Antelias: HEHOM organizes general knowledge contest between schools

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

HEHO M ORGANIZES A GENERAL KNOWLEDGE CONTEST BETWEEN THE STUDENTS OF
ARMENIAN SCHOOLS

The Armenian Church University Students’ Association (HEHOM) organized a
general “knowledge contest” between the students of Armenian schools, with
the aim of bringing them together in a social environment.

The contest was held in the Catholicosate of Cilicia on April 1. Students
from Yeghishe Manoukian College, Levon and Sophia Hagopian College,
Haratch-Gulbengian College, Melankton and Haig Arslanian Djemaran, the
Armenian Catholic Hripsimiants School, the Armenian Catholic Mesrobian
School, the Armenian Evangelical School (Beirut), and the Armenian
Shamelian-Tatigian Evangelical School participated in the contest.

Although outside the classroom, the students were able to enrich their
knowledge about religion, geography, literature, science, sports, history
and film in a friendly environment.

The group representing Melankton and Haig Arslanian Djemaran won the first
prize. The second and third prizes were won by the Armenian Catholic
Hripsimiants School and Yeghishe Manoukian College respectively.

##

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the youth
activities of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

NKR Foreign Minister Lays Emphasis on Full Engagement of Karabakh

NKR FOREIGN MINISTER LAYS EMPHASIS ON FULL ENGAGEMENT OF KARABAKH

Lragir.am
08 April 06

On April 7 Georgy Petrosyan, Minister of Foreign Affairs of NKR, met
with the newly-appointed EU Special Representative for the South
Caucasus Peter Semneby.

Congratulating Peter Semneby on his appointment, Georgy Petrosyan
emphasized the role of the European Union in promoting democracy and
maintaining stability in the region.

Peter Semneby informed that the mandate of the EU Special
Representative had been expanded and now includes prevention and
settlement of conflicts.

On the request of the EU Special Representative the foreign minister
of NKR briefed Peter Semneby on democratization in NKR, as well as the
stance of official Stepanakert on the settlement of the conflict,
underlining the necessity of full engagement of Nagorno Karabakh in
the talks.

Expressing concern about recently frequent cases of violation of the
ceasefire at the front line between the armed forces of Nagorno
Karabakh Republic and Azerbaijan, Georgy Petrosyan extended the text
of the statement of the NKR Foreign Ministry, calling Azerbaijan and
Armenia for confirming their willingness to achieve a peace settlement
of the Karabakh conflict.

NKR Special Representation to RA

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

The Services of Ambulatory-Polyclinic System Will Always Be Free

THE SERVICES OF AMBULATORY-POLYCLINIC SYSTEM WILL ALWAYS BE FREE

Yerevan, April 7, ArmInfo. The services of the ambulatory-polyclinic
system of Armenia will always be free for all categories of citizens,
said Minister for Healthcare Norayr Davidian.

Over the last 15 years the healthcare services were chargeable for
everybody except the indigent. Since the beginning of 2006 these
services have become free. In order to provide free ambulatory
treatment at the polyclinics additional AMD 7 billion (about $14
million) was granted by Government. Minister Norayr Davidian also
informed that last year the polyclinics of Armenia were visited 6,635
million times by the citizens.

The state budget 2006 assigns AMD 39,1 billion to healthcare against
32,9 in 2005. The polyclinics receive the major part – AMD 14,3 billon
of all the financing, 24,7% more than last year.

Silent for too long, the witnesses to evil

Silent for too long, the witnesses to evil

The Independent – United Kingdom; Apr 08, 2006
ROBERT FISK
X-Sender: Asbed Bedrossian <[email protected]>
X-Listprocessor-Version: 8.1 — ListProcessor(tm) by CREN

A quote from the cops. I was in Oslo when I received the SMS on my
Lebanese mobile phone from the country’s Internal Security Forces,
Lebanon’s paramilitary ISF. “Dear citizen,” it began – and I have to
admit, I liked the assumption of Lebanese citizenship. “Starting March
15th, the Internal Security Forces will be dealing strictly with
traffic contraventions. Be co-operative for your safety. The ISF.”

Now I’m sure the “for your safety” bit was just a figure of speech’ I
would be safer in my car if I wore my seatbelt, wouldn’t I? Was that
why my driver Abed met me at Beirut airport strapped into his seatbelt
for the first time? Or was there a threat? That in order to be “safe”
I should be “‘co-operative”?

All the same, I like cops. They know what we journalists want to know
(along, I suppose, with criminals whose own mentality, I suspect, has
a lot in common with policemen and reporters). But in Lebanon these
past few days, we’ve been learning quite a lot about what the cops
know – or knew – about the past: like who killed the Lebanese Druze
leader Kemal Jumblatt.

Jumblatt Senior – as opposed to his mercifully still living son Walid
who is under constant threat of Syrian assassination – was murdered on
16 March 1977, shot dead in his car as he drove near his home in the
Chouf mountains. We all suspected at the time that the Syrians were
involved’ Kemal had turned down an invitation to visit the late
President Hafez el-Assad of Syria in Damascus to discuss the Lebanese
civil war – the equivalent at that time, of refusing Henry VIII a
divorce.

But now along comes my old friend General Issam Abu Zaki, former head
of the Lebanese judicial police, to spill the beans. For General Abu
Zaki – a man so generous he once gave away his much-loved worry beads
because a female friend of mine was rash enough to admire them – turns
out to have been the cop in charge of the Jumblatt murder case.

In 1977, an American car containing drugs had been discovered at
Beirut port, the general has revealed in the Beirut daily AnNahar
newspaper. But outside the gates of the port, the vehicle was stopped
at a Syrian military checkpoint. The Lebanese judicial police later
confirmed that a Syrian intelligence officer based in the Beirut
suburb of Sin el-Fil – a major in rank – stated in writing that he was
in possession of the car.

“A short time later,” Abu Zaki writes, “the car made an appearance in
the Chouf, lying in wait for Kemal Jumblatt as he headed … to
attend a party political meeting. As Jumblatt’s car passed the
American car, the latter pulled out and tailed the Druze leader’s
vehicle. The pursuing car had four people in it, two in civilian
clothes, the other two in military uniforms. Upon leaving the town of
Baaqleen, the suspect American vehicle intercepted Jumblatt’s car.

“Kemal Jumblatt’s bodyguards were bundled into the American vehicle,
and two of the pursuers replaced them… the two cars had barely
travelled 900 metres when something happened that evidently took the
abductors by surprise, for they braked suddenly, as evidenced by the
tyre skid marks on the road left by Jumblatt’ s car. The sudden stop
led to the American car crashing into the back of Jumblatt’ s car. At
this moment the heinous crime took place.”

Jumblatt was murdered with a shot in the head – his brains splashed
over the morning news-paperhehadbeen reading when he was ambushed –
and the killers made their escape. From the knives found in Jumblatt’s
car, Abu Zaki and his cops suspected the attackers intended to take
the Druze leader to a neighbouring Christian village where they would
have cut his throat and thus provoked further atrocities in Lebanon’s
already two-year-old civil war. But Jumblatt struggled with the
Syrians who were forced to shoot him on the spot.

Or so Abu Zaki surmises. Jumblatt’s son Walid told me this week he
believes this story to be true – just as did a Beirut flower seller
called Abu Talib who reported to Abu Zaki back in 1977 that the Syrian
killers had later stopped at a Hamra Street hotel in the city. So too,
apparently, did the Lebanese judicial investigative judge, Hassan
Qawass, who survived an abduction attempt and a missile attack on his
Beirut home when he refused to drop the case.

Alas, a “highly placed legal authority” in Lebanon was later suborned
to close the Jumblatt file.

But now we know a little more about that 1977 murder and so Abu Zaki
wonders whether we will also know the truth about the assassination
last year of former Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Hariri whose death
is being investigated, in ever more lacklustre a fashion, it seems, by
the UN. Yet it raises other, bigger questions.

Why, for example, don’t cops and diplomats and statesmen come out with
the facts at the time? Why do they wait till their retirement to blurt
out the truth? Why did we only know the truth from the top about
Vietnam after Robert McNamara had become a Grand Old Man of Letters?
Why did we have to wait for decades to know that General Sir Douglas
Haig lied in 1916? Why do we have to wait until 2006 to learn that we
tortured Germans in 1946?

Well, just look at what has happened to John Evans, the US ambassador
to Armenia who – while in office – told the truth about the Armenian
holocaust, the genocide by the Ottoman Turks which killed one and a
half million Armenian Christians in 1915. Before he was elected
president, George W Bush promised the Armenians of America that he
would acknowledge this genocide. Once in office, however, he caved in,
gutlessly calling it a “tragedy” so that he wouldn’t get his fingers
burned by that wonderful democratic Nato ally – and would-be EU member
– called Turkey.

But there was Ambassador Evans on 19 February this year telling
Armenians in the Bay area of San Francisco that “as someone who has
studied it, there’s no doubt in my mind what happened. I think it is
unbecoming of us, as Americans, to play word games here. I believe in
calling things by their name. I will today call it the Armenian
genocide”.

The luckless but over-truthful ambassador has since been constrained
by the State Department to remark that “although I told my audience
that United States policy on the Armenian tragedy (sic) has not
changed, I used the term ‘genocide’, speaking in what I characterised
as my personal capacity”.

Phew! But I think I get it. If you want to spill the beans while in
office, you have to tell the truth only in “a personal capacity”. The
mass rape and slaughter of tens of thousands of Armenian girls in 1915
can only be acknowledged in a “personal capacity”. The mass murder of
Turkish Armenia’s manhood in 1915 can only be conceded in a “personal
capacity”. And even then you are liable to get fired.

Well, I have a little nudge of the arm to make here. In October, I
shall be lecturing in Turkey on the Armenian genocide. I shall be
doing so as Middle East correspondent of The Independent as well as
author of a book whose Turkish edition will carry a whole chapter on
the Armenian holocaust. I don’t have to talk in a “personal capacity”
although I might like to have General Abu Zaki at my side. For what
the Lebanese ISF would no doubt call my “safety”.

If you want to spill the beans while in office, you have to do it in
‘a personal capacity’

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

A `Tacit’ Step By Step Settlement

A `TACIT’ STEP BY STEP SETTLEMENT

Azat Artsakh, Nagorno Karabakh Republic [NKR]
07 April 2006

Recently debates and events connected with the Karabakh issue have
acquired a new quality and course. The offered solutions are so many
and so different that it seems impossible to offer a fundamentally new
solution. However, the relationships of the conflict parties have not
changed and still lack confidence. Hence, `bridges’ are needed rather
to bring into being one of the existing solutions. This first of all
requires mutual confidence or at least a constructive dialogue on good
faith. The official bilateral and mediated meetings of the
representatives of Armenia and Azerbaijan apparently cannot foster the
establishment of this atmosphere. As a result the role of the
non-governmental sector increases, and recently it has been quite
active. In this context the Dartmouth Conference is a significant
step. This is an American initiative since 2001. The delegations of
Azerbaijan, Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh participate in the activity
of the Dartmouth Conference Regional Conflicts Task Force. The task
force has effective relations with both NGOs and official
bodies. After the meetings in Baku and Armenia the task force arrived
in Stepanakert on April 1. The US co-chairman Harold Saunders, the
Russian co-chairman Vitaly Naumkin, as well as Phil Steward and Irina
Zvyagelskaya met with the representatives of non-governmental and
political organizations at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The core
question discussed at the meeting was the draft of the framework
agreement on the peace settlement of the Karabakh issue, worked out in
2005, during the ninth meeting of the Dartmouth Conference. Harold
Saunders briefed the main principles of the document. According to
him, none of the sides wants a deadlocked negotiation for the peace
settlement of the Karabakh conflict. However, he also pointed out that
it is impossible to lay bridges of agreement between the logically
opposite views that the sides have today. By the way, Harold Saunders
meant Nagorno Karabakh as a conflict side. For the role of the
framework agreement in establishing this bridge, Harold Saunders
thinks if applied it would establish serious progress in the talks. He
characterized it as a peace-building plan, in which every next step is
possible after the fulfilment of the previous one, rather than a
document that would establish peace at once. Accordingly, the process
is divided into two parts. In the first one it is foreseen to
establish an atmosphere, take actions and create conditions for the
second stage, when a final resolution of the issue will be
reached. The Russian co-chairman Vitaly Naumkin pointed out the fact
that the representatives of the United States and Russia, which have
considerable controversies with regard to conflict settlement, act
together in the peace settlement of the conflict over Karabakh. It is
interesting to know the status, however. According to him, it is
impossible to settle the Karabakh issue at once. First it is necessary
to create an atmosphere. With regard to this Vitaly Naumkin said it is
impossible to achieve results at once. Therefore, it is preferable to
take a tiny step than not to do anything at all. And the engagement
of Karabakh in the talks will, according to him, have only positive
results for it. Nagorno Karabakh will be recognized in international
relations, and will have the right to sign certain agreements and make
commitments. The representatives of the NKR NGOs and political
organizations disagreed to certain principles and terms used in the
document with regard to the step-by-step resolution of the conflict
and the status of Nagorno Karabakh. Margarita Karapetyan, Official of
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of NKR, said: `The document does not
state clearly the legal status of Nagorno Karabakh, which is of utter
importance for the Karabakh side. Here a de-facto, an ` intermediate’
status is mentioned only. On the other hand, the step-by-step
settlement underlies this document, determining the peace settlement
by the return of certain territories, the problem of refugees, etc. It
is very important that it is done through successive steps, the first,
then the second, etc. Practically, in accordance with the document,
the conflict over Karabakh and its settlement is viewed from the
aspect of elimination of the consequences rather than the cause of the
conflict ` the status of NKR.’

NORAYR HOVSEPIAN.
07-04-2006

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Azerbaijan Says U.S. Proposals On Karabakh ‘Very Interesting’

Radio Free Europe, Czech Rep
April 8 2006

Azerbaijan Says U.S. Proposals On Karabakh ‘Very Interesting’

April 8, 2006 — Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov
today said the United States made him “very interesting” proposals on
how to solve his country’s territorial dispute with Armenia.

Speaking after talks with U.S. officials in Washington, Mammadyarov
said Baku would make its response public when U.S. envoy Steven Mann
visits the Azerbaijani capital on April 18.

Before meeting with Mammadyarov on April 7, U.S. Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice reportedly talked with the Armenian and Azerbaijani
presidents over the phone.

Yerevan and Baku have been formally at war since 1988, when the
predominantly ethnic Armenian enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh seceded
from Soviet Azerbaijan.

The United States, Russia, and France co-chair the Minsk Group of
nations mandated by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe to mediate between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Proposal of CoE: “Let a New Mayor of Baku be elected”

Today, Azerbaijan
April 8 2006

Proposal of Council of Europe: “Let a New Mayor of Baku be elected”

08 April 2006 [19:16] – Today.Az

Recently third meeting of steering project group on creation of
National Associations of local authorities started.

Working Group aims at rendering assistance in development of
municipalities of Azerbaijan. Expert of Council of Europe, Owen
Masters, underlined that professionalism of group members has been
improved. Besides, he informed that the events for learning demands
of municipality would be held.

Although opinions regarding creation of the unions of local steering
authorities in the South Caucasus were repeated, however accordingly
to O. Masters today given project cannot be realized. Expert informed
that “Conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia prevents it”, but in
future Council of Europe intents to realize such a project.

Masters emphasized the importance of the uniting of all
municipalities of Azerbaijan within one organization, He informed
that within the frames of the project on creation National
Association of local authorities in Azerbaijan, training would be
held abroad: “This step aims at informing municipalities regarding
Association and bringing importance of the given issue to their
notice. Project will concern municipalities of Azerbaijan; it will be
completed in 2007. Then the Association itself will be established.”

“In the name of Civil Society” NGO Coordinator, Fikret Rzayev, gave
information about members of Working Group. He said that depending on
the venue and possibilities, he get acquainted with all
municipalities.

Head of department of Presidential Administration on the work with
municipalities, Ramig Gashimov, informed about his intention to
cooperate with the Council of Europe for development of the above
structures. Council of Europe will provide possibility for
Azerbaijani municipality to make their own choice.

Project Manager, Karlen Martin, informed that meetings are expected
to be held at the regions for informing purposes. Besides, it was
stressed that abroad there would be held training. Accordingly to K.
Martin publishing of journal of National Association would be
possible. Project Manager underlined that proposal on appointment of
mayor of Baku via election not via direct appointment will be
considered.

“Although a proposal on appointment of mayor of the capital via
election was submitted, no discussions were held in this connection,”
Ramig Gashimov, Head of department of Presidential Administration on
the work with municipalities, said.

According to him, the above proposal was submitted by the President
of Congress on Regional and Local authorities, Dee Stazi. However,
today country is experiencing process of formation of municipalities
that is why the issue on creation of municipality of the city is high
on the agenda.

/

URL:

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.today.az/news/society/24932.html
www.demaz.org/

BAKU: Oskanyan: “We are ready to host Azerbaijani team in Yerevan”

Today, Azerbaijan
April 8 2006

Vardan Oskanyan: “We are ready to host Azerbaijani team in Yerevan”

08 April 2006 [08:29] – Today.Az

“We are ready to provide all conditions to conduct the meeting
against Azerbaijani national football team in Yerevan,” said Armenian
FM Vardan Oskanian.

The matter is, though Azerbaijani and Armenian national teams have to
meet within the qualifying stage of the European Cup in Austria and
Switzerland in 2008, the Foreign Minister of the aggressive country
said he had talks with International Football Federation-FIFA not
with European Football Union-UEFA.

“We are having talks with FIFA. I hope Azerbaijan will provide
everything for meeting in Baku,” Oskanyan said.
Secretary General of Azerbaijan Football Federation (AFFA) Fuad
Asadov told APA that he was not informed about Armenians talking with
FIFA.

“Armenians might have talks with FIFA. However, AFFA is determined in
its position,” Asadov stated, APA informs.

URL:

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.today.az/news/society/24917.html

Free Kurdistan

NewsByUs, ID
April 8 2006

Free Kurdistan

By: Bruce Walker: on Apr 07, 2006

Recent nuances and nudges in government policy as well as tacit
support for the most obscene anti-Semitism and anti-Americanism by
the ruling political party of Turkey ought to cause the United States
to begin to rethink its comprehensive policy toward Asia in general
and toward one non-Arab minority in Iraq in particular: the Kurds.

What, today, is the most intractable political problem in Iraq? It
is the very real political and religious aims of Shiite, Sunni and
Kurdish regions of the nation. Since the inception of Operation
Iraqi Freedom, President Bush has maintained that the unity of the
nation of Iraq was non-negotiable. In politics and in war, however,
nothing should be non-negotiable.

Iraq is not a nation in any real sense, but it was rather three
separate concentration camps each with differing degrees of
oppression. The Sunnis, the smallest group in the economically and
landlocked center of Iraq, had the most to gain by making peace
quickly and joining a unity government. Coalition forces have
supported the ungrateful Sunnis by opposing a partition of Iraq. Now
President Bush should embrace such a division.

This would divide Iraq into three separate nations: a relatively
unimportant Bagdad Iraq of Sunnis, a Basra Iraq of Shiites who could
govern themselves without the need for Iranian support, and an Mosul
Iraq which would be the first true homeland for Kurds in many
centuries, an oil rich area that is well able to defend itself and
has shown the most gratitude to America of the three nations of Iraq.

Why has America shied away from this approach? The principal reason
is that Kurds are a dispossessed people whose natural homeland
stretches across much of the Middle East. A substantial number of
Kurds live in Iran, which is as close to a mortal enemy of the United
States as there is in the world today. American support for
reclaiming those colonial possession of Teheran and the incorporation
of those lands into Kurdistan would roughly double the area of the
Iraqi Kurds.

A significant, but smaller, number of Kurds live in Syria, an enemy
of America and a supporter both of the Iraqi insurgency and of
international terrorism. If the Baathist regime did not give up its
Kurdish lands, then the Kurds, with American military support, should
smash the Syrian Army and force as humiliating a peace treaty as
possible on Damascus.

The majority of the thirty million or so Kurds, however, live in
Turkey – almost one quarter of the population of Turkey. That, more
than anything else, has stayed our hand so far. Kurdistan with the
southeast quarter of Turkey, is a fairly large nation.
Traditionally, Turkey has been an ally of America, but that has been
changing fast and Turkish support for American policies has always
been based entirely on cynical self-interest. We owe Turkey –
neutral in World War Two and our enemy in World War One – nothing.

Our support for Turkey costs us the goodwill of Greeks, Armenians and
other European nations that suffered through centuries of Turkish
oppression. It also has cost of much of the goodwill of Kurds, who
would otherwise welcome the presence of a superpower that was not
intolerant, not Arab, and sought nothing but friendly relations with
it.

Another important reason for supporting a true Kurdistan is that the
Kurds are a genuinely diverse people. Although they were forced to
covert to Islam, today only about seventy percent of the Kurds are
Moslem, and many of those only nominally, Jews, Christians,
Zoroastrians (or a faith much akin to that) and Bahai have lived
within the long-persecuted Kurdish community with their first
allegiance as Kurds, and there is no single branch of Islam that
clearly dominates the Kurdish community.

Kurdistan could then be a democracy with an Islamic majority that was
genuinely inclusive of all faiths, both needing the support of all
Kurds to survive (much like Israel) and also because of centuries of
living largely underground, tolerant of all Kurds. There is little
doubt that it would become an affluent nation as capable of defending
itself as Israel is today, and that along with the establishment of a
truly free and democratic Lebanon, would create three strong, free
and prosperous democracies which would naturally become allies or at
least friends.

The dismemberment of Iran, which would lose ten percent of its
population, and the humiliation of Syria, which would be forced into
a very precarious position, would be great peripheral benefits. The
downside has always been the impact on Turkey, but a Turkey which
continues to deny its Armenian holocaust and is rapidly moving toward
denial of HaShoah as it embraces vicious anti-Semitism, should
increasingly lose our concern about its interests.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

U,S. hopeful for progress on rift over Nagorno-Karabakh

U,S. hopeful for progress on rift over Nagorno-Karabakh

AP Worldstream; Apr 07, 2006

The State Department said Friday it is hopeful Azerbaijan and Armenia
can make progress toward ending their dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh.

That issue came up on Friday during a meeting between Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice and Azeri Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarove.

State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said that ahead of the
meeting, Rice spoke with the Azeri and Armenian presidents.

The two leaders met recently in France.

“We hope that both sides can in the wake of the talks in France again
provide some renewed impetus to those discussions and come to an
agreement that would resolve this longstanding issue,” McCormack said.

Rice and Mammadyarove also discussed economic reform and
democratization in Azerbaijan.

“The secretary emphasized the importance of respect for human rights
and moving forward on the democratization process in Azerbaijan,”
McCormack said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress