Church Leaders Condemn Christian Murders In Turkey

CHURCH LEADERS CONDEMN CHRISTIAN MURDERS IN TURKEY

Agence France Presse — English
April 20, 2007 Friday

The Catholic and Greek Orthodox churches on Friday condemned the
murders of three Christian evangelists in Turkey this week, calling
them a "mad act" and "a violation of religious freedoms".

"I think all Turkish people have condemned this mad act, the work of a
fanatical minority," Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the pope’s right-hand
man and the Vatican’s secretary of state, was cited by the I-Media
agency as saying.

Bertone referred to the victims as "martyrs" but added that "we must
not ruin the results of the pope’s visit to Turkey (in December),
which led to a connection and an effort to understand Christianity
on the part of the majority of the Turkish population".

Meanwhile, a statement from the Holy Synod of the Greek Orthodox Chuch
on Friday condemned the murders as a "violation of religious freedoms".

It expressed hope that Turkish leaders’ remarks following the attacks
"would lead to guarantees for religious freedom in Turkey, a necessary
condition for the country’s democratisation and its entrance into
Europe".

The Greek Orthodox church is opposed to Turkey’s membership of the
European Union.

The synod also expressed its "anguish over the possible religious
and political motives" of the killings, noting that they followed
last year’s murder of a Catholic priest and January’s killing of a
Armenian journalist.

The three people killed in the eastern Turkish town of Malatya were
members of an evangelist Protestant community. According to several
accounts, they were tortured and interrogated about their missionary
activities before they died.

Ten murder suspects were questioned by police on Friday.
From: Baghdasarian

Iran Seizes Four Million Litres Of Illicit Booze

IRAN SEIZES FOUR MILLION LITRES OF ILLICIT BOOZE

Agence France Presse — English
April 18, 2007 Wednesday 1:50 PM GMT

Iran on Wednesday said that it had seized four million litres of
illicit booze during the last Iranian year, ending March 2007, the
ISNA news agency reported.

"Last year we seized four million litres of alcohol. It is very
shocking, and this is only 25 to 30 percent of what is distributed
in the country," police commander General Esmaeel Ahmadi-Moghadam said.

Only recognised Christian minorities in Iran, such as the Armenians,
are allowed to produce and consume alcohol, discreetly and behind
closed doors so as not to offend Islamic sensibilities.

Production, sale or consumption of alcohol are otherwise punishable by
jail or the lash, although this has not stopped significant smuggling
from neighbouring countries.

Earlier this month, 12 people died after drinking homemade hooch in
a holy city of Qom in Iran and another 100 became sick.

Most of the alcohol that comes to Iran comes over its western border
from Iraqi Kurdistan.
From: Baghdasarian

TEHRAN: Talks On Tripartite Oil Refinery To Start Soon

TALKS ON TRIPARTITE OIL REFINERY TO START SOON

Press TV, Iran
April 19 2007

Officials from Iran, Armenia, and Russia will meet soon to discuss
the construction of a big oil refinery on the Armenian-Iranian border.

Officials from the three governments will try to "ascertain the scale
of each party’s participation in the project," the Russian Regnum
news agency has quoted Armenia’s Deputy Energy Minister Areg Galstian
as saying.

Galstian has not given further details of the talks over the refinery
which would cater for the Iranian market.

A subsidiary of Russia’s state-run Gazprom has said that investment
estimated $1.7 billion is needed for the construction of the refinery
near the Armenian border town of Meghri.

Armenian President Robert Kocharian has reportedly discussed the
multimillion-dollar project with senior Russian officials during a
visit to Moscow in January.

According to Russian press, the plant would have an annual capacity
to refine 7 million tons of Iranian oil that would be pumped into
Armenia through a special pipeline to be built in northwestern Iran.

Petrol produced by it would then be shipped back to Iran by rail.

Construction of the 200-kilometer pipeline and the railway would
require hundreds of millions of dollars in additional funding.

Armenia and Iran have no rail links at present.
From: Baghdasarian

Karabakh Parties Made A Joint Statement

KARABAGH PARTIES MADE A JOINT STATEMENT

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
April 19 2007

In connection with the Nagorno-Karabagh Republic President’s elections
to be held July 19 political forces presented at the NKR Parliament –
Artsakh Democratic Party, Free Motherland Party, ARF Dashnaktsutyun
and Movement-88 – made a joint statement.

The document runs, in part, "since the NKR’s declaration serious steps
have been undertaken in the country to create the bases of independent
statehood, legitimate and efficient system of power on protecting the
country’s sovereignty and ensuring people’s security, due to which
it has become possible to prevent the threat of frustration of the
country’s natural development and head for democratic amendments’
implementation", DE FACTO own correspondent in Stepanakert reports.

The statement’s authors note the unity of the stands on forming the
agenda for the coming years on the basis of the following priorities:
the NKR’s international recognition; legislative amendments arising
from the Constitution; further democratization of the governance’s
system; establishment of the institute of public control over the
leadership; elaboration of a new conception of financial and crediting
policy stimulating economy’s development; demographic situation’s
improvement.

According to the document the parties "can support a common NKR
Presidential nominee, including the one proposed under civil
initiative, on the basis of mutual agreement on the provisions of
the latter’s election program and the above-mentioned priorities".
From: Baghdasarian

Prospering Armenia Spends Most Of All On Its Electoral Campaign

PROSPERING ARMENIA SPENDS MOST OF ALL ON ITS ELECTORAL CAMPAIGN

Arminfo
2007-04-18 19:08:00

As of now the Prospering Armenia party has spent the biggest amount
of money on its electoral campaign.

The official site of the Central Electoral Commission says that the
Prospering Armenia party has spent 12.395mln AMD. ARFD has spent
7.858mln AMD, Republican Party of Armenia – 7.576mln AMD.

The RPA has the biggest electoral fund – 29.350mln AMD, ARFD –
28.150mln AMD, Prospering Armenia – 12.600mln AMD (i.e. the party
has spent almost all of its money). The Heritage party of Raffi
Hovhannissyan has spent 9.236mln AMD of 9.550mln AMD.

The Dashink party has spent 5.820mln AMD of 8mln AMD, the New Times
party – 2.600mln AMD of 2.750mln AMD but is expecting new funds.

The National-Democratic Party of Shavarsh Kocharyan has spent just
700,000 AMD of 5.700mln AMD, the Orinats Yerkir party 2.744mln AMD
of 4.232mln AMD.

The People’s Party has spent all of its funds: 1.750mln AMD. The
Hanrapetoutyun party has spent 474,000 AMD of 540,000 AMD.

The Democratic Party of Armenia, the United Liberal-National Party,
the Communist Party and the Armenian Pan-National Movement Party are
the most economical parties: they have not spend a single penny of
their electoral funds.

National Unity has spent just 936,000 AMD of 7.500mln AMD.
From: Baghdasarian

NKR Citizens Have RA Passports

NKR CITIZENS HAVE RA PASSPORTS

A1+
[08:59 pm] 17 April, 2007

Citizens of NKR are deprived of their own state passports.

For instance, Shushan Stepanyan born and grown in Hadrut, when given
the passport she found out that she was a citizen of RA rather than
NKR. ‘When I was going to Yerevan State University, it really caused
some problems. It was easier for the students from Diaspora to enter
the university, but the admission committee did not believe me to
be an NKR citisen.They could believe me only looking at the side to
state the birthplace,’ she said.

Karlen Avetisyan, NKR Permanent Representative in RA elucidated the
fact,’ As far as NKR is not officially recognized, people are given
RA passports to keep connections with outer world.’

Are the NKR citizens likely to participate in the forthcoming elections
being deprived of the right? We should mention that the passports are
not a bit different from those of RA citizens.’ I have no fear about
it. According to law, they do not have the right either to elect or
be elected due to the law. The election lists are formed according
to the election sites,’ Karlen Avetisyan commented on the issue.
From: Baghdasarian

Armenia Joins Who’s Initiative "Immunization Week In Europe"

ARMENIA JOINS WHO’s INITIATIVE "IMMUNIZATION WEEK IN EUROPE"

Noyan Tapan
Apr 17 2007

YEREVAN, APRIL 17, NOYAN TAPAN. Armenia joined the initiative
"Immunization Week in Europe" held by the World Health Organization
on April 16-22. During this period, immunization-related issues
will receive coverage of the Armenian mass media. The RA Minister
of Health Norayr Davidian said at the April 16 press conference
that the purpose of the initiative is to raise the population’s
awareness of the significance of vaccination. According to him,
immunoprevention is one of the highly efficient strategies of health
care, thanks to which no cases of such diseases as diphtheria, neonatal
tatanus and poliomyelitis are now registered in Armenia. Besides,
another achievement of immunoprevention is that in recent years no
cases of children’s deaths due to controllable infections have been
registered. In 2002, Armenia was declared a poliomyelitis-free zone
by the WHO.

Head of the National Immunoprevention Program Gayane Sahakian
noted that vaccination against diphtheria, whooping cough, tetanus,
poliomyelitis, measles, German measles, parotitis and tuberculosis
is done free of charge in Armenia. In her words, only high-quality
vaccines approved by WHO are used in the country.

By the way, Honored Artist of the Republic of Armenia Shushan Petrosian
was elected as ambassador of Immunization Week.
From: Baghdasarian

Awards to policemen

Awards to policemen

AramRadio.am
16.04.2007 17:40

On the occasion of the Police Day, on April 13 RA President Robert
Kocharyan signed a decree on awarding a number of employees of the
Police for the contribution to the reinforcement of the public order
and courage demonstrated when carrying out the professional duties,

Medal for the `excellent maintenance of the public order’ was awarded
to Deputy Chief of Police, Lieutenant General Hovhannes Hunanyan.

A medal for courage was awarded to Police Lieutenant Colonel Murad
Baghdasaryan and Police Lieutenant Colonel Gevorg Ghazaryan.

Active Service Medals were awarded to Police Lieutenant Colonel Melkon
Antonyan, Police Senior Lieutenant Arkadia Gevorgyan, Police Senior
Sergeant Alexan Tumikyan, Police Captain Vardan Kharatyan, Police
Lieutenant Colonel Samvel Hakobyan, Police Major Sumbat Margaryan,
Police Captain Kajik Voskanyan, Police Mayor Robert Rafaelyan, Police
Major Zaven Simonyan, Police Sergeant-Major David Vanesyan, Police
Captain Lernik Vardanyan, Police Senior Sergeant Nerses Pirumyan.

On the occasson of teh Police Day Mkhitar Heratsi medals were awarded
to Vardan Movsisyan and Arthur Petrosyan.
From: Baghdasarian

March In Honor Of Genocide Victims

MARCH IN HONOR OF GENOCIDE VICTIMS

KarabakhOpen
13-04-2007 17:21:10

At 8 o’clock in the evening of April 23 Aram Manukyan Students Union
of the ARF Dashnaktsutyun and the Union of Young People of Artsakh
will hold a march with torches in memory of the 1.5 million victims
of the Genocide in 1915.

We learned from the Students Union that the march will set out at
the Square of Freedom.
From: Baghdasarian

Tackling a Turkish taboo

Montreal Gazette, Canada
April 7 2007

Tackling a Turkish taboo

JOEL YANOFSKY, Freelance
Published: Saturday, April 07, 2007

Turkish author Elif Shafak’s new novel, The Bastard of Istanbul, is
hard to categorize. It includes recipes and fairy tales, excerpts
from chat lines, pronouncements by soothsayers and meditations on
Johnny Cash. It’s part chick lit, part magic realism – a domestic
comedy with tragic historical overtones.

It is, in other words, a narrative mess. It is also, for all that, a
heartfelt and courageous work of fiction. In her acknowledgments,
Shafak explains rather matter-of-factly that when the novel first
came out, she was put on trial for "denigrating Turkishness," a crime
under the Turkish penal code.

The charge, which carries a sentence of up to three years in prison,
has been levelled at other Turkish writers, including Orhan Pamuk,
last year’s Nobel laureate for literature. And while the charges are
often dropped, as they were in Shafak’s case, the point gets made. In
Turkey, some things are not open to discussion, namely the 1915
Armenian genocide.

Those who forget the past don’t always repeat it; sometimes, it’s bad
enough that they just go on forgetting it. Shafak is very good at
showing how wide and deep the collective amnesia runs in her country.
What happened to Armenians almost a century ago is taboo; it’s also
off the radar screen.

The past is another country for Turks, one of Shafak’s characters
says, and that’s even true for the mostly sympathetic Kazanci family,
most of whom live in one house in Istanbul. That household is made up
entirely of women, including Zeliha, "the youngest of four girls who
could not agree on anything but retained an identical conviction of
always being right, and feeling each had nothing to learn from others
but lots to teach."

A contentious but close-knit clan, they have their own way of coping
with unpleasant realities, past and present: to ignore them. So that
when Zeliha announces in the opening chapter that she’s pregnant, no
one bothers to ask who the father is. It’s left to the teenage Aysa,
Zeliha’s daughter and the bastard in the title, to grow up and
recognize that this nurturing female environment is also "a
nuthouse."

The Kazanci men, meanwhile, are cursed. They either die young or
disappear in order to avoid dying young, as Mustafa, the brother in
the family, has done.

Mustafa is enduring a lonely bachelorhood in the United States when
he meets a divorcee named Rose who marries him, primarily because
he’s Turkish and her ex-husband was Armenian. This is her revenge on
her meddling former in-laws, who disapprove of Turks even more than
they do of her.

One of the points Shafak makes most effectively in The Bastard of
Istanbul, her sixth novel and her second written in English, is that
despite the animosity between Turks and Armenians, the two groups are
more alike than they will admit. This is a premise dramatized when
Armanoush, Rose’s Armenian-American daughter and Mustafa’s
step-daughter, travels to Istanbul to stay with the Kazanci women and
explore her roots.

Aysa and Armanoush are the same age, and after some wariness on both
sides, they become friends. Armanoush’s obsession with the past and
Aysa’s detachment from it connects them and connects Shafak’s
conflicting themes of memory and forgetfulness.

A touching moment in the novel comes when Aysa is introduced, online,
to the members of an Armenian chat group. Aysa is shocked, at first,
by the anger directed at her for being a Turk.

But she also surprises her correspondents by being honest with
herself and them. "If I had a chance to know more about my past, even
if it were sad, would I choose to know it or not?" Aysa asks, adding:
"Tell me, what can I as an ordinary Turk in this day and age do to
ease your pain?"

But simple, poignant moments like this get lost as the story becomes
increasingly cluttered with out-of-the-blue plot twists. For
instance, there’s no warning early on of the pivotal role Mustafa
will play. Flashbacks to the events of 1915, though eloquently
written, also feel forced – more like an obligation than a seamless
part of the narrative.

The Bastard of Istanbul, like the city it so lovingly and candidly
describes, is a hodgepodge of old and new, hope and despair and,
appropriately, delights and misfires. Shafak ends up packing the
novel with more than she probably needs to, but, given Istanbul’s
rich, complicated and often overlooked history, it’s hard to blame
her.

Joel Yanofsky is a Montreal writer.

– – –

The Bastard of Istanbul
By Elif Shafak
Viking, 360 pages, $31
From: Baghdasarian