His Holiness Karekin II Elevates Three Bishops

PRESS RELEASE
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Information Services
Address:  Vagharshapat, Republic of Armenia
Contact:  Rev. Fr. Ktrij Devejian
Tel:  +374-10-517163
Fax:  +374-10-517301
E-Mail:  [email protected]
Website: 
February 19, 2007

His Holiness Karekin II Elevates Three Bishops

His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians,
has elevated three bishops of the Armenian Church to the rank of
Archbishop.  The honor, given by Pontifical Encyclical, was recently
bestowed upon His Grace Bishop Aris Shirvanian, His Grace Bishop Sevan
Gharibian and His Grace Bishop Vicken Aykazian, for their years of devoted
service to the Armenian Church and people.

Archbishop Aris Shirvanian is the director of Ecumenical and Foreign
Relations for the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem.  He also serves as the
official spokesman for the Patriarchate and is a lecturer on theology at the
Patriarchate’s Theological Seminary.

Archbishop Sevan Gharibian is a senior member of the Armenian Patriarchate
of Jerusalem.  During his pastoral service, he has held various scholastic
and administrative positions within the St. James Monastery in Jerusalem.

Archbishop Vicken Aykazian is the Diocesan Legate and director of Ecumenical
Relations for the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern).  He
is also President-elect of the National Council of Churches USA and serves
on the Executive Committee of the World Council of Churches.

www.armenianchurch.org

The Yacoubian Building

The Yacoubian Building, by Alaa Al Aswany, trans Humphrey Davies
Home truths in Egypt’s multi-story saga
By Alev Adil

The Independent/UK
16 February 2007

It would be difficult to overestimate the impact that Alaa Al Aswany’s
novel has had in Egypt. The Yacoubian Building has topped the
bestseller lists for over two years, been adapted for the screen by
Marwan Hamid and inspired impassioned cultural debate. This addictively
readable evocation of Cairo at a time of political and social ferment,
during the first Gulf War, is both a damning critique and a love letter
to a city and its inhabitants. It engages with corruption, homophobia,
sexism, Islamic fundamentalism and terrorism; all sensitive and
controversial issues in contemporary Egyptian society.

Yet despite dealing with serious subjects, the experience of reading
the novel is more akin to a guilty literary pleasure than a civic duty.
Al Aswany’s interwoven narratives of the diverse inhabitants of a once
grand, now dilapidated, apartment block in downtown Cairo marry the
humanist realism of Balzac with the hyperbolic momentum of Egyptian
soap opera.

Built in 1934 by an Italian firm for an Armenian millionaire, the
Yacoubian Building, "ten lofty stories in the high European style", is
a metaphor for wider historical upheavals. Initially home to the "cream
of society", after the nationalist revolution in 1952 and the "exodus
of Jews and foreigners", the apartments are taken over by army officers
and their families. As the middle classes abandon the inner city the
inhabitants become more varied, and the little lock-up sheds on the
roof become homes for migrants from the countryside.

The inhabitants offer us a multiplicity of stories and perspectives,
from the rabble on the roof to aristocrats in their 10-room apartments.
While ageing roué Zaki Bey whiles away his evenings in Maxim’s
listening to Edith Piaf, nostalgic for Egypt’s cosmopolitan past, Taha
the doorman’s son becomes a fervent advocate for its Islamic future.

Taha’s trajectory from an ambitious schoolboy, whose aspiration is to
join the police force, to a fundamentalist terrorist is perhaps the
most compelling of the novel’s plots. We are shown how social
exclusion, police corruption and American atrocities in Iraq all play
their part in his conversion, although it is oppression and torture
that finally set him on the path to violence.

Busayna, Taha’s childhood sweetheart, is worn down by the double
standards which expect her to provide for her widowed mother and
siblings, to guard her honour, and to endure sexual harassment at work.
Hatim Rasheed, the editor of a French-language newspaper, an aristocrat
and an intellectual, is madly in love with Abduh, an underfed conscript
with unbrushed teeth.

Many Egyptian readers have found Al Aswany’s depiction of male
homosexuality the most challenging aspect of the novel. Yet the
depiction is often uncomfortable because it seems prejudiced rather
than permissive. Homosexuals, the novel tells us, excel in professions
like public relations because they lack "that sense of shame that costs
others opportunities". At times, the voice is culturally as well as
sexually conservative. Despite acknowledging the rich contribution of
Copts, Greeks, Armenians and Jews to Egyptian culture, the novel slips
into monocultural assumptions.

But perhaps intellectual consistency is too much to ask, especially
when Humphrey Davies’s elegant translation provides us with the most
emotionally compelling Egyptian novel published in English since Naguib
Mahfouz’s Cairo Trilogy.

Book Review: Home truths in Egypt’s multi-story saga

Arts & Book Review
February 16, 2007
First Edition

ARTS & BOOKS REVIEW; Pg. 24

Home truths in Egypt’s multi-story saga;
The Yacoubian Building By Alaa Al Aswany, trans Humphrey Davies
FOURTH ESTATE £14.99

by ALEV ADIL

It would be difficult to overestimate the impact that Alaa Al
Aswany’s novel has had in Egypt. The Yacoubian Building has topped
the bestseller lists for over two years, been adapted for the screen
by Marwan Hamid and inspired impassioned cultural debate. This
addictively readable evocation of Cairo at a time of political and
social ferment, during the first Gulf War, is both a damning critique
and a love letter to a city and its inhabitants. It engages with
corruption, homophobia, sexism, Islamic fundamentalism and terrorism;
all sensitive and controversial issues in contemporary Egyptian
society.

Yet despite dealing with serious subjects, the experience of reading
the novel is more akin to a guilty literary pleasure than a civic
duty. Al Aswany’s interwoven narratives of the diverse inhabitants of
a once grand, now dilapidated, apartment block in downtown Cairo
marry the humanist realism of Balzac with the hyperbolic momentum of
Egyptian soap opera.

Built in 1934 by an Italian firm for an Armenian millionaire, the
Yacoubian Building, "ten lofty stories in the high European style",
is a metaphor for wider historical upheavals. Initially home to the
"cream of society", after the nationalist revolution in 1952 and the
"exodus of Jews and foreigners", the apartments are taken over by
army officers and their families. As the middle classes abandon the
inner city the inhabitants become more varied, and the little lock-up
sheds on the roof become homes for migrants from the countryside.

The inhabitants offer us a multiplicity of stories and perspectives,
from the rabble on the roof to aristocrats in their 10-room
apartments. While ageing roué Zaki Bey whiles away his evenings in
Maxim’s listening to Edith Piaf, nostalgic for Egypt’s cosmopolitan
past, Taha the doorman’s son becomes a fervent advocate for its
Islamic future.

Taha’s trajectory from an ambitious schoolboy, whose aspiration is to
join the police force, to a fundamentalist terrorist is perhaps the
most compelling of the novel’s plots. We are shown how social
exclusion, police corruption and American atrocities in Iraq all play
their part in his conversion, although it is oppression and torture
that finally set him on the path to violence.

Busayna, Taha’s childhood sweetheart, is worn down by the double
standards which expect her to provide for her widowed mother and
siblings, to guard her honour, and to endure sexual harassment at
work. Hatim Rasheed, the editor of a French-language newspaper, an
aristocrat and an intellectual, is madly in love with Abduh, an
underfed conscript with unbrushed teeth.

Many Egyptian readers have found Al Aswany’s depiction of male
homosexuality the most challenging aspect of the novel. Yet the
depiction is often uncomfortable because it seems prejudiced rather
than permissive. Homosexuals, the novel tells us, excel in
professions like public relations because they lack "that sense of
shame that costs others opportunities". At times, the voice is
culturally as well as sexually conservative. Despite acknowledging
the rich contribution of Copts, Greeks, Armenians and Jews to
Egyptian culture, the novel slips into monocultural assumptions.

But perhaps intellectual consistency is too much to ask, especially
when Humphrey Davies’s elegant translation provides us with the most
emotionally compelling Egyptian novel published in English since
Naguib Mahfouz’s Cairo Trilogy.

Swiss ferry deal to facilitate cargo transportation to Armenia

Mediamax, Armenia
Feb 13 2007

SWISS FERRY DEAL TO FACILITATE CARGO TRANSPORTATION TO ARMENIA

Yerevan, 13 February: The Kavkaz-Poti ferry service will start
operating on 15 March. Cargo in railway wagons will be carried from
Armenia and back.

A protocol to this effect was signed in Yerevan today between the
Armenian Transport and Communications Ministry and the Swiss
corporation (?Reserve Capital), the owner of the ferry.

Armenian Transport and Communications Minister Andranik Manukyan
pointed out that an agreement had been reached on the construction of
a ship holding 50 railway wagons. The ferry will take two trips a
week and work only for Armenia.

The minister said that this will make it possible to reduce the
expenses of Armenian transport companies by 20 per cent because cargo
has been transported up to date only through the port of Ilyichevsk
where the Ukrainian company Ukrferry has a monopolistic position.

The owner of the ferry, (?Hakim Machanov), believes that the opening
of the ferry link via the Kavkaz-Poti route meets the interests of
both Armenian and Russian exporters and importers. He also said that
the Reserve Capital corporation has started building a second ship
which will be commissioned in May.

Sitting Of Coordination Committee On Air Defence Of Cis Coutries To

SITTING OF COORDINATION COMMITTEE ON AIR DEFENCE OF CIS COUTRIES TO TAKE PLACE IN YEREVAN ON FEBRUARY 14-16

Noyan Tapan
Feb 12 2007

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 12, NOYAN TAPAN. The sitting of the Coordination
Committee on Air Defence attached to the Council of Defence Ministers
of the CIS countries will take place in Yerevan on February 14-16. As
Noyan Tapan was informed by the Defence Ministry’s Press Service,
Vladimir Mikhaylov, the Chairman of the Coordination Committee on
united air defence system of the CIS countries, Army General will
arrive in Armenia for that purpose.

ANKARA: Baykal Lashes Out At Police In Dink Murder Case

BAYKAL LASHES OUT AT POLICE IN DINK MURDER CASE

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Feb 10 2007

Leader of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) Deniz
Baykal criticized the police for mishandling the investigation of
the murder of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink and said the
Ýstanbul police chief should be removed from office.

"Why is the chief of Ýstanbul police still in office? Is it possible
that an investigation conducted in this manner can yield healthy
results?" Baykal asked as he spoke to reporters in Munich, Germany.

"I want a proper police chief," he exclaimed.

Dink was murdered on Jan. 19 by 17-year-old Ogun Samast, outside
his newspaper office in Ýstanbul. As the investigation continued,
the police came under fire for mishandling the case with revelations
that they had failed to follow up on an earlier tip-off about a plot
to murder Dink.

The criticism deepened when video footage showing members of the
police and the gendarmerie posing for souvenir photos with Samast at
a police station in Samsun appeared on national television. Samast is
from the Trabzon region of the Black Sea and was captured in nearby
Samsun after a nationwide manhunt. The scandalous pictures were taken
some time after his arrest when he was remanded into custody pending
a trial. The police and gendarmerie are two separate organizations but
share internal security duties in Turkey. Early reports said that the
footage had been shot at a gendarmerie station, but the gendarmerie
angrily denied it, saying the leak of the footage was a deliberate
plot. Inspectors have requested permission to launch a preliminary
investigation into Ýstanbul Police Chief Celalettin Cerrah. He may face
a full investigation according to the results of the preliminary probe.

Baykal said the Dink murder probe put the police under the spotlight
and added that Turkey should dig deep into what is happening inside
the police services.

In an interview broadcast on CNN Turk television, Baykal said the
police department was plagued by "religious sectarian elements"
and called for efforts to restructure the department.

"There is dangerous nepotism in the police department. If we don’t take
measures to tackle this, there could be bigger incidents," he said.

In comments published in the daily Milliyet yesterday, Baykal claimed
that the murder had "official links," saying it would be difficult
to believe that the murder had been planned by a small group without
knowledge of the police.

The opposition leader also dismissed talk of the "deep state,"
a term used to refer to elements within the state working together
with criminal gangs in secret unsanctioned operations for the "high
interests" of the state.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan has suggested that the murder
could have a linkage with the deep state and said Turkey has paid a
heavy price for its failure to dismantle it.

"This is empty talk," Baykal said of the deep state debate and stressed
that the Dink murder once again brought to the surface a rift between
the police and the gendarmerie.

"I have never seen the gendarmerie accuse the police of any
wrongdoing… It has always been the opposite," Baykal said. "Those
who do not fulfill their duties blame those who do."

The CHP leader also reiterated his call for the dismissal of Interior
Minister Abdulkadir Aksu in connection with the handling of the Dink
murder case. "The responsibility for this incident lies with the
interior minister and the prime minister… A security policy promoted
by them is being pursued at the moment and this policy is wrong."

–Boundary_(ID_VQlGHebunfJ+9H1HZ0d9G Q)–

ANKARA: BBP: Party Being Pushed Into Dink Murder Spotlight

BBP: PARTY BEING PUSHED INTO DINK MURDER SPOTLIGHT

The New Anatolian, Turkey
Feb 10 2007

The leader of an ultranationalist political party on Friday challenged
recent media reports linking his party to the perpetrators of last
month’s killing of journalist Hrant Dink.

Muhsin Yazicioglu of the Grand Unity Party (BBP), citing media reports
alleging that Yasin Hayal, the alleged second man behind the murder,
was given money by a BBP official, said that he will get even through
the courts with those bringing charges against him and his party.

Daily Radikal claimed that Hayal confessed that BBP Trabzon head Yasar
Cihan gave him YTL 1,000 via his family after he was sent to prison
on charges of bombing a McDonald’s restaurant in the city three years
ago. The daily last week also claimed that Ogun Samast, the arrested
gunman, had a very warm welcome from prison staff who allegedly
provided him with new sheets and a newly painted prison cell. The
claims were promptly denied by both prison authorities and the Cabinet.

Yazicioglu claimed that certain circles are working to making the BBP
the focal point of the incidents, branding it an attack on the party.

A photo of Yazicioglu with suspect Erhan Tuncel, arrested on charges
of soliciting the murder before his being a former police informant
came to light, was published by the media in the immediate aftermath
of the killing.

The party leader also said that these reports are clearly meant to
interfere in the judicial process.

The party’s Trabzon head, Cihan, confirming news that he gave money
to Hayal’s family, said that he has been serving in the party as the
provincial head for almost eight months and that as a businessman
he is used to assisting needy families. "I don’t know Hayal’s family
personally; I helped them three years ago as they asked me for help,"
he added.

In related news, yet another suspect, identified as M.K. and detained
in Trabzon late on Thursday in light of Hayal’s testimony, was
delivered to Istanbul police.

Police deny problems with gendarmerie

Investigations into the murder of journalist Hrant Dink are being
carried out in full coordination and without overlooking any details,
said Police spokesperson Ismail Caliskan on Friday.

Asked about the police and the gendarmerie allegedly being at odds,
a claim afloat ever since the bombing in the southeastern Semdinli
district in November 2005, Caliskan denied any problems between the
institutions, saying such speculation is being leaked to the media
by certain malevolent people.

Vartan Oskanian to partake in the 43rd Munich Conference on Security

Vartan Oskanian to partake in the 43rd Munich Conference on Security Policy

ArmRadio.am
09.02.2007 17:58

February 10 RA Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian will leave for Germany
to participate in the 43rd Munich Conference on Security Policy to
be held February 9-11.

A number of bilateral meetings are expected in the framework of the
conference. Minister Oskanian is scheduled to meet the representative
of Germany presiding over the European Union and Georgian Foreign
Minister Gela Bezhuashvili.

February 11 the Foreign Minister is due to leave for Koln, where he
will meet with representatives of the Armenian community to discuss
issues of accomplishment of decisions taken during the Armenia-Diaspora
Third Forum in 2006.

Armenia To Take Part In Black Sea Countries First Sports Games

ARMENIA TO TAKE PART IN BLACK SEA COUNTRIES FIRST SPORTS GAMES

Noyan Tapan
Feb 08 2007

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 8, NOYAN TAPAN. Representatives of Armenia will
also take part in the Black Sea countries first sports youth games to
be held on July 2-8 in the Turkish city of Trapison. As Noyan Tapan
correspondent was imformed by Yuri Alexanian, Spokesperson of RA
Sports Committee, 6 Armenian sportsmen will take part in free-style
wrestling competitions, 6 in Greco-Roman wrestling competitions,
3 boys and 1 girl in taekwondo competitions, 4 girls and 1 boy
in athletics competitions, the team of 16-17-year-old players in
football tournament. In addition to the above mentioned kinds of
sports, shooting, art gymnastics, volleyball (girls), basketball
(boys) and swimming are also included in the games’ program. Besides
Armenia, sportsmen from Albania, Bulgaria, Azerbaijan, Georgia,
Greece, Moldova, Romania, Russia, Serbia, Ukraine and Turkey will
take part in the games. Second Black Sea countries’ youth sports
games will be held in three years, in 2010. Starting third games,
the event will take place by the olympic cycle, once in four years.