BAKU: Captured Soldier’s Family Anxious

CAPTURED SOLDIER’S FAMILY ANXIOUS

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
April 3 2007

Parents of the soldier of Azerbaijani Army Samir Mammadov captured by
Armenian forces wrote a letter to him for the next time, the soldier’s
uncle Vidadi Mammadov told the APA. They will present the letter to
the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC). Vidadi Mammadov
said that his relatives are anxious as they could not get information
about him.

"He was captured four months ago. Samir’s parents are very anxious,"
he said.

Shahin Sayilov, secretary of the State Commission for Prisoners of War,
Hostages and Missing Persons told the APA that all related instances
have been appealed for, and they are expecting for Armenia’s answer.

Representatives of ICRC last visited the captured Azerbaijani soldier
on March 21.

ANKARA: Police Had Received Detailed Notification About The Dink Kil

POLICE HAD RECEIVED DETAILED NOTIFICATION ABOUT THE DINK KILLING

Sabah, Turkey
April 2 2007

It has been revealed that the Trabzon Security Directorate had warned
Istanbul’s Security Directorate long before the Dink killing. The
file received by the Istanbul Security Directorate had included even
the smallest details about the planned assassination.

The Istanbul Governorship has given investigation permission on
Intelligence Bureau Director Ýlhan Guler, who neglected to show the
warning letter received from Trabzon’s Security Directorate about
the Dink assassination to Istanbul police chief Cerrah.

The only thing which was not included in the report was the white beret

Details have been revealed about the report sent by Trabzon’s Security
Directorate 11 months before the Dink killing. It turned out; the
report which was intended to warn the Istanbul Security Department
about a possible assassination attempt against Hrant Dink had included
almost every single detail about the planned murder.

Istanbul’s Governor Guler has given investigation permit on former
Intelligence Bureau Director Ýlhan Guler, for neglecting his duty
and failing to communicate the report with the Istanbul Security
Directorate.

The report which was sent to Istanbul 11 months before the assassin
wrote: "Yasin Hayal hates Armenians and he is planning to kill Agos
Newspaper Editor-in-Chief Hrant Dink in Istanbul for humiliating
Turkishness."

–Boundary_(ID_Y92 7yqtNTtCDuDHgpsLMsw)–

British Film Festival to be held in Yerevan and Gyumri

British Film Festival to be held in Yerevan and Gyumri

ArmRadio.am
02.04.2007 15:08

April 3-7 the British Council in Armenia will hold a British Film
Festival in Yerevan. The opening of the 6th festival of British films
will take place at `Nairi’ cinema on April 3.

The festival will open with the Oscar winner `Permanent Gardener film.

Five films will be screened in the framework of the festival, all of
which have received prizes at different popular film festivals.

April 5-7 the British Film Festival will be held in Gyumri.

The revenue of the festival will be used for charity.

Every year the British Council organizes the Festival to present the
best contemporary British films.

Don’t destroy my neighborhood, LAUSD

Los Angeles Times, CA
April 1 2007

Don’t destroy my neighborhood, LAUSD

His house, along with many others in his community, may be forcibly
condemned to make way for a public school.

By Marcos M. Villatoro, Novelist and poet Marcos M. Villatoro is a
professor of English at Mount St. Mary’s College and a columnist for
Tu Ciudad Los Angeles magazine. (marcosvillatoro.com)
April 1, 2007

RULE NO. 1: Always, always open your junk mail.

I almost didn’t. I saw "LAUSD" and thought: "Probably a public
awareness flier." But there was that subtitle, "Real Estate Office."
Then all three phones rang: two cells and our land line. All of our
neighbors in this corner of Van Nuys opened their junk mail that day.

Nowhere does the letter say "eminent domain," but there it is, in all
its overstuffed, half-apologetic rhetoric: the legal taking, if
necessary without consent, of private property.

"We plan to build a new elementary school in your community…. The
property(s) you own and/or occupy … is located within one of the
sites being considered for this school."

So our little neighborhood is part of a grand scheme. The district
has already spent billions of dollars to put up 65 schools since
2000. It plans to build 80 more. So far, the district says it has
"successfully relocated" 2,200 businesses and households.

At a public meeting on Wednesday, with 300-plus enraged homeowners in
the audience, Al Grazioli, the Los Angeles Unified School District
development manager, shared the vision: The district wants Elementary
School No. 14 to be built on one of two contiguous full blocks north
of Vanowen Street, between Tobias and Willis, Hart and Bassett. The
new school, he said, would relieve the populations of five other
schools in our area and help put schools back on the traditional
calendar.

Earlier, Grazioli’s real estate manager told me over the phone that
my neighborhood needs to look at the greater good. And fear not: The
LAUSD will hire an appraiser and buy our homes at market prices.

We will sell "voluntarily" to the district or get involuntarily
"condemned," unless the plan changes.

My interpretation: Not only can the government take my land without
my permission, it can also set the price . And here, between the
little streets of Tobias and Willis, Hart and Bassett, it can
bulldoze a community that’s taken decades to build.

Over the years, I’ve learned to be mistrustful. I don’t take much to
the phrase "the greater good." Especially when it comes out of the
mouths of powerful monoliths like the LAUSD.

The school district’s ability to use eminent domain may blind it to
what its power does to the folks on the ground. Our neighborhood
anecdotes may come off as subjective, one-sided and irrelevant
measured against the need for more schools. But perhaps the LAUSD
could humor me for a moment.

After the letter arrived, my wife, Michelle, walked the blocks, house
to house.

Half of our neighbors are Spanish speakers. Though the letter also
came in Spanish, Michelle explained the situation to them: No matter
which of the two blocks is chosen, 22 houses will have to go. All
afternoon she heard, "I had no idea what this was about," usually
followed by, "Oh no. Not here in America!"

"Where will we go?" asked Mona, who’s lived here over 35 years. "We
have nothing, nothing but our house." Next to her, Rejo, who just
moved in his young family three weeks ago, is too stunned to speak in
either English or Indonesian.

Neighbors across our street received no letters. Yet they’re as upset
as those of us waiting to be condemned. We meet on the sidewalk,
something we’ve done for a dozen years. Because this is that type of
neighborhood. We throw block parties a couple of times a year –
potato salad and pupusas in my driveway, two barbecues filled with
four meats on Ron’s patio. We hand over our house keys to one another
while on vacation. We’re the Latino-Jewish-white-Armenian Wilmas and
Bettys, gossiping at the fence.

People outside our neighborhood don’t see this. They don’t see Chi,
who ran an electric line from his house to next door so his neighbor
could finish his bathroom renovations. Nor do they see Constance and
Dwayne, who’ve lived here almost 50 years and have made their home
and gardens into a gorgeous Japanese-motif setting.

We live in one of those hidden places you pass while driving down
Victory Boulevard or Sherman Way. The place of potholes (we’ve asked
the city for 17 years to repave our street), the place where all
those brown people aren’t raking the yards, but instead walk through
their own front doors after work.

We have our hell-raisers. Norma lives across the street. Whenever
something smells of injustice, Norma always gets that Cesar Chavez
look in her eyes.

Norma is the president of our community organization, the Cedros
Associated Neighborhood, made up of the residents of the two targeted
blocks. She’s studied the letter and has done her own homework. The
letter states that "there is simply no vacant, safe land in the
location where the school is needed." Yes, there is. There’s a huge,
fallow field one block north of us, owned by a church. Six blocks
east of us stands a plot that the LAUSD bought up over a year ago.
The houses are still there, behind barricades. There are overgrown
fields, an abandoned Ralphs, an empty Red Cross building.

At the public meeting, I couldn’t tell whether Grazioli and his
district compadres were absorbing the outrage or wearing Teflon
suits. Did he hear us when we said to cheers, applause and outcries
that we do not want to leave our homes? If the meeting was meant to
"educate" – I read that as "pacify" – the locals, it didn’t work. We
were already mad as hell; after the meeting, we were madder. More
schools – that’s important, but isn’t there another way?

Something that was once so safe, the place you ran to when afraid or
tired, can be taken away. Just like that – with a form letter,
dressed up as junk mail. But the people on these two city blocks in
Van Nuys have more to lose: One another. Community. A word the
district doesn’t use on its site-selection-criteria form.

The LAUSD, with its clumsy, ham-fisted, photocopied letter and the
fear it delivered, has ironically made our strong community stronger.
The district would blindly tear apart a lively, close-knit, vintage
community. Here on the ground, those who crouch under the bulldozing
shadow of eminent domain ask only one thing from it: Don’t.

CE Rep Mentions Necessity of Holding Free And Fair Elections

CE REPRESENTATIVE MENTIONS NECESSITY OF HOLDING FREE AND FAIR
ELECTIONS IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, MARCH 27, NOYAN TAPAN. "The May 12 parliamentary elections
are unequivoccaly considered in Armenia as a unique possibility for
development of democracy." Bojana Urumova, the Special Representative
of the Secretary General of the Council of Europe to Armenia stated
about it at the conference entitled "Free and Fair Elections as
Foundation-Stone of Democracy" taken place on March 27. She reminded
that holding of free and fair elections is one of the obligations
undertaken by Armenia in front of the CE. In B. Urumova’s words,
perhaps, correspondence of the coming parliamentary elections with the
European standards of free and fair elections would be a considerable
progress for Armenia. "Expectations and hopes of the international
community to see considerable results in this sense are very high,"
the CE representative mentioned. She also mentioned that the CE,
attaching importance to the elections to be held in Armenia, did a
considerable work with the corresponding instances.

Over 14 Iraqis killed in violence including two Armenians

Press TV, Iran
March 27 2007

Over 14 Iraqis killed in violence
Tue, 27 Mar 2007 15:24:09

Two mortar rounds on Tuesday slammed into the capital’s Abu Chir
neighborhood where Iraqi and U.S. forces have been concentrated under
a massive new security crackdown, officials said.

Two children, a man and a woman were killed from separate families,
while another 14 people, again women and children included, were
ferried to hospital with injuries from the attack, the sources said.

A roadside bomb attack killed an Iraqi policeman in southeast
Baghdad, while another police officer was killed in a gun attack in
the heart of the capital.

A local soldier was killed by an insurgent sniper in central Baghdad
and four civilians were hospitalized following a mortar attack near
the finance ministry.

South of Baghdad, another four people died in Iskandiriyah when
unidentified gunmen opened fire on a funeral cortege, said Iraqi army
officer Mohammed al-Tahi.

Elsewhere two elderly Armenian women who had lived in Kirkuk for
years were shot dead when gunmen broke into their house early Tuesday
in Kirkuk, said police Captain Imad Jassim. One of the women was aged
80 and the other in her 60s, the officer said.

In a separate incident, two car bombs exploded near the home of a
tribal leader in the Abu Ghraib district west of Baghdad on Tuesday,
killing the man’s son and several other people

Iraqiya state television said there were many casualties.

Sheikh Thahir al-Dari, whose home was targeted, is the head of the
al-Zobaie tribe, which is the same as that of Deputy Prime Minister
Salam al-Zobaie. The deputy prime minister was the target of an
assassination bid last week.

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http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=4016&amp

Last Farewell In the House of Opera and Ballet

A1+

LAST FAREWELL IN THE HOUSE OF OPERA AND BALLET
[10:59 am] 26 March, 2007

The state special commission at the head of RA NA
Speaker Tigran Torosyan, informs that the civil
funeral of the Armenian Prime Minster will take place
at Sayat-Nova 8, Avan District, at 5:00 p.m., on March
27.

The last farewell will take place in the Academic
Opera and Ballet Theatre after Alexander Spendaryan at
12:00 p.m., on March 28. The funeral will take place
in the Pantheon after Komitas at 3:00 p.m.

Russian nationalist extremists jailed

United Press International
March 25 2007

Russian nationalist extremists jailed

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia, March 24 (UPI) — Russian authorities have
rounded up members of two nationalist extremist groups suspected in a
string of explosions and other attacks on immigrants.

St. Petersburg city prosecutor Sergei Zaitsev said 10 area residents
ages 17 to 23 were charged in connection with attacks on citizens of
Armenia, Uzbekistan, Moldova and Cameroon in the past month in St.
Petersburg and Pushkin, Itar-Tass reported Saturday.

Authorities said three of five suspects in the bombing of a
McDonald’s fast-food restaurant also have been arrested, and
explosives and bomb parts were seized. Police, who have confirmed the
identity of the bombs used at both the McDonald’s attack that injured
six people and an explosion at a flower kiosk near a train station,
said the arrests prevented at least two more explosions.

Zaitsev said the suspects were taking part in actions organized by
the Movement Against Illegal Migration. "The perpetrators wanted not
only to breach the order but also to intimidate the authorities," he
said.

3.46% of Goers, 18.05% of Entrants in Armenia in 2006 Job Seekers

BY PRELIMINARY RESULTS OF SURVEY AT BORDER POINTS OF ARMENIA, 3.46% OF
GOERS AND 18.05% OF ENTRANTS IN ARMENIA IN LATE 2006 WERE JOB SEEKERS

YEREVAN, MARCH 23, NOYAN TAPAN. The results of the study of goers and
entrants through all border points of Armenia were summarized. The
study was conducted in September-December 2006 on the initiative of
the RA National Statistical Service, and with the assistance of the
program "Competitive Armenian Private Sector" of the Armenian Tourism
Development Agency and the USAID. The survey involved 3% of goers and
entrants and was conducted 7 days each month.

According to the RA National Statistical Service, in the indicated
period, 3,620 out of 7,545 entrants – survey participants had status
of Armenian resident, while 3,155 out of 6,012 goers had status of
non-resident of Armenia. 2,708 or 25.9% of entrants were outgoing
tourists, 41.8% of goers – incoming tourists. 30.83% of entrants
(51.02% of goers) had the purpose to visit their friends, 27.75% of
entrants (18.45% of goers) – business purpose, 18.05% (3.46%) – job
purpose, 10.8% (9.27%) – recreation purpose and 2.4% (3.77%) – medical
treatment purpose.

Men made up 57.7% of entrants (59.5% of goers). During the indicated
period, the average daily expenses of an entrant made 17.2 US dollars,
those of a goer – 51 dollars.