PM received Syrian minister of economy and trade

ArmenPress
Aug 6 2004

PM RECEIVED SYRIAN MINISTER OF ECONOMY AND TRADE

YEREVAN, AUGUST 6, ARMENPRESS: Armenian PM Andranik Margarian
received yesterday Syrian Minister of Economy and Trade Ghassan
al-Rifai and the delegation headed by him who are in Armenia to
participate in the third session of Armenian-Syrian intergovernmental
joint committee.
According to government press services, PM noted that Armenia
attaches great importance to boosting relations with Syria as part of
its policy in Middle East.. He also said, that despite of joint
efforts to develop economic and cultural- scientific cooperation, its
size is far from being satisfactory. He therefore underscored
Armenian-Syrian intergovernmental sessions to which Ghassan al-Rifai
is a co-chair. Syrian Minister of Trade and Economy told the Armenian
PM about the pace of work of the committee’s third session noting
that a number of documents have been signed in the field of health,
communication, tourism and others. Attaching importance to their
implementation, the minister told that the Syrian side intends to
create a working group which will monitor it.
The Armenian PM and minister Ghassan al-Rifai expressed readiness
to increase size of trade turnover in the near future. The sides also
praised several cooperation projects in the fields of education and
culture as part of agreements in previous intergovernmental sessions.
The sides underscored the need for exchange of information through
such entities as Armenian Development Agency, Armenian Chamber of
Commerce and Industry and respective bodies in Syria.
Armenian PM thanked the Syrian side for providing wheat and potato
seeds as an aid and as part of cooperation in the field of
agriculture. At the end of the meeting the sides voiced their hope
that the visit of Syrian PM Naji Utri will give a new boost to
Armenian-Syrian relations.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Ukraine outpaces Russia in economic growth

The Russia Journal

Ukraine outpaces Russia in economic growth

August 06, 2004 Posted: 15:10 Moscow time (11:10 GMT)

Ukraine and Tajikistan have outpaced Russia in economic growth. The Russian
Federation ranks 7th among the CIS members in GDP growth rate shown in the
first half of this year, according to the data released today by the
Interstate Statistics Committee of the CIS. The Russian economy expanded at
a 7.9-percent annual rate over the first six months of 2004.

Ukraine showed the largest growth of 12.7 percent. Tajikistan ranked second
benefiting 11.1-percent growth. Azerbaijan followed Tajikistan with
10.6-percent growth. Belarus, Georgia and Kyrgyzstan outpaced Russia as
well, benefiting from a 10.3-percent, a 9.4-percent and a 9.2-percent
expansion respectively. Data on Moldovan and Kazakhstani GDP growth has not
been released as yet.

The economic growth among the CIS members averaged 9 percent in the first
half of this year. At the same time the inflation rate averaged 10 percent
in the CIS in the first half of 2004. Belarus showed the highest inflation
rate of 20.8 percent. Kyrgyzstani 4.1-percent inflation was the most
moderate among other CIS members. Russia ranked third in the increase in the
Consumer Price Index (CPI) in the first six months of 2004. Consumer prices
in Russia advanced 10.4 percent. Moldova showed the second highest inflation
rate of 13.6 percent. CPI index jumped 7.5 percent in Armenia. Ukraine
showed a 7.4-percent increase in the CPI. Kazakhstani consumer prices
advanced 6.6 percent over the first half of 2004. Azerbaijani consumer
prices increased 6 percent. Georgia showed a 5.5-percent increase in the
CPI. Tajikistan showed a 5.2-percent increase.

As Russian Economy Minister German Gref announced yesterday, one should not
rule out the possibility of Russian economy showing 6.8-7.1 percent
expansion if oil prices average over $30.4 a barrel this year. According to
Gref, the average monthly rate of economic growth is forecasted to decrease
by 0.2 percent in the second half of this year. Thus, it is expected to fall
to 0.5 percent from 0.7 percent in the first half of this year. However, the
Russian Economy Minister considers this rate to be high. Experts with the
Russian Economy Ministry forecast a 6.7-percent economic expansion for this
year. The Russian Economy Ministry has revised upward its estimates of the
Russian economic growth for 2005, Gref said. It forecasts a 6-percent
expansion compared to earlier estimates of a 5.9-percent economic growth.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

It’s foreign policy, stupid!

WorldNetDaily, OR
Aug 6 2004

It’s foreign policy, stupid!

Soon the American people will determine who will be their next
president based upon one central issue: foreign policy. Why is this
the Holy Grail of understanding? Because our domestic policies, as a
result of 9-11, are being held hostage by our foreign policies!

John Kerry and George Bush need to talk about the real reason America
was attacked. It was not because of our cultural heritage or our
democratic way of life. Europe was a much easier target, and has
plenty of both, but was not in the crosshairs.

The final report of the 9-11 commission was an eye opener. It stated
that Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, the man who conceived and directed the
9-11 terrorist attacks, was motivated by his strong opposition to
America’s support for Israel. Mohammed conceived the initial outline
of the attack six years before its execution and brought the plan to
al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden, because he knew he did not have the
resources to carry it out on his own.

There was only one sheriff in town setting down foreign policy during
those six years. Precisely what was Bill Clinton’s policy on terrorism?
It was appeasement. Instead of fighting terrorism, he chose to feed
it. Like Neville Chamberlain, Clinton believed that, in doing so, the
terrorists would leave America alone.

A prime example of this deluded strategy was his attitude toward
Yasser Arafat. One of Clinton’s greatest hopes was to go down in
history as the man who finally resolved the Arab-Israeli conflict. In
order to do that, Arafat had to be transformed from a murderer into a
diplomat – from the arch terrorist who invented airplane hijacking
and who was behind the massacre of Israeli athletes at the Munich
Olympics in 1972, among countless other atrocities. As part of the
president’s effort to do so, Arafat became the most welcomed foreign
leader at the White House during the Clinton years.

Clinton’s Middle East initiative involved an extraordinarily
far-reaching offer that would give Arafat almost everything he said
he wanted: 98 percent of the territory of Judea, Samaria and the Gaza
Strip, all of east Jerusalem except for the Jewish and Armenian
quarters of the Old City, Palestinian sovereignty over the Temple
Mount (conceding only the right of Jews to pray there), and a
compensation fund of $30 billion.

Arafat instead turned down this offer of a peaceful settlement and
chose to declare a terrorist war, one that has resulted in the deaths
of thousands of Israelis and Palestinians over the past four years
and has made the Middle East even more unsafe than before. But is
America a safer place as a result of this strategy? Could America be
safer as a result of making such promises to the Arafats of the
world?

Still in the aftermath of 9-11, we seem to be on a fast track back to
Clinton’s worldview of moral relativism. Will terrorists now be
divided into good ones and bad ones based upon their declared
intentions? Will there be an amnesty policy that allows bad ones to
denounce terrorism – whether they mean it or not – as Arafat did in
his famous “I denounce terrorism” speech to the U.N. General Assembly
in 1988?

Nine years ago, the U.S. Congress voted in favor of moving the
American Embassy to Jerusalem. Why has the Jerusalem Embassy Act of
1995 been held up every six months by a presidential “national
security” waiver? Is it because we actually believe that recognizing
Jerusalem as Israel’s capital will somehow threaten our national
security? In light of 9-11, that makes about as much sense as giving
bin Laden family members frequent-flyer miles when they flew home on
chartered planes a few days after 9-11.

When a former U.S. attorney general and Democratic presidential
candidate was murdered in 1968, no one asked whether it could have
been over foreign policy. In fact, Robert Kennedy was the first
American politician murdered by a Middle Eastern terrorist, Sirhan
Sirhan. He was murdered on June 5, the same day he won the California
primary. It was also the first anniversary of the outbreak of the Six
Day War.

Yitzhak Rabin, the Israeli chief of general staff during that war and
a future ambassador to America and prime minister, had been invited
to join Kennedy for a photo op to commemorate the outcome of the war.
He clearly recognized the connection between the two events, as he
wrote in his memoirs: “The American people was so dazed by what it
perceived as the senseless act of a madman, it could not begin to
fathom its political significance.”

Rabin’s words could indeed describe America’s present-day lingering
confusion over 9-11. For what was the political significance of
Robert Kennedy’s tragic assassination? According to a report by a
special counsel to the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s office,
Sirhan shot Kennedy because of his support for Israel, and had
planned the murder for months.

As Sirhan stated in an outburst at his trial: “I killed Robert
Kennedy, willfully, premeditatedly, and with 20 years of malice
aforethought.” (Twenty years referred to Israel’s declaration of
statehood in 1948. Kennedy, fresh out of Harvard in 1948, was a
reporter for the Boston Globe and, in fact, was in Israel when
statehood was declared.)

America must not allow itself to be held hostage any longer by
bigot-infested, oil-rich Arab regimes that consider Jews “pigs and
monkeys,” Christians “infidels,” and America “the great Satan.” The
war on terrorism cannot be won without a war on bigotry. Let’s hope
someone in the crowd can get the attention of the candidates with a
timely reminder that “It’s about our foreign policy, stupid.”

Ariel Sharon once said, “The Arab world may have the oil, but we have
the matches.” With Iran’s nuclear program on a fast track, those
matches are getting uncomfortably close to the oil.

Michael D. Evans is the author of “Beyond Iraq: The Next Move,” an
Amazon No. 2 and a New York Times best-seller, and founder of
America’s largest Christian coalition praying for the peace of
Jerusalem, Jerusalem Prayer Team.org. His latest book, “The American
Prophecies,” is slated to be released by Time Warner this month.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://worldnetdaily.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=39841

Who’s afraid of Lev Leviev?

Mmegi, Botswana
Aug 6 2004

Who’s afraid of Lev Leviev?

QUESTION TIME
PATRICK VAN RENSBURG
8/6/2004 1:58:23 AM (GMT +2)

FIRST of all, who – except for the diamond insiders – knows who Lev
Leviev is? The Daily News recently told us that he wants to open a
diamond-polishing factory in Botswana, without telling us much about
him. According to The Economist of London, `De Beer’s days of market
dominance may well be drawing to a close. Yet consumers should not
get excited just yet. Whether a duopoly or oligopoly emerges, diamond
prices are not going to plunge. Leviev will be among those putting a
stop to that’.

Could it be because of Leviev that De Beers settled its price fixing
case with the US Government by paying a US$10 million fine? Now,
because of that payment, and a guilty plea to charges of price fixing
of raw diamonds, it can – as it could not till then – sell its
diamonds directly on Fifth Avenue, New York, indeed anywhere in
America.

Lev Leviev, The Economist tells us, `threatens to break up entirely
how De Beers organises the diamond industry’, which of course
substantially affects Botswana, not only because the country has a
15% stake in the company.

Leviev, an Israeli citizen, born in Uzbekistan (a former Soviet Union
Republic), has considerable interest in diamonds, as well as in
transport and property. For a long time, at a time that De Beers
still controlled, though did not themselves mine, 80% of the world’s
diamonds, Leviev worked as a De Beers sight holder, buying unseen
parcels of stones at non-negotiable prices. That was how De Beers
operated then, given its almost total control of the industry.
Leviev, reportedly, so much resented having to take or leave the
stones available from De Beers, that he apparently decided to get
back at the cartel.

His first major break came in Russia, where he became a close
personal associate of Vladimir Putin’s, before Putin became
President. Leviev was already known as a diamond cutter and polisher
in the 1980s, and the Soviet state-owned diamond corporation asked
him to help set up local factories there fifteen years ago. He formed
a joint venture with the state firm, and insisted that only rough
diamonds from Russian mines be supplied for cutting and polishing to
the joint enterprise. None were to be diverted through De Beers. De
Beers were reportedly very angry at losing its supply. When, after
the fall of the Soviet Union, the factories were privatised, Leviev
`somehow emerged as the sole owner’, it was reported.

Leviev didn’t stop there. He was helping create jobs and adding value
to the diamonds exported, and offered to do the same in Angola. He
reportedly invested US$60 million there. Although he did not get all
he wanted out of the deal – Angola later cancelled three quarters of
the supply of diamonds that it initially made available to him – he
had ousted De Beers.

Leviev then built a diamond factory in Windhoek to add value to the
country’s diamond exports. With 550 workers, it is apparently
Africa’s largest. On June 28, Leviev took Sam Nujoma around his new
factory. Despite Namibia’s deal with De Beers in NAMDEB, the
country’s mining laws prevent a monopoly control of diamond supplies,
and Leviev has access to its diamonds, if the President agrees. And
what did Nujoma reportedly say on June 28, when he went round the
factory? `To our brothers and sisters of neighbouring states, Angola,
Botswana, South Africa, I hope this gives you inspiration to do what
we have done here’ – which is to establish a diamond cutting and
polishing factory using locally-mined stones.

Leviev has a fleet of mining ships, apparently, operating off
Namibia’s coast, `sucking up diamonds from the sea’. He boasts that
it is the world’s second largest fleet. The biggest is apparently
that of De Beers. Leviev claims he is the only diamond tycoon with
interests in all stages of production, from mining to processing as
well as to selling.

He has factories in Armenia, India, Ukraine, Israel and elsewhere.
`These give him the power to challenge De Beers’ central clearing
house and seek instead to channel raw stones directly and at a lower
price, to his own polishers’.

He is building another factory in Angola. Besides what The Daily News
told us, he has apparently said that his factory here could be far
larger than that in Angola, `employing tens of thousands’.

The historical success of De Beers, with its near-monopoly as a
trader of rough stones was based on maintaining and increasing the
prices of diamonds by controlling supply. It had persuaded
governments to make it illegal for unlicensed individuals to buy and
sell diamonds in all the producing countries. It had never done much
over the earlier years of its control of the diamond trade to create
jobs or develop skills in diamond-producing countries, but it
`delivered big and stable revenues to its governments’, The Economist
concludes.

The big question for us now, is how to deal with both Leviev and De
Beers. There is no doubt that there is a need for us to beneficiate
more of our raw materials, and although we now have cutters and
polishers, albeit not yet with shining successes, the more finished
products we can account for, the more jobs are created and the more
the country earns from its minerals.

Some years ago, Bristol University in the UK discovered how to make
diamond fibre, which could become very valuable for spacecraft
manufacture and other uses. Could Leviev be interested in that
possibility, too?

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

CSTO, NATO reach agreement on contacts in anti-terror fight – CIS

CSTO, NATO reach agreement on contacts in anti-terror fight – CIS
security chief

AKIpress news agency web site 6 Aug 04

Bishkek, 6 August: The Collective Security Treaty Organization
comprising six countries – Russia, Belarus, Armenia, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan – and NATO have reached an agreement to
establish contacts in order to jointly counter international
terrorism, CSTO Secretary-General Nikolay Bordyuzha has told a news
conference in Kyrgyzstan on the results of the Rubezh-2004 exercises.

The Rubezh-2004 exercises were held in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan in
two stages, and over 2,000 servicemen were involved in them.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Party Urges Leader to prevent Armenian officers’ in NATO event

Azeri party urges leader to prevent Armenian officers’ presence at NATO event

Assa-Irada
6 Aug 04

BAKU

The board of the United People’s Front Party of Azerbaijan adopted an
appeal to Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev at its session held on
Thursday 5 August .

The appeal reads that the 10-year Azerbaijani-Armenian talks over the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict have not yielded positive results yet.

“The party hopes that President Ilham Aliyev will take in view the
fact that the issue is of moral importance for the Azerbaijani people
and express his position on preventing Armenian officers from visiting
Baku to attend NATO exercises in this September ,” the appeal said.

The document says the protest actions presumably outside the embassies
of NATO member countries will be postponed if the issue is resolved
positively. This will show that the national interests are more
important.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Ex-Marseille coach takes over Armenian national soccer team

Canadian Press
Aug 6 2004

Ex-Marseille coach takes over as head of Armenian national soccer
team

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) – Former Marseille coach Bernard Casoni took
over as head of Armenia’s national soccer team, saying Friday that he
is ready to work hard to achieve good results for this ex-Soviet
republic.

“I am not a magician – good results will be achieved gradually,”
Casoni told a news conference in the Armenian capital. He added that
his first impression was that the team had some good talent, who
needed “only to be led forward.”

Former coach Mihai Stoichita resigned in late June, less than two
months before the start of World Cup qualifying. Armenia plays its
first qualifier on Aug. 18, against Macedonia.

Casoni said he was focusing on that game, adding that he had
previously known very little about Armenian soccer or the national
team.

Ruben Airapetian, head of the Armenian soccer federation, said that
he had signed a one-year contract with Casoni. He added that he would
be paying the money for the French coach “from my pocket” since the
Armenian federation lacked cash.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Terror’s next target in Iraq

World Magazine
Aug 6 2004

Terror’s next target in Iraq

CHURCH ATTACKS: In the first coordinated assault on one of Iraq’s
most important minorities, Islamist insurgents murder 12 and injure
60 Christians at worship. The success of the interim government’s
response represents the next test of its legitimacy – and of national
unity in post-Saddam Iraq | by Mindy Belz

Most churches in Iraq hold services Sunday evening for a simple
reason: Here, as in the rest of the Muslim world, the Christian
Sabbath is a workday. So the coordinated attacks that struck the
Christian community on Aug. 1 arrived in time for maximum carnage.

At six in the evening – just as most services begin – a car bomb exploded
outside the Armenian church in Karada, a Baghdad neighborhood that
was the heart of the Christian community before and during British
colonial rule and where old-line churches post-Saddam thrive. Minutes
later an explosion rocked the Catholic Syriac Church, also in Karada.
Then, as the Chaldean Church of St. Peter and St. Paul emptied from
evening mass, two blasts hammered the compound. Bombers also struck
Mar Elya church in north Baghdad. At nearly the same time and 220
miles north, two car bombs exploded in central Mosul outside Mar
Polis church.

Glass sprayed into nearby homes, parked cars erupted in flames, and
massive plumes of smoke rose into the air. Fellow worshippers crawled
over the wreckage in search of Bibles, crosses on necklaces, and
other tokens to identify the scattered portions of the dead.
Ambulances and police swarmed. U.S. Army helicopters responded to the
smoke visible miles away, patrolling low overhead what had become – in
less than an instant – a war zone.

Chaldean Catholic priest Faris Toma stood in the wreckage outside his
church where dozens of cars were upended and several propelled into
the sanctuary by the force of the blasts. `We cannot understand why
or how they could do something like this,’ he said. `All we can do is
ask God to give them forgiveness and grant us peace.’

Remarkably, out of hundreds of worshippers attending targeted
churches and the snugly built neighborhoods where they reside, the
attacks killed a dozen people – 10 from Mr. Toma’s church – and injured
about 60. If the deaths were miraculously minimized, the
choreographed stab at Iraq’s Christian minority maximized the fear
factor. More than a year after war ended and insurgency began, it was
the first attack on Christian houses of worship.

Iraqi Christians now feel they are not only a minority but a targeted
minority,’ said Nabil Haj, a U.S. military engineer and
Lebanese-American who attends church in Baghdad. `Even evangelical
practice and preaching is under attack.’

Newer churches in Baghdad say they received threats ahead of the
bombings. At the Christian Missionary Alliance church two blocks from
the Catholic compound, where the worst attack took place, a warning
letter from the `Fallujah Mujahideen’ arrived four days before the
Sunday bombings. Churchgoers told WORLD that they have received a
variety of intimidating messages from militants ever since the
Fallujah siege by U.S. forces in April, linking them to Western
religion and vowing retaliation. Those threats could signal that
Christians – numbering somewhere between 700,000 and 800,000 – are next
up on the terrorists’ target list.

Experts increasingly pinpoint Fallujah and the surrounding Anbar
province as the sending agent behind bombings. The dusty city of
300,000, located in the desert 40 miles west of Baghdad, is a locus
of Saddam loyalists and Islamic fanatics. U.S. forces fought
unsuccessfully – from ground and air – to control the city and rout
opposition elements after Fallujahans killed four U.S. defense
contractors and hung their bodies from a bridge last spring.

Under a controversial pact, U.S. forces have agreed not to enter
Fallujah at all, leaving local militias and other militants in the
hands of former Saddam loyalists fueled by anti-American clerics. In
five months, the 4th Marine Regiment’s Second Battalion has engaged
in over 200 firefights in the area, absorbing close to 300 casualties
while killing more than 1,000 guerrillas, according to former
assistant secretary of defense F.J. Bing West, who is writing a book
on the fight for Fallujah.

An insurgency with churchgoers and Bible believers at its bullseye
comes as many churches, particularly those launched after the war,
are straining at the highest points on the growth chart. Just weeks
before the bombing, Christian Missionary Alliance pastor Ghassan
Thomas told WORLD his Sunday evening services – which began only a year
ago with less than 50 attendants – attract more than 450 worshippers.
The church meets in an already expanded house and is looking for its
third home. Mr. Thomas was administering communion Sunday evening
when the blasts at the Catholic complex two streets over shook the
Alliance building, knocking books from shelves and causing lights to
flutter. `It shook the whole building,’ he said, `and people started
screaming and leaving.’

How many Christians will come back is the question church leaders are
asking themselves. `Many people can no longer go to church regularly,
they are forced by bombings to meet in homes’ one pastor said. `With
this explosion many Christians are planning to leave Iraq.’

(In the aftermath, few Iraqi Christians who spoke to WORLD were
willing to be identified in print, obviously fearing for their
safety. Underscoring the concern, an Iraqi employee of The New York
Times covering the church bombings had his name withheld from the
paper’s report.)

Church leaders find themselves in an unhappy predicament: posting
guards and setting up walls around facilities where they have worked
hard to be good neighbors.

At St. Peter and St. Paul church, Catholic groundskeepers bolted
gates normally left ajar. At the Alliance church, workers hauled an
oversized flatbed truck to one end of the street as a barrier. At the
other end, they posted guards next to a barricade of bricks, logs,
and cardboard barrels. At St. George’s Anglican Church, an
evangelical congregation whose building was renovated through joint
efforts of Iraqi Christians and U.S. chaplains, signs advertising
English-language services came down.

At the Presbyterian church in Mosul, one of Iraq’s longer-standing
congregations started by missionaries in 1820, both pastor and
congregation have found themselves under increasing vigilance. Last
month the pastor’s own wedding was moved north to an affiliate church
in Dohuk after threats from a local mosque to disrupt his services.
Twelve guards stood watch outside during the marriage ceremony, even
after it was relocated. During the Sunday blasts, Iraqi police
defused a bomb near the Presbyterian church after two bombs went off
outside Mar Polis, a traditional Aramaic-speaking church in central
Mosul, killing one and wounding at least 15.

Christians have lived in Iraq for 2,000 years. The Assyrian Church of
the East is the oldest in Iraq; it was founded in a.d. 33. Chaldeans,
many of whom continue to speak and/or worship in Aramaic, the
language of Jesus, are the majority among the descendants of early
Mesopotamian Christians. Orthodox churches blend with Eastern-rite
Catholics who recognize the pope but maintain some measure of their
own autonomy – all in all, making for a liturgical soup of Armenian
Catholics and Armenian Orthodox, Syrian Catholics and Syrian
Orthodox, along with Greek Orthodox and Greek Catholic communities,
Anglicans, Baptists, and evangelicals. Christians reportedly numbered
1 million before the 1991 Gulf War, when many left for the West. Now
their numbers are around 800,000.

Since the most recent war, churches are growing in both number and
size. More importantly, they are acquiring a multiethnic face, as
Assyrians and Chaldeans, Kurds and Turkomans, even former Baathists
and an occasional Muslim convert – freed from the police state – can
worship together. Clergymen, too, have formed transethnic and
transdenominational ties because for the first time in memory they
can travel the country freely and meet together. A pastor’s
conference last spring attracted dozens of clergymen, including many
recent returnees.

Once isolated congregations also are learning to work in partnership
with one another and with parachurch groups. The St. Peter and St.
Paul church, which also includes a seminary and health clinic, has
been a focus for community outreach and charity. Given the facility’s
extensive damage and security concerns, however, outreach may have to
wait.

Muslims and Christians showed signs of solidarity in the
traditionally mixed neighborhoods of Karada and elsewhere. After all,
mosques were first bombed months ago. One local glass shop offered to
repair church windows at wholesale. Muslim neighbors showed up at
hospitals to check on burn victims. Christian clergy visited Muslim
homeowners nearby to see whether they suffered damage.

Iraq’s Shiite and Sunni leaders issued public statements against the
attacks. Grand Ayatollah Ali Sistani denounced the `criminal campaign
targeting Iraq’s unity, stability, and independence.’ The Association
of Sunni Muslim Scholars condemned the attacks as `totally remote
from any religious or humanitarian norms.’

Iraq’s national security adviser Mowaffak al-Rubaie said Christians
should not interpret the attacks as a warning to leave Iraq. `We
can’t afford to lose any of them, to be quite honest with you,’ Mr.
Rubaie said. `Iraq will be a big, big loser. This blow is going to
unite Iraqis.’

Government leaders have increased awareness about the importance of
the Christian minority, which has a strong business presence, higher
education levels, and more open and steady ties to the West.

Deputy Prime Minister Barham Saleh promised beefed-up security near
churches. He said authorities would hunt down those responsible. `The
Christian community in Iraq is respected and valued,’ he told
reporters. `They are loyal Iraqi citizens, and any attack on them is
an attack on all decent Iraqis,’ adding, `We are determined to defeat
the terrorists who so brutally seek to disrupt social peace.’

With singed cars as a reminder and fear as a companion, Christian
survivors are hard-pressed to find a silver lining in the week’s
death toll. But many may now more purposefully join Muslims, truck
drivers, government leaders, and U.S. soldiers who – left to puzzle
together the who, what, when, and where – more urgently want to know
how to stop the killings. – –

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Movement for Azerbaijan to hold protest actions in Russia,

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Aug 5 2004

Movement for Azerbaijan to hold protest actions in Russia, Georgia
and Ukraine

Baku, August 5, AssA-Irada
The Movement for Azerbaijan has decided to hold protest actions in
Russia, Georgia and Ukraine.
`Activists of the Movement will hold public protest actions in front
of the Armenian embassies and central squares in Moscow, Tbilisi and
Kiev on August 22 and 31, the organization said on Thursday.*

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANCA: Armenian Americans Active at the DNC

Armenian National Committee of America
888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: (202) 775-1918
Fax: (202) 775-5648
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet:

PRESS RELEASE
August 5, 2004
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

ARMENIAN AMERICANS ACTIVE AT THE
DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION

— Strengthen Alliances with Coalition Partners

BOSTON, MA – Armenian Americans from throughout the United States
took part in the Democratic National Convention last week to
communicate Armenian American priorities, strengthen alliances, and
contribute to the success of the Kerry-Edwards ticket this
November, reported the Armenian National Committee of America
(ANCA).

Armenian American delegates to the Convention represented states,
ranging from Colorado and Iowa to New York, Massachusetts and Rhode
Island. They were joined by local community activists from
Massachusetts, invited guests, and representatives of the Armenian
American press.

Kathryn Allikian, an Iowa alternate delegate attending a national
party convention for the first time, cited a range of domestic and
Armenian American concerns which led her to lend her support to the
Kerry-Edwards ticket. “When I first heard that the Bush
Administration had placed Armenia on the terrorist watch list after
9/11. That just floored me. All they had to do is do their
homework. I’m glad that it was taken off and that they recognized
their mistake, but it took a lot of lobbying efforts from the
Armenian community’s side to get that done.” Other Armenian
American delegates included Massachusetts State Representative
Rachel Kaprielian, ANC Rhode Island activist Ani Haroian, Armene
Brown, and Mike Najarian.

Armenian Americans were also active in the Convention through
participation in the Democratic Party’s Ethnic Caucus, which took
place on July 28th. The two-hour Caucus meeting, run by Caucus Co-
Chairman and Arab American Institute Chairman Jim Zogby, featured a
range of speakers including Kerry-Edwards campaign co-chairwoman,
former New Hampshire Governor Jean Shaheen, Connecticut
Congresswoman Rosa DeLauro, and Kerry-Edwards Ethnic Outreach
Coordinator George Kivork. In addressing the ethnic community
representatives, Rep. DeLauro explained, “You are tireless
advocates for what makes our country unique and special. It is
that diversity of background and opinion, cultural tradition and
value. That is what our country is all about. And what you all do
is help preserve the core of the American experience and the notion
that we can build a more perfect union.”

Since its inception in the early 1990’s, the Armenian American
community’s participation in the Caucus has been through the
Armenian American Democratic Leadership Council, which actively
fosters support within the Armenian American community for the
Democratic Party and national Democratic office holders, while
promoting the election of Armenian American Democrats to political
office and encouraging participation by Armenian American Democrats
at all levels of the public policy process.

——————————————————-
State Representative Koutoujian Urges Armenian American Youth:
“Please Get Involved, We Need You.”
——————————————————-

Massachusetts State Senator Peter Koutoujian and John Kerry for
President Ethnic Outreach Coordinator George Kivork outlined the
Senator Kerry’s strong record on Armenian American concerns
including Sen. Kerry’s twenty year record in support of Armenian
Genocide recognition efforts, and leadership in the adoption of
Freedom Support Act restrictions on U.S. aid to Azerbaijan due
their ongoing blockade of Armenia and Nagorno Karabagh.

The ANCA, in its official statement endorsing the Kerry/Edwards
ticket provided an extensive accounting of both Sen. Kerry’s and
Pres. Bush’s records on Armenian American concerns. The full text
of the endorsement may be read on the ANCA website at:
;pressregion=anca

Both Koutoujian and Kivork made a general call for greater Armenian
American involvement in the political process. When asked to
provide a message to Armenian American youth considering a career
in politics, Rep. Koutoujian stated, “I would say to all the young
Armenians – ‘Please get involved, we need you.’ There are only two
State Representatives up here (Massachusetts) – myself and Rachel
Kaprielian, and that’s kind of shameful. . . We really need our
young people to rise up to positions of power and positions of
influence where we can affect change, we can affect policy issues.”

Kivork’s message was equally emphatic: “Get involved. Get
involved right now. We need Armenian Americans getting involved in
every level of campaign – whether it is city council, your local
Congressman, you school board. Just get involved, because at the
end of the day, you are the face of not just the candidate, but of
all Armenian Americans. You have a unique opportunity to represent
both your community and your candidate in a positive light. Just
get involved.”

——————————————————————-
Rep. Schiff: “We are going to take every opportunity to bring the
[Genocide Recognition] fight to the floor of the Congress
——————————————————————-

Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA) was among the thousands of Democratic
elected officials to participate at the Convention this year. In
an interview with Horizon Armenian Television, Rep. Schiff, who
successfully spearheaded an amendment to the foreign aid bill,
which restricts the use of U.S. assistance to Turkey in lobbying
against the Genocide Resolution, outlined the next steps in
securing Congressional support for the measure.

“The amendment is part of the House Bill. It is not yet part of
the Senate Bill. We want to make sure it stays in on the
Conference Committee,” explained Rep. Schiff. “Regrettably the
House Leadership, Speaker Hastert, Tom Delay and others have
pledged to do everything they can to strip it out of the bill. So
we have a fight on our bill.” Rep. Schiff is referring to a
strongly worded statement by Speaker Hastert, Majority Leader Tom
DeLay and Majority Leader Roy Blunt, issued immediately following
the passage of the amendment, critical of the amendment and
pledging not to schedule a floor vote on the Genocide resolution,
H.Res.193. The Genocide Resolution, which was introduced by Rep.
George Radanovich (R-CA), Rep. Schiff and Congressional Armenian
Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Joe Knollenberg (R-MI),
has 111 cosponsors and was adopted unanimously by the House
Judiciary Committee in May, 2003.

Following the passage of the Schiff amendment, Representatives
Radanovich, Pallone and Schiff initiated a Congressional letter to
Speaker Hastert asking him to schedule a vote on the Genocide
Resolution. The letter has already garnered over 30 Congressional
signatories. Rep. Schiff stressed the importance of nationwide
Armenian American activism in support of the letter to send a clear
message to the House leadership. “If he [Speaker Hastert] doesn’t
hear from people throughout this country, he is going to think that
people don’t care. On the other hand, if he can hear from all of
us, if we can send thousands and thousands of faxes, he’s going to
know that there is a price to making a promise to our community and
then breaching it.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

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www.anca.org