Lithuania President Heads 2-day Delegation to Armenia April 25

From: [email protected]
Subject: Lithuania President Heads 2-day Delegation to Armenia April 25

DELEGATION HEADED BY PRESIDENT OF LITHUANIA TO PAY TWO-DAYS OFFICIAL
VISIT TO ARMENIA ON APRIL 25

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, NOYAN TAPAN. At RA President Robert Kocharian’s
invitation, the delegation headed Valdas Adamkus, the President of the
Republic of Lithuania will pay a two-days official visit to Armenia on
April 25-26. As Noyan Tapan was informed by the RA President’s Press
Office, the main goal of the visit is to stregthen interstate ties, to
point out the primary tasks and directions of the economic cooperation
between the two countries as well as to stimulate scientific-educational
and cultural ties giving a new quality and contents to the Armenian
and Lithuanian peoples’ traditional friendship. The solemn ceremony of
meeting the President of Lithuania will take place at the RA
President’s residence on April 25. Presidents Robert Kocharian’s and
Valdas Adamkus’ private conversation will follow the ceremony. Then a
meeting with the enlarged staff of the official delegations will take
place, then an agreement on encouraging investments and mutual
protection will be signed between the Governments of the two
countries. The two countries’ Presidents will hold a joint
press-conference. During the visit to Armenia, the President of
Lithuania will have meetings with Prime Minister Andranik Margarian,
Deputy Speaker of National Assembly Tigran Torosian. Karekin II
Catholicos of All Armenians will also receive Valdas Adamkus. The
President of Lithuania will have a meeting with the professors’ and
lecturers’ staff and students at the Yerevan State University. Valdas
Adamkus will also visit the Armenian Genocide memorial complex, the
Armenian Genocide Institute-Museum. The delegation headed by the
President of Lithuania will visit the Matenadaran (Armenian repository
of ancient manuscripts) and the Sergey Parajanov Museum.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Local Self-Government Elections To Be Held in 4 Regions in May

LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT ELECTIONS TO BE HELD IN 4 REGIONS IN MAY

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, NOYAN TAPAN. Local self-government elections are
envisaged in 4 Armenian regions – in Shirak, Syunik, Vayots Dzor and
Tavush, in May. As Noyan Tapan correspondent was informed by Tsovinar
Khachatrian, Spokeswoman of RA Central Electoral Commission, on May 7,
special elections of councillors are envisaged in the village
communities of Vardakar and Gusanagyugh, Shirak region. On May 21,
regular elections of councillors and community head will be held in
the village communities of Torunik, Vardanidzor, Lehvaz, Nyuvadi,
Yegheg of Syunik region, in village communities of Yeghegis, Zedea,
Hermon of Vayots Dzor, elections of councillors in the village
community of Goghtanik of Vayots Dzor, elections of community head in
the town community of Goris and village communities of Aldara, Soflu
of Syunik region. On May 28, elections of village head and councillors
will be held in the village communities of Aghavnavank, Khachardzan,
Hovk, Debedavan, Zorakan of Tavush region, village head elections in
the village community of Karaberd and councillors elections in the
village community of Bagravan and Musayelian, Shirak region. And the
coming local self-government elections will be held on April 23 in the
village community of Hatsavan, Kotayk region, and Pokrashen, Shirak
region. The residents of the latters will elect the head of their
community.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Events Dedicated to 91st Anniversary of Armenian Genocide in Romania

EVENTS DEDICATED TO 91st ANNIVERSARY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE HELD IN
ROMANIA

BUCHAREST, APRIL 21, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Various events to
commemorate the 91st anniversary of the Armenian Genocide are being
held in Romania. The presentation of the book “History of a Geocide
Passed by in Long Silence” of Romanian Armenian author Sergio Selian
(the book was published in Romanian by the Ararat publishing house of
the Armenian Union of Romania) took place in the Union of Writers of
Romania on April 19. Varizhan Oskanian, member of the Romanian Senate,
Chairman of the Standing Financial and Bedgetary Commission, Eghishe
Sargsian, the Armenian Ambassador to Romania, and Mikael Gazazian,
editor of the newspaper “Ararat” of the Armenian Union of Romania,
made speeches on the Armenian Genocide at the event. According to the
RA MFA Press and Information Department, Atom Egoyan’s film “Ararat”
was demonstrated in Bucharest and Constantsa, as well as a photo
exhibition dedicated to the Armenian Genocide was organized, during
which speeches were delivered by a number of high-ranking Romanian
officials, particularly by Danut Kuletu, Governor of Constantsa, as
well as by the Armenian Ambassador Eghishe Sargsian, Head of the
Romanian Armenian diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church Archbishop
Tirayr Martikian and others.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

1594.9 Tons of Humanitarian Aid Brought to Armenia in January-Feb

1594.9 TONS OF HUMANITARIAN AID BROUGHT TO ARMENIA IN JANUARY-FEBRUARY

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, NOYAN TAPAN. 1594.9 tons of goods of the total cost
of 4.6 mln U.S. dollars were brought to Armenia as humanitarian aid in
January-February, 2006. To recap, 676.7 tons of goods of 7792.2
thousand dollars were brought to Armenia during the same period of
time of the last year. According to the RA National Statistical
Service, paper and goods of paper made 25.5% of the got aid, textiles
made 18.4%, instruments and apparatus made 17.6%, non-precious metals
and goods made of them made 19.6%.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Days of Jazz To Be Held in Armenia on April 26-30 – US Embassy Init.

DAYS OF JAZZ TO BE HELD IN ARMENIA ON APRIL 26-30, ON INITIATIVE OF
U.S. EMBASSY

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, NOYAN TAPAN. The 5th festival “Days of Jazz” will
be held on April 26-30 on the initiative of the U.S. Embassy to the
RA. Concerts of Armenian and American jazz musicians, shows of films
and dancing jazz performances, a competition and an exhibition of
young artists’ works are envisaged within the framework of the
event. According to the information submitted to Noyan Tapan by the
U.S. Embassy, during the festival the Judy Bady Quartet from New York
will have a concert with Armenian prominent jazz musicians.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

State Engrng University Recognized Winner of US CRDF Fund & NFSAT

STATE ENGINEERING UNIVERSITY OF ARMENIA RECOGNIZED WINNER IN
COMPETITION ANNOUNCED BY U.S. CRDF FUND AND NFSAT

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, NOYAN TAPAN. The “Synthesis and Research of
Polymers” program presented by the State Engineering University of
Armenia (SEUA) was recognized the winner in the grant competition
stated by the U.S. CRDF fund and the National Foundation of Science
and Advanced Technologies (NFSAT). 4 programs were presented from
Armenia in this competition, among them there were works from the
Yerevan State University and other scientific centers. As Yuri
Sargsian, the SEUA acting Rector, RA NAS academician stated at the
April 20 press-conference, the primary goal of this program of total
cost of 300 thousand dollars is creation of a scientific-educational
center functioning on the first line of high technologies, as well as
preparation of a new generation of future scientists. Yuri Sargsian
mentioned that this grant operating by co-financing has been given for
three years the half of which, 150 thousand dollars, the Armenian side
will put in: the RA Ministry of Education and Science will put in 90
thousand dollars, the SEUA – 60 thousand dollars. For founding the
scietific-educational center, the University was given laboratories of
total surface of about 200 sq.m., where new equipment of 180 thousand
dollars to be bought within the framework of the program will be
placed. According to Sevan Davtian, the scientific head of the
program, 15 young scientists, graduate students and mastering students
are involved in implementation of this scientific research. Two of
them have already been sent on business abroad for one month each. 15
young people working in the program will also participate in the
annual “Yenikolopov’s Readings” interntional conference to take place
in Yerevan in October. According to Sevan Davtian, young graduate and
mastering students made the best and most valuable speeches will be
sent on business abroad, to implement scientific works.

Government Proposes to Change Names of 52 Settlements

RA GOVERNMENT PROPOSES TO CHANGE NAMES OF 52 SETTLEMENTS

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, NOYAN TAPAN. The draft concerning making amendments
and additions to the RA law “On RA Administrative-Territorial Division”
was approved at the April 21 sitting of the RA Government. The draft
was worked out to liquidate foreign, inharmonious and repeated names
of settlements. The decision proposes to involve the Verin Giratagh
community of the marz of Syunik in the community of Lernadzor as a
rural settlement, and the Pirlu (Verin Geghavank) and Kyurut (Karut)
communities in the community of Geghi as a rural settlement. Taking
into account the wish of inhabitation of the Ayrum community of the
marz of Tavush, the positive opinion of interested state bodies as
well as the fact that Ayrum is practically an urban settlement with
corresponding infrastructures and has no lands of agricultural
meaning, it is proposed the give Ayrum status of an urban community.
As Manuk Vardanian, the Chairman of the State Committee of the Real
Estate Cadastre attached to the RA Government, informed journalists
after the sitting, about 60% of 40 thousand settlements, valleys,
channels, mountains of the republic are not Armenian. Names of in
total, 52 settlements are at present proposed to change. M.Vardanian
mentioned that 38 of them have a Turkish name. And names of 5
settlements will be changed at the inhabitation’s request, the main
part of which is Kurds. The process of changing the names is envisaged
to finish till late this year. According to M.Vardanian, it was also
decided to name after public, political, scientific and cultural
figures only in 10 years after their death.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

“Ararat” To Be on Russian Public TV on April 24

FILM “ARARAT” BY ATOM EGOYAN TO BE ON RUSSIAN PUBLIC TELEVISION ON DAY
OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATION

Yerevan, April 21. ArmInfo. “Ararat” by Atom Egoyan, a film telling
about the Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey, will be on the Russian
Public Television on the night of April 24. Vigen Sargsyan, Assistant
of Armenian President, said at a press conference, Friday.

The film is demonstrated on the occasion of the Year of Armenia in
Russia to pay homage to the victims of the massacre, V. Sargsyan
said. The Armenian communities in all the regions of Russia will
traditionally commemorate those killed at the beginning of the 20th
century on April 24. He said Russia is the very country where
“Genocide is called Genocide” in conformity with a relevant decision
by State Duma and no other synonyms are search.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Historic graveyard is victim of war

From: [email protected]
Subject: Historic graveyard is victim of war

Historic graveyard is victim of war

The Times
April 21, 2006

By Jeremy Page in Moscow

Azerbaijan is being blamed for the destruction of a unique cemetery.

A MEDIEVAL cemetery regarded as one of the wonders of the Caucasus has
been erased from the Earth in an act of cultural vandalism likened to
the Taleban blowing up the Bamiyan Buddhas in Afghanistan in 2001.

The Jugha cemetery was a unique collection of several thousand carved
stone crosses on Azerbaijan’s southern border with Iran. But after 18
years of conflict between Azerbaijan and its western neighbour,
Armenia, it has been confirmed that the cemetery has vanished.

The Institute for War and Peace Reporting, a London-based
non-governmental organisation that supports independent journalism,
said that one of its staff had recently been to the highly restricted
site.

Where once stood between 2,700 and 10,000 intricately carved
headstones ‘ khachkars ‘ dating from the 9th to the 16th centuries,
there was only a dry patch of earth, said the institute
(). It was the first independent confirmation of what
Armenia has long alleged ‘ that Azerbaijani authorities have razed the
cemetery since the two former Soviet republics began a bloody border
war in 1988.

The war ended in a ceasefire in 1994, with 30,000 dead and a million
displaced, but still simmers over the disputed region of
Nagorno-Karabakh, which is held by Armenia but internationally
recognised as Azerbaijan. Foreign organisations had been unable to
visit the cemetery because it is in Nakhichevan, a tiny enclave of
Azerbaijan cut off by Armenia and Iran and accessible only by air.

Azerbaijan has repeatedly dismissed Armenia’s allegations as
scaremongering and in turn accused Armenia of destroying hundreds of
Muslim sites. President Aliyev of Azerbaijan angrily dismissed reports
about the cemetery’s destruction as `a lie and a provocation’ last
week.

The institute’s revelation now threatens to embarrass him and further
cloud the prospects for a lasting peace with Armenia.

Vartan Oskanian, the Armenian Foreign Minister, welcomed the
report. `The irony is that this destruction has taken place not during
a time of war but at a time of peace,’ he told The Times. There has
been clear intent by the Azerbaijanis to eliminate all evidence of
Armenian presence on those lands. To do that, unspeakable,
irreversible destruction has been wrought and 10,000 tombstones which
hold immense religious and artistic significance are simply gone.’

Tahir Tagizade, a spokesman for the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry, said
that there had never been an Armenian cemetery or any other Armenian
cultural relics in the area visited by the institute. `As a multi-
ethnic society, we are proud of our diverse cultural heritage,’ he
said. `I don’t see any reason for destroying Armenian property, even
though we are at war with the Armenians.’

The report comes as a European Parliament delegation is visiting both
countries to look into allegations of attacks on cultural sites. It
had hoped to visit the Jugha site, but has yet to be granted
permission.Unesco said that it was also ready to send a fact-finding
mission but needed permission from the Azeri and Armenian
governments. The institute said that there was now a village of about
500 people by the cemetery site. Some of those there said it had been
destroyed much earlier, while others disputed that it was Armenian.

The report quoted two witnesses as saying that the cemetery had been
deliberately destroyed between 1989 and 2002. Argam Aivazian, the
leading expert on Armenian monuments in Nakhichevan, said that Jugha
had been the largest Armenian cemetery in existence, and a unique
example of medieval art. `On the entire territory of Nakhichevan there
existed 27,000 monasteries, churches, khachkars, tombstones and other
Armenian monuments,’ he said.

They were mostly intact when he visited in 1987. `Today they have all
been destroyed.’

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.iwpr.net

The Government of Canada Recognizes the Armenian Genocide

Armenian National Committee of Canada
Ottawa, ON
130 Albert St., Suite 1007
Ottawa, ON
KIP 5G4
Tel. (613) 235-2622 Fax (613) 238-2622

PRESS RELEASE

April 21, 2006 Contact: Aris Babikian
(613) 235-2622

The Government of Canada Recognizes the Armenian Genocide

Ottawa – On the eve of 91st anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, The
Prime Minister of Canada, the Right Honourable Stephen Harper, on
behalf of the Government of Canada, issued a statement recognizing the
Armenian Genocide. The statement brought the policy of our executive
branch of government on the Armenian Genocide in line with the House
of Commons and the Senate of Canada resolutions.

This is the first time that the head of the Federal Government in
Canada has issued such a policy statement on the Armenian Genocide. By
issuing the statement the Prime Minister and the government
steadfastly upheld their previous stand during the House of Commons
debate and vote on Motion M-380. Furthermore, the Government
statement honoured not only the memories of the victims of the
Armenian Genocide but also the wishes of the overwhelming majority of
Canadians. In addition to the Canadian Senate and the House of
Commons, the three largest provinces (Ontario, Quebec, and British
Columbia) also recognize the Armenian Genocide. In his statement,
issued to the Armenian National Committee of Canada, the Prime
Minister stated:

`I would like to extend my sincere greetings to all of those marking
this sombre anniversary of the Medz Yeghern.

Ninety-one years ago the Armenian people experienced terrible
suffering and loss of life. In recent years the Senate of Canada
adopted a motion acknowledging this period as `the first genocide of
the twentieth century,’ while the House of Commons adopted a motion
that `acknowledges the Armenian genocide of 1915 and condemns this act
as a crime against humanity.’ My party and I supported those
resolutions, and continue to recognize them today.

We must never forget the lessons of history, nor should we allow the
enmities of history to divide us. The freedom, democracy, and human
rights enjoyed by all Canadians are rooted in our mutual respect for
one another.

I join with you today in remembering the past I encourage you to
continue honouring your forefathers by building a bright future for
all in Canadians.’

Dr. Vagharch Ehramdjian, chairman of the Armenian National Committee
of Canada (ANCC), said: `The Prime Minister’s and his government
colleague’s moral fortitude demonstrates once again that truth and
justice will prevail over short term economic gains or political
expediency. The Prime Minister’s statement is a clear massage to the
despots of the world that Canada and the free world will not tolerate
genocide and ethnic cleansing.’

For over 30 years the ANCC and its regional chapters have worked
diligently to keep the Armenian Genocide issue on the agenda of the
Canadian government and make it an important part of the public and
political discourse in our country.

-30-

The ANCC is the largest and the most influential Canadian-Armenian
grassroots political organization. Working in coordination with a
network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout Canada and
affiliated organizations around the world, the ANCC actively advances
the concerns of the Canadian-Armenian community on a broad range of
issues.

Regional Chapters
Montréal- Toronto – Laval – Vancouver – Ottawa – Hamilton – Cambridge
St. Catharines – Windsor

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress