
OSCE Minsk Group and to the Permanent Commission of OSCE in Vienna.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Official Figures: 10K Turks Massacred By Armenians in Erzr.

Anadolu Agency
Jan 29 2005

Aslan: According To Official Figures, About Ten Thousand Turkish
People Had Been Massacred By Armenians In Erzurum

Anadolu Agency: 1/29/2005
ERZURUM (AA) – Documents about massacres committed by the Armenians
against Turkish people in eastern city of Erzurum and adjacent areas
between the years of 1918 and 1920 were compiled by Assistant Prof.
Betul Aslan of Ataturk University in a book entitled ”Armenian
Events in Erzurum”.
The book includes a brief history of Armenians in Anatolia,
documents about massacres committed by Armenians, results of
excavations in the city, testimonies of those who witnessed the
massacres, and recollections of Russian, German and American
officials in the region such as Russian officer Tverdo Khlebov,
Russian nurse Tatyana Karameli, German journalist Paul Wietz and
former Council of Germany in Erzurum Edgar Andres.
In an interview with the A.A, Aslan said, ”Armenians have been
doing everything in their power to keep their baseless allegations
high on world’s agenda. There was not any single document proving
their allegations about such a genocide.”
”But, Armenian gangs committed massacres in Erzurum after
Russian soldiers withdrew from the city. According to official
figures, about 10 thousand Turkish people were killed by Armenians in
Erzurum. However, unofficial figures gave the number of slain people
as 50 thousand,” she added.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

The Mysteries of Mercy

Washington Times
Jan 30 2005

Commentary: The mysteries of mercy

By Martin Sieff
UPI Senior News Analyst

Washington, DC, Jan. 28 (UPI) — It’s easy to despair looking at the
world this week of the 60th anniversary of the liberation of the
Auschwitz concentration camp by the Soviet Red Army. From Cambodia to
Sudan, and from Rwanda to Bosnia, the chronicle of man’s inhumanity
to man has remained a stunning spectacle with genocide remaining
frightfully in fashion through the second half of the 20th century
and into the 21st.

With millions continuing to die every year of starvation, disease,
civil war and merciless pillaging across the continent of Africa in
particular, it is obvious that this is still not “the best of all
possible worlds” — an attitude the great French 18th century
philosopher Francois-Marie Arouet Voltaire ridiculed in his classic
satirical novel “Candide.”

Given the enduring realities of human greed, hatred, cowardice and
envy, the recurrence of monstrous crimes against entire races and
religious groups of people — be they Christians, Muslims,
Cambodians, Bosnians, Chinese, Tibetans or Tutsis — over the second
half of the 20th century is arguably as predictable as the genocide
of Jews, Gypsies, Ukrainians, Armenians and Chinese in the half
century that went before.

It’s easy to overlook, therefore, other common trends in modern human
history that have been far more positive, yet may be so obvious that
they are almost always unseen. One of the most important is the wise,
commonsense observation of the great Mahatma Gandhi, architect of the
huge non-violence movement that broke the back of the British will to
remain in India: “There have always been tyrants and murderers, and
for a time, they may seem invincible, but in the end, they always
fall. Think of it. Always.”

It’s also easy to overlook during this week of the anniversary of the
liberation of Auschwitz that it and the other Nazi death camps were
indeed liberated. And less than a decade later when Soviet dictator
Josef Stalin died, his eventual successor, Nikita Khrushchev threw
open the gates of the infamous Soviet Gulag Archipelago, freeing
millions of survivors who had been convinced they would never see
their homes again.

It’s easy to forget that, as the movie “Saving Private Ryan”
dramatically reminded an entire generation of Americans, millions of
American, Soviet and British soldiers, and their Canadian,
Australian, French and many other allies, fought and died to destroy
the terrible regimes that had ravaged the human race in the 1930s and
’40s. Those awful actions eventually called forth an even greater and
ultimately decisive reaction.

The bravery and decency of hundreds of millions of human beings was
called forth as never before during World War II to protect their
nations and the wider human race from the actions of scores of
millions more who had been deceived or enticed into supporting
monstrous regimes. Eventually, the Soviet communist colossus, too,
crumbled into dust, just as Gandhi had predicted.

In 1993, the already classic movie “Schindler’s List” directed by
Steven Spielberg and starring Liam Neeson celebrated the heroism of
an ordinary, indeed, more than slightly seedy German businessman who
saved more than a thousand Jewish lives from the Holocaust. The awful
crimes he saw around him called forth from him a decency he himself
had never before realized was there.

And now, movie theaters around the world are showing a similar tale,
“Hotel Rwanda,” the story of Paul Rusesabagina, played in the movie
by the great American actor Don Cheadle. He was another ordinary man
who was not looking to be a hero but whose sense of decency saved
more than 1,200 lives from the extraordinary slaughter of 800,000
Tutsis and moderate Hutus by Hutu extremists in Rwanda in 1994.

It’s easy to demonize every German, or Russian, or Chinese, or
Israeli, or Arab, or Hutu that ever lived and blame the horrific
crimes perpetrated by crazed mobs or brainwashed multitudes in
specific times and places on everyone who fits the appropriate label.
It is much more difficult by far to remember the eternal words of the
great Gulag chronicler Alexander Solzhenitsyn when he warned, “the
line between good and evil runs through every human heart.”

Even Nazis could know mercy. One Nazi Party member, John Rabe, saved
a quarter of a million lives during the massacre of hundreds of
thousands of Chinese during the rape of the city of Nanking by
conquering Japanese forces in 1937.

The day after world leaders solemnly met at Auschwitz, the terrible
“capital of death” where at least 1.5 million human lives, most of
them Jewish, were deliberately and systematically snuffed out, Louis
Michel, the 25-nation European Union’s Commissioner for Development
and Humanitarian Aid, addressed a European Institute conference in
Washington. Michel straightforwardly noted, “The bald figures speak
for themselves. More than a billion people in the world live on less
than one dollar a day; 11 million children — most under the age of 5
— die each year; over 6 million of these deaths are due to
preventable diseases.” But Michel continued, “This is no time to
despair; this is the time for us to act.”

In the Book of Deuteronomy, the Bible records God stating, “I have
set before you life and death: Choose therefore life.” On the
anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, it is well to remember
that the camp was indeed liberated, even though it was too late for
so many — and that the way of life, as well as the way of death,
still remains open before us.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

46 Loan Programs

46 LOAN PROGRAMS

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR)
31 Jan 05

In 2004 the NKR Fund for Development of Small and Medium- Size
Business worked out and implemented a program for encouraging small
and medium-size business providing for financial and investment aid to
small and medium-size business owners through privileged loans, as
well as information and consulting. To fulfill these goals the fund
worked out a system of measures to be taken for the implementation of
which 200 million drams were provided from the State Budget 2004. In
the framework of the program about 10 small and medium-size business
owners from Nagorni Karabakh participated in the first economic forum
of the CIS Chamber of Commerce and Industry and EXPO 2004 held in
Yerevan in June 2004. According to the executive director of the fund
Vladimir Sayadian, recently business directories, reference books have
been published to provide information, methodological aid, consulting
in working out business plans, a web site was created. V. Sayadian
said, the amount of the loans provided in the framework of financial
and investment aid totaled 188 million drams. In 2004 111 applications
for loan were submitted of a total of 566675 thousand drams the most
part of which was for orcharding. 43 applications for loan referred to
orcharding and viticulture. 39 were for cattle breeding and fish
breeding. 15 applications referred to industrial production, 8 food
processing and production, 6 services. Of the 111 applications for
loan the fund financed only 31. On the whole, in 2004 the fund granted
46 loans totaling 181147.6 drams.

SRBUHI VANIAN.
31-01-2005

Azeri MPs Intend to Raise Karabakh Issue at OSCE PA

AZERI MPs INTEND TO RAISE KARABAKH ISSUE AT OSCE PA

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 1. ARMINFO. Azeri MPs are going to raise the
Karabakh issue at the Feb 24-25 Vienna session of the OSCE
Parliamentary Assembly, says the vice chairman of the standing human
rights commission of the Azeri parliament Rabiyet Aslanov.

The Vienna session is a preparation for the June Waghington annual
session. So the Azeri MPs are going to raise the issue in Vienna to
have it included in the agenda in Washington. “We want the Washington
session to officially discuss the issues of Nagorny karabakh, refugees
and displaced people as well as the intensification of the OSCE Minsk
Group’s work,” says Aslanova. “We will do our best to have these
issues included in the session’s agenda.”

Citing Pres.Aliev who said that the OSCE MG has achieved no results
during its 12 year work Aslanova says that this time everything will
be different and the victory at the CE will influence the
OSCE. Especially as most of the Azeri delegates to PACE are also
delegates to the OSCE.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Turk Analyst Condemns Oskanian of Insulting Jews From the UN Podium

TURK ANALYST CONDEMNS OSKANIAN OF INSULTING JEWS FROM THE UN PODIUM

Azg/arm
2 Feb 05

Armenian foreign affairs minister Vartan Oskanian’s speech at the
Special Session of General Assembly of the UN dedicated to the 60th
anniversary of Auschwitz death camp liberation caught the attention of
Hatem Jabbarl from Caucasian Department of Eurasian Military Research
Institute. In an article of January 28 of Haberanaliz newspaper
Jabbarl draws readers’ attention to Vartan Oskanian’s readiness “to
join other survivors on behalf of the people and government of
Armenia” and to “Jews and Armenians are linked forever by Hitler”
statement and says that the General Assembly’s Special Session played
more into Armenians hands than into Jews as the Holocaust is
recognized worldwide while the “so-called genocide” is only
recognized, Jabbarl thinks, by states that are unwilling to see Turkey
developed due to their past enmity.

Jabbarl considered Oskanian’s speech an opportune occasion to
influence the international community from such an authoritative
podium as UN’s and expressed an opinion that the Armenian foreign
minister “insulted the memory of Holocaust, the Jewish people as well
as the participants of the Special Session by offering his
condolences”.

Jabbarl explained Oskanian’s “insult” by anti-Semitism rampant in
Armenia. Writing that anti-Semitism has grown into a state policy in
our country, he merely points out to Roman Yepiskoposyan’s “The
National Systems” book and chairman of Armenian Aryan Union Armen
Avetisian’s statements that “the Yezids and Jews should be put out of
Armenia” as well as to the head of Armenia’s Jewish community,
Rima Varzhapetian, as she feverously seeks signs of anti-Semitism.

This means that the Turkish analyst is more concerned with creating an
illusion of anti-Semitism than with the real state of things.

But what really lies behind Jabbarl’s words is the concern that the
condolences of the Armenian minister to the Jewish nation create
grounds for friendship which will supposedly bind Turkey’s hands as it
is striving to remove the US Congress resolutions on Armenian Genocide
by means of Jews institutions. In other words, the reason Hatem
Jabbarl on “finding” anti-Semitism in Armenia raised it to the rank of
state policy is that he wanted to oppose anti-Semitism to Armenian
foreign minister’s speech, rather annoying for Turkey.

By Hakob Chakrian

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Italian Business Interested in Launching Shoes Production in Armenia

ITALIAN BUSINESMEN INTERESTED IN LAUNCHING SHOES PRODUCTION IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, FERBUARY 1. ARMINFO. Italian businessmen are interested in
launching a production of shoes in Armenia.

Speaking at a press conference today, Head of the Industrial
Department of the Armenian Ministry for Trade and Economic Development
Meruzhan Hakobyan says that it has become known in the course of the
official visit of an Armenian delegation headed by President Robert
Kocharyan to Rome. According to Hakobyan, during meeting with
business-circles of Italy, several local businessmen even expressed
readiness to invest big funds in construction of a new shoes factory
in Armenia. Hakobyan proposed them investing their funds in the large
shoes factories in Armenia, which were idling for various reasons
(some 20 factories). He says that at present, mainly small shoes
productions operate in Armenia, meanwhile, in the Soviet times, 25
million pares of shoes were produced in the country, 23 million of
them were exported. Businessmen decided to think of the proposal and
visit Armenia within several months.

During a meeting at the Foreign Trade Center in Venice, Italians took
an interest in the prospects of production of office furniture in
Armenia, promising to supply components for it. He adds that the
Customs regime in Armenia is more favorable than in Russia. In this
connection, Armenia could become a bridge for supply of the local
products to Russia. Meanwhile, the most complicated of the transport
problems is activation of the train ferry between the ports Poti
(Georgia) and Caucasus (Russia,) he says.

According to Hakobyan, the commodity turnover of Armenia and Italy
totaled $68 million, including $28 million exports and $39 million
import of Armenian products.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

PACE Resolution on NK Reflects Processes Inside OSCE Minsk Group

PACE RESOLUTION ON NAGORNY KARABAKH REFLECTS PROCESSES INSIDE OSCE
MINSK GROUP: ARMENIAN OPPOSITION MP

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 1. ARMINFO. The PACE resolution on Nagorny Karabakh
is an unprecedented document in terms of Armenia’s having been
recognized as a direct party to the Karabakh conflict and an occupant,
says Shavarsh Kocharyan, Armenian delegate to PACE from the Justice
opposition bloc.

No international document except for the resolutions by the
Organization of the Islamic Conference has ever recognized Armenia as
a direct party to the Karabakh conflict. The appointment of a new PACE
rapporteur on Nagorny Karabakh will not change the situation. The new
rapporteur will follow the logic of the PACE resolution.

Shavarsh Kocharyan calls a lie the statements that the resolution will
not affect the OSCE MG peace process. On the contrary the resolution
reflects the processes inside the MG and this unfavorable atmosphere
is the result of Armenia’s ineffective foreign policy.

Shavarsh Kocharyan says that during the resolution discussion the
initiatives of the Azeri delegates were strongly supported by their
Turkish colleagues while the Armenian delegation could hardly expect
the same from any other foreign counterparts. Even Armenia’s
strategical partner Russia was not supportive. For example at PACE
the Russian delegates were first neutral but when it turned out that
the proposals of Armenian MPs were passing some of them began voting
in favor of Azerbaijan.

If Armenia wants European support it should effect democratic
reforms. No coincidence that before 1995 when Armenia held free and
democratic elections the international community sympathized with i
but the situation changed after the electoral fraud of 1996. Of course
Azerbaijan is not a democratic state either but in Azerbaijan there is
oil, says Shavarsh Kocharyan adding that Pres.Aliev is much liked in
the world and the international community is ready to support him
everywhere even in the Karabakh issue just to reinforce his positions
in Azerbaijan and to launch democratic reforms there.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Renato Bruson to Perform in Yerevan

RENATO BRUSON TO PERFORM IN YEREVAN

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 1, ARMENPRESS: One of the most famous world
baritones, Renato Bruson, will give a concert in Armenia on February 5
together with Armenian Philharmonic Orchestra. The concert sponsored
by the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) is part of events
dedicated to the 90-th anniversary of the Armenian genocide to be
marked on April 24.

After studying at the Padua Conservatory, Bruson made his debut
atthe Spoleto Experimental Theatre in 1961 in Verdi’s Trovatore. He
immediately started a brilliant career that led him to sing in all the
most important opera houses in the world, alongside the most famous
singers.

With his soft, rich, deep voice he has emerged as the leading
romantic baritone of our time, specializing above all in Donizetti and
Verdi, but not disdaining eighteenth-century opera.

Among his most important recordings we remember Donizetti’s
Poliuto, Puccini’s Manon Lescaut and Tosca, Verdi’s Alzira, Luisa
Miller, Falstaff, Macbeth, Rigoletto, La Traviata and Il Segreto di
Susanna by Wolf-Ferrari. Bruson will perform in Yerevan Verdi’s arias.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress