Quake In Armenia

QUAKE IN ARMENIA

Yerevan, June 23. ArmInfo. A 2.5 Magnitude earthquake was registered
20 km south-east from the town of Martuni, Gegharkunik region,
Armenia, at 1:45am local time on June 23. The shake in the epicenter
totaled 3-4 on 12-scale bar. The shake was followed by a 1.8
Magnitude aftershock measuring 2-3. The National Seismic Protection
Service of Armenia told ArmInfo.

Earlier yesterday at 9:36pm local tome, a 3.5 Magnitude earthquake
was recorded 55 km west from the Iranian town of Khoy, on the border
of Turkey and Iran. The shake in the epicenter measured 4-5 on
12-scale bar, the source reports.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

The First Revelations of Mathew Bryza

A1+

THE FIRST REVELATIONS OF MATTHEW BRYZA
[01:35 pm] 23 June, 2006

Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and
Eurasian Affairs Matthew Bryza who is already the US
co-chair of the OSCE Minsk group represented the main
principles or the pack of offers which is to be
considered during the negotiations over the Karabakh
conflict.

"We have a frame agreement which calls on Armenia to
take out the armed forced from the Azeri areas",
Matthew Bryza announced in an interview to Radio
Station "Azatutyun". "On the other hand, the agreement
supposes the improvement of the economic and
diplomatic links between Armenia and Azerbaijan. There
are also other provisions like the allocation of
peace-makers, international economic support for the
Karabakh region, and economic development. That is to
say, we have a pack of offers to discuss".

"And finally we also intend to organize voting in
order to decide the status of Nagorno Karabakh. This
is the main outline of the pack of offers", the new US
co-chair said.

Factually, the Presidents of Armenia an Azerbaijan are
given a specific offer which they refuse to accept.
The US politician refused to say which provision is
the disputed one.

Matthew Bryza urged the President of Armenia and
Azerbaijan to accept the agreement. "We urge the
Presidents to accept the offer. That required
political courage," the Minsk group US co-chair
mentioned.

BAKU: Turkey aspires to military technology

Turkey aspires to military technology
By Selcan Hacaoglu

Baku Sun, Azerbaijan
June 23 2006

ANKARA, Turkey – For the first time ever, there are no U.S. bidders
for a major Turkish arms contract, signaling serious snags in one of
the world’s closest military-commercial partnerships.

For more than 50 years, the United States and U.S. firms have been
the main arms suppliers to Turkey, a lynchpin of NATO’s southern
flank during the Cold War. Turkey, in a rough neighborhood that
includes Iran, Iraq, Syria as well as traditional rival Greece, has
also been eager to snatch up weapons to supply its large army, which
is also dealing with a domestic Kurdish insurgency. At the heart of
the problems today are both diplomatic and technical issues rooted
in Turkey’s ambition to gain control over its military technology.

Turkey is going through a low point in defense relations with
Washington following its refusal to host U.S. troops for the invasion
of Iraq in 2003. It has actively sought out other potential arms
suppliers, making Turkey’s business less attractive for U.S.
companies. If they last, the frictions threaten to make U.S arms
companies reluctant to support Turkish lobbying efforts in Washington,
analysts and defense sources say.

Next week, firms from South Africa, Russia, France and Italy are
competing for a US$2 billion (1.6 billion euros) tender to deliver
attack helicopters to Turkey. U.S. makers Bell Helicopter Textron,
Boeing Co. and Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. did not even offer proposals
after evaluating tough tender conditions.

The new bidding rules included full access to the aircraft’s specific
software codes – which the United States considers a security risk –
and a written guarantee from the provider’s government that there
will be no political obstacles to the export of the arms. However,
the U.S. government can only seek the consent of Congress for a deal
after the sale is finalized.

It was not clear whether Turks would be satisfied with an initial
letter from the government assuring them there would be no political
problems.

"As far as Boeing is concerned, some of the conditions in the tender
are such that we simply could not agree to (them), and that we felt
would make the program from a Boeing perspective very difficult,"
Greg Pepin, Vice President of Boeing Turkey said in an interview.

Pepin explained that sharing the software was problematic because
it was partly owned by other U.S. suppliers as well as the U.S.
government – and the other owners would likely balk at sharing the
technology even if Boeing were willing.

"We can’t guarantee that the U.S. government will transfer that
technology, we can talk about the technology that we own but we can’t
agree to and sign up to assuring that these other owners of technology
would do the same," Pepin said. "That was an issue we had, we simply
cannot guarantee that."

Turkey imposed new bidding rules last year, after it canceled a
previous tender in 2004 when a deal with Bell Helicopter Textron’s
"King Cobra," a Turkish version of the AH-1Z Super Cobra used by U.S.
Marines, collapsed over price, technology transfer and licensing
problems.

The new rules empower Turkey to substitute alternative, probably
locally manufactured components such as weapon systems, the mission
computer, avionics and electronic warfare suites, and require the
supplier to integrate other systems or equipment built by Turkish
companies.

"The collapse of one deal is not itself a major crisis, but if
Turkey persists in seeking carte blanche from American suppliers to
substitute its own technology for theirs and asks for impossible terms,
U.S. arms suppliers will not, indeed cannot, bid for Turkey’s business,
and they will likely cease their lobbying efforts on Turkey’s behalf
with both the White House and Congress," said Ian M. Cuthbertson,
an arms sales expert at World Policy Institute. "U.S. industry will
lose business and Turkey would lose powerful allies in Washington."

U.S. arms companies have been lobbying for Turkey against Armenians –
who are pressing for recognition of killings of Armenians in the early
20th century as a genocide – and Kurds – who complain about Turkey’s
alleged human rights violations. Turkey’s concerns over technological
control of its weaponry increased after it faced arms blockades
from several countries because of human rights problems in its fight
against autonomy-seeking Kurdish guerrillas, while Washington demanded
Turkish progress on human rights as a condition for arms sales. Many
Turkish defense authorities also bitterly remember a U.S. arms embargo
following Turkey’s invasion of Cyprus in 1974, when Libya provided
Turkey with bombs and spare parts to operate its U.S.-made jets.

Today, Turkey is keen on having a sovereign helicopter to freely use,
mainly against Kurdish guerrillas in the rugged southeast, without
taking on the risk of outside interference in the aircraft’s mission
computer or of political obstacles from Washington to its use.

Turkey’s Defense Executive Committee might opt in its next meeting on
June 27 to choose one of the current bidders from France, Italy, Russia
and South Africa _ which lifted an arms embargo against Turkey in
2005 _ to end a decade-long search for Turkey’s next attack helicopter.

The options are Tiger of the Franco-German company, Eurocopter,
Mangusta of Italy’s Agusta Aerospace, Kamov of Russia and South
African company Denel’s Rooivalk.

"If Turkey wants to have a sovereign helicopter, this is the
opportunity," said an official of Likom Defense, the representative
of Denel in Turkey, speaking on condition of anonymity because he
was not authorized to speak to the media.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian Delegation To Take Part In Pace Summer Session

ARMENIAN DELEGATION TO TAKE PART IN PACE SUMMER SESSION

YEREVAN, JUNE 23, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. PACE summer session
will open on June 25 in Strasbourg. The Armenian delegation led by
Tigran Torosian, RA National Assembly Speaker, Head of NA delegation
in PACE, will take part in the session. As Noyan Tapan was informed
from RA NA Public Relations Department, Armen Rustamian (ARFD),
Gurgen Arsenian (ULP), Stepan Demirchian (Ardarutiun), Artashes
Geghamian (National Unity) and Hermine Naghdalian (RPA) will leave
for Strasbourg as members of the Armenian delegation.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

His Holiness Karekin II Visits Historical Islands In The Sea Of Marm

HIS HOLINESS KAREKIN II VISITS HISTORICAL ISLANDS IN THE SEA OF MARMARA

ISTANBUL, JUNE 23, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. On the morning of
June 22, His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos
of All Armenians; His All Holiness Bartholomew I, Archbishop of
Constantinople and Ecumenical Patriarch; and His Beatitude Mesrob
Mutafian, Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople, visited Halki Island
in the Sea of Marmara, off the western coast of Turkey. The island
houses the Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Monastery and the famous
Theological School of the Ecumenical Patriarchate. The metropolitan
abbot of the monastery greeted the three hierarchs as they entered
the grounds and extended his message to His Holiness Karekin II,
noting that it was with great honor, respect and love that the
clergy and population of the island welcomed the Catholicos of All
Armenians to Halki. The abbot stated that the visit of the Pontiff
of All Armenians was a visible manifestation of the brotherly warmth
and love between the Greek and Armenian communities of Istanbul,
and thanked him for honoring them with the visit. His Holiness
expressed his thanks for the warm welcome, noting that he knows
how very important it is to prepare a new generation of young men to
serve the Church and people, and appreciates the wonderful opportunity
given to church leaders to train and educate individuals to dedicate
their lives to God. His Holiness stressed the importance of hope in
the struggle of life and in achieving the mission to which Christ
has called all of us. As the Greek seminary has been closed by the
orders of Turkish authorities since the 1970’s, the Catholicos of
All Armenians specifically noted that he prays for the re-opening of
the Theological Seminary located on the island and that the Armenian
Church stands alongside their sister Church in their difficulties. The
Armenian and Greek delegations then visited the historic library on
the island and toured the grounds of the monastery. According to the
Information Services of the Mother See of Holy Echmiadzin, in the
afternoon, the entourage traveled to Kinali, an island with a high
Armenian population, and visited the Armenian church of St. Gregory
the Illuminator. Many Armenians had gathered in the church to greet
the arrival of His Holiness Karekin II, His All Holiness Bartholomew
I and His Beatitude Mesrob and to participate in the joint prayers
of the hierarchs. The Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople offered
his kind words of welcome to both the Catholicos of All Armenians and
the Ecumenical Patriarch and expressed his happiness for this first
Pontifical Visit of His Holiness Karekin II to Turkey. His Holiness
Karekin II noted that his presence in Turkey was through the joint
invitation of the Ecumenical Patriarch and the Armenian Patriarch, and
stressed his happiness for this unique opportunity to pray together and
strengthen the relationship between the Armenian and Greek Churches,
which will lead to greater cooperation and collaboration between
sister Churches. His Holiness extended his pontifical blessings
to the assembled Armenians and offered his prayers for peace and
love in the world. The Catholicos also noted his admiration for the
Armenian community of Istanbul, stating that they are well known
throughout Armenian life for their fidelity to the Mother Church,
to Holy Etchmiadzin, and their steadfast faith and love for national,
cultural and spiritual traditions. His Holiness spoke of the countless
contributions made by the Armenians of Istanbul throughout history,
and that today, they are the ones who help keep the Christian presence
of Istanbul alive. He concluded by exhorting them to remain steadfast
in their faith and hope, on the paths of serving our Lord Jesus Christ,
the Church and Armenian community. The Armenian Pontiff then invited
His All Holiness Bartholomew I to join him and Patriarch Mesrob at
the Holy Altar of the Church of St. Gregory, where they gave their
joint blessings to the faithful. Following the service, a reception
was hosted in the garden on the grounds of the church in honor of
the guests.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Lilian Keshishian Appointed Deputy Minister Of Tourism And Sports Of

LILIAN KESHISHIAN APPOINTED DEPUTY MINISTER OF TOURISM AND SPORTS
OF URUGUAY

MONTEVIDEO, JUNE 23, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. By a decree of
Tabare Vazquez, the President of Uruguay, Lilian Keshishian, a Deputy
of Armenian origin of the country Parliament was appointed in the
executive power. According to Radio Liberty, Keshishian will occupy
from now on the post of the Deputy Minister of Tourism and Sports of
Uruguay. According to the legislation of the country, Keshishian must
leave the Deputy’s mandate. Lilian Keshishian has visited Armenia,
participated in the events dedicated to the 15th anniversary of the
Armenian Parliament.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

‘Lifelong volunteer’ helped Armenians

‘Lifelong volunteer’ helped Armenians
By Jim Steinberg

The Fresno Bee
June 23, 2006

Rosemarie Saghdejian of Fresno left Beirut, Lebanon, as a child,
eventually growing up to become a leader in Armenian charity around
the world and in education in Fresno.

Mrs. Saghdejian served as a board member of the international
Armenian Relief Society and the Armenian Community School in Fresno.
She founded the Trinity Adult Day Care Center in Fresno.

Mrs. Saghdejian died Saturday. She was 52.

Tatul Sonentz-Papazian, executive ARS director, said from the agency
headquarters in Massachusetts that Mrs. Saghdejian was dynamic and
committed. She worked with the Armenian Relief Society to raise funds
and involve more people in the organization’s work.

The ARS operates in 23 or 24 countries, Sonentz-Papazian says, and
Mrs. Saghdejian’s work touched people in all of them.

Yeretsgin Sossy Costanian, an ARS assistant coordinator in Fresno who
also left Beirut, came to know Mrs. Saghdejian when the two worked
together in Los Angeles.

"She had a love for humanity," Costanian says, "and she was adored
by seniors. She was like an angel."

Mrs. Saghdejian graduated from the University of Wisconsin with a
teaching credential. She moved to Los Angeles to become close to
its growing Armenian community. She received her master’s degree
from UCLA in French culture and arts, and met her husband, Abraham
"Apo" Saghdejian.

Former Fresno Mayor Jim Patterson lives around the corner from the
Saghdejians’ home, and recalls Mrs. Saghdejian helping him and,
especially, his wife, Sharon.

"She took Sharon under her wing, and treated her like a daughter,"
Patterson says. "Rose and Abe made us feel we were invited to their
dinners because we were part of the family. I loved her baklava and
humus. A regular plate would show up o-n our doorstep."

Abraham Saghdejian recalls his wife’s work for others regardless of
national boundaries: "She was generous and helpful to people all over
our community. She was a lifelong volunteer, a leader who had been
to Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh."

He referred to a disputed Armenian enclave inside the neighboring
nation of Azerbaijan.

The couple worked together with the ARS o-n a relief telethon for
victims of the 1988 Karabakh earthquake, which killed upward of 25,000
people and left 500,000 homeless.

Mrs. Saghdejian spoke fluent English, Armenian, French and some Arabic,
her husband says.

Apart from her work, Mrs. Saghdejian was an excellent cook and
hostess, he says: "She made beautiful dishes and set beautiful
tables. Congressmen remember her food."

Mrs. Saghdejian’s accomplishments and contributions could not prepare
her for the tragedy of their lives, Abraham Saghdejian says. o-n
July 14, 2004, their son, Hovig, 23, was killed in a Herndon Avenue
traffic collision.

"She was very hurt," Saghdejian says.

"She had been such a healthy woman. Then she came up with cancer in
the stomach. Grief can do anything.

"She never complained. She talked with people about their
organizations, and asked what they were doing… She brought life,
joy and happiness to people in pain."

A funeral service was held Thursday at Holy Trinity Armenian Church
in Fresno, followed by burial in Masis Ararat Cemetery.

The reporter can be reached at [email protected] or (559)
441-6311.

www.ancfresno.org

Gas Supply Network Installation In Aragatsavan To Start Soon

GAS SUPPLY NETWORK INSTALLATION IN ARAGATSAVAN TO START SOON

ASHTARAK, JUNE 23, NOYAN TAPAN. The process of installing a gas
supply network in Aragatsavan – one of the largest settlements of
Aragatsotn marz started in early 2005 but was later discontinued
due to lack of funds, the community head Andranik Papikian told NT
correspondent. Only part of the program was implemented with 7 mln
drams allocated by the Armenian government and 2 mln drams (about
4.7 thousand USD) invested by the community. According to A.

Papikian, considerable financial resources are needed in order
to complete the program. He said that the Armenian government
and ArmRusgazprom will allocate funds for this purpose, and the
installation of a gas supply network in Aragatsavan will resume
soon. It is envisaged to complete this work in late 2006.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: ICG to announce its report on the situation of national minori

TREND, Azerbaijan
June 23 2006

International Crisis Group to announce its report on the situation of
national minorities in Georgia in August

Source: Trend
Author: R.Abdullayev

23.06.2006

The International Crisis Group (ICG) in August will announce its
report on the situation of national minorities in Georgia where the
main attention will be paid to the situation of Azerbaijani
community, Vugar Gojayev, the representative of ICG in Azerbaijan,
told Trend.

According to Gojayev, the preparation of the report was trusted on
Baku office of the organization and at the moment, serious measures
are taken to study problems of residents of KvemoKartli region of
Georgia populated by Azerbaijanis.

"In July, the representatives of the office will leave for Gardabani
and Dmanski (Georgia) where they will study different life aspects of
Azerbaijanis’ within 2-3 weeks, especially statistic data,
implementation of reforms, as well as land reforms," told Gojayev. He
noted that in parallel work is carried out in Javakheti settled
manily by Armenians.

"Our group also includes Sabina Frazer, the project coordinator of
ICG on Caucasus," stressed Gojayev, adding that for the preparation
of the report, meetings are held with Georgian citizens in
Azerbaijan.