Manvel Badalian Appointed Chairman of Civil Service Council

MANVEL BADALIAN APPOINTED CHAIRMAN OF CIVIL SERVICE COUNCIL

YEREVAN, JANUARY 15, NOYAN TAPAN. By RA President Robert Kocharian’s
January 14 decree, Seyran Petrosian was appointed a member of the RA
State Commission for Protection of Economic Competition for five years’
term.

According to the report provided to Noyan Tapan by the RA President’s
Press Office, by R. Kocharian’s January 15 decree, Manvel Badalian was
appointed Chairman of the Civil Service Council (the term of
commissions is six years).

OSCE/ODIHR Presents Bid For Observer Mission to CEC

OSCE/ODIHR PRESENTS BID FOR IMPLEMENTING OBSERVER MISSION TO CENTRAL
ELECTORAL COMMISSION

YEREVAN, JANUARY 11, NOYAN TAPAN. The OSCE/ODIHR (Office for Democratic
Institutions and Human Rights) has presented a bid for implementing an
observer mission (with the participation of 40 long-term observers and
250 short-term ones) at the February 19 presidential elections in
Armenia to the RA Central Electoral Commission (CEC). As of January 11,
this is the only bid received from the international organizations
which were invited beforehand by the Armenian authorities, NT
correspondent was informed by the spokeswoman for CEC Tatev Ohanian.

The number of accredited local observers remains unchanged: 6,074
representatives of 5 NGOs have been accredited in the CEC. The deadline
for accrediting observers is February 9.

74-Year-Old Expert On Former Yugoslavia To Head The Mission Of Long-

74-YEAR-OLD EXPERT ON FORMER YUGOSLAVIA TO HEAD THE MISSION OF LONG-TERM OBSERVERS OF OSCE ODIHR IN ARMENIA

Mediamax
January 10, 2008

Yerevan /Mediamax/. 74-year-old German diplomat, Ambassador
Geert-Hinrich Ahrens will head the mission of long-term observers of
the OSCE Office of Democratic Institutions and Human Rights (ODIHR)
in Armenia.

Mediamax reports that on January 9, Ambassador Geert-Hinrich Ahrens
met the Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian and stated that
the mission will work with maximum transparancy.

28 long-term and 250 short-term observers from the OSCE will be
observing the presidential elections in Armenia, which will take
place on February 19 of 2008.

Mediamax notes that the German career diplomat Geert-Hinrich Ahrens
has great work experience in former Yugoslavia and in the Balkans.

In 2007, his book "Diplomacy on the Edge" was published, which presents
the activity of the Minorities Working Group of the Conferences on
Yugoslavia, which was headed by the German diplomat. The Working
Group was the principal UN and European Community diplomatic effort
to grapple with ethnic conflicts in the Croatian Krajina, Kosovo,
Macedonia, and southern Serbia.

In various periods of time, Geert-Hinrich occupied the positions of the
German Ambassador to Vietnam and to Colombia; was the Head of the OSCE
Office in Albania. In fall of 2004, Geert-Hinrich Ahrens headed the
observation mission of the OSCE during the elections in the Ukraine.

Armenia Preparing For Presidential Elections

ARMENIA PREPARING FOR PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS

Russia & CIS Presidential Bulletin
January 9, 2008

The Armenian Central Elections Commission (CEC) has not received
applications from foreign observers to monitor the upcoming
presidential elections which are scheduled for February 19, 2008,
CEC press secretary Tatevik Oganian told Interfax.

All observer missions, both local and international, will be able to
register up to ten days before the voting day, she said.

So far, the Armenian CEC has registered observers from five local
organizations: Erebuni (three observers), the Open Society Institute
(1,405 observers), Your Choice (4,010 observers), Mutk (40 observers),
Justice and Law (616 observers).

Armenian parliamentary speaker Tigran Torosian sent an invitation to
monitor the presidential elections to international organizations in
late December 2007.

It is expected that the long-term OSCE observer mission consisting
of 24 people will arrive in Armenia in mid-January. Observers will
monitor the electoral campaign, the access of candidates to mass media,
the registration of candidates, as well as possible appeals.

It is expected that 250 short-term OSCE observers will monitor the
elections on the voting day.

Nine candidates are running for the Armenian Presidency: Parliamentary
Speaker and leader of the Orinats Yerkir (Law-Based State)

party Artur Bagdasarian, Prime Minister and leader of the Republican
Party Serzh Sarkisian, leader of the opposition National-Democratic
Union Vazgen Manukian, Parliamentary Deputy Speaker and member of the
Bureau of the Dashnaktsutyun Armenian Revolutionary Federation Vaan
Ovanisian, Armenia’s first President Levon Ter-Petrosian, leader of the
National Union party Artashes Gegamian, Chairman of the People’s Party
Tigran Karapetian, leader of the National Accord party Aram Arutyunian,
and Arman Melikian, an ex-aide to the Nagorno Karabakh president.

Meanwhile, Ter-Petrosian was the first candidate to present his
electoral program last Monday.

In the program obtained by Interfax he vows to establish a sound
democracy in the country, to guarantee freedom of speech, the
independence of judicial authorities, and the final implementation
of the multiparty system.

Touching upon the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement, Ter-Petrosian notes
the need to search for compromises with Azerbaijan, given the right
of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh to self-determination.

The candidate is certain that if his program is fulfilled better
results could be expected as to the Nagorno-Karabakh settlement, the
lifting of a blockade, and the opening of the Armenian-Turkish border.

Ter-Petrosian notes that the main challenges that the newly elected
Armenian authorities would face will be the development of the
industrial sector and a qualitative improvement of people’s welfare.

Equal conditions for economic agents, free competition, and guaranteed
inviolability of property could contribute to the achievement of
these goals, Ter-Petrosian said.

The former president vows in his program that annual salaries will
grow by 20% and pensions will increase from 30% to 40% and that
social housing construction will be large-scale in order to provide
poor and young families with free housing.

Vartan Oskanian: "Do Not Destabilize The Country"

VARTAN OSKANIAN: "DO NOT DESTABILIZE THE COUNTRY"

A1+
[05:29 pm] 09 January, 2008

"Some forces attempt to destabilize the country to come to power. I
urge these forces to give up their intentions," Armenia’s Foreign
Minister Vartan Oskanian told a press conference today.

Vartan Oskanian stated that he considers "unacceptable" any efforts to
destabilize the situation to reach political goals. "The forces, which
strive to preserve power, or to come to power, should use exclusively
democratic tools and mechanisms," Vartan Oskanian stated. The Armenian
FM declined to divulge those forces. He only said that everything
should be done to conduct free, fair and transparent elections
in Armenia.

In reply to A1+’s question whether the opposition can rig the election
Vartan Oskanian said, "Surely, they can because if there is a wish
to take the track of fraud and destabilization, the mechanisms are
always found." He declined to speak of mechanisms and advised to turn
to the relevant bodies.

The Armenian FM is seriously concerned over the presidential election
since it is a major event for the country’s external policy. "I
don’t want Armenia to tarnish its reputation acquired after the 2007
parliamentary elections." He wants Armenia to conduct a better election
to raise the country’s international reputation.

Vartan Oskanian expressed confidence that if the presidential elections
are held at a higher level than the parliamentary elections of 2007
"the following 5 years will be years of upsurge for Armenia."

Vartan Oskanian also commented on Ter-Petrossian’s election programme
concerning Armenia’s foreign policy. The Minister is dissatisfied
with the programme. "I think the ex-president’s programme should
have included new political approaches and proposals since he used to
criticize our foreign policy. But we have found nothing new. There is
not a single new idea," the Minister says. If Levon Ter-Petrossian
did not criticize the government’s foreign policy, the expectations
for innovation would not be that great.

Speaking about the development of the peace process in 2007,
Mr. Oskanian noted that the parties managed to achieve certain
progress although a number of principles remain non-agreed. Vartan
Oskanian declared about the willingness of the Armenian side to
continue the negotiations based on the progress achieved, "in the
basis of which lies the right of the people of Nagorno Karabakh to
self-determination."

The Foreign Minister expressed the opinion that the settlement process
will be active in 2008.

The OSCE Minsk Group CO-Chairs will visit the region to get acquainted
with the conflicting sides’ stance on the new proposals. Vartan
Oskanian says Armenia has a lot to say in this connection, but he
declined to say whether Armenia’s stance is positive or negative.

Armenia will express its stance during the co-chairs’ regional visit
in January. Vartan Oskanian declined to mention the exact date of the
visit, noting that the preliminary date of the visit on January 14-15
is not convenient for Armenia and they will let the co-chairs know.

Armenia will mark the 20th anniversary of the Armenian massacres in
the Azerbaijani town of Sumgait. Vartan Oskanian noted that Sumgait
is highly important because it is closely connected with the Karabakh
conflict. The military component of the Karabakh conflict settlement
originated in Sumgait. The first attempt of ethnic cleansings took
place there, and led the people of Karabakh to the irreversibility
of the idea of self-determination. The Armenian FM urged NGOs to
contemplate over the issue more seriously.

Azeri Jews: Centuries of coexistence in Azerbaijan

01/10/2008

JEWISH L.A.

The Jewish Daily
2008-01-11
Azeri Jews: Centuries of coexistence in Azerbaijan
By Gabriel Lerner

Gabriel Lerner, left, with leader of Jewish community in Quba.
"This," says the guide, a man in his 20s with a round face, a hint of a
mustache, beard and very short hair — "this below us is the city of Quba."

We are standing at the top of a cliff, overlooking an urban development that
at first sight looks like any other in this country — bright tin roofs,
low-slung buildings, a few cars covered in dust because of the wind, but no
commercial signs or logos — and, surprisingly, few mosques for a Muslim
Shiite country like Azerbaijan.

Then I see the river that runs through Quba, and in the distance I notice a
cluster of distinctive houses. They are more attractive, much larger, and
decidedly different compared to others in surrounding areas. None of these
houses looks like any other.

"This is where the Jewses [sic] of Quba live," says the guide, pointing at
the group of houses I was looking at. "They are very successful."

Behind us is a cemetery. While the rest of the group stares at the river and
the city, I walk alone toward the cemetery’s iron gates, where I immediately
recognize a Mogen David. This gate is not unlike one at the cemetery outside
Buenos Aires, where my father is buried, or one in Rishon Letzion, Israel,
that contains my ex-father-in-law’s remains, or even the cemetery where my
sister rests in L.A.’s Eden Memorial Park in Mission Hills. I walk slowly,
reading the Russian and Hebrew inscriptions and staring at the photographs
of the deceased etched in stone.

"They [the Jews] have the best cars," continues the guide. "Ferraris,
Mercedes. They have them all. Jewses in Quba live very well." His face
portrays satisfaction and pride, and the other members of my group —
journalists from Europe and the United States — listen and nod. I am with
this group to cover for La Opinión an international conference on the role
of the media in the development of tolerance, organized by the Organization
of the Islamic Conference (OIC).

Not unlike the Jews of Sefarad (Spain) during the First Caliphate,
Azerbaijan’s Jewry is interwoven into the fabric of this state, which
emerged in August 1991 from the Soviet Union. And despite their minuscule
numbers — maybe 12,000 in a population of 8 million — their presence is
known and acknowledged, especially that of the Jews of Quba. These Mountain
Jews, as they are called, have been living in this area for a very long
time, perhaps 2,500 years; they consider themselves the descendants of those
Jews exiled to Babylon after the destruction of the first Temple in 586
B.C.E., remaining in what is modern day Iran. In the eighth century, when
the Muslims from the Arab Peninsula conquered the area, they brought the
Jewish tribe, an ally, to the area of Baku to serve as a barrier against the
Kazakhs to the north. In 1730, they were officially allowed to put down
roots and own property in the Quba province.

I have read this and other accounts about the Mountain Jews, and now I am
ready to meet them. I am the only Jew in the group. The others seem to sense
my emotion and begin taking pictures of us as we approach a small group of
congregational leaders. As I reach the group of Azeri Jews, I look at them
looking at us and realize, all of a sudden, that these people and I have
more in common than anybody else here, and so I step up, and the guide
introduces me to the head of the community, and then I say "Sholem
Aleichem," and I also say in Hebrew, "Ani Yehoudi," and point to myself. We
stare at each other, each noting our similarities, and we hug in the middle
of a street in Quba, Azerbaijan.

Now I feel part of them. We enter the building, and my "cousin" speaks to me
in Azeri, which is translated into English. He is a mathematician, he says.
He points to signs on the wall with lists of names, those of Jews who died
in the long fight against the Armenians: a few dozen. Like everybody else on
our trip, he speaks of the allegiance to President Ilham Aliyev, with
special attention to the memory of his father, the late President Heydar
Aliyev.

While 93 percent of the population is Muslim, the constitution mandates no
state religion, a legacy from the former Soviet Union. The residents wear
Western clothes, and in the official meals we were offered throughout the
trip, vodka, wine and beer were served. Ethnically, I cannot differentiate
between Azeris and Mountain Jews. But Yevda Abramov, the Jewish member of
the Parliament representing rural Quba, whom I met in Baku, explains these
differences.

"The Jewish community," Abramov says, "differs from the rest of the
population in education and lifestyle. We are very educated and operate
businesses. We kept the Persian language," referring to the Jewish version
of the dialect Tat, "but 25 percent of the words we use are in Hebrew."

Like almost everything else in Baku, the Parliament building is undergoing
massive additions and renovations but will no doubt maintain its
unmistakable Soviet-era character — solemn, impersonal, with massive
amounts of concrete, small doors and an oversized walkway. Abramov’s office
is a small room, devoid of decorations, on the building’s fifth floor.

"I ran against 17 other candidates of my own party" (the ruling New Azeri
Party), Abramov states. "I won over all of them, and an international agency
was watching the election. This is a democracy."

In Quba, Abramov was a teacher, a principal and a rural organizer. "Today
Quba is not unlike any other Jewish community," he tells my translator, who
then speaks to me in Spanish. "Our rabbi, butcher, mohel, chazzan — all
were educated in Israel."

Since the Helsinki Accords of 1972, the Jews of Azerbaijan have been exiting
the country in large numbers, mainly going to Israel, where they number more
than 50,000. Since most of the emigrants were Ashkenazis from Baku, the
Mountain Jews remained here, as the majority of the community in the
country.

Abramov, a bulky man with a prominent mustache, discusses the successes of
Jews in Azerbaijan, mostly in holding government positions. There are some
well-known Azeri artists who are Jewish. According to him, his country is a
model for religious liberty in the world, "especially compared to Armenia,"
he emphasizes, where "there are not even 10 Jewish families today."

While the country keeps a remarkable pace of development and focuses on very
rapid urban construction, exploitation of its huge oil reserves and the
expansion of the apparatus of the state, its main concern is the conflict
with Armenia. My hosts took me to a "recently discovered mass grave" — a
horrific pile of bones at the end of a soccer field in a small town. These
are, they claimed, the remains of hundreds of Azeris slaughtered by
Armenians in 1918. At the same time Armenians were slaughtered by the
Ottoman Empire.

Abramov supports the official line. "If there is a war between Armenia and
Azerbaijan," Abramov says, "many Jews will die. Please, clarify that to the
world. In the war for Karabakh, the first fallen hero was Jewish. Send the
message."

Between 1992 and 1994, the war between the two new countries left 30,000
dead and 800,000 refugees, almost all of them Azeris. Armenia, a country of
less than 2 million, compared to 8 million of Azerbaijan, conquered the
region of Nagorno-Karabakh, about 16 percent of the territory of Azerbaijan.
One of the refugees was Emin Alesgerov, my translator. "I lived there with
my grandparents; I was 7 years old, and they told us to leave. My
grandparents still want to go back," he told me.

The conflict is central to the government’s policies. Idahav Orijov,
minister of religious affairs, becomes emotional describing the war. He
stands by a map on the wall in his office and shows me a spot that
represents his hometown in the area controlled by Armenia. Then he describes
a series of settlements destroyed by the conquerors. Nazim Ibrahimov,
minister of the diaspora — a population he put at 50 million (35 in Lower
Azerbaijan, in Iran) in 36 countries — tells me about the need to organize
that diaspora "like the Jews, the Italians, the Irish of the United States
did," to counter the influence of the Armenian diaspora.

Recovering the lost territory is considered the supreme goal of the state.
To gain support for their cause, they resort to every imaginable resource,
including an alleged strategic alliance with Turkey, a main ally, and
Israel, with which they established diplomatic relations in April 1992. When
I went to meet the head of the embassy in Baku I found an old friend.

The Ambassador

Arthur Lenk, a native of New Jersey, served as Israeli consul for
communications and public affairs in Los Angeles between 1998 and 2000. We
had met on several occasions back then, as the consulate implemented a
distinctive process of recognizing the increasing importance of the Latino
community in the United States. Then he returned to other assignments in
Israel, and in September 2005 he submitted his credentials in Azerbaijan.

Now we are looking at each other, smiling and speaking Hebrew, surrounded by
other Israelis and Azeris — and a sizable contingent of security agents. He
invited me to the celebration of Yom HaAtzmaut, the 59th anniversary of
Israel’s independence. Lenk says that "the most interesting thing I found
here is the human link, the fact that there is a sizable Jewish community
that lives as brothers and partners, as part of a Muslim country. This is
not always understood in the world and is vital for Israel.

"While there are those who speak in terms of a clash of civilizations, in
Azerbaijan they talk about the other Islam, the moderate. Their relationship
with Israel, in business, energy and regional interests, is a compelling
example of tolerance and coexistence," Lenk says. "They are an important
partner of Israel; here, we buy one-sixth of our oil."

All together, that’s more than a billion dollars every year. According to
Jane’s Defence Weekly, Israel sells to Azerbaijan "battlefield aviation,
artillery, antitank, and anti-infantry weapons." The Washington Institute
for Middle East Policy includes in Israel’s involvement "training for
Azerbaijani security and intelligence services, as well as security for the
Azerbaijani president during his foreign visits."

While as a diplomat he emphasizes bilateral collaboration, Lenk cannot
ignore the fact that there is still no Azeri embassy in Israel.

"It is true, but this is not our decision, and they must consider it in the
perspective of their own interest. I try to convince my Azeri friends that
the presence of Israel serves their own goals."

In the hall of the Hyatt-Regency, Jewish youth sing the national anthem of
Azerbaijan and "Hatikvah." I stand close to Lenk — we sing too. I returned
home to Los Angeles at the end of April. Since then, Azerbaijan never
disappeared entirely from the news; first were stories about imprisoned
journalists that sent an image of an authoritarian regime. Then, on Nov. 6,
Azerbaijan announced that it foiled an attack by Wahabi extremists aided by
Al Qaeda on the U.S. Embassy. Baku tries to dispel an insistent rumor about
military cooperation with the United States and Israel that would allegedly
include providing an air base for an attack on Iran’s nuclear sites. In
August, President Aliyev made an urgent trip to Tehran to meet Iranian
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, six days after the visit to Baku by Israel’s
transportation minister Avidgor Lieberman.

This area is in turmoil and under tremendous pressure for change and
development. In this process, the Jews of Azerbaijan, Quba dwellers, the
Mountain Jews who claim to have arrived 2,500 years ago to the area, are
patient witnesses as well as participants.

Gabriel Lerner has worked in various editorial positions for La Opinion, the
largest Spanish- language newspaper in the United States, since 1999,
covering local, national and international news. A native of Buenos Aires,
he lived in Israel for more than 25 years and has resided in Los Angeles
since 1989. He founded a publishing company in Israel and a literary
magazine in Spanish. He has written several books and is currently
researching the immigration protests of 2006 in Los Angeles.

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Dadrian Lectures on Legal Aspects of The Genocide in South America

ZORYAN INSTITUTE OF CANADA, INC.
255 Duncan Mill Rd., Suite 310
Toronto, ON, Canada M3B 3H9
Tel: 416-250-9807 Fax: 416-512-1736 E-mail: [email protected]

PRESS RELEASE
CONTACT: Torrey Swan
DATE: January 8, 2008
Tel: 416-250-9807

Prof. Dadrian Lectures on Legal Aspects of the Armenian Genocide in South
America

Toronto, Canada-There has been significant activity regarding Armenian
Genocide recognition in South America lately. This has involved governmental
agencies, human rights organizations, parliamentarians, journalists, lawyers
and university students.

As late as November 19, 2007, deputies from Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and
Uruguay-all members of the South American Parliamentarians’ coalition known
as MERCOSUR-adopted a resolution recognizing and condemning the Armenian
Genocide at a meeting held in Montevideo. MERCOSUR, established in 1986, is
the largest intergovernmental organisation in South America. The Senate of
Chile also recognized and condemned the Armenian Genocide in June, 2007.

In this vein, a major international conference, "The Armenian Genocide:
History and Present Day," was held in Montevideo at the same time. Organized
by the Uruguay Armenia Cultural Association (ASCUA), the Political Science
Institute (UDELAR), and the Human Rights Program (CLAEH), the conference was
co-sponsored by the University of Montevideo, the Ministry of Education and
Culture, the Ministry of Tourism, the Press Association of Uruguay, the
Municipality of Montevideo, Amnesty International-Uruguay Section, and the
Embassy of the Republic of Armenia. Zoryan participated by sending its
Director of Genocide Research, Prof. Vahakan N. Dadrian to speak at this and
another conference in Buenos Aires.

Similarly, another conference was organized in Buenos Aires by the Luisa
Hairabedian Foundation, which is a group dedicated to the preservation of
universal human rights, with a special interest in the Armenian Genocide.
The three Masters of Ceremonies were all alumni of the university program
run by the International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies (A
Division of the Zoryan Institute), held annually in Toronto in partnership
with the University of Minnesota. This event was attended by university and
middle school students, lawyers, historians, sociologists, anthropologists
and a large number of members of the Armenian community in Argentina.

Owing to the interest in the Armenian Genocide, and particularly its legal
aspects, Prof. Vahakn N. Dadrian, Director of Research at the Zoryan
Institute, shed light on these subjects. His work was particularly
interesting to The Luisa Hairabedian Foundation, which is currently engaged
in a unique legal procedure in Argentine law regarding a "truth trial" on
the Armenian Genocide. Instituted as a method to uncover the truth about the
human rights abuses of Argentina’s recent past, especially the "Forced
Disappearances," truth trials do not require the prosecution of a defendant.
The Federal Court has accepted the case and sanctioned the initiation of
legal proceedings. The lawyers involved are assembling materials, including
a mass of authentic and verifiable official documents, for which they are
receiving assistance from Prof. Dadrian and the Zoryan Institute.

Prof. Dadrian’s presentation in Montevideo was on the conflict between the
near-universal recognition of the Armenian Genocide and its persistent
denial by past and present Turkish officials. His analysis, summarised
below, suggests that Turkish denial will not cease because of foreign
pressure on the Turkish government, but rather only by pressure from the
Turkish population itself, who, as part of their democratic movement, will
require the state to recognise its own falsifications of history and remove
its limitations on the freedom of speech and conscience.

Prof. Dadrian outlined the specific components of the denial syndrome and
explained its underlying motives and reasons. He highlighted the enormous
problems modern Turkey would face should its leaders decide to recognize the
historical reality of the Armenian Genocide. At the very least, any
government daring to do so could hardly expect to survive. The risks for
Turkey of recognizing the Armenian Genocide transcend the economic issues of
reparations and land claims. Given the critical role some of the founders of
the modern Republic of Turkey played in the organization of the Genocide,
such revelations bear directly upon the very genesis of the republic and
hence the issue of the current regime’s integrity. The launching and
sustaining of the blockade against Armenia and the total absence of
diplomatic ties are conditions that accentuate these pitfalls. Under these
tense circumstances, Armenia will remain at grave risk-with or without
Russian protection.

Notwithstanding, the historicity of the Genocide, argued Dr. Dadrian, is
beyond any legitimate dispute. This fact is attested by the series of
criminal trials the post-war Turkish Military Tribunal instituted in the
1919-21 period. The Key Indictment that charged the leaders of the Ottoman
government, as well as top young Turk Ittihadist leaders with the crime of a
centrally organized mass murder against the Armenians, incorporates dozens
of secret documents, and many cipher telegrams, ordering the destruction of
the deportee convoys. What is so extraordinary about this line of legal
documentation is the fact that the prosecution and the Chief Judges of the
Military Tribunal employed a two-track procedure to ensure the validity of
the documentation. First, the documents were carefully examined by competent
officials of the Ministries of Justice and the Interior, who marked their
authenticity with a stamp. Second, before taking the witness stand, the high
ranking party officials and Cabinet Ministers were asked to inspect the
documents bearing their signatures and verify their authenticity. This
two-tier procedure of authentication of key wartime documents served to
ensure ironclad utilization of prima-facie official evidence. This is
exactly the same procedure adopted at Nuremberg, where Nazi criminals were
tried and convicted some two dozen years later.

The rapid ascendancy of the Kemalist insurgent movement in the end served to
jettison, however, the completion of the courts martial and to even
effectively help invalidate many of the verdicts and sentences renditions.
Nevertheless, the massive legal documentation of the wartime crime of
genocide against the Armenian citizens of the Ottoman Empire is on record
and is indelibly ensconced in the serial Annexes of Takvim-i Vekyi, the
official gazette of the Ottoman Parliament- despite the resolute effort of
Turkish authorities to collect and remove them from circulation and access.

The next day, Dadrian delivered a public lecture on the topic of "The
Significance of the Ottoman-Turkish Official Documents Dealing with the
Armenian Genocide." The final plenary session featured the Deputy Foreign
Minister of Uruguay who delivered a paper discussing the global ramification
of genocide today, in which she made reference to the devastating
consequences attached to the impunity that characterizes the present status
of the World War I Armenian Genocide.

In Buenos Aires, Dadrian spoke on "The Armenian Genocide and International
Criminal Law." This lecture argued the linkage between the World War I
Armenian Genocide core issue of "crimes against humanity," which term the
Allies for the first time formally and officially introduced when denouncing
that act of genocide, and the Nuremberg doctrine. This central issue of
intent and governmental complicity was an integral component in the
conception and organization of the crime.

The Argentinean publisher, Imago Mundi, will come out in April with a
Spanish translation of Dadrian’s classic book, The History of the Armenian
Genocide, which is already available in French, Greek, Italian, and Russian.
Prof. Dadrian and Prof. Taner Akçam, renowned Turkish Sociologist and
Historian, are publishing the results of their collaborative archival
research on the only official record of the military tribunals prosecuting
the Armenian Genocide, found in the Takvim-i Vekyi, in Turkish. The work
contains translation of the original trial documents and argues many of the
points Prof. Dadrian presented in his South American lectures.

The Zoryan Institute, co-publisher of Genocide Studies and Prevention: An
International Journal and Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies, is
the first non-profit, international center devoted to the research and
documentation of contemporary issues with a focus on Armenian social,
political and cultural life, with the concern for the human rights of all.
For more information please contact the Institute by email
[email protected] or telephone (416) 250-9807.

www.zoryaninstitute.org

Armenian Genocide Resolution May Be Put On Vote In Mid-January

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION MAY BE PUT ON VOTE IN MID-JANUARY

PanARMENIAN.Net
07.01.2008 14:51 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian Genocide Resolution (H. Res. 106)
may be put on a vote in the plenary session of the U.S. House of
Representatives in January 2008, Democrat Brad Sherman declared after
a meeting with House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Turkish media reports.

"The bill will be brought to a vote, when we have the support of the
necessary number of Congressmen.

Possibly, the voting will take place in January 2008," Sherman said.

Speaker Pelosi had recently reconsidered her decision to put the
bill on a vote before November 22 due to pressure from the Bush
administration.

The resolution introduced by Rep. Adam Schiff is supported by 219
Congressmen.

Exhibition To Feature Western Armenia

EXHIBITION TO FEATURE WESTERN ARMENIA

ARMENPRESS
Jan 7, 2007

YEREVAN, JANUARY 7, ARMENPRESS: The Armenian culture ministry and the
Shushi Foundation will hold in spring a display of 250 photographs
that will be called "Western Armenia (now in eastern Turkey) is the
Homeland of Armenians."

Bakur Karapetian, the chairman of the Shushi Foundation, said to
Armenpress the photographs will show the culture of Western Armenia,
its monuments, traditions of people, their crafts and traditions
between 1860-1915. The exhibition will also show the map of six
Armenian provinces in Western Armenia.

SriLanka: Asokamala safe for now : The mock wedding ceremony

Sunday Leader , Sri Lanka
Dec 6 2007

Asokamala safe for now

The mock wedding ceremony

Roles reversed

Human beings may have reached the top of the food chain but evolution
has done little to ameliorate the suffering meted out by our species
to other animals. In Sri Lanka the elephants have been singled out
as an animal of particular sin from forcing them to walk endlessly on
heated asphalt in peraheras to encroaching on their territory through
development, war, and population migration. Our nation stands guilty
of intense animal cruelty. Would you like to be a performing human?

The Yerevan Zoo in Armenia was in the news last year as animal rights
activists battled Sri Lankan authorities in the Supreme Court to stop
nine year old Asokamala, born at the Pinnawela Elephant Orphanage
>From being exported to that zoo. Rights activists say the Yerevan Zoo
which boasts of 2,300 animals is in a deplorable state.

Recreational Minister, Gamini Lokuge who was the mover and shaker of
the proposed gift reportedly denied to media, claims by animal rights
activists that there was a confectioner involved in the deal to
"gift" Asokamala to Armenia. However the following article published
in the Armenian press reveals that a confectioner was indeed
involved.

The bride from the north: Armenia’s bachelor elephant gets a wife
>From Russia

Armenia’s bachelor elephant, who has been desperate for a wife for
several years, has finally found his match. The "wedding of the year"
between Grand and Masha from Russia took place at Yerevan’s Zoo on
Sunday and proceeded in a pompous atmosphere in the presence of
hundreds of guests.

The Yerevan Zoo is home to more than 2,300 animals today. The number
of animals increases from year to year. But finding a partner for
Grand was not an easy thing to do as it appeared to have reached a
deadlock in recent years.

A ‘bride’ for Grand

Grand, sponsored by Grand Holding, was brought to Armenia in November
1999, and it’s been several years since he reached puberty. But every
time, brides intended for him could not arrive in Armenia for
different reasons.

"If Grand remained lonely for a little longer, he would have faced
serious physiological problems," Grand Holding President, Hrant
Vardanyan told ArmeniaNow. "Before this we tried to get a bride from
India, Malaysia, Sri Lanka, but every time we encountered problems."

A few years ago, India’s Prime Minister promised to gift an elephant
to Armenia. However the elephant named Komala intended for Armenia
suffered poisoning at the native Bangalore Zoo and died. The next was
Veda, who did not reach Armenia because of protests from local
environmentalists who cited "severe climatic conditions in Armenia."

"I think Masha, who has already been renamed Candy, is a good match
for our Grand. Her transportation to Armenia cost about $150,000,
which is not a particularly big sum for me," Hrant Vardanyan
explained. "We hope that Grands and Candys will be born in two or
three years to our common delight. And now we should rejoice at
today’s wedding."

Celebrations

On that day Yerevan Zoo was decorated with balloons, wedding ribbons
and special banners symbolising the elephants’ love.

The marrying couple was not attending their own wedding ceremony
though – "to avoid unnecessary trouble," but it did not prevent those
present to have fun at the symbolic wedding celebrated according to
Armenian, Indian and Russian traditions, with humans dressed in
colourful elephant clothes posing as the marrying couple.

The toast

"Our bride is from Russia, however she is an honest and modest girl
and will not let us down," the host of the wedding party declared
>From the improvised stage in the centre of the zoo announcing the
start of the ceremony, as he wished "good health, love and
solidarity" to the marrying couple.

Then the organisers began distributing candies from wedding trays and
tarosiks (small presents given to unmarried guests of the wedding
party).

.HTM

http://www.thesundayleader.lk/20080106/lifestyle