Presentation on US Support for Science and Technology in Armenia

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Network of America, Washington Region
P. O. Box 10423
Arlington, VA 22210-9998
Email: [email protected]

Washington, DC. – The Armenian Network invites you to a presentation
on US support to science and technology development in Armenia through
the US Civilian Research Development Foundation (CRDF).

This event is jointly sponsored with the Washington Section of the
Armenian Engineers and Scientists of America (GMWAS/AESA, contact
Dr. Jack Kooyoomjian, [email protected]). It features CRDF
speakers John Modzelewski, Director of Centers and Institution Building
Programs, and Ms. Siri B. Oswald, Senior Manager for Institution
Building Programs. They will introduce and update participants to
the many programs and research and development activities sponsored
by the US CRDF and other organizations which directly benefit the
scientists and engineers in Armenia.

Network seminars provide great opportunities for professional
networking. In particular, this seminar should appeal to all those
interested in (1) supporting research projects that offer scientists
and engineers alternatives to emigration and strengthen the scientific
and technological infrastructure of Armenia; (2) funding collaborative
research and development projects; (3) helping move applied research
to the marketplace; (4) strengthening research and education in
Armenian universities. On the eve of its independence anniversary,
let’s celebrate Armenia’s past scientific achievements and explore
ways of sustaining its future development.

The presentation is scheduled for 6:30pm, Tuesday, September 21,
2004, at 1530 Wilson Boulevard, 3rd Floor CRDF conference room,
Arlington, Virginia 22209. CRDF headquarters are located two
blocks from the Roslyn metro stop. For driving directions check

Advance registration is required for security purposes. Please RSVP by
noon Sept. 20th to [email protected]. Refreshments will be served.
Event is free and open to the public.

The Armenian Network of America, Inc., is a 501(c)(3) non-profit
membership based organization dedicated to the advancement of the
Armenian American community.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.crdf.org/directions.html.

From Beslan to Yerevan: Russia’s tragedy touches Armenia

>From Beslan to Yerevan: Russia’s tragedy touches Armenia
By Julia Hakobyan, ArmenianNow Reporter

Armenianow.com
Sept 10, 2004

The gruesome details that have emerged in the aftermath of last week’s
terrorist act in Russia have revealed that 33 Armenians were among
hostages held for three days in that school gymnasium in Beslan,
Russia.

Nine Armenians, including five children, are among at least 335 who
were killed. Survivors are now in hospital in Beslan, Moscow and
other Russian cities.

About 200 Armenians in Yerevan offered blood for Beslan victims Like
other world-wide sympathizers, reports of children being shot in
the back as they fled what should be a child’s sanctuary but instead
became a life-lasting chamber of horror, shocked Armenian sympathizers.

Monday classes throughout Armenia’s capital (the hostages were taken
on the first day of school) began with tributes to the victims.

“The events in Beslan were very painful for all of us, neither pupils
nor teachers in our school could concentrate on lessons,” says Anahit
Lazarian, a teacher at School N118. “Everyone tried to put himself
in the position of hostages. We started our lessons on Monday and
Tuesday- the days of mourning in Russia with a minute of silence. We
join to all families in Beslan in their grief for killed relatives.”

President Robert Kocharyan and Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan and
other top government officials signed a book of condolences at the
Russian embassy. The Vice-Speaker of the Armenian Parliament Tigran
Torosyan said that the tragedy in Beslan showed that moral values
have eroded.

“We faced a new way of brutality that had not yet reached children,”
he said.

An Armenian airliner was the third, behind Norway and Italy, to
deliver relief supplies, and the Ministry of Health has extended an
invitation for victims to be brought to Yerevan for treatment.

“We have sent one box of plasma and 21 boxes of medication to Beslan,
including those for anti-shock and antipyretic treatment,” says Hayk
Darbinyan, the Deputy Minister of the Armenian Health Ministry. “Now
we are preparing to send another consignment, including more medical
goods and clothes.”

Meanwhile, at the Armenian Center of Hematology, residents queued to
donate blood for the Beslan victims. Yuri Karapetyan, vice director
of the clinic, says that more than 200 people applied to become donors.

“Most of them are parents, also there are many people from
law-enforcement bodies,” Karapetyan says. “We examine the
cardiovascular system, the blood pressure, and other health
parameters. So far we accept blood from 120 people, but we are going
to send more assistance to Beslan and welcome all those who want to
help the victims.”

Arpine Nalbandyan, a student of Armenian Medical College and young
mother was among the first to become a donor.

“As a medical student I know that those hostages who received severe
burns from the bombs- blasts will need long treatment and they will
need great amounts of blood. I think what every person should do now
for the sake of humanity is to be a donor, because now we can nothing
else for them,” says the future nurse.

A memorial at the Russian embassy included toys, candy, water The
event has also sparked international debate over who the terrorists
really represent. A $10 million reward has been put up for information
concerning the whereabouts of key Chechen rebel leaders. And Russian
President Vladimir Putin has responded to criticism from the west,
with his own chastisement of its handling of its “War on Terror”.

Alexander Iskandaryan, Vice-Director of the Swiss based Caucasus
Media Institute in Yerevan joined other analysts in criticizing
Russian anti-terrorist policy and calls their present steps against
terrorism ineffective.

“On the one hand it is clear the world has not yet found a successful
and final way on fighting terrorism which Russia can apply. But on
the other hand the Beslan tragedy showed that Russia is not even a
step ahead after the series of the terrorist acts in the last years,”
he said.

“As a person I want to believe that the Beslan tragedy will never be
repeated in Russia. But as an expert I will have to say that by the
measures Russia takes now it will not prevent more terrorist actions.”

The political scientist lays part of the blame on corruption in
Russia, where, he says, it would be easy for terrorists to buy off law
enforcement. “However, honest and professional agents are not enough
to stop terrorism,” Iskandaryan said. “The war between the Kremlin and
Chechnya over the past decade destroyed the region. Today in Chechnya
there is a generation of people who know nothing except war and know
nothing except killing and are ready to die, with bomb-belts.”

While analysts opine and officials make offers and public gestures of
solidarity, it is a make-shift memorial outside the embassy that most
shows the depth of thought that the tragedy in Beslan has stirred here.

Along with candles and flowers, toys have been placed at the memorial,
in a tribute to the dead children, at least 156. And with the toys and
candles and flowers, bottles of water are there, a poignant reaction
to reports that the hostages were denied drink for three days in
a sweltering and packed gymnasium, while home-made bombs hung over
their heads.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Iran-Khatami-Tajikistan

Iran-Khatami-Tajikistan

Khatami arrives in Tajikistan Dushanbe, Sept 11, IRNA — President
Seyed Mohammad Khatami arrived here in the Tajik capital on Saturday
on the last leg of his three-nation tour of Armenia, Belarus and
Tajikistan. Khatami was officially welcomed on arrival by his Tajik
counterpart Emomali Rakhmonov. The welcoming ceremony began with
the playing of the national anthems of the two countries followed
by the review of a guard of honor by the two presidents. Khatami
is due to hold talks with top Tajik officials on ways of bolstering
Tehran-Dushanbe ties.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Trade Objects Of Armenians And Azerbaijanis Destroyed In Yekaterinbu

TRADE OBJECTS OF ARMENIANS AND AZERBAIJANIS DESTROYED IN YEKATERINBURG

BAKU, SEPTEMBER 10. ARMINFO-TURAN. Four cafes belonging to the
Armenians and Azerbaijanis were destroyed in Ekaterinburg and in its
suburb Verkhnaya Pishma on September 9 at night. One man is killed,
the Moscow newspaper “Commersant” reports. An action was brought on
the Article “Hooliganism” on the facts. The owners of the destroyed
objects believe that the attacks express their intolerance to the
origins from Caucasus.

The first attack was made at 1:50 on cafe “Oasis plus”, 20 people
run into the cafe with sticks and lashes. For several minutes they
beat the people and broke furniture and then hid away. As a result
four Armenians were injured and two of them were hospitalized with
trauma in their brains.

In an hour the case “Caspian” in the Proyezaya street was attacked. The
attackers destroyed all they could and then threw bottles with burning
substances into the cafe. The cafe burnt out. As a result of fire the
relative of the owner of cafe 52 years old Safarov died. Half an hour
later the bandits threw several bottles with burning substances into
the snack- bar “Shartash”.

The same day the attackers threw several bottles with burning
substance into the window of the accounting office of the restaurant
“David’s”. The eye-witnesses tell that the bandits were in masks. The
militia detained 8 people. The owners of the destroyed cafes suppose
that the attacks on their objects is a result of the intolerance
to people coming Caucasus after the latest acts of terrorism in the
planes, in Moscow and in Beslan.

However, militia states that the attackers are the “criminal
clarifications”. It is not the first case of attack on the origins
from Caucasus over the last days. Thus, at night on September 6
two strangers shoot from sub-machine gun the visitors of the cafe
“Snezinka” . Then four people died and five were wounded. Among the
suffered are the people from Azerbaijan and Daghestan.

Two days ago in Moscow two militiamen beat the former secretary of
the security Council of Daghestan Magomed Tolboyev.–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Tbilisi, Moscow Engaged in Abkhazia Railway Row

Tbilisi, Moscow Engaged in Abkhazia Railway Row

Civil Georgia, Tbilisi / 2004-09-11 11:47:08

Georgian Foreign Ministry has summoned the Russian Ambassador to
Vladimir Chkhikvishvili to express protest over, as Tbilisi put
it, “unilateral and illegal” decision of Moscow to resume railway
connection with unrecognized Abkhazian Republic.

In a statement issued on September 10, the Georgian Foreign Ministry
described the move as “a violation of Georgia’s sovereignty.” The
railway connection between Moscow and Sokhumi, capital of Georgia’s
breakaway Abkhazia was resumed on September 10.

According to the agreement signed by the Presidents of Russia and
Georgia in March, 2003, the return of internally displaced persons
to Abkhazia and resumption of the railway should be simultaneous
processes.

However, Ambassador Chkhikvishvili told the reporters after meeting
with the Georgian Foreign Ministry officials that Russia “is not
violating the agreements.”

“The sides have agreed earlier that it is not always necessary to
synchronize these two processes – return of the IDPs and resumption of
the railway [communication] – if there is a progress in one direction,
we should not stop and should move further,” Vladimir Chkhikvishvili
said. The Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement issued on
September 10, that restoration of railway will benefit the entire
South Caucasus region, including Georgia and Armenia.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Action not words

Action not words

The Guardian, UK
Sept 11 2004

Leader

America’s declaration that genocide is taking place in Sudan has
injected fresh urgency – and controversy – into the international
debate about what the UN unhesitatingly calls the world’s worst
humanitarian crisis. It was only to be expected that the Khartoum
government would reject the charge, but there has also been a lukewarm
response elsewhere to Colin Powell’s statement to the Senate foreign
relations committee. The US secretary of state says genocide is
taking place on the basis of evidence that black African villagers
in Darfur are being targeted with the specific intent of destroying
“a group in whole or part”. Human rights organisations have welcomed
the shift. Britain’s official response is that grave crimes are
being committed by the government-backed Janjaweed Arab militias and
that the UN should mount an urgent investigation. Is this a case of
diplomatic sensibilities masking a brutal truth? Is it right to have
reservations about using the G word?

Situations previously characterised as genocide include the Turkish
massacre of 1.5 million Armenians during the first world war and,
less controversially, the Nazis’ extermination of six million Jews
in the second world war, when the term was coined from the Greek
word genos (race or tribe) with the Latin word cide (to kill). It
has been widely applied to Pol Pot’s Cambodia of the 1970s and made
bloody reappearances in Rwanda in 1994 and in the aftermath of the
wars of the Yugoslavian succession. Slobodan Milosevic, the former
Serbian president, is facing a genocide charge at the Hague war crimes
tribunal. Radislav Krstic, a Bosnian Serb general, was convicted of
genocide for his role in the Srebrenica massacre of 7,000 Muslim men
and boys.

Sudanese officials will admit to nothing more than a humanitarian
crisis created by ethnic strife and have contemptuously accused Mr
Powell of seeking black votes in the forthcoming US presidential
election. Khartoum also argues that the intervention will undermine
delicate peace negotiations with Darfur rebel groups in Nigeria. Most
of the facts, though, are indisputable: 50,000 people have died since
February 2003 and over a million have been displaced. Aid workers
yesterday reported a new mass influx of refugees into one camp in
southern Darfur. Harrowing images have been on our TV screens for
long enough to fuel demands for something that goes beyond agonised
handwringing and ineffective quiet diplomacy

It is true that behind the debate in the US lies guilt about
the shameful failure to act when the first reports of genocide
emerged from Rwanda a decade ago. That is only natural. The genocide
characterisation may also be intended to galvanise the international
community – though targeted sanctions such as an assets freeze and a
travel ban on senior Sudanese officials would be more effective than
the oil embargo currently being proposed by Washington. That is opposed
by China, an importer of Sudanese oil and a security council member,
as well as by Pakistan and Algeria. And there is the familiar dilemma
that such sanctions are a notoriously blunt instrument, as the Iraqi
experience taught. But urgent though the crisis is, Washington and
London are still not trying the sort of heavy-duty arm-twisting they
tried when seeking a second UN resolution authorising war on Saddam.

Mr Powell’s intervention puts the US a step ahead of the EU, which
says it wants a UN investigation. But the real question is not about
a dictionary definition of genocide. No one can claim that Sudan
is not experiencing a terrible human tragedy. As Oxfam has been
warning in appeals for help to save lives: time is short and people
are dying. Recognising the scale of human suffering is a prerequisite
to action. Words, however resonant, are not enough.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Kocharian replaces head of Armenian delegation to NATO

KOCHARIAN REPLACES HEAD OF ARMENIAN DELEGATION TO NATO

ArmenPress
Sept 10 2004

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 10, ARMENPRESS: By a September 8 decree Armenian
president Robert Kocharian dismissed Vigen Chitechian of his duties
of head of the Armenian delegation to the North-Atlantic Treaty
Organization. Kocharian’s press office said that Samvel Mkrtchian
was appointed by Kocharian to take up the post.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Newly appointed amb. of Finland hands her credentials over to Kochar

NEWLY APPOINTED AMBASSADOR OF FINLAND HANDS HER CREDENTIALS OVER TO PRESIDENT KOCHARIAN

ArmenPress
Sept 10 2004

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 10, ARMENPRESS: The newly appointed ambassador of
Finland to Armenia Ms. Terry Hakkalan, with residence in Helsinki,
handed over her credentials to president Robert Kocharian today.

According to president press services, congratulating the diplomat on
taking up the new post, Robert Kocharian said that Armenian underscores
developing relations with Finland.

The ambassador said that Finland is interested in stimulating
cooperation with South Caucasian countries, and Armenia in particular,
and is watchfully following the developments in the region. She
underscored Armenia’s involvement in European Union New Neighborhood
Project which opens up significant opportunities for cooperation.

The president of the republic and the ambassador exchanged ideas
on stimulating bilateral relations. Ms. Terri Hakalla said that
Finish business community is largely interested in Armenia. The sides
underscored development of a proper legal field and holding a business
forum in order to make business links more active.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Archbishop ordains next generation of leaders in Racine

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

September 10, 2004
___________________

PARISH TURNS OUT FOR ORDINATION SERVICE IN WISCONSIN

In front of the parishioners who are like family, surrounded by the
community he’s called home his whole life, Daniel Korakian got ready to
take on new responsibilities.

Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese of the Armenian
Church of America (Eastern), spoke to the crowd, asking them if Korakian
was worthy of being a deacon.

“And they said I was worthy. That just made me think, ‘I hope I am.’
It was wonderful — a beautiful thing,” said the humble Korakian who was
ordained a deacon on Sunday, August 29, 2004, at the St. Mesrob Church
of Racine, WI. “I love this place. I love the people. These people
have been raising me my whole life. I think that’s why I am still
here.”

Korakian grew up in the Racine parish and currently serves as the
parish’s administrator and caretaker. He has been seriously working
towards his ordination for the past 12 years, and feels it was important
to step forward and assume the responsibilities of a deacon, a position
the parish takes very seriously. There is only one other deacon at the
parish.

“I will be able to continue what has been established,” Korakian said.
“The parish doesn’t have to be worried, there is another deacon to
support our senior deacon and to carry on in the future.”

The Primate said Korakian’s selfless devotion to the church is an
example others should follow.

“He is a true steward of the Armenian Church and of his parish. He
knows that each of us must step forward to do the work the Lord calls on
us to do,” the Primate said. “His is truly a ministry of service, which
brings the light of the Lord into the lives of his friends and
neighbors.”

Others in the parish followed Korakian down the path of service. That
same weekend the Primate ordained a number of acolytes and sub-deacons.

On Saturday, August 28, 2004, following an evening vespers service, the
Primate ordained five new acolytes: Grace Bedoian, Amanda Desotell,
Britany Garvin, Alex Janiuk, and Marissa Mahnke.

Along with ordaining Dn. Korakian on Sunday, the Primate ordained five
sub-deacons: Joseph Gabrielian, Richard Kadamian, Aram Katerdjian, Kai
Kazarian, and Stanton Sheridan.

— 9/10/04

E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable in the News
and Events section of the Eastern Diocese’s website,

PHOTO CAPTION (1): Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate, ordains Daniel
Korakian as a deacon during a service at St. Mesrob Church in Racine,
WI, on Sunday, August 29, 2004.

PHOTO CAPTION (2): The Primate ordained one deacon and five sub-deacons
at the St. Mesrob Church of Racine, WI, on Sunday, August 29, 2004.

PHOTO CAPTION (3): Parishioners filled St. Mesrob Church of Racine, WI,
on Saturday, August 28, 2004, as the Primate ordained five new acolytes.

PHOTO CAPTION (4): Archbishop Barsamian and Fr. Yeprem Kelegian, pastor
of the St. Mesrob Church of Racine, WI, join the new acolytes ordained
on August 28, 2004.

# # #

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.armenianchurch.org
www.armenianchurch.org.

BAKU: Parliamentarians blame Iran,Armenia for producing chemical wea

Parliamentarians blame Iran, Armenia for producing chemical weapons

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Sept 10 2004

Baku, September 9, AssA-Irada — Azerbaijan’s neighbors Iran and
Armenia are producing chemical weapons. This evidence can easily be
proved if the UN conducts serious investigations.

This statement was made by MP Elman Mammadov in a Thursday meeting of
the permanent parliamentary commission on security and defense issues.

However, Vice Speaker of the Milli Majlis (parliament) Ziyafat Asgarov,
who was presiding over the meeting, interrupted Mammadov, noting that
the issue is not related to the one on the agenda.*

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress