Presidium Of Armenia’s NAS Approves Candidates For Directors

PRESIDIUM OF ARMENIA’S NAS APPROVES CANDIDATES FOR DIRECTORS

Arka News Agency, Armenia
March 21 2007

YEREVAN, March 21. /ARKA/. The presidium of the Armenian National
Academy of Sciences (ANAS) approved the candidates for directors in
the non-commercial organizations of the NAS scientific center.

Vigen Goginyan was approved for the office of the
scientific-technological center of microbiology and deposition
of microorganisms. G. Sargisov is commissioned for the scientific
center of zoology and hydro-ecology, and Ararat Malkhasyan – for the
scientific-technological center of organic and pharmacologic chemistry.

State non-commercial organizations of the ANAS Scientific Center were
formed by the Government’s decision on March 12, 2006.

The Genocide Museum-Institute To Present A New Display On April 20

THE GENOCIDE MUSEUM-INSTITUTE TO PRESENT A NEW DISPLAY ON APRIL 20

Armradio.am
20.03.2007 15:08

Prior to the 92nd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide the Genocide
Museum-Institute of RA Academy of Sciences will have a display of
new documents.

Director of the Genocide-Museum-Institute Hayk Demoyan told Armenpress
that the display will open on April 20, 4 days ahead of April 24,
when Armenians worldwide will mark the 92nd anniversary of this crime.

Hayk Demoyan said they will be working in the next five years to
prepare what he called "a super new exhibition of facts and evidence
of the first genocide in the past century."

Demoyan said all questionable documents of vague origin will be
removed from the current display, saying also the Museum will undergo
a sweeping interior remodelling and part of the new display will
depict the life of Armenians in their homeland in Western Armenia,
which is now in Turkey before Turkish rulers ordered the complete
annihilation of the Armenian race in 1915.

The Director also said the Museum will also seek contacts with
Diaspora-based Armenian organizations which have many documents and
evidence of the genocide. He said an online bulletin in English and
French will be released beginning from Aril to present the Museum
and its activities. Another direction of the activity, according to
Demoyan, will be to collect the evidence of survivors of the genocide,
whose number is dwindling with each passing year.

ANKARA: Ahmadinejad To Open First Stretch Of Armenian Gas Pipeline F

AHMADINEJAD TO OPEN FIRST STRETCH OF ARMENIAN GAS PIPELINE FROM IRAN

The New Anatolian, Turkey
March 20 2007

Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his Armenian counterpart
on Monday formally open the first stretch in Armenia of a natural
gas pipeline.

Ahmadinejad and Armenian President Robert Kocharian will inaugurate
the 40-kilometer (25-mile) section in the town of Meghri, just over
the border from Iran.

Under the first stage of the project, Iran is to deliver up to 400
million cubic meters (14 billion cubic feet) of gas a year; when the
pipeline is completed and extends to the capital, Yerevan, the volume
could rise to 2.5 billion cubic meters (88 billion cubic feet) a year.

Rain and fog prevented a helicopter flight that was to transport
Ahmadinejad, and he was expected to arrive later by road.

The project was launched in 2004 after more than a decade of
negotiations.

Russia, which supplies most of Armenia’s gas, had objected to the
project. Armenian officials said last year they were discussing the
prospect of Russia’s natural-gas monopoly Gazprom purchasing the
Armenian section of the pipeline from Iran.

Landlocked Armenia has developed its relations with Iran amid
economic troubles caused by the closing of its borders with Turkey
and Azerbaijan in the wake of the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh,
a region of Azerbaijan occupied by Armenian and ethnic Armenian
Karabakhi forces.

Iran also has sought projects and influence in other parts of the
former Soviet Union, mostly in Central Asia.

Last year, Ahmadinejad opened an Iranian-financed tunnel improving
connections between impoverished Tajikistan’s north and the capital
region. Tehran has focused mostly on transport and infrastructure
projects and restoring historically close cultural ties.

TEHRAN: Iran-Armenia Natural Gas Pipeline Project Put Into Operation

IRAN-ARMENIA NATURAL GAS PIPELINE PROJECT PUT INTO OPERATION

Fars News Agency, Iran
March 19 2007

TEHRAN (Fars News Agency)- The pipeline project for the transfer of
Iran’s natural gas to Armenia was put into operation in the presence
of the Iranian and Armenian presidents.

Iran-Armenia natural gas pipeline project that transfers Iran’s
natural gas to Armenia was put into operation a few minutes ago in
the presence of the Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Armenian
president Robert Kocharian.

The Iranian natural gas pipeline is 40 kilometers long from the
Iranian border spot.

The project has cost USD33 million through joint investment by Iran
and Armenia and will go into complete effect when final tests have
been conducted within the next few months.

The project has been commissioned and implemented entirely by the
Iranian experts and contractors.

I Left OYP As I Had No Reasons For Becoming Opp, Vayots Dzor Gov.

I LEFT OYP AS I HAD NO REASONS FOR BECOMING OPPOSITION, VAYOTS DZOR’S
GOVERNOR, CURRENTLY ALREADY RPA MEMBER, DECLARES

YEREVAN, MARCH 19, NOYAN TAPAN. "When the Orinats Yerkir (Country of
Law) Party left the coalition, I as a Governor had no reasons for
becoming opposition, so I left OYP," Samvel Sargsian, Vayots Dzor’s
Governor, currently member of Republican Party of Armenia (RPA),
declared at the March 19 press conference. S. Sargsian has been
nominated by majoritarian system at electoral district N 39
(Yeghegnadzor-Jermuk) by RPA for the forthcoming parliamentary
elections.

"I am leaving my post and I am going to legislative work in order to
be able to continue my programs aimed at region’s further
development," he said. In S. Sargsian’s words, though the governor
does serious and responsible work, he does not have as great powers as
a deputy.

S. Sargsian also assured that at the forthcoming parliamentary
elections fair elections will be held concretely at their region and
as a Governor will not use his levers.

And Ararat Governor Alik Sargsian said that for already third time RA
President has strictly ordered everybody to hold fair elections. "In
case of any violation the representative of empowered body, in this
case the Governor will be punished," he said.

Reconstruction of St. Cross Church on Akhtamar a political decision

PanARMENIAN.Net

Reconstruction of St. Cross Church on Akhtamar is a political decision
16.03.2007 16:13 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Opening of the Armenian St. Cross Church on Akhtamar
will contribute to constructive dialogue between the two states, RA
Minister of Culture and Youth Affairs Hasmik Poghosian told a news
conference in Yerevan. `Reconstruction of the church is a political
decision. Nevertheless, the church will be open for attendance and
it’s a positive fact for Armenia. The final composition of the
Armenian delegation will be determined next week,’ the Minister said,
reports Novosti-Armenia.

The Turkish government has assigned $1.5 million for reconstruction of
the church. The works were accomplished by the Turkish Ministry of
Culture and Tourism jointly with the administration of Van city. The
church is a unique monument of Armenian medieval architecture. It was
built in 915-921 AD by architect Manvel under the rule of King Gagik
Artsruni.

Egemen Bagis: US Two Congressmen Not To Assist Armenian Resolution

EGEMEN BAGIS: U.S. TWO CONGRESSMEN NOT TO ASSIST ARMENIAN RESOLUTION

ANKARA, MARCH 16, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Egemen Bagis, the
head of the delegation of the Grand National Assembly of Turkey left
for Washington on March 12 to do lobby work against the U.S. Congress
draft concerning the Armenian Genocide, a deputy from the Justice and
Development Party ruling in Turkey stated that owing to their "works,"
two American congressmen who previously assisted the Armenian
resolution, "changed their position and will vote against the
resolution appeared in the House of Representatives."

As the Turkish Sabah daily states, in the interview with journalists
Bagis expressed a hope that the U.S. legislative body will not adopt
such a resolution as, in his words, Washington will not lose an
important ally like Turkey.

The Turkish parliamentarian did not mention names of those two
congressmen.

ANKARA: Turkish, Armenian historians quarrel over failed study

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
March 16 2007

Turkish, Armenian historians quarrel over failed study initiative

Turkish and Armenian historians remained at odds following the
failure last week of a planned joint study into the World War I
events in eastern Anatolia, which Armenians claim amounted to
genocide.

Yusuf Halaçoðlu – Ara Sarafian
Yusuf Halaçoðlu, who heads the Turkish Historical Society (TTK),
rejected accusations from British Armenian historian Ara Sarafian
that their plans for a joint case study on the treatment of Armenians
in Harput in eastern Anatolia in 1915 would not work because
Halaçoðlu said he could not provide some of the documents he
requested.

"I never said that we could not open some of the archives or that we
cannot show some documents," Halaçoðlu said in a statement released
Wednesday afternoon. He noted that he did not have the legal
authority to impose restrictions on archive documents. Halaçoðlu,
speaking last week, blamed the Armenian diaspora for failure of the
initiative and said Sarafian bowed to pressure from the diaspora.

"I particularly want to stress that Mr. Sarafian has probably been
subject to pressure," Halaçoðlu then said. "As a matter of fact, a
news report published by [bilingual Armenian-Turkish newspaper] Agos
said that the Armenian diaspora was very angry with Sarafian because
of his proposal to study with Turkish historians."

In London, Sarafian refuted claims that he was afraid to carry out
research with a Turkish academic and said Halaçoðlu had told him some
of the documents he requested were not available in the Ottoman
archives.

"This is an incredible statement. I expect Halaçoðlu to clarify what
this means," he said in an interview with the Cihan News Agency. "I
am not the one who gave up on the research. I am the one who proposed
doing research in Turkey and would love to work in this direction."

He said, however, that his proposal was no longer on the table
because the documents, as Halaçoðlu said, were not in the Ottoman
archives. "If these documents are not available, then we of course
cannot do any study," he was quoted as saying by Cihan.

Sarafian also said he wanted to stay in contact with Turkey and that
he favored dialogue. "I favor dialogue to show that at least those
days when Turks and Armenians were killing each other are over," he
said. "I believe there will be a consensus on that but I know that
this will not be easy." He also said: "I am not a supporter of the
Armenian diaspora who criticizes Turkey without talking to Turkish
historians and looking into the archives. I am in favor of trying to
work in and with Turkey as much as I can."

Ugly Ties Bind Genocide Past And Present

UGLY TIES BIND GENOCIDE PAST AND PRESENT
By Amy Klein, Religion Editor

The Jewish Journal of greater L.A, CA
March 15 2007

Genocide.

The word evokes different, powerful references, depending upon who
hears it.

For Jews, the primary thought is the Holocaust, officially recognized
in the United States as the first genocide.

For Armenians, it refers to mass killings by the Ottomans in Turkey
in 1915, though many countries, including the United States, have
not recognized those as such.

These days the word immediately points to Africa — to Rwanda, Darfur
and other recent bloodbaths that have involved ethnic cleansing.

But genocide is not a modern invention, and although the term has
legal connotations — specific conditions must apply in a conflict
for the U.S. government to officially use the designation — acts of
genocide can be traced back to the Bible. Some scholars argue that
there have been 15 or more additional occurrences that could qualify
in the 20th century. And while the motives of the perpetrators, the
identity of the victims and the region of the carnage have changed
over time, genocides almost always share one common thread: Religion.

"Whenever genocide takes place, religion is involved — before,
during or after — in one way or another," said John K. Roth,
founding director of the Center for the Study of the Holocaust,
Genocide and Human Rights at Claremont McKenna College and the author
of "Approaches to Auschwitz: The Holocaust and Its Legacy."

Roth spoke last month at a conference titled "Genocide and Religion:
Victims, Perpetrators, Bystanders and Resisters," a collaboration
between the Simon Wiesenthal Center and Pepperdine University School
of Law, Institute on Law, Religion and Ethics.

The Feb 17-19 symposium, which was open to the public and attended
by a few hundred students, scholars, rabbis and community members,
aimed to broaden the discussion beyond the usual focus on a single
genocide, such as the Holocaust — the subject of many books, studies,
films and classes.

It also went deeper than many such conferences by examining as
many as possible of the various groups involved in a genocide —
the perpetrators, the victims, the bystanders and resisters — all
of whom can be found in every such conflict, past and present.

"We didn’t want it to be just another conference on perpetrators’
responsibility," said Roger Alford, an associate professor in the
law school at Pepperdine, who organized the conference with professor
Michael Bazyler, of Whittier Law School in Costa Mesa.

"We wanted to basically focus on the issue of how law and genocide and
religion connect with one another: Is there a religious motivation,
why are certain groups targeted, why is it the resisters try to resist,
is there a religious component to that, what is it about bystanders and
why do they not do more?" Alford said of the three days of lectures
by academics, legal scholars and government officials from around
the world.

There are four motivations for genocide, Roth said: To implement a
belief, a theory or ideology; to eliminate threat; to spread terror
among enemies; and to acquire economic wealth.

"Religion can be an agitating factor in genocides," he said, noting
that it is impossible to understand the numbers of people affected by
the devastation, which has effects for generations to come, because
it destroys cultures and traditions. "The effects of genocide have
not stopped. On the contrary. Genocide has gone on and on. It might
continue to do so."

Religion plays a role in conflicts today, said Sandra Bunn-Livingstone,
of the State Department’s Office of International Religious Freedom,
Bureau of Human Rights. "The less religious freedom, the higher the
religious persecution, and it sets the stage for possible genocide."

Today, she pointed out, "there is higher religious persecution in
countries with Muslims."

Of 143 countries monitored for the highest level of persecution, 40
percent had a Muslim majority, versus 3.9 percent with a Christian
majority.

On speakers’ and audience members’ minds was the role that Islam plays
in world conflicts today — conflicts that have not been designated
as genocide, but which involve terrorism, murder and group persecution.

Is there something inherent in Islam that is responsible for the
terrorist tactics we see being perpetrated around the world today?

"We have to be very careful about demonizing religion," Bazyler said
in an interview. "We in the Jewish community have to be careful not
to do that; it doesn’t serve us well."

Instead of condemning the entire community or religion, we should
"criticize individuals in the Muslim communities for not condemning
enough the extremist elements, and we can reach out to what we believe
are moderate Muslims."

Others at the event lamented a climate in academia in which there’s
"a fear of political incorrectness," in the words of Israel Charney,
executive director of the Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide at
Hebrew University in Jerusalem. Although Charney is against those who
completely vilify Islam, such as Daniel Pipes and Arianna Fallaci —
"who are so inciting they inflame the process I’m against," he said —
he allowed that "the violent position has prevailed" many times in
Islamic society, and he said that it’s important to tell it like it is.

Of Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s call to eliminate Israel,
Charney said, "I don’t think you send that to a committee for
discussion; you treat it as incitement, you treat that as a call to
kill, you add that to your evaluation to what it means that they’re
seeking nuclear weapons, and unless you’re a complete jerk, you start
looking for what actions to take, but you don’t do nothing and say, ‘We
don’t really know if he means it, we don’t know if he has influence,’
That’s been the rationalization [so] that you don’t have to respond
to stop him."

Others at the conference were less certain.

"How Islam is to be interpreted," Roth said, is still up for
discussion. "If you go back to the Hebrew Bible or other traditions,
you can see there’s a struggle taking place" between the injunction
against murder and the allowances for it.

"Maybe we haven’t seen the end of the struggle in Islam," he suggested,
hopefully.

Much of the conference focused on academic issues, including taking
a historical perspective, but there were a few voices asking for help
in current crises.

"Intervention is not prevention," said Pierre Prosper, former U.S.

ambassador at large for war crimes and former war crimes prosecutor
on the UN international criminal tribunal for Rwanda.

Prosper was among the first prosecutors to arrive in Rwanda, where
1 million people were killed in 100 days.

"Prevention means stopping it before it begins — not stopping it in
its tracks," he emphasized. "It means really taking the hard steps
so that this truly does not happen."

People of a society must feel they have recourse or redress, and the
international community should focus all its attention on creating
legal systems in those societies and looking at early-warning systems
of genocide before they occur.

"It’s not enough to compare this nation and its courage against other
nations in the world," said Bruce Einhorn, a U.S. immigration law
judge. "We have a special obligation," he said, not to be the world’s
policemen, but to take action against the perpetrators of genocide.

"Will the international community and the U.S. make the war against
genocide as proactive as the war against terror?"

The program was part of the Pepperdine Institute’s new International
Human Rights Program, where law students spend their summer working for
humanitarian causes around the world. In 2006, 10 students worked on
almost every continent, focusing on issues such as human trafficking,
HIV and religious liberty, said program director Melanie Howard,
associate director of the Institute on Law, Religion and Ethics. "They
said it was life-changing," she said of the students, noting that 100
have expressed interest for this summer. "The program fits with the
overall mission of the law school — purpose, service and leadership,"
Howard said.

Darfur is an example of action taken.

"It was the Jewish community to bring Darfur to the forefront and
keep it on the forefront. We keep hearing so much about Darfur …

because of Jewish leaders," said conference founder Bayzler, referring
to Rabbi Harold Schulweis, founder of Jewish World Watch, who spoke
at the conference.

"Why is the Jewish community talking so much about Darfur? Because
of the experience of the Holocaust. It’s really the theme of ‘never
again.’ Not just for our own people, but never again for other people,"
Bazyler said.

Many speakers argued that while religion can be an agitator, it can
also offer salvation.

"What tools of religion can we use to combat the potential for
genocide?" asked Michael Berenbaum, professor of theology and director
of the Sigi Ziering Institute at the University of Judaism.

"If we look at Christianity, we have a perfect model of what we can
do to get out of this quagmire [of religion causing genocide].

Christianity has de-emphasized the teachings [that might] have led
to genocide, especially against the Jews."

Religion can play a positive role, not only in preventing genocide,
but afterward, as well.

"Survivors in its aftermath have done something profoundly religious,
biblical in proportion," he said, by deepening responsibility and
pleading for the future. "The meaning of survival is not found in the
accident of survival but what you do among the aftermath of survival."

Reporters’ Trick, Speaker Says

REPORTERS’ TRICK, SPEAKER SAYS

Panorama.am
20:35 15/03/2007

On March 23, Republican Party member Ruben Khlghatyan and Prosperous
Armenia member Araik Aghababyan will combat the election for the post
of Armavir mayor.

The media already disseminated opinions that they will use all means
of elections fraud and the "strongest" will win.

"It is a reporters’ trick. Such speculations do not have anything
common with the reality," Tigran Torosyan, speaker of the Armenian
parliament, told a press conference today.