Demonstration to Be Held in Berlin in Support of Assyrian Monastery

Assyrian International News Agency AINA
Jan 24 2009

Demonstration to Be Held in Berlin in Support of Assyrian Monastery

Tens of thousands of Armenians across Europe are preparing for a huge
demonstration to take place in Berlin on Sunday — Women and married
men are to play a bigger role in France’s Catholic Church — A private
high school in Cologne takes special care of immigrant children —
Some ancient laws in Britain concerning inter-religious relations are
up for change

"Save the monastery of Mor Gabriel, save Christendom in Turkey" —
that is the slogan of a huge demonstration planned for Sunday,
Jan. 15, in Berlin. Its aim is to help safeguard the existence of Mor
Gabriel — also known as the Monastery of St. Gabriel — which is the
spiritual center of Syrian-Orthodox Christians in Turkey. Founded in
397, it is the oldest surviving Syriac Orthodox monastery in the
world. It is located on the Tur Abdin plateau in Southeastern Turkey,
the motherland of the Syriac people. Its main purpose is to keep
Syriac Orthodox Christianity alive in the land of its birth by
providing schooling and the ordination of native-born
monks. Throughout its long history, it has also provided physical
protection to Turkey’s Christian minority. The so-called "Action Mor
Gabriel" was founded by S.E. Mor Julius Dr. Hanna Aydin, the
Archbishop of the Syrian-Orthodox church of Antiochia in Germany in
November 2008. It unites six organizations, namely the Archdiocese of
Syrian-Orthodox Churches in Germany, the umbrella organization of Tur
Abdin, the European Syriac Union, the Federation of Armenians in
Germany, the Federation Survoye and the Central Council of Assyrian
Associations in Germany. The managing director of the "Action Mor
Gabriel" is Raid Gharib, a German citizen of Turkish descent. He is a
political scientist working at the university of Tübingen on a
Ph.D. entitled "Nation and identity of the Syriac Christians: The
quest for a feasible societal model."

The President of the French Bishops’ Conference André Vingt-Trois
launched towards the end of last year an unprecedented campaign to
recruit more priests. This must be, said the Cardinal, the daily
preoccupation of French churchmen and women. Even President Sarkozy
has said it is a problem for his country. There were 41,000 French
priests in 1965. There are half that number today. And now mass is
said never or very rarely in most country churches. Although there is
no sign that the Vatican is about to reform the celibacy rule or admit
women to the priesthood, it is allowing women and married men to play
a much bigger role — with potentially far-reaching consequences for
the future.

For young people in Germany with an immigration background, one of the
biggest challenges is preserving their cultural heritage, while still
preparing for life as adults in German society. Over the past few
years, a number of high schools have been set up with just that
challenge in mind. One of them is the Dialogue Private High School in
Cologne, which opened in 2007. Though its students are predominantly
Muslims, the school doesn’t see itself as a religious institution. The
school’s top priority is to give its students the chance to take and
pass the national college entry exams.

In Britain, a new attempt is being made to change ancient laws which
bans the monarch from marrying a Catholic. The Act of Settlement,
introduced by King William III in 1701 states anyone who marries a
Catholic cannot become king or queen. It also gives legal precedence
to male heirs in the line of succession, and it is these two aspects
that a British lawmaker wants to change. Dr. Evan Harris, from the
country’s third political party the Liberal Democrats says this
blatant religious and sex discrimination is outdated and must go.

www.dw-world.de

Armenian-Georgian Relations Aim To Strengthen Cooperation

ARMENIAN-GEORGIAN RELATIONS AIM TO STRENGTHEN COOPERATION

PanARMENIAN.Net
21.01.2009 18:01 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian-Georgian relations aim to strengthen
cooperation between the two countries, implementation of joint
projects and resolution of social and economic programs, says 2008
annual report issued by the Armenian Foreign Ministry.

The situation in the region has changed. The August hostilities in
South Ossetia told on Armenia’s economy," the report says.

It also mentions that Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan visited Georgia
in October 2008 and received state Golden Fleece Order. Besides,
an agreement on construction of a new highway to connect the two
countries was achieved.

Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan also paid a visit to
Tbilisi last year to attend the 7th meeting of the Armenian-Georgian
intergovernmental committee took place in 2008, the report says.

ANKARA: Two Years On, Hrant Dink Murder Remains Unsolved

TWO YEARS ON, HRANT DINK MURDER REMAINS UNSOLVED

Today’s Zaman
Jan 20 2009
Turkey

Yesterday was the second anniversary of the assassination of
Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was fatally shot outside
his office by an ultranationalist teenager.

Though two years have passed since Dink was killed, the investigation
into this vicious murder has yielded almost no concrete results.

A series of ceremonies were held across Turkey to mark the second
anniversary of the death of Dink, who was gunned down on Jan. 19,
2007 in broad daylight in front of the headquarters of the bilingual
Armenian weekly Agos, where he was editor-in-chief. Police arrested
the suspected gunman, Ogun Samast, and an associate, Yasin Hayal,
a few days later. There are a total of 20 suspects in the case,
eight of whom are currently under arrest. Following Dink’s murder,
numerous reports suggested that the police had been tipped off about
the planned assassination more than once before his murder but had
failed to prevent it.

Hundreds of people gathered in front of the headquarters of Agos
yesterday to commemorate Dink on the second anniversary of his
murder. Carrying banners that denounced the vicious attack against
Dink in a number of languages including Turkish, English, Armenian
and Kurdish, protestors shouted "For Hrant, for justice" and "We are
all Hrant, we are all Armenians." Protestors also placed carnations
in front of the building in memory of the slain journalist.

In an attempt to protest the Dink investigation, which has yielded
almost no concrete answers, a group of demonstrators lay motionless
on the ground for one minute.

Several rights organizations and activists expressed their
frustration that the investigation into the murder seems to have
reached an impasse, yielding almost no concrete results since Dink’s
assassination.

"We believe there is an organized campaign to delay the dissipation
of the shroud of mist surrounding the Dink murder. His assassination
is certainly not the work of only 20 suspects. The police should
investigate very carefully how the assassination plan was devised,
how Dink was targeted and how the murder was carried out. Officials
at the İstanbul and Trabzon police departments with suspected links
to the murder should be called to account.

We, as the friends of Hrant, will continue to raise our voices until
the case into his murder is concluded," stated Ozlem Dalkıran of
the Helsinki Citizens’ Assembly.

An investigation in the wake of the Dink assassination revealed that
a group of ultranationalists was behind the murder. Strong evidence
suggested that some members of the group had ties with the police
department in northern Trabzon, the hometown of the plotters. Some
gendarmes later confirmed that they had been tipped off about the plot
to kill Dink before the murder was committed. Dink family lawyers
have frequently leveled allegations that police have attempted to
obscure evidence. Two gendarmes are currently standing trial for
having ignored warnings about the plot to kill Dink.

Culture and Tourism Minister Ertugrul Gunay stated yesterday that clues
uncovered in the aftermath of Dink’s death made one think that the
assassination plot was not devised by a single individual but that it
was part of a series of traps aimed to hurt Turkey and its democracy.

İsmet Berkan of the Radikal daily wrote in his column yesterday that
the real reason behind the killing of the Turkish-Armenian journalist
was a gradually increasing level of racism in society.

"Dink was killed because he was an Armenian; he was killed because
he was a man who spoke out a great deal even though he belonged to a
minority group. The main problem is, because people are not sensitive
to racism in Turkey and most of us are not criticized for our racist
actions, we fail to realize whom we hurt or frighten with our words
or writing. When those who plotted Dink’s assassination were looking
for a youth to carry out the murder, they said the youth would kill
an Armenian, not a human being. You see my point, don’t you? Even if
we are not conscious of it, racism is our biggest problem," he stated.

Star’s Mehmet Altan noted that a chain of negligence led to Dink’s
murder. "When was Dink killed first? The moment when CoÅ~_kun İgci
informed Gendarmerie Intelligence Director Capt. Metin Yıldız about
the assassination plans against Dink? Or when the warning fell on
the deaf ears of Col. Ali Oz?" he asked.

İgci, the uncle of Hayal, one of the prime suspects in the case,
testified last year in court that he had repeatedly informed gendarmes
of a plot to assassinate the journalist at least five months before the
incident. Gendarmes Okan Å~^imÅ~_ek and Veysel Å~^ahin also testified
that they knew about the plot to kill Dink six months before the
murder took place and recounted that they had informed the gendarmerie
intelligence director, who, in turn, informed Col. Oz. The two officers
testified that Oz did nothing upon receiving the information.

Oz gave his testimony last July and denied their claims, saying "I
don’t remember" when asked about intelligence information related
to Dink’s murder and "I don’t know them" when asked about the two
gendarmes who said they had informed him about the murder.

According to lawyer Fethiye Cetin, who represents the Dink family in
the trial, the investigation has yielded more evidence linking the
masterminds of the murder plot to police departments in İstanbul,
in Trabzon, the hometown of most of the suspects and the place where
the assassination was planned, and in Ankara, where the police had
intelligence about the murder.

The Sabah daily published an interview earlier this week with Cetin,
who complained that crucial evidence in the Dink assassination was
obscured soon after the murder. She said footage recorded by security
cameras of shops and banks located close to the crime scene during the
time of the murder was mysteriously lost. "Officials with suspected
links to the murder are still serving. As long as they continue in
their positions, we will either not have access to evidence in the
Dink murder, or this evidence will be distorted," she said.

Cetin also said the Dink assassination plot was very detailed
and well planned. "Dink was killed after an incredible process of
preparation. Step by step, he was carefully targeted," she noted. She
also expressed hope that all the questions surrounding the death of
Dink would be answered sooner or later.

Timeline of investigation into Dink assassination Jan. 17, 2007:
Dink is fatally shot around 3 p.m. in front of the headquarters of
the bilingual Armenian weekly Agos as he was leaving the building. He
was pronounced dead at the scene of crime.

Jan. 20, 2007: Suspected gunman Samast nabbed by police at the Samsun
bus terminal.

Jan. 21, 2007: Hayal, who aided Samast in the assassination, is
captured in Trabzon.

Feb. 6, 2007: Plans to shoot Dink dead, reported to police by defendant
Erhan Tuncel, are revealed.

Feb. 22, 2007: The Interior Ministry launches an investigation into
officials at the Trabzon Police Department for dereliction of duty
in the Dink case.

July 2, 2007: The Dink trial begins.

Jan. 3, 2008: A forensic medicine report indicates that a bone analysis
test showed Samast to be 19 years old.

Dec. 29, 2008: A prosecutor files charges against former Trabzon
Gendarmerie Commander Col. Oz and five other officers, seeking up to
two years’ imprisonment.

Jan. 5, 2009: The Trabzon 2nd Magistrates Court rejects the indictment
against Col. Oz and five other gendarmerie officers, saying it is not
in its jurisdiction and that the case should be handled by a court
of first instance. The prosecutor appealed the decision.

–Boundary_(ID_kWUQrYHtMyfzhUoaV+r+VQ)- –

Consultations Between Armenian And Russian Foreign Ministries Take P

CONSULTATIONS BETWEEN ARMENIAN AND RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTRIES TAKE PLACE AT RA FOREIGN MINISTRY

Noyan Tapan

Jan 20, 2008

YEREVAN, JANUARY 20, NOYAN TAPAN. Consultations regarding work with the
Diaspora were held between RA and RF Foreign Ministries on January 20
at the RA Foreign Ministry. The Armenian delegation was headed by RA
Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharian and the Russian delegation
by Alexander Chepurin, the Head of the RF Foreign Ministry Department
on Work with Compatriots Abroad.

According to the RA Foreign Ministry Press and Information Department,
the sides attached importance to periodic holding of consultations
in connection with work with the Diaspora.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1011410

Presidents Of Armenia, Russia Meet In Moscow

PRESIDENTS OF ARMENIA, RUSSIA MEET IN MOSCOW

armradio.am
19.01.2009 10:45

The Presidents of Armenia and Russian Serzh Sargsyan and Dmitry
Medvedev had a meeting in Moscow.

The two Presidents met following the international gas summit. The
President of Russian thanked his Armenian counterpart for accepting
the invitation and participating in the summit. The Presidents highly
appreciated the relations between the two countries, characterizing
those as reliable and corresponding to the Armenian-Russian strategic
partnership.

Dmitry Medvedev noted that the Armenian-Russian allied relations
are more comfortable than the complex issues discussed during the
gas summit.

President Sargsyan, in turn, attached importance to the cooperation
with Russia and "Gazprom" in the field of energy, assessing it as
reliable and grounded on long-term interests.

Serzh Sargsyan underlined that the consumption of gas has tripled
in Armenia over the past years, and with the level of gasification
Armenia is leading mot only in the CIS, but also the world, as a whole.

Presidents Sargsyan and Medvedev agreed that the frequent high-level
visits and meetings provide an opportunity to discuss and find
solutions to most complex issues.

BAKU: MG OSCE Co-Chairs: We hope the presidents will meet in Davos

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
Jan 18 2009

We hope after the talks the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia will
meet in Davos – Co-Chairman of MG OSCE
18.01.09 18:32

Azerbaijan, Baku, January 18/Trend News E. Tariverdiev / We hope after
the talks the both presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia will meet in
Davos. We witnessed the negotiations went successfully, and we keep
continuing actions. It was reported by US Co-Chairman Matthew Bryza to
Trend News Agency.

«Depending on the discussions, we hope that the two presidents
would agree to meet in the last days of January», – he said.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan
lost all of Nagorno-Karabakh except for Shusha and Khojali in December
1991. In 1992-93, Armenian armed forces occupied Shusha, Khojali and 7
districts surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan and Armenia signed
a ceasefire in 1994. The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group ` Russia,
France, and the U.S. ` are currently holding the peace negotiations.

ANKARA: New Detentions Shed Light On More Ergenekon Crimes

NEW DETENTIONS SHED LIGHT ON MORE ERGENEKON CRIMES

Today’s Zaman
Jan 15 2009
Turkey

Former Police Department Special Operations Unit Deputy Chairman
İbrahim Å~^ahin was detained in last week’s operations.

A number of plans, lists, maps and arms caches unearthed last week
in the latest wave of searches and detentions carried out as part of
the Ergenekon investigation suggest that the group was behind many
provocative attacks and murders previously attributed to various
other organizations.

Some of the incidents that now appear to be Ergenekon jobs are
high profile events from Turkey’s recent history, all considered as
watershed catastrophes that fundamentally changed the country’s course.

In last week’s operations, former Police Department Special Operations
Unit Deputy Chairman İbrahim Å~^ahin was detained. Assassination plans
found in his home during searches showed clearly some of Ergenekon’s
future planned assassinations. Potential victims included Alevi leaders
such as Kazım Genc, head of the Pir Sultan Abdal Association. Since
last week’s operations, the individuals in danger have been assigned
police protection.

According to the documents found in Å~^ahin’s house, the group was
planning to kill Genc with a package bomb. The organization had worked
out the locations of İstanbul’s security cameras, known as MOBESE, in
every region they planned to commit a murder. Police say the details
of the planned Genc assassination are strikingly similar to methods
used in killing Malatya Mayor Hamid Fendoglu, who was killed with a
package bomb in 1978. The killing was seen as a result of a conflict
between Alevi and Sunni communities in the city, the sort of chaos
Ergenekon wanted to provoke, according to investigators assigned to
the case. A similar bomb was used in the killing of Bahriye Ucok,
a socialist academic who was killed in 1990 with a package bomb. Her
killer was never found. These two murders were key events in the
process that led to the 1980 coup d’état in Turkey.

Another Alevi leader, Ali Balkız, was also on Ergenekon’s hit
list. The would-be assassins drew detailed maps of Balkız’s house
and his daily route and planned to detonate a car bomb parked along
this path as he drove. The 1993 killing of journalist Ugur Mumcu, who
was killed by a bomb planted in his car, and the killing of journalist
Mehmet Ali KıÅ~_lalı in 1999, two very important unresolved murders
of the ’90s, have a strong similarity in that both involved a plastic
explosive known as RDX, a very rare explosive that is extremely
difficult to acquire in Turkey, according to experts. In last week’s
operations, a formidable cache of A-4 RDX was unearthed in Ergenekon’s
secret munitions depots buried underground.

Other past events now very strongly suspected to be Ergenekon’s doing
include the 1990 killing of academic Muammer Aksyon, the 1990 killing
of Hurriyet daily Editor-in-Chief Cetin Emec, the 1990 killing of
Turan Dursun and the 2007 shooting of journalist Hrant Dink.

Armenian community leaders, including Patriarch Mesrob Mutafyan,
were also on Ergenekon’s hit list.

–Boundary_(ID_cw3T5df1DGG3KTAeWtdFBg)–

Special Accounting Center To Provide Consultation To Small And Mediu

SPECIAL ACCOUNTING CENTER TO PROVIDE CONSULTATION TO SMALL AND MEDIUM-SIZED BUSINESS

ARMENPRESS
Jan 15, 2008

YEREVAN, JANUARY 15, ARMENPRESS: Special accounting center will
start functioning in Yerevan from this month. The center has been
established to support representatives of small and medium-sized
business in presenting accounting registrations and reports.

During today’s session of the Armenian government Prime Minister
Tigran Sargsyan noted that the office has been established within
the frameworks of the strategy of support to small and medium-sized
business. Its establishment aims at providing available and qualified
services thanks to which the relations of representatives of small
and medium-sized business with tax bodies will become notably easy. In
the office, 11 accounting companies will provide consultation support.

The decision on providing an area for establishment of the office
was made today by the Armenian government.

Mosul, Fresh Anti Christian Violence. Murder And Torture

MOSUL, FRESH ANTI CHRISTIAN VIOLENCE. MURDER AND TORTURE

AsiaNews.it
Jan 16 2009
Italy

36-year old Chourik Bagrad, was massacred with multiple gunshot
wounds to the head. Another believer was kidnapped New Years eve: he
was released on payment of a ransom of 50 thousand dollars. AsiaNews
sources relay that Mosul is a "volcano about to explode".

Mosul (AsiaNews) – The lifeless body of a young Christian was found
yesterday by the army in Mosul (Northern Iraq). The abandoned body
uncovered in a street in the east of the city was that of 36 year
old Chourik Bagrad.

AsiaNews sources in Mosul – a city with one and a half million
inhabitants, 360 km north of Baghdad – confirmed that it was a an
execution style killing: multiple gunshot wounds to the head. His
body was later discarded in al-Bakr district, where it was found
by police and brought to the morgue for an autopsy. Chourik Bagrad
was a Christian from the Armenian Church and his brother works in
Mosul University.

The same sources refer that a Christian was also kidnapped New Years
Eve in Mosul. The man, whose name we choose not to publish for security
reasons, was kidnapped and held hostage for four days. He was only
freed after the payment of 50 thousand dollars ransom. During his
detention he was tortured over and over again. "If we hadn’t paid
the ransom – the source confirms – they would certainly have killed
him. They are criminal gangs, who kidnap for money. The want the
Christian’s money".

Despite government claims and reports proclaiming that security
standards have improved, Mosul remains "a volcano ready to explode
at any moment".

The situation for Christians there is still tragic. In October alone
16 faithful were killed and 2000 families forced to flee. Groups
linked to Al-Qaeda are operative in the area, targeting Christians
in killing sprees, destroying their homes and properties, threatening
them with letters, abductions and attacks. A hate campaign perfectly
constructed to drive them from the land of their birth.

In 2007 Msgr. Paulo Farj Rahho, the Chaldean bishop of the diocese
was killed, his body found on March 13th in abandoned land outside
the city limits. During the attack that led to his kidnap the three
men who were with him for his safety were killed. In 2007 the death
toll of Mosul’s Christian community was 13: among them we remember
Fr. Ragheed Gani massacred on June 3and another two priests.

Majority Of Those Granted Pardon Were Shop Plunderers And Not Politi

MAJORITY OF THOSE GRANTED PARDON WERE SHOP PLUNDERERS AND NOT POLITICAL ACTIVISTS, SDHP CHAIRWOMAN SAYS

Noyan Tapan

Jan 14, 2008

YEREVAN, JANUARY 14, NOYAN TAPAN. The Armenian authorities do not
know what to do in the issue of political prisoners: by releasing
the imprisoned activists, they will get into one trouble, whereas
by keeping them in custody – into another, the chairwoman of the
Social-Democrat Hunchakian Party (SDHP) Lyudmila Sargsyan said during
a talk with NT correspondent.

In her words, prior to a visit of the PACE Monitoring Committee
co-rapporteurs John Prescott and Georges Colombier to Armenia, "the
authorities tried to make a gesture": they granted pardon to 9 persons
imprisoned in the March 1 case. However, according to L. Sargsyan,
the majority of those granted a pardon were not political activists
but people who plundered shops and committed acts of hooliganism on
March 1 on the authorities’ demand.

Speaking about the PACE hearing on Armenia to be held on January
29, she said that the authorities will not succeed in escaping
sanctions. "It is with pain that I am saying that because the sanctions
will affect our country’s rating. The authorities should realize that
they are also punished," L. Sargsyan concluded.

http://www.nt.am?shownews=1011289