ASBAREZ Online [04-12-2004]

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04/12/2004
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WEBSITE AT <;HTTP:// 1) Vote of Confidence 'Recommendation' Not Mandatory Stresses Constitutional Court 2) Pro-Government Majority Boycotts Parliament Sessions 3) Opposition Rally Continues into Monday 4) Iraqi Gunmen Batter US Supply Lines 1) Vote of Confidence 'Recommendation' Not Mandatory Stresses Constitutional Court YEREVAN (Armenpress)--Armenia's Constitutional Court again clarified its April 15, 2003 decision recommending a vote of confidence in the president, in an effort to end attempts to exploit the decision in "pursuit of political goals," stemming from "unawareness of constitutional justice," it said in a statement. Issued on Monday, the statement stresses that the Constitutional Court upheld the country's Central Electoral Commission decision on the results of presidential elections, and that the decision is final and binding; it also spelled-out the nature and rationale of its suggestion for a vote of confidence. "When regulating a national conflict, the Constitutional Court must not only provide a concrete legal solution, but must also outline (keeping in mind the country's legal and democratic development) realistic legal means for regulating social and political issues. The Constitutional Court stressed in its decision that since possible confrontation could greatly endanger the country, the conflict must be overcome democratically. One of the suggested methods was to hold a [presidential] referendum of confidence, which supposes direct utilization of democratic potentials. The proposal was underlined as a non-compulsory proposal, bearing no legal consequences." The statement also emphasizes that that it made no decision on the constitutionality of the Law on Referendums, allowing the National Assembly (NA) to pursue the issue, taking into consideration the NA's commitments before the Council of Europe that call for reforms of election laws. "More than 110 Constitutional Courts currently operate throughout world, and their decisions, without exception, include both mandatory decisions and non-compulsory recommendations. Thus, the Constitutional Court of Armenia requests that its decision be viewed only from a legal point and attempts to make it a subject of political speculation be halted," concludes the statement. 2) Pro-Government Majority Boycotts Parliament Sessions YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--A regular session of Armenia's parliament was disrupted on Monday after the majority of deputies representing the ruling government coalition refused to attend. A brief statement by the Republican Party (HHK), the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF), and the Orinats Yerkir Party said the move is aimed at "avoiding artificial tensions." Deputy parliament speaker and ARF leader Vahan Hovannisian, stated that the coalition partners want to stave off possible clashes between their supporters and the opposition crowd. Some leaders of the parliament's opposition minority, which has been boycotting its sessions since February, were quick to criticize the boycott. Victor Dallakian of the Artarutyun (Justice) bloc accused the majority of "dodging responsibility" for the increasingly tense situation. But Artashes Geghamian, the leader of the National Unity Party, welcomed it, saying that the ruling coalition defied Kocharian. 3) Opposition Rally Continues into Monday YEREVAN (Reuters, Yerkir)--Up to 5,000 opposition protestors marched through the Armenian capital of Yerevan on Monday to demand the resignation of the nation's president. The protestors are calling for President Robert Kocharian to either step down, or for a nationwide confidence vote to take place on the Kocharian administration. Speaking at the rally National Democratic Union leader Vazgen Manukian, said that neither the removal of the existing president or a new president will resolve problems, and suggested a plan be developed to draw the population out their situation. Victor Dallakian, in turn, said it is not Robert Kocharian they oppose, rather his administration. Riot troops sealed off the presidential offices and the nation's parliament building. Two deputies affiliated with the Artarutyun (Justice) bloc, Tatul Manaserian and Vartan Khachatrian, were briefly detained on Monday as they campaigned in the city's northern and southern districts, urging local residents to attend the opposition rally due in the afternoon. Over the weekend, prosecutors said that two armed men were detained on Friday for allegedly planning to carry out a "terrorist act" on behalf of an opposition lawmaker. The statement claimed that the opposition paid the two men to shoot at and "terrorize" its own supporters during a street protest. State-run Armenian Public Television aired late on Monday the footage of an interrogation of the two men who claimed to have been paid by Artarutyun lawmaker Smbat Ayvazian to fire gunshots and "spread panic" during the first opposition rally held in Yerevan on Friday. According to the Armenian Police Service, 31 residents of Yerevan have been sentenced to between two and six days in prison while 28 others fined for attending the unsanctioned anti-Kocharian demonstrations in the capital. The police had no information on detained residents of other Armenian regions. Also on Sunday, the authorities made a second arrest in their separate criminal investigation into the opposition campaign for regime change. Aramazad Zakarian, a senior member of the Hanrapetutyun party affiliated with Artarutyun, was held as he tried to enter Freedom Square. 4) Iraqi Gunmen Batter US Supply Lines FALLUJAH (AP)--Under pressure from the US military, a Shiite Muslim cleric withdrew his militiamen Monday from police stations and government buildings in three key southern cities after taking control from coalition forces last week. Elsewhere, there were daring rebel attacks on US supply convoys Monday, when the military also reported two American soldiers and seven employees of a US contractor had been missing for at least two days after an ambush in the Sunni Triangle region west of Baghdad. China reported Monday that seven of its citizens were taken hostage. Three Czech journalists also were missing. An Iraqi official said 12 foreign hostages had been released Monday without giving any details. The top US military spokesman, meanwhile, said about 70 Americans and 700 insurgents had been killed this month, the bloodiest since the fall of Baghdad a year ago. In Najaf, a lawyer representing cleric Muqtada al-Sadr said police were back on the streets and in their stations for the first time since the al-Mahdi Army militia took control last week. Witnesses and police in Karbala and Kufa said the militiamen had pulled back there as well. "Al-Sayed al-Sadr issued instructions for his followers to leave the sites of police and the government," said lawyer Murtada al-Janabi, one of al-Sadr's representatives in negotiations with Iraqi Shiite political parties on ending the US standoff. One of the US demands in the talks was the return of police and government control in all three cities al-Sadr's militia took over--Najaf, Kufa, and Karbala. The Americans, who are not taking part in the talks, also demanded the dissolution in the al-Mahdi Army. The military said it had the cities of Kut, Nasiriyah, and Hillah under control. Sanchez said he did not know where al-Sadr was, but he was last known to be in Najaf. "The mission of US forces is to kill or capture Muqtada al-Sadr. That is our mission," Sanchez said. A tenuous cease-fire was holding in Fallujah, but more US forces maneuvered into place around the city, and commanders said they were not yet ready to negotiate with the insurgents. The military has been trying to regain control of supply routes after several convoys were ambushed and at least 10 truck drivers kidnapped. Nine were released, but an American--Thomas Hamill of Macon, Miss.--remained a captive. On Monday, a convoy of flatbed trucks carrying M113 armored personnel carriers was attacked and burned on a road in Latifiya, 20 miles south of Baghdad. Witnesses said three people were killed. A supply truck was also ambushed and set ablaze Monday on the road from Baghdad's airport. Looters moved in to carry away goods from the truck as Iraqi police looked on without intervening. An attack on a convoy Sunday killed a Romanian working for a security company, Romania's ambassador to Iraq said. Two German security guards were killed on a highway last week, prompting Germany to urge all of its citizens to leave Iraq on Monday. Securing roads has now become a top priority for the military, US Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt said Monday. "Over the past 24 hours we have put significant amount of combat power on both areas of operation to open up those lines of communication so we can not only resupply our forces in Fallujah, Ramadi and our forces down south, but also make those roads safe for travel," Kimmit said. "They're at a condition that we would call amber; it is certainly not green yet," he said. Three US Marines were killed Sunday in Anbar province, the area that includes Fallujah, the military said Monday without giving further details. An attack on an Army patrol in Samarra, 60 miles north of Baghdad, killed a soldier from the 1st Armored Division and injured four others on Sunday. Kimmitt on Monday released the first full casualty statistics since widespread fighting erupted on April 4. "The coalition casualties since April 1 run about 70 personnel. ... The casualty figures we have received from the enemy are somewhere about 10 times that amount, what we've inflicted on the enemy," he told a Baghdad press conference. About 600 Iraqi dead, mostly civilians, were recorded by the main hospital and four clinics in Fallujah, hospital director Rafie al-Issawi told The Associated Press. In all, about 880 Iraqis have been killed, according to an AP count, based on statements by Iraqi hospital officials, US military statements and Iraqi police. President Bush prepared Americans for the possibility of more US casualties. "It was a tough week last week and my prayers and thoughts are with those who pay the ultimate price for our security," Bush said. Marines on Sunday investigated a bomb-making factory first uncovered three days earlier. Along with five suicide belts found in the initial raid, they uncovered US military uniforms--suggesting suicide bombers may try to get close to American forces, Lt. Col. Brennan Byrne said. Sanchez, the top US commander in Iraq, acknowledged that a battalion of the Iraqi army refused to fight in Fallujah--a sign of Iraqi discontent with the siege. Asked about the battalion's refusal on NBC's "Meet The Press," Sanchez said, "This one specific instance did in fact uncover some significant challenges in some of the Iraqi security force structures ... We know that it's going to take us a while to stand up reliable forces that can accept responsibility." Some 900 members of the Iraqi Civil Defense Corps are with three battalions of Marines. US forces on Sunday examined a captured insurgent cache of suicide belts--raising concerns of a deadly new tactic in the city's fighting. Bush held out hope for the Fallujah talks, saying the United States was "open to suggestions" on reducing the violence. Meanwhile, a rash of kidnappings continued. Seven Chinese civilians were abducted by insurgents in central Iraq Sunday evening, China's government said. A Czech television reporter, cameraman and radio reporter were also missing and believed kidnapped, their employers said. In the last week, militants have kidnapped more than 30 civilians from at least 12 countries. Mohsen Abdul-Hamid, a Sunni Muslim, who is also the head of the Iraqi Islamic Party, said up to 12 foreigners taken hostage had been released, but he did not identify the nationalities of the hostages or where they were. Still unknown was the fate of Hamill, whose captors threatened to kill him unless the Marines withdrew from Fallujah. Other insurgents promised to release three Japanese by Sunday, but the Japanese Embassy in Baghdad said Monday they had not been freed. In the south, members of the Iraqi Governing Council have reportedly held talks with followers of al-Sadr. One factor that has held off US action to uproot al-Sadr's al-Mahdi Army militia was the presence of up to 1.5 million Shiite pilgrims in Karbala for Sunday's al-Arbaeen ceremonies, one of the holiest days of the Shiite religious calendar. Most pilgrims had left the city by Monday morning. US commanders are demanding that control of Iraqi police and US-led coalition forces in the cities be restored and that insurgents in Fallujah lay down their arms and hand over Iraqis who killed and mutilated four American civilians on March 31. Despite the truce in Fallujah, guerrillas overnight made sporadic attacks, said Byrne. Marines killed two insurgents setting up a machine gun near a patrol and others were fired on by gunmen hiding in a school, he said. The bodies of 11 Iraqis were seen brought to a makeshift clinic in a city mosque Sunday. Most of the Iraqis killed in Fallujah in fighting that started April 5 were women, children and elderly, said al-Issawi, the Fallujah hospital director. Byrne cast doubt on the numbers and said he was confident troops in his 1st Battalion, 5th Regiment had not killed any civilians. "Just because (the Iraqis) say it's so, doesn't meant it's so," he said. Fallujah residents took advantage of the lull in fighting to bury their dead in two soccer fields. One of the fields, seen by an AP reporter had rows of freshly dug graves, some marked on headstones as children or with the names of women. A gravedigger at the site said that more than 300 people were buried there. All subscription inquiries and changes must be made through the proper carrier and not Asbarez Online. ASBAREZ ONLINE does not transmit address changes and subscription requests. (c) 2004 ASBAREZ ONLINE. All Rights Reserved. ASBAREZ provides this news service to ARMENIAN NEWS NETWORK members for academic research or personal use only and may not be reproduced in or through mass media outlets. From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

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Oskanyan is off to Tehran

Armenian foreign minister off to Tehran
Moscow, April 12, IRNA — Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanyan,
headed for Tehran Monday to review ways of expanding mutual
cooperation in various fields, it was announced today.
Oskanyan, heading a high-ranking delegation, is scheduled to confer
with First Vice-President Mohammad-Reza Aref, Secretary of the Supreme
National Security Council (SNSC) Hassan Rowhani and Foreign Minister
Kamal Kharrazi.
The Armenian foreign minister and senior Iranian officials are to
review issues of mutual interests as well as latest regional
developments.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Business-Forum “Investment Potentialities of Armenia” in UAE

BUSINESS-FORUM “INVESTMENT POTENTIALITIES OF ARMENIA” HELD IN UAE ON APRIL
3-7
YEREVAN, APRIL 12. ARMINFO. A business-forum on the topic “Investment
potentialities of the Republic of Armenia” was held in United Arab
Emirates on April 3-7. ARMINFO was informed in the press office of the
Foreign Ministry, the purpose of the business-forum was the
development of Armenia-UAE trade cooperation, increase of the volume
of trade between two countries, as well as more profitable
presentation of the economic and industrial potential of Armenia. For
this purpose a delegation, consisting of representatives of 25
Armenian companies, have arrived in the UAE. During the meetings the
Armenian entrepreneurs have introduced the dynamics of the economic
development of Armenia, more quickly developing and prosperous
directions of the industry of the republic, as well as the main
legislative base which coordinates the investment field of the
country. The participants of the business-forum mainly acquainted with
the opening possibilities in the sphere of information technologies,
pharmacology, jewelry goods, in the sphere of light and chemical
industry, power engineering and other spheres.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

CC: Proposal for Referendum on Confidence in Prez Not Imperative

PROPOSAL FOR REFERENDUM ON CONFIDENCE IN PRESIDENT NOT IMPERATIVE: CC
YEREVAN, APRIL 12. ARMINFO. The RA Constitutional Court (CC) stated
once more that by its decision of April 16, 2003, it upheld the
decision on the election of Robert Kocharian Armenia’s President,
which was adopted by the RA Central Electoral Commission on March 11,
2003. The CC’s decision was final and imperative.
In its statement provided to ARMINFO, the CC once more stressed that
the CC’s proposal for holding of a referendum on confidence in the
President within a year is not imperative and does not have any legal
consequences. According to the statement, the CC’s proposal was
supposed to relieve political tension on the threshold of the
parliamentary elections and referendum on constitutional amendments on
May 25, 2003. In its statement, the CC calls for retraining from
making its proposal a subject of political speculations.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Coalition Refuses to Take Part in Three-Day Session of Parliament

COALITION REFUSES TO TAKE PART IN THIS THREE-DAY SESSION OF PARLIAMENT
BECAUSE IT WANTS TO PREVENT POSSIBLE CONFRONTATION
YEREVAN, APRIL 12. ARMINFO. The representatives of the ruling
coalition of Armenia motivated their refusal to take part in the
current three-day session of the National Assembly by that they want
to prevent the possible confrontation between the supporters of the
opposition and pro-power forces. Representatives of the ruling
coalition told the journalists today. According to them, today
procession of the opposition up Baghramyan avenue, where the
parliament and the residence of the president are situated, may create
pre-requisites for skirmish between the participants of the procession
and supporters of the ruling coalition, who may come to the building
of the parliament.
Talking to journalists the Vice Speaker of the parliament, member of
the Bureau of the party ARF Dashnaktsutiun Vahan Hovhannisian again
stressed that the requirement of the opposition to include in the
agenda the bill on making amendments to the law on referendum, is not
acceptable for the ruling coalition. “The coalition’s refusing to
take part in the current three-day session of the parliament is not
connected at all with this issue. The representatives of the ruling
coalition have the right not to take part in the sittings of the
parliament just as the representatives of the other parliamentary
forces”, the vice speaker said. At the same time Vahan Hovhannisian
stressed that the ruling coalition is ready to sit down at the
negotiation table with the opposition to discuss the internal
political situation.
Talking to ARMINFO, Chairman of the deputy group “People’s deputy”
Karen Karapetian considered unwarrantable the refusal of the coalition
to take part in the sittings of the National Assembly. According to
him, the internal political situation in the republic is not so
strained in order to resort to such extreme measures. The leader of
the deputy group expressed an opinion that one of the reasons for the
refusal of the ruling coalition is that the agenda of this three-day
session includes only 13 questions, which may be concluded during one
sitting.
Karen Karapetian pointed out that the ruling coalition and other
parliamentary forces have their share of fault in that the opposition
has taken such a irreconcilable position. The deputy thinks that the
ruling majority of the parliament could not find bearings and
elaborate a right tactics of work with the opposition. “We must sit
down at the negotiations table, as no one of the sides can be a
winner, and the whole people will be the loser”, Karen Karapetian
said. According to him, even in the case of reaching power in the
antagonistic situation the opposition cannot change the situation in
the country fundamentally, and the republic will appear in permanent
process of elections and change of power. Karen Karapetian stressed
that in the presence of quorum the deputy group “People’s deputy” is
ready to take part in the three-day session of the parliament. The
leader of the faction of the United labour party Gurgen Arsenian on
behalf of the faction also expressed readiness to take part in the
three-day session of the parliament.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Azeri-Armenian Strife Has Been Set in Stone

Azeri-Armenian Strife Has Been Set in Stone
By Chloe Arnold
Tuesday, Apr. 13, 2004.
BAKU, Azerbaijan — I had never seen people queuing to get into a
cemetery until last Saturday. Some brought their children, others
brought their grandparents. Still others, who were making a day of it,
carried video cameras and bags full of sandwiches.
There’s only one person who could attract such crowds in Azerbaijan,
even after his death. And sure enough, everyone was heading to the
center of the graveyard, where Heidar Aliyev, the last president, is
now buried. Aliyev died of heart failure last year at the age of 80,
after leading the country for more than 30 years.
His grave is a lavish affair. A flight of white marble steps leads you
to a wide terrace patrolled by an armed guard. Around it, there are
benches scattered around where the hordes can rest their feet.
At the center is a massive easel bearing a photograph of Aliyev,
looking as round and cheery as the Pillsbury Doughboy. Beneath it are
dozens of bouquets of fresh flowers that are replaced every few hours.
The other graves in the cemetery — Azerbaijan’s celebrated scholars,
politicians and statesmen — are almost as flash. Some have life-size
marble statues of the deceased, others have surreal sculptures made of
glass or metal perched on top of them. One features a jungle of
plastic flowers and fronds — there are even strings of rubber grapes
slung between the trees over the gravestone.
It’s all a little different on the other side of town in the rundown
cemetery for ordinary folk. There’s no guard at the gate — there
isn’t even a gate — and one section has been completely
destroyed. The flowerbeds have been trampled, there’s graffiti and
broken glass everywhere and someone has taken a sledgehammer to the
graves, leaving nothing but fragments of stone.
It’s here that many of Baku’s Armenians are buried, in what used to be
one of the capital’s Armenian quarters. That was when Azeris and
Armenians lived side by side, and Armenians were buried just a stone’s
throw from the graves of the hundreds of Azeri soldiers killed during
World War II.
But then that was before the war over Nagorny Karabakh, which
destroyed the friendship between the two neighboring countries. The
international community has urged the two sides to reach some sort of
agreement over the disputed territory. But when hatred runs so deep
that even the dead are drawn into the conflict, there’s little hope of
reconciliation.
Ironically, Aliyev’s son Ilham, the new president, now lives just
behind the desecrated Armenian cemetery. He regularly visits his
father’s grave. But in the current climate, he’s unlikely to do
anything about the shattered gravestones on the other side of his
garden wall.
Chloe Arnold is a freelance journalist based in Baku, Azerbaijan.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenia opposition preparing large-scale protests

Armenia opposition preparing large-scale protests
ITAR-TASS News Agency
April 12, 2004 Monday 5:33 AM Eastern Time
By Tigrain Liloyan
Water cannons and trailers with barbed wire were moved to the
presidential palace in the Armenian capital Yerevan on Monday.
The opposition, which urges for the resignation of President Robert
Kocharyan, is going to begin a meeting in the afternoon and march to
the parliament’s building and offices of the presidential
administration.
The opposition accuses Kocharyan of “seizure of power as a result of
rigged elections” in 2003.
The Armenian Constitutional Court has review a plea from the
opposition about legitimacy of the presidential elections last year
and ruled that the final count of votes was correct, simultaneously
recommending the conduction of a referendum on confidence in
authorities within a year.
Now that this timeline is gone, the opposition demands the referendum,
but the parliament has rejected the idea.
Having failed to rally large numbers of people for protests on Friday
and Saturday, which were not permitted by authorities, the opposition
pins much hopes of Monday’ actions.
“This is a decisive day,” a secretary of the oppositionist
parliamentary faction Justice, Viktor Dallakyam, told Itar-Tass.
He said columns of members of the opposition would march to provinces
in order to “break through police cordons” and to lead provincial
oppositionists to the capital.
Meanwhile, the president said authorities “have enough resources in
order to curb political extremism in the country with political
means”.
The parliamentary majority declared on Monday that it would not attend
plenary sittings of the National Assembly on April12-14.
Parliament leader Artur Bagdasaryan said the decision was made “in
order to avoid an artificial exacerbation of the political situation”.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Refugee Tale Makes a Home in Your Heart

The Daily Californian
April 8, 2004
Refugee Tale Makes a Home in Your Heart: Nightmarish
Subject Matter Makes for a Reader’s `Dream’
By MEREDITH SIRES
Micheline Aharonian Marcom
THE DAYDREAMING BOY
[Riverhead Books]

We live in a day and age where Janet Jackson’s `wardrobe malfunction’
inspires an outraged public to insist on immediate drastic measures.
The masses, deeply offended, have gone so far as to call for a federal
investigation aimed at righting this wrong.
That said, I am recommending Micheline Aharonian Marcom’s `The
Daydreaming Boy’ not only for its literary value but also as an
apparently much-needed prescription of perspective.
Honestly, with the amount of sympathy generated by Vahé Tcheubjian
as he narrates his tormented existence and recalls his troubled youth
as a refugee from the Armenian Genocide, a reader risks emotional
exhaustion. But before I scare anyone into picking up the newest
Danielle Steel instead, I want to make it clear that I mean this in
the best way possible. Like a fictional Anne Frank, Vahé doesn’t
ask, so much as force you to share his burden, understand his plight
and eventually reevaluate a world that would allow such atrocities as
genocide to happen. His insightful retrospective of hopeless days
spent in a Lebanese orphanage, ironically deemed The Bird’s Nest as it
is as far from comforting as possible, is genuinely heartbreaking.
`I understand now, in this my middle years, that they gave us God in
the orphanage like the rich will give a coin to the corner beggar –
it’s enough to keep us quiet and continually searching the horizon,’
Vahé narrates.
Along with introspective analysis, the path from a grim past to a
subtler but equally dreary present is exposed through a series of
intermittent flashbacks. In this way, Marcom beautifully illustrates
the transformation of a defenseless `Turk-dog’ child mercilessly
tortured by his peers into the violently lustful, though married
Armenian man of present-day (or rather the novel’s present-day, the
1960s). Accordingly, the reader must endure an array of necessarily
disturbing, though perhaps exceedingly graphic scenes where the victim
becomes the aggressor. It is notable, however, that even when this is
the case, Vahé’s constant self-awareness allows him to draw
parallels between himself and those he victimizes. From his next door
neighbor’s frightened 10-year-old Palestinian servant girl to the
psychotic monkey at the local zoo, the novel is littered with physical
manifestations of Vahé’s inner turmoil. And through this vulnerable
stream-of-consciousness, Malcom effectively humanizes our protagonist
by reminding us of the motives lying behind his deviant actions.
With such a powerful, unique style, the story, although somewhat
gruesome, is enthralling. Short chapters are packed with poignant
questions and such haunting memories you are almost surprised to find
that it is not a grown-up Vahé looking up at you from the book
jacket’s back cover. As I said before, though you are hopelessly
heartsick by the last page you still find yourself satisfied. Which is
probably more than you can say when you put down the latest issue of
`People.’
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Apostles met grisly ends

Apostles met grisly ends
Bucks County Courier Times
April 11, 2004
by J. D. Mullane
After the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus, what happened to the 12
apostles?
We know they hid in an upper room, fearing they would be crucified, too.
Scripture states Jesus appeared to them, that Thomas doubted, and that they
went out into the world to preach.
Then what?
It’s hard to say for sure. History is sketchy when it comes to the 12, and
it’s tough to separate fact from the thick cloud of Bible lore, tradition
and faithful belief.
John, for example, is believed to have written the Book of Revelation, with
its frightening images of the apocalypse. Also, his preachings were so
effective he supposedly was tossed into a vat of boiling oil by Roman
authorities, but miraculously emerged unharmed.
Andrew is said to have parted an ocean with a cup of water.
Philip allegedly killed a black fiery dragon, and was accompanied on his
journeys by his sister, Miriam, who was martyred.
Whatever really happened, this much is clear: Most apostles were put to
death because they refused to deny Jesus.
Here’s a list of what happened to the 12 men Jesus picked to spread his
message, according to books and scholarly articles:
Peter married Perpetua and they had two children, a boy and girl. After
Jesus’ death and resurrection, Peter was perhaps the most aggressive
disciple and most visible face of the early Christian church. King Herod
tossed him in prison. Christian lore states an angel freed him. He preached
throughout Asia Minor, where Mark joined him and gathered material for his
gospel. He became the first bishop of the Church of Rome, where he was
crucified by the Roman Emperor Nero in 64 A.D.
Andrew, a fisherman and the first apostle, preached throughout Scythia,
today in the area of Ukraine. He was crucified on an x-shaped cross on
orders of the Roman governor Aegeas. He was tied to the cross rather than
nailed to prolong suffering.
James the Elder was a fiery speaker and personality who probably traveled
throughout Spain after the resurrection. He is considered the patron saint
of Spain. He was beheaded with a sword about 44 A.D. by Herod Agrippa.
Matthew spent 15 years evangelizing Egypt and Ethiopia, but there are
conflicting stories regarding the place and manner of his death, and if he
was martyred at all. Some accounts have King Hircanus ordering his death by
sword; others that Matthew was stoned, burned or beheaded.
Philip was a coach maker by trade who became a disciple after Jesus told
him, “Follow me.” He preached for 20 years in Asia, joined by his three
daughters. He was stoned and crucified head downward on a cross.
Bartholomew preached throughout Armenia. Details of his death in Albanopolis
conflict. He was either skinned alive and then crucified with head downward,
or beheaded by Astyages for having converted his brother, Polymius, the King
of Armenia.
Thaddeus preached throughout Judea and Samaria, but was clubbed and his head
severed with an ax by nonbelievers.
Simon was crucified after preaching the gospel in Samaria.
James the Lesser had sworn off food and drink until he saw the resurrected
Jesus. He was murdered about 62 A.D. in Jerusalem, tossed from the top of a
temple, stoned and clubbed. Some accounts have him praying for his attackers
as he died.
Thomas, the doubter, took his ministry to India, where he converted the wife
and son of King Misdai. For this he was sentenced to death, led from the
city to a hill and executed by four soldiers with swords.
Matthias, who replaced Judas Iscariot, was a wealthy tax collector who gave
away his money and embarked on a ministry to spread the message of Jesus,
perhaps in Ethiopia. Some accounts place his death in Ethiopia, others have
him being stoned to death and beheaded in Jerusalem.
John, the apostle “best loved” by Jesus, was among the first four apostles
and shared the nickname “Son of Thunder” with his brother, James the Elder.
Jesus gave the brothers the name because of their fiery preaching. John was
the only apostle not to abandon Jesus at his trial and crucifixion. He
traveled extensively and died at an old age, the only apostle believed to
have died of natural causes.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Different figures given for Armenia opposition Saturday rally

Different figures given for Armenia opposition Saturday rally
Interfax news agency, Moscow
10 Apr 04

YEREVAN
Two opposition parties held a rally in central Yerevan on Saturday [10
April] which was one in a recent series of meetings to demand the
removal of Armenia’s leadership.
“The current Armenian regime is doomed as it is impossible to keep
power by force,” the leader of the Justice party, Stepan Demirchyan,
told the meeting, whose number of participants was put at about 20,000
by the organizers but at a maximum of 2,500 by the law-enforcement
agencies.
It was announced at the rally, organized by the Justice and National
Unity parties, that there would be an opposition procession on Monday
along the street in Yerevan where the presidential residence and
parliament stand.
Opposition leaders told the rally that several dozen opposition
activists had been detained since Friday and that the arrests were
illegal.
A police spokesman told Interfax that “there have been arrests of
citizens for breach of peace but not for participation in an illegal
rally.” He said he could not name the exact number of those arrested.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress