"Impartial Investigation Should Be Launched On Each Case"

"IMPARTIAL INVESTIGATION SHOULD BE LAUNCHED ON EACH CASE"

A1+
[08:22 pm] 16 May, 2008

"Did people break a rule or attack an official before the March
1 events? They stayed calm even after the Central Election
Commission publicized the election figures. No one resorted to
violation. Authorities state that they used arms to avert further
threats but their step is not justified. The rigged presidential
election resulted in the March 1 events," said Leader of the People’s
Party of Armenia (HZhK) Stepan Demirchian.

"Never would we gather so much people if people weren’t displeased
with the election conduct and outcome. It is important to find out
who ordered to open fire on peaceful people and who exerted power.

"People were shot dead as a result of concrete actions. An impartial
and independent investigation should be conducted on each case to
eliminate the consequences of the tragic events."

The HZhK leader agrees that the PACE resolution could serve as ground
for a dialogue between the authorities and opposition. "Definite
steps and measures are to be taken to foster a dialogue between the
conflicting sides. One cannot help with empty talks.

The Armenian leadership has always ignored the recommendations of the
PACE and other international organizations. Otherwise they would have
returned A1+ to the air or punished the wrongdoers of the previous
elections.

To recover the situation in the country the authorities should free
the political prisoners."

Asked whether the opposition has worked out methods to further the
struggle, the HZhK leader said, "Obviously, the struggle is carried
on by people who want to restore their violated rights. The opposition
only directs the struggle to a legal path."

"The authorities pretend to be implementing the PACE recommendations
and provide broadcasting to the opposition representatives. But I think
"their kindness" is temporary."

Demirchian thinks that the crisis can only be surmounted through a
nationwide election. The HZhK leader is not seriously disposed to the
upcoming elections of district heads. "If the authorities really want
to assuage the situation they should pass the draft law on Yerevan,"
he said.

The HZhK leader promised to reflect on the Government’s activity in
100 days. So far the Government hasn’t made major changes, he says.

Untruths Tarnish Holodomor Tragedy

UNTRUTHS TARNISH HOLODOMOR TRAGEDY
John-Paul Himka

Kyiv Post
May 15 2008
Ukraine

Even after I earned a Ph.D. in history from the University of Michigan
and had been working as a researcher at the Canadian Institute of
Ukrainian Studies (CIUS) in Edmonton for several years, I was extremely
naive about how scholars arrived at estimates for major catastrophes
on the order of the Holocaust of the Jews or the Holodomor in Ukraine.

When I was a young man, most of what I read suggested that each of
these events took about six million lives. I thought that either the
murderers kept a tally of their victims or else it was a fairly simple
matter of subtracting the results of one census from another.

I began to realize the complexity of the issue in 1980. I was working
closely with a scholar from Poland who was a visiting professor at
CIUS, Janusz Radziejowski.

He had demographic training and was used to working with census
materials, and he offered a brief estimate of the population losses
from collectivization and famine.

The conclusion he came to was that there was a "demographic loss
of 9,263,000" Ukrainians in the USSR between 1926 and 1939. I was
astounded at this high number. I never realized, I said, that the
famine killed over 9 million people. He patiently explained to me
that a demographic loss is not the same as a death toll.

In addition to the latter, this number includes children not born to
those killed, other children not born for other reasons connected to
collectivization and famine, and Ukrainians who assimilated. Given
the data available at that time, he doubted that we could sort out
how much of this loss was attributable to each category.

My next encounter with the issues came in 1983. I was a Neporany Fellow
at CIUS, and my only obligation was to work on my book about Galician
villagers and the Ukrainian national movement in the 19th century.

I would spend every day poring over my sources and writing my
monograph. In the room next to me was another researcher, also working
on a book on the Ukrainian peasantry.

This was Alex Babyonyshev, better known under his pseudonym
Maksudov. He was a former human­rights activist in the USSR and
interested in demographic questions, history and politics. His book
was about collectivization and the famine.

Needless to say, two researchers with a basement to themselves and
working on related topics entered into intense discussions of their
projects.

For me, it was like a year­long seminar on how collectivization
was implemented and on how to arrive at a more accurate estimate of
the population losses. I learned that these estimates were much more
complex than even Janusz had taught me. Alex was busy drawing up graphs
of the age structure of populations, examining economic indicators
that might help estimate the extent of out­migration from Ukraine
in the 30s, and attacking the problem from other angles. He estimated
that the total demographic loss in Ukraine came to 4.5 million.

Later in the mid­1990s, I began to work on the Holocaust. My readings
in this field only reinforced the lessons I had learned earlier on the
difficulty of estimating the number of victims when mass murder was
involved. It was often helpful to scholars when a particular German
unit would report to Berlin that it had killed a number of Jews in
such and such locality, but generally the picture was fuzzy.

I bring all this up to help explain why I am disturbed by blithe
claims I see being made about 7 or 10 million Ukrainians killed in the
famine. I know that President Viktor Yushchenko and his administration
are also using the 10 million figure. That does not make it correct,
however.

President Yushchenko once relied on a professional historian,
Stanislav Kulchytskiy, for advice on historical issues, but now he
seems to have decided to use history as a political tool and does
not want to be confused by the facts.

In Ukraine, politicians frequently appeal to identity politics, since
symbols are easier to deliver than better health care, education,
or civil service.

Dr. Kulchytsky was among the ideological architects of Yushchenko’s
campaign to have the Ukrainian famine recognized internationally as
genocide. He devoted a number of publications in 2005 to explaining
why the famine fit the definition.

In the texts, Kulchytskiy stuck to the results of his earlier research
on the demographic effects of the famine in Ukraine: that there were
3,238,000 deaths directly attributable to the Holodomor.

Kulchytskiy had conducted careful research on the subject and
published several works devoted to the demography of the famine. What
distinguishes Kulchytskiy’s research from that of the earlier
researchers is that it draws on statistical information that was not
available before the collapse of the Soviet Union and the opening of
its archives.

Kulchytskiy also drew heavily on recent studies by Australian
historian and demographer Stephen Wheatcroft, who estimates that 3
to 3.5 million died in the Ukrainian famine.

Another serious attempt to estimate the losses in Ukraine was
conducted by a team of French and Ukrainian demographers (Jacques
Vallin, France Mesle, Serguei Adamets, and Serhii Pirozhkov). Here
is their conclusion:

"The disasters of the decade culminated in the horrific famine of
1933. These events resulted in a dramatic fall in fertility and a rise
in mortality. Our estimates suggest that total losses can be put at
4.6 million, 900,000 of which were due to forced migration, 1 million
to a deficit in births, and 2.6 million to exceptional mortality."

So how many people were killed by the famine? From 2.5 to 3.5
million. Those who died disproportionately were the rural population
(predominantly Ukrainians) and little children. May their memory
be eternal.

And let me add: may it be unsullied by falsehood.

I find it disrespectful to the dead that people use their deaths in
a ploy to gain the moral capital of victimhood. To this end, they
inflate the numbers. Let me just take one case.

Marta Tomkiw and Bobby Leigh are working on a film about the
famine. The trailer opens with the following: "The Darfur, Sudan
genocide claimed the lives of 180,000 people in four years. The
Armenian genocide claimed the lives of 1 million people from 1915
to 1918. The Holocaust claimed the lives of 6 million people in nine
years. They are not forgotten."

"Unfortunately, the Holodomor has exceeded these tragedies by claiming
the lives of 10 million Ukrainians in only 17 months. History knows
no other crime of such nature and magnitude."

Here I do not want to single out this particular movie project for
criticism. These are views one can easily find in many other Ukrainian
representations of the famine, particularly in the North American
diaspora. But the trailer formulates them clearly.

The point of these ideas is that the Holodomor is bigger than the
others, particularly bigger than the Holocaust. I do not understand
why others are not offended by this competition for victimhood, even
if the numbers were true, which they are not. I think the discussion
of tragedies like these demands a certain moral probity.

Disasters like these should not be taken lightly, manipulated,
instrumentalized, or falsified. Moreover, these are not simply deaths,
but crimes, murders, and violations of the moral order. How much more
careful we should be about them, how much more respectful of the truth.

Even if the Holodomor did account for 10 million victims, and even
if this competition were decent, the final claim about this being
the biggest crime in history would still be incorrect.

There was also a famine in China directly attributable to the campaign
for the Great Leap Forward. Again, it is difficult to estimate the
number of losses, but Western and Chinese scholars estimate that from
15 to 43 million peasants starved to death in China in 1959 to 61.

Here I have attempted to bridge that gap with information about the
number of deaths actually attributable to the Holodomor. But I am
also raising a moral question about how we should remember our dead.

I think it should be clear to all that the respect and honesty we owe
the departed means that we should refrain from using their deaths to
gain political popularity in Ukraine or to score points in interethnic
rivalry in North America. Above all, we must be careful not to embed
their deaths in a falsehood.

John­Paul Himka is professor of Ukrainian and Eastern European
history at the University of Alberta in Edmonton.

–Boundary_(ID_jiKKdUL0Kpc7OW0COWspFw)- –

Tariffs Of Services Increase By 2.6% In Armenia In April 2008

TARIFFS OF SERVICES INCREASE BY 2.6% IN ARMENIA IN APRIL 2008

Noyan Tapan

Ma y 14, 2008

YEREVAN, MAY 14, NOYAN TAPAN. 2.6% growth in the tariffs of services
was registered in Armenia in April on March 2008, mainly due to a
growth in tariffs of medical (5.3%), transport (4.3%) and public
catering services (3.4%).

According to the RA National Statistical Service, the tariffs of
educational, personal, legal and banking services grew by 0.1-1.3%
in the indicated period. At the same time, there was a decline in
tariffs of cultural (2.8%), communication (0.2%) and recreational
services (0.1%).

The tariffs of housing and municipal services remained at the level
of the previous month.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=113316

Eight Year Old Hayk Needs Major Operation

EIGHT-YEAR-OLD HAYK NEEDS MAJOR OPERATION

A1+
[03:59 pm] 13 May, 2008

100.000 euros is necessary to save 8-year-old Hayk Manoukian’s
life. It is the price for the operation to be performed in the
Russian Federation. Still at the age of three doctors detected acute
liver-nephritic poly-schistose congenital disease in the child but
his parents couldn’t afford the costly operation.

Last year they pawned their flat to be able to have the child examined
in Russia. For the past two months complications have set in and Hayk
has to be under doctors’ supervision. "My son’s life is at risk. The
only way to save him is liver transplantation. He can’t eat anything
now", says Hayk’s mother. The child has to take 8 different medicines
every day and they all cost a great sum of money.

The parents have turned to various charity organizations and
representatives of RA Government for help. The RA Ministry of Health
responded to their request paying the travel expenses to Russia.

Today Hayk is deprived of many pleasures, such as leaping, jumping,
running, playing ball games, riding a bicycle. He can play in the yard
only under his parent’s supervision. He does not even go to school.

"Donation is our last hope. We have had to open a bank account to
collect money for the operation", Hayk’s mother says in tears.

Who’s going to teach at the branch of the University of Architecture

Who is going to teach at the branch of the University of Architecture?

08-05-2008 16:24:31 – KarabakhOpen

A few days ago Prime Minister Ara Harutiunyan said if this year the
branch of the Agrarian University of Armenia is opened, the government
will consider opening a branch of the University of Architecture. One
of our readers shared some observations in a letter.

`The impression is that the prime minister who had not managed to set
up a business in the form of a university is now trying to correct this
shortcoming. It is common knowledge that the qualification of a
specialist depends on the teachers. It is interesting who is going to
teach at the branch of the University of Architecture.

Presently Artsakh State University issues thousands of `specialists’
who are not suitable for anything, while it turns out that they do not
need such a specialist as Gagik Baghunts.

The sector of education has turned into a labor exchange for teachers,
and there are only empty talks about the qualification of teachers. My
opinion is that scholarships should be granted to students to study at
the universities of Armenia. The government should know on what it
spends the money. And let those students study here who need the
diploma for their dowry and are ready to pay any teacher for it.

Perhaps soon the diplomas will have to be classified, otherwise now the
unification under the `state status’ has razed the senior school to the
ground in NKR.’

BAKU: Russian Centre of Vexillology and Heraldry shows NK as Armenia

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
May 8 2008

Russian Centre of Vexillology and Heraldry shows Nagorno Karabakh as a
territory of Armenia

[ 08 May 2008 13:38 ]

Baku. Zaur Nurmammadov`APA. Official website of Russian Centre of
Vexillology and Heraldry has posted information about Azerbaijan’s
Nagorno Karabakh in Armenian Department, APA reports.

Nagorno Karabakh territory is shown as ethnic Armenian state in the
website.

`UN considers Nagorno Karabakh as a territory of Azerbaijan. We have
decided to post information about Nagorno Karabakh in Armenian
Department taking into account of Nagrono Karabakh as an ethic state
of Armenia and symbols of Armenian origin’, the text says. Authors of
the website tried to relate the posting of information in `Armenia’
Department with Armenians living in Nagorno Karabakh at present.

An Interview With The Stiletto Our Blogger Of The Month

Blogger News Network
May 6 2008

An Interview With The Stiletto Our Blogger Of The Month

Posted on May 6th, 2008 by Simon Barrett in Blogosphere News,

I had the opportunity to chat with our Blogger Of The Month, a blogger
who uses the mysterious nickname of The Stiletto.

I have to ask this one, (I’m nosy) why do you use the mysterious pen
name? And can you tell us a little about yourself?

The Stiletto has a particular interest in the Armenian Genocide and
when she writes about it, she often gets vituperative ` and sometimes
threatening ` comments and e-mails from Turks. As much as The Stiletto
admires Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was assassinated by
Turkish nationalists in Istanbul in January 2007, she does not want to
share his fate. Hence, the nom de guerre.

The Stiletto is a classical or laissez-faire liberal ` which means
that according to today’s political taxonomy, she is a
conservative. Her idealism and beliefs never changed, but the labels
did. Anyone who wants to know more about The Stiletto, is welcome to
read her bio or these FAQs.

Politics seems to be your writing specialty, are you a political
animal?

The Stiletto is intensely ` perhaps insanely ` political.

What got you interested in politics?

The Stiletto cannot remember ever not being interested in
politics. While other kindergarteners were watching cartoons, she was
watching the evening news with Walter Cronkite. Perhaps one can’t be a
news junkie without also being a political junkie, and vice versa.

How, and why, did you enter the writing business?

Before starting The Stiletto Blog, The Stiletto would e-mail articles
she found interesting or provocative to her friends, but she
eventually wanted to reach ` and perhaps influence – a wider circle of
people than just the ones she knew. Plus, The Stiletto had been
contributing political humor to various Web sites, and decided it was
time to strike out on her own. She started The Stiletto Blog to share
her thoughts on what she deemed the important issues of the day ` but
without beating people over the head. For this reason, humor is an
important element of The Stiletto Blog. Even if you don’t agree with
The Stiletto on an issue ` or any of them, for that matter ` she can
still make you laugh, so there’s no hard feelings.

The writing game is a brutal game, your articles get lots of comments,
some are less than complementary. How do you deal with your critics?

The First Rule of punditry is: Don’t ever apologize, don’t ever
explain. You have to have the courage of your convictions.

The Second Rule is: Try never to be wrong, so you don’t have to
violate the First Rule. You have to do your homework, and be able to
back up your position with facts, figures and supporting documents `
which, as a blogger, you can imbed into your narrative so people can
check things out for themselves.

The Third Rule is: Everyone is entitled to his or her opinion, just
like you. The only thing The Stiletto doesn’t abide is ad hominem
attacks ` she will not allow anyone to define her as a `racist,’
`nativist’ or some other pejorative a commentor will resort to when
(s)he cannot disprove your argument or is too lazy to try.

Politics is clearly your favorite arena, but do you write about other
things?

The Stiletto Blog is about `politics and other stuff.’ The Stiletto is
also a geek so she also writes about her other interests, which
include technology (AI, astrophysics, DNA computing); her attempts to
learn to drink scotch (she’s a vodka aficionado); and her love of
muscle cars (she actually coaxed a Prius to go 105 mph once). It goes
without saying that The Stiletto is mad about shoes, and has quite a
collection of them.

You got an Honorable Mention in the Webby awards. That is quite the
achievement. Can you tell us about how you got involved?

Thank you. Maybe this is chutzpah ` or the fact that each category
entry carried a $250 fee ` but The Stiletto entered in only one
category, Political Blogs. Admittedly, the odds were stacked against
The Stiletto Blog: It’s a one-woman operation; it’s done on a
shoe-string budget; its political orientation is right of center; and
it’s an independent operation, not part of a larger media or corporate
entity. The Stiletto was hopeful that the quality of her content would
enable her to hold her own against her MSM competitors ` but was still
pleasantly surprised (shocked!) when she found herself in the same
company as CNN, Time magazine, The New York Times and other huge media
firms. Being recognized as a Webby Official Honoree shows that Big
Media hasn’t completely taken over the blogosphere, and that there is
still room for independent bloggers to have their say and make an
impact.

So whats next in your career?

The Stiletto is hoping that The Stiletto Blog becomes one of those
blogs ` such as, Captain’s Quarters, Betsy’s Page, My DD and The
Volokh Conspiracy ` that MSM pundits cite in their own columns. Plus,
a link on The Drudge Report wouldn’t hurt, either.

Thanks for talking with us today, and good luck with your endevours

http://www.bloggernews.net/115507

BAKU: Armenian armed forces fire on positions of Azerbaijani Army

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
May 5 2008

Armenian armed forces fire on positions of Azerbaijani Army in several
directions

[ 05 May 2008 12:10 ]

Nagorno Karabakh. Mahbuba Gasimbayli `APA. Armenian armed forces
violated the ceasefire, Azerbaijani Defence Ministry’s Press Service
told APA.

Divisions of Armenian armed forces fired on the positions of
Azerbaijani Armed Forces near Gazakh and Tovuz regions with machine
and submachine guns from their posts in Chinari village of Berd region
and Noyemberyan region from 08.30 till 21.50 on May 4, Kuropatkina
village of Khojavand Region from 16.00 till 01.10 on May 5,
Tapgaragoyunlu village of Goranboy Region from 16.40 till 16.50.

The enemy has been silenced by reprisal fire. No casualties
reported. /APA/

President receives diaspora Armenian businessman, Vache Manukian

ARMENPRESS

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT RECEIVES DIASPORA ARMENIAN
BUSINESSMAN AND PHILANTHROPIST VACHE MANUKIAN

YEREVAN, MAY 5, ARMENPRESS: Armenian President
Serzh Sargsian received today Diaspora Armenian
businessman and philanthropist Vache Manukian and
member of the Board of Directors of HSBC bank David
Badd.
Presidential press service told Armenpress that
during the meeting the sides discussed issues on
improvement of Armenia’s investment environment, full
usage of Diaspora’s potential.
The sides noted that Armenia has a great potential
the right usage of which may greatly promote the
development of economy, including tourism.
During the meeting the interlocutors also referred
to the prospect of expansion of the activity of HSBC
bank in Armenia.

Armenia Fund Chair to be awarded Ellis Island Medal of Honor

Armenia Fund Chair to be awarded Ellis Island Medal of Honor

armradio.am
07.05.2008 17:40

Armenia Fund U.S. Western Region announces that its president of the
board, Maria Mehranian, has been awarded the Ellis Island Medal of
Honor by the National Ethnic Coalition of Organizations. Mehranian will
be honored at a special ceremony at the Ellis Island in New York on
Saturday, May 10, 2008.

The Ellis Island Medal of Honor is designed to pay homage to the
immigrant experience, as well as for individual achievement. The medal
is awarded to U.S. citizens from various ethnic backgrounds. The
honorees are remarkable Americans who exemplify outstanding qualities
in both their personal and professional lives, while continuing to
preserve the richness of their particular heritage. NECO was
established by Mr. William Denis Fugazy in 1984.

The Ellis Island Medals of Honor are sanctioned by the United States
Congress and recipients’ names are listed in the Congressional Record.
When Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY) sponsored a resolution to
officially recognize NECO’s Ellis Island Medal of Honor, she said, `Our
heritage gives us roots. It brings meaning to our lives and binds us to
each other.’ The Senate Resolution ` passed unanimously ` applauds the
Medal of Honor for celebrating `the richness and diversity of American
life’.

Since 2004, Mehranian has been serving as the president of Armenia
Fund, Inc. in a volunteer capacity. Since its inception the Fund has
rendered more than $190 million in large scale infrastructure
development projects as well as short term humanitarian aid. Since
2004, the Fund has registered an unprecedented level of growth in the
Western U.S. both in the number of donors and total amount raised.

Mehranian is the Managing Partner and Chief Financial Officer of Los
Angeles based Cordoba Corporation, a civil engineering and construction
management firm specializing in educational facilities, transportation
systems, and water infrastructure.

Mehranian also serves on the La Canada Planning Commission. The
municipal entity is responsible for reviewing proposed development and
land use requests with the mandate to preserve and improve the quality
of life in the city. Mehranian is also a volunteer board member at the
California Hospital Medical Center.