Flexing Muscles

FLEXING MUSCLES
by Igor Romanov

DEFENSE and SECURITY
March 12, 2008 Wednesday
Russia

PARLIAMENTARY HEARINGS ON NON-RECOGNIZED STATES AS A RESPONSE TO
RECOGNITION OF KOSOVO AS A SOVEREIGN STATE; Experts do not expect
recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia as sovereign states despite
the noise the Duma may make.

The Duma will discuss the issue of self-proclaimed republics of the
post-Soviet zone on March 13. The hearings will be Russia’s response
to recognition of sovereignty of Kosovo by the West. Experts in the
meantime do not expect Russia to take any practical steps to change
the status of Abkhazia or South Ossetia.

Informal meeting of the leaders of Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and
Trans-Dniester region will take place in Moscow next Thursday. The Duma
will meet to discuss the issue of post-Soviet self-proclaimed states
that same day too. Konstantin Zatulin, Senior Deputy Chairman of the
CIS Committee of the Duma, said the lower house of the parliament also
intended to discuss Nagorno-Karabakh "whose leaders cannot make the
meeting in Moscow." A cooperation treaty between United Russia and
the United Abkhazia party is to be signed on March 13, apparently to
demonstrate Russia’s determination.

The Russian parliament has discussed non-recognized republics’ status
more than once already, but initiators of the hearings promise that it
will be different this time. CIS Committee Chairman Aleksei Ostrovsky
claims that recognition of Kosovo launched a "rearrangement of the
world" that might affect Russia. "Now that Kosovo declared itself
an independent state and world powers began recognizing it as such,
the peoples of Abkhazia and South Ossetia are entitled to demanding
their own recognition too," Ostrovsky said.

Duma’s zest meanwhile may complicate the relations between Russia and
the West. US State Secretary Condolleezza Rice said this Wednesday
that Washington will never recognize sovereignty of Abkhazia. "We are
convinced that Kosovo is a unique case stemming from the exceptional
circumstances fomented by disintegration of Yugoslavia," Rice said.

Should the Duma decide to go too far, its activeness may impair the
image of Dmitry Medvedev. Aleksei Malashenko of the Moscow Carnegie
Center, however, does not expect the Duma to make any problems
for Medvedev or Russia. "That’s the only way to react for Russia,"
Malashenko said. "Our foreign policy is ambivalent. On the one hand,
there is the clear and reasonable position that there will be no
recognition of self-proclaimed states. On the other, there is also the
policy of verbal games usually promoted by the Duma. That’s a show,
nothing more. They will make noise, and that will be that."

Armenian President Removes Media Restrictions

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT REMOVES MEDIA RESTRICTIONS

ARKA
March 13, 2008

YEREVAN, March 13. /ARKA/. RA President Robert Kocharyan has removed
a number of restrictions imposed of Armenia’s mass media by a decree
on a state of emergency in the country. The new decree is to take
effect on March 14.

The RA presidential press service reports that the RA President made
alterations to his decree of March 1. The new wording of Sub-Paragraph
4 of Paragraph 4 is: "prohibition of deliberate misinformation of
mass media on state and domestic political affairs".

The decree prohibits any calls for participation in illegal
activities, as well as dissemination of misinformation on such
activities. According to the original wording of the presidential
decree, mass media were allowed to public information on state and
domestic political affairs exclusively within the limits of official
information.

At his meeting with journalists yesterday, President Robert Kocharyan
stated the possibility of altering the terms of emergency in Yerevan.

"This evening or tomorrow morning I will sign a decree altering the
approach. At present, as part of the state of emergency we are pointing
to what may be done, and the new decree will point to what may not,"
Kocharyan said.

Today, the RA President’s decree also invalidates Sub-Paragraph 5 of
Paragraph 4 of the March 1 decree, saying: "political propaganda by
means of leaflets or by other means is prohibited unless permitted
by relevant government bodies".

On March 1, 2008, the RA President signed a decree imposing a state
of emergency in Yerevan.

The following points of the decree remain in force: prohibition
of meetings, demonstrations, processions, strikes and other mass
activities hindering organizations’ activities; law-enforcers are
entitled to search vehicles and individuals.

On March 10, the RA President signed a decree removing the restrictions
on the activities of parties and other public organizations preventing
the elimination of circumstances that led to the declaration of a
state of emergency. The decree also invalidated the points on the
eviction of people violating the emergency regime.

ANKARA: EU Calls On Turkey To Uncover Ergenekon’s Links In State

EU CALLS ON TURKEY TO UNCOVER ERGENEKON’S LINKS IN STATE

Today’s Zaman
March 13 2008
Turkey

The European Parliament, one of the European Union’s strongest
institutions, has called on Turkey to investigate the shadowy Ergenekon
network to unearth its "deep connections" within the state.

The Ergenekon gang, a neo-nationalist group accused of involvement
in plans to stage a violent uprising against the government, was
discovered at the end of an investigation that came upon the heels
of a police raid in June of last year that uncovered an arms depot
in a house in Ýstanbul’s Umraniye district. The prosecutor in the
Ergenekon case has said the gang worked to create disorder and chaos
through divisive and violent acts so the public would be willing to
accept a military intervention to restore order.

"Turkish authorities should resolutely pursue investigations into the
Ergenekon affair, to fully uncover its networks reaching into the state
structures and to bring those involved to justice," the draft report,
prepared by Dutch Christian Democrat MEP Ria Oomen-Ruijten, said.

The group is suspected of involvement in the murder of three Christian
missionaries in Malatya in 2007, the 2006 murder of a priest in the
northern city of Trabzon, the murder of ethnic Armenian journalist
Hrant Dink in 2007, a 2006 attack on the Council of State and a
grenade attack on daily Cumhuriyet in 2006.

The draft report also strongly called on the government to speed up
its reform process and fulfill its promises on sensitive issues such
as Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code (TCK). The nine-page draft
viewed by Today’s Zaman is expected to be discussed at the Foreign
Affairs Committee in April and to be approved by the parliament in May.

The draft, which is expected to be amended several times before
approval by the European Parliament, welcomes a declaration by Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan that 2008 would be the year of reforms.

Another development that the report refers to with satisfaction is the
civilian authorities’ success in confronting the military interference
in the political process back in April, when the government boldly
rejected an intervention by the military in the process of presidential
elections.

Welcoming Parliament’s passage of the Law on Foundations granting
broader property rights for non-Muslim minorities, the draft calls for
vigorous further steps for reforms. Calling the outlawed Kurdistan
Workers’ Party (PKK) a terror organization, the draft says the PKK
should declare an immediate and unconditional cease-fire. The draft
also took note of Erdoðan’s statements on assimilation, which he made
in Germany and which were widely criticized in EU capitals.

Erdoðan said in Germany last month that the government wanted the Turks
to integrate better in the German society, but rejected assimilation,
saying it was a "crime against humanity."

In her draft report Oomen-Ruijten refrained from using the word
"genocide" to describe events of World War I, which Armenians claim
amounted to a genocide of their ancestors in eastern Anatolia by
the Ottoman Empire. She instead called on Turkey and Armenia to work
together to start a process of reconciliation. Oomen-Ruijten, in her
previous resolution on Turkey last fall, came under enormous pressure
from Armenian groups to refer to a genocide, but she refused to do so.

Basic issues highlighted in report * Civilian-military relations:
[The European Parliament] welcome[s] the fact that in 2007 democracy
prevailed over attempts by the military to interfere in the political
process; encourages the Turkish government to make further systematic
efforts to ensure that the democratically elected political leadership
bears full responsibility for formulation of domestic, foreign and
security policy and that the armed forces respect this civilian
responsibility.

* 301: [The] Turkish government and the Parliament should carry out,
as a priority, the repeatedly promised reform of Article 301 of
the Penal Code; [the European Parliament] deplores the fact that no
progress has been achieved regarding freedom of expression.

* Law on Foundations: [The European Parliament] welcome[s] the recent
adoption by the Turkish Parliament of the Law on Foundations; welcomes
the commission’s intention to examine the new text, and underlines that
it should analyze whether the law addresses all shortcomings faced by
non-Muslim religious communities with regard to property management
and acquisition, including expropriated property sold to third parties.

* PKK: [The European Parliament] strongly condemn[s] the violence
perpetrated by the PKK … reiterates its solidarity with Turkey
in its fight against terrorism; and once again calls on the PKK to
declare and respect an immediate and unconditional cease-fire.

* Northern Iraq: [The] Turkish government should not engage in any
disproportionate military operations violating Iraq’s territory;
urges Turkey to respect Iraq’s territorial integrity, human rights and
the rule of law, and to ensure that civilian casualties are avoided;
urges the government of Iraq and the Kurdish Regional Government of
Iraq not to allow Iraqi territory to be used as base for terrorist
acts against Turkey.

* Kurdish Issue: [The] Turkish government should launch, as a matter
of priority, a political initiative favoring a lasting settlement of
the Kurdish issue, which can only be based on tangible improvements in
the cultural, economic and social opportunities available to citizens
of Kurdish origin, including real possibilities to learn Kurdish and
to use it in broadcasting and in access to public services; calls
upon the [Democratic Society Party] DTP, its members of parliament
and mayors to engage constructively in the quest for a political
solution to the Kurdish issue within the democratic Turkish state.

* Armenia: [The] Turkish government should end the economic blockade
and re-open its border with Armenia; calls once again on Turkish
and the Armenian governments to start a process of reconciliation,
in respect of the present and the past, allowing for a frank and open
discussion of past events.

* Hrant Dink murder: [The European Parliament] strongly urge[s]
the Turkish authorities to carry out a full investigation into the
murders of Hrant Dink and of the three Christians in Malatya, as well
as all other cases of politically or religiously motivated violence,
including full clarification of allegations of negligence on the part
of the competent authorities, and to bring all responsible to justice.

* Constitution: Takes note of the process under way to prepare
a new, civilian constitution; regards it as a key opportunity to
place the protection of human rights and freedoms at the core of
the constitution.

–Boundary_(ID_WqPmEGC/Njkeev4fnFzd 8w)–

More Ter-Petrosian Supporters Arrested

MORE TER-PETROSIAN SUPPORTERS ARRESTED

Radio Liberty
March 12 2008
Czech Rep.

The Armenian government’s unprecedented crackdown on the opposition
continued unabated on Wednesday, with law-enforcement bodies arresting
12 more supporters of former President Levon Ter-Petrosian and
searching the offices of a major opposition party.

The arrests raised to at least 96 the total number of opposition
leaders and activists jailed since last month’s disputed presidential
election. According to the Office of the Prosecutor-General, 90
of them have been formally charged with plotting a coup d’etat,
organizing and participating in "mass riots," assaulting security
officers and other grave crimes.

The accusations mainly stem from the March 1 violent confrontation in
Yerevan between riot police and thousands of opposition protesters
demanding a re-run of what they see as a rigged election. Senior
prosecutors insisted on Wednesday that the clashes, which left at
least eight people dead, were part of Ter-Petrosian’s plot to return
to power by "destabilizing the situation in the country." But they
would not say whether the opposition leader too will be arrested and
prosecuted on relevant charges.

Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian, the official election winner, did
not rule out such possibility as he meet with university students in
Yerevan. "Levon Ter-Petrosian’s fate will be primarily decided by the
people, not now, because in addition to legal responsibility there is
also moral responsibility, there is also historical responsibility,"
he said.

"Talk of Levon Ter-Petrosian to be arrested today or tomorrow is not
true. Neither are the claims that nobody will dare to arrest Levon
Ter-Petrosian," added Sarkisian.

Outgoing President Robert Kocharian was also vague on the matter,
stressing the need to punish "all those who created this situation."

"If we don’t do that, these provocative actions will continue. There
are people who regard Armenia’s weakness and instability as beneficial
for their political interests," he said without naming anyone.

Most of the detainees are senior members of opposition parties who ran
Ter-Petrosian’s national and local election campaign offices. One of
them, Ararat Zurabian, is the chairman of the Armenian Pan-National
Movement (HHSh), the country’s former ruling party of which the
ex-president remains a member. Most members of the HHSh’s governing
board are also under arrest. The party’s largely deserted headquarters
was being searched by officers of the National Security Service
late Wednesday.

Ter-Petrosian on Tuesday condemned the charges brought against his
loyalists as politically motivated and said the "political repressions"
unleashed by the ruling regime will further heighten post-election
tensions in Armenia. He also reiterated his claims that the authorities
themselves orchestrated the March 1 violence to crush his campaign
for the holding of a repeat presidential election.

But Hakob Gharakhanian, a senior prosecutor involved in the ongoing
criminal investigation, denied any political motives behind the
crackdown. He claimed that some of the demonstrators who barricaded
themselves outside the Yerevan mayor’s office opened fired at and
wounded several dozen police and interior troops in accordance with
Ter-Petrosian’s alleged coup plan.

Journalists at the scene, including an RFE/RL correspondent, did not
witness any opposition supporters carrying firearms both during and
after their fierce pitched battles with security forces. The latter
fled the scene shortly after failing to disperse the crowd with
truncheons, water cannons, tear gas and tracer bullets.

The law-enforcement authorities insist that they fired live rounds only
into the air. But they have yet to explain just how at least seven of
the protesters were shot dead during the clashes. An interior troop
officer was also killed in still unclear circumstances.

Gharakhanian questioned the authenticity of a video clip of the
violence circulating on the Internet which shows a group of special
police officers opening automatic gunfire in the direction of
the demonstrators. Nonetheless, he said, Prosecutor-General Aghvan
Hovsepian has instructed his subordinates to examine the footage and
determine whether the police indeed shot at the crowd.

"Nobody fired live rounds at the demonstrators," Gharakhanian told
reporters. "Despite that, the prosecutor-general has issued a written
order to investigate and give legal assessment to the actions of
police officers."

Underscoring their distrust of the Armenian security apparatus, the
European Union and some international human rights organizations have
called for an independent investigation into the deadliest street
violence in Armenia’s history.

The Armenian government is unlikely to agree to such an
investigation. Hovsepian, according to his spokeswoman Sona Truzian,
told the head of the OSCE office in Yerevan late Tuesday that he is
only ready to let "international experts" take part in forensic tests
conducted by the investigators.

Armenian Authorities Will Not Allow Opposition Rally After State Of

ARMENIAN AUTHORITIES WILL NOT ALLOW OPPOSITION RALLY AFTER STATE OF EMERGENCY IS LIFTED

Regnum
March 12 2008
Russia

President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan has called a statement of
Levon Ter-Petrosyan of his intention to hold a rally the next day
after the emergency state in Yerevan is lifted "a provocation." "One
has to be a troublemaker to take the same steps. Some people may
welcome new clashes and victims, but authorities will not allow that,
especially since Article 40 of the Constitution provides us with all
necessary legal foundation for that," Kocharyan stated while talking
to journalists on March 12.

According to the Armenian president, the authorities are not going
to allow holding a rally, if they receive such request. "Imagine if
we allow holding a meeting, and both people who participated in the
riot and clashes with the police and law enforcement officers gather
together on one spot. I just don’t see what their ‘communication’
will be like."

The president has also advised citizens to avoid such events for
some time.

Regarding the state of emergency regime and prospects of its lifting
before the term announced on March 1, Robert Kocharyan has commented
that today, there are no reasons for prolonging the state of emergency
after March 20. "The situation in the city is quiet and entirely
under control," Kocharyan noticed. He has added that already today
or tomorrow, he is going to sanction lifting several more state of
emergency provisions, in particular, those limiting the media activity.

The decree, Kocharyan has said, will clearly define action that should
be avoided by the media, particularly, publishing deliberately false
and inciting information.

President Vladimir Putin Telephoned Robert Kocharian

PRESIDENT VLADIMIR PUTIN TELEPHONED ROBERT KOCHARIAN

RIA Oreanda
Economic News
March 11, 2008 Tuesday
Russia

Moscow. ">OREANDA-NEWS . March 7, 2008. Speaking of the instability
in Armenia after the presidential election, the President of Russia
expressed his conviction that the efforts of the Armenian leadership
would restore constitutional order to the country. Copyright (c)
1997-2008 "OREANDA-NEWS"

NKR President Discussed Situation In Conflict Zone With OSCE Ambassa

NKR PRESIDENT DISCUSSED SITUATION IN CONFLICT ZONE WITH OSCE AMBASSADOR

DeFacto Agency
March 10 2008
Armenia

YEREVAN, 10.03.08. DE FACTO. March 7 the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
President Bako Sahakian received Personal Representative of the OSCE
Chair-in-Office Ambassador Andrzey Kasprzyk.

According to the Central Department of Information under the NKR
President, the interlocutors discussed the cases of cease-fire
violations on the Nagorno-Karabakh and Azerbaijani Armed Forces’
contact line, as well as a number of issues referring to the
forthcoming monitoring of the OSCE Minsk group on the contact line.

Both parties underscored the necessity of maintaining cease-fire and
inadmissibility of the attempts to destabilize the situation. The
meeting’s participants also touched upon current situation and the
perspectives of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict’s settlement.

The President again reaffirmed the NKR leadership’s position, according
to which the problem should be resolved only by peaceful means.

The same day Ambassador A. Kasprzyk met with the NKR FM Georgy
Petrossian, the NKR MFA Press Office reports.

Iran’s non-Muslims question U.S. motives

Iran’s non-Muslims question U.S. motives
Aiding immigration seen by some leaders as propaganda tool
Thomas Erdbrink,Karin Brulliard, Washington Post
Sunday, March 9, 2008

(03-09) 04:00 PST Tehran — For decades the United States has funded
an effort intended to help Christians, Zoroastrians and Jews escape
persecution in Iran. Now some of their leaders are questioning
American motives as sects that have endured here for thousands of
years dwindle rapidly as a result of the migration.

Since the late 1980s, the U.S. government has made it easier for
certain foreigners fleeing religious oppression overseas, such as in
the former Soviet Union or Indochina, to immigrate to America.

But leaders of Iran’s non-Muslim religious minority groups say their
communities are not mistreated by the Iranian government, whose
actions are overseen by Shiite Muslim clerics. Instead, some Christian
and Zoroastrian leaders say, their members are leaving mainly to take
advantage of the program’s offer of a streamlined path to legal
residence in the United States for a fee of $3,000.

"Christians and Zoroastrians leave because of unemployment, the bad
economy, but these problems affect all Iranians," said Yonathan
Betkolia, an Assyrian Christian leader and member of Iran’s parliament
who holds the United States responsible for his community’s
decline. "They give all those green cards to our people. Their only
goal is to propagate the idea that Iran is mistreating its
minorities."

The program is coordinated by the New York-based Hebrew Immigrant Aid
Society, or HIAS, which traditionally has helped resettle Jews in the
United States. It received about $3.4 million in U.S. government
funding last year to help non-Muslim minorities leave Iran.

There are no reliable numbers on the sizes of those communities in
Iran, a predominantly Shiite country of 65 million to 70 million that
is also home to Muslim ethnic minorities, including Kurds, Arabs and
Baluchis. According to a census taken in 1976, there were 420,000
non-Muslims in a population of nearly 34 million. Many non-Muslims
fled the country after the 1979 Islamic revolution.

Despite the Iranian government’s bellicose approach to Israel, Jews in
the country say they can practice their religion freely. More than
25,000 Jews remain in Iran, community leaders say, making it the
largest Jewish population in the Middle East outside Israel.

The State Department says 2,842 Jews have left Iran for the United
States under the program in the past decade, compared with more than
18,000 members of other non-Muslim minority groups. More than 10,000
Iranians are waiting now to travel to Vienna, where HIAS facilitates
their passage to the United States as refugees, according to a former
U.S. official familiar with the program.

"The migration is a big, big problem for all non-Muslim minorities in
Iran," said Kurosh Niknam, a parliament member representing Iran’s
Zoroastrians, adherents of the pre-Islamic national faith that he
estimates has shrunk by half since the 1979 revolution. "I wish
everybody would come back to Iran, but I guess they won’t. It looks
like there will be no Zoroastrians left in this country in 30 years."

HIAS was selected early this decade by the State Department to be the
sole agency for processing Iranian minorities from Vienna, where it
operates what it calls an "overseas processing entity." In 2004,
Congress passed a law that made it easier for religious minorities
from Iran to qualify as refugees.

U.S. funding for HIAS’ work on behalf of Iranians has almost tripled,
from $1.24 million in 2002 to $3.46 million in 2007, because of an
increase in applications. The United States, which is at odds with
Iran over its nuclear ambitions and role in the war in Iraq,
classifies Iran as one of eight "countries of particular concern"
because of what the State Department calls severe violations of
religious freedom.

This designation "provides the substantive basis for running a refugee
program for Iranian religious minorities," said Gideon Aronoff, chief
executive of HIAS. "It speaks for itself that there are people who
feel there is a need for this type of program to provide them with
safety."

One Armenian Christian businessman in Tehran, who spoke on condition
of anonymity so as not to jeopardize his family’s persecution-based
application for legal U.S. residence, struggled to come up with a list
of reasons to leave Iran. For more than a decade, he said, he had
been looking for reasons to stay.

"One, our Iranian passports are useless; we need visas for every
country.

Two, the Iranian economy is destroyed. Three, my daughters are forced
to wear the Islamic head scarf," he said. The 2005 election of
President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the businessman continued, had
increased the sense of uncertainty.

"There are foreign threats, there might be a war. We feel pressure
every day."

Sitting in his dining room, he took another sip of cognac, which like
all other alcoholic drinks is illegal for Muslims to consume in Iran,
and smiled wearily. "I guess our reasons for migrating are no
different from other Iranians who want to go. But as Christians, it’s
so much easier for us to leave Iran."

Betkolia, the Assyrian Christian parliament member, said he and his
co-religionists were "freer in Iran than our Muslim brothers." The
politician sat in his large office in the Assyrian club in Tehran. "We
can drink, our boys and girls can mingle in our clubs freely and we
can dance and sing," he said.

"Muslims are not allowed to do those things in here."

Members of the Bahai faith, however, face arrest and other forms of
persecution, according to U.S. and other officials. Followers of
Bahaism, which was founded in 19th century Persia and emphasizes
religious unity and racial equality, are not allowed to practice their
religion or study at universities. The government regards the faith
as heretical, while Christians, Jews and Zoroastrians are respected as
being members of traditional monotheistic religions.

The former U.S. official familiar with HIAS said persecution of
non-Muslims continues. "The fact is that this regime treats religious
minorities very poorly. It has acted viciously toward some of them,"
the former official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because
of the sensitivity of the program.

"For Christians and others, it’s a lower grade of persecution. They’re
treated like third-class citizens, day in and day out. If you are not
a Shiite, you’re going to face severe discrimination," he said.

"Maybe people grow accustomed to it and may learn to live with it,"
the former official said. "But to say they’re living an OK life and
they’re just economic refugees is ridiculous."

The recent increase in applicants has caused a significant backlog, he
said.

"If the Iranians wanted to, they could stop cooperating and create
trouble for the program."

But according to some Iranian authorities, that would not
happen. "There is no way that the Iranian government would block
members of religious minorities from leaving. This would cause an
international outcry," said Mohammad Ali Abtahi, a former vice
president and a Shiite cleric.

"If HIAS would open its doors for Muslims, lots of Iranians would
leave for America. I guess the same would happen in Pakistan or Saudi
Arabia," Abtahi said. "I am sad people of other faiths leave Iran. But
for that to change, big problems which affect all Iranians need to be
tackled."

cle.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/03/09/MN25VC467.DTL
This article appeared on page A – 14 of the San Francisco Chronicle

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/arti

Best Selling Author Peter Balakian To Visit Australia

Armenian National Committee of Australia
259 Penshurst Street, Willoughby NSW 2068
PO Box 768, Willoughby NSW 2068
T: (02) 9419 8264 | F: (02) 9411 8898
E: [email protected] | W:

10 March, 2008

PRESS RELEASE

{CONTACT: Haig Kayserian (Communications Officer) ~ 0403 317 903 ~
[email protected]}

BEST SELLING AUTHOR PETER BALAKIAN TO VISIT AUSTRALIA

SYDNEY: New York Times bestselling author Peter Balakian is the Armenian
Genocide Commemorative Committee’s (AGCC) special guest speaker for this
year’s Armenian Genocide Commemorative events.

Professor Balakian will be in Australia for two weeks, lecturing and
speaking in Sydney and Melbourne about the Armenian Genocide. His first
public appearance will be as keynote speaker of the Sydney Armenian Genocide
Commemoration, which will be held at UTS Kurin-gai Campus’ Greenhalgh
Theatre on Sunday, April 20.

Prof. Balakian is the author of The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide
and America’s Response (2003), which received the 2005 Raphael Lemkin Prize
(best book in English on the subject of human rights and genocide) and was a
New York Times Notable Book and New York Times bestseller.

The Burning Tigris is a narrative of the massacres of the Armenians in the
1890s and the 1915 Genocide at the hands of the Ottoman Turks. It presents
the chilling history of how the Young Turk government implemented the first
modern-day genocide behind the cover of World War I.

Prof. Balakian is also the author of Black Dog of Fate; his personal memoire
and the unfolding of his sense of identity as he traces his childhood and
the history of his ancestors.

Prof. Balakian has received many awards and prizes including a Guggenheim
Fellowship, 1999; National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, 2004; and the
New Jersey Council for the Humanities Book Award, 1998.

AGCC representative, Mr. Stephen Abolakian said: "We are honoured to have
Prof. Balakian join us in Australia to assist our community, as we continue
to raise awareness of genocide in the hope that such hateful crimes are not
repeated."

Further details of Armenian Genocide Commemorative events will be released
by the AGCC in coming weeks.

www.anc.org.au

Aronian splits points with Carlsen

ARMENPRESS

ARONIAN SPLITS POINTS WITH CARLSEN

YEREVAN, MARCH 7, ARMENPRESS; Armenian grandmaster
Levon Aronian was forced to split the point with
Magnus Carlsen of Norway after the penultimate round
at the Morelia-Linares chess tournament underway in
the Spanish city on Thursday. He now shares 3-4th
places.
World Champion Viswanathan Anand played out an easy
draw with Vassily Ivanchuk of Ukraine to maintain his
slender half point lead
Barring a disaster in the last round game against
former world champion Veselin Topalov of Bulgaria,
Anand is assured of at least a shared first place in
the category-21 tournament and is likely to retain the
title he won last year.