Court Sentences Two Former Policemen for Forcing False Confession

Armenian court sentences two former policemen for forcing false confession

.c The Associated Press

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) – An Armenian court on Monday sentenced two former
policemen to three years in prison for violently forcing a suspect to falsely
confess to raping and murdering an 11-year-old girl. But the two were freed
immediately under an amnesty.

Ruben Saakian and Gurgen Arushanian also were stripped of the right to work
as police officers for violently coercing suspect Armen Pogosian to confess
to the charges, which landed him 15 years in prison.

After five years, prosecutors established the crime had been committed by
another man, Pogosian was freed, and the two officers were fired.

They received amnesty because their 1998 crime fell under an amnesty
declared in 2001 to mark the 1,700th anniversary of Armenia’s adoption of
Christianity.

06/20/05 03:15 EDT

Two Issues Concerning Azerbaijan Put On PACE Summer Session

TWO ISSUES CONCERNING AZERBAIJAN PUT ON PACE SUMMER SESSION

YEREVAN, JUNE 17, NOYAN TAPAN. The summer session of the Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe will be convened in Strasbourg on
June 20-24. No issue directly concerning Armenia is envisaged by the
draft agenda. But the PACE Beauru gave a positive conclusion on the
initiative to put the issue concerning the constitutional reforms
in Armenia on the agenda as an immediate one. It must get necessary
number of votes to be put on the agenda of the plenary sitting. As
Shavarsh Kocharian, a member of the PACE Armenian delegation,
a representative of the NA “Ardarutiun” (“Justice”) bloc informed
the Noyan Tapan correspondent, among the South Caucasian problems,
two issues concerning Azebaijan, about political prisoners and
formation of democratic institutions, are on the agenda of the
session. Malcolm Bruse, a British Deputy appionted as a special
rapporteur will present the first one, and co-rapporteurs on the
Azerbaijani issue at the Monitoring Commission of the Assembly will
present the second one. At the final part of the draft resolution
to be presented to the PA adoption it is particularly mentioned that
if the parliamentary elections to take place in Azerbaijan early in
November do not correspond to international standards and are not
free and just the PA will not recognize the Azerbaijani delegates’
powers at the January session. Besides the plenary sittings, the
representatives of the Armenian delegation will participate in the
discussion of the edited draft of constitutional amendments of Armenia
to be held jointly with the working group of the Venice Commission
on June 23-24. The Ad-hoc Committee on Nagorno Karabakh Issue will
also convene its first sitting during the days of the session of the
Assembly. It was created two months ago according to the demand of the
January resolution of the Assembly concerning Nagorno Karabakh. Heads
of the national delegations to the Assembly of the OSCE Minsk Group
member countries, Armenia and Azerbaijan, rapporteurs on the issue
of Armenia and Azerbaijan at the Assembly are particularly in the
committee headed by Lord Rassel Johnstone. It is envisaged to involve
one additional representative of opposition in the delegations of
Armenia and Azerbaijan in the Committee. The only mission of the
Ad-hoc Committee is to gather information got from the each member
about steps taken by the own country in the direction of supporting
a peace settlement of the Karabaklh conflict, and, summing up the
mentioned information to present an annual report to the Assembly.

Rafal Zambzhicky Pane performs Armenian music

AZG Armenian Daily #112, 18/06/2005

Culture

RAFAL ZAMBZHICKY PANE PERFORMS ARMENIAN MUSIC

The fact that a great number of musicians play Armenian music evidences
that it is the component part of contemporary music. Rafal Zambzhicky
Pane, born in Lodz, is one of them. He studied in England in the class
of Wuen Zhu Lee. He also studied in Vienna in the class of Gerhard
Schultz. After receiving the second prize at the Violin Contest in
Luxemburg in 2005 and being awarded a prize in BBC Young Musician of
the Year in 2000, he began performing as a soloist and an orchestra
musician. Rafal Zambzhicky performs with the London “Dimension”
Piano Trio and the Frankfurt “Ensemble Modern.”

It was the second visit of Rafal to Yerevan. In the May of 2002 he
performed Aram Khachatrian’s Concerto for Violin with the Philharmonic
Orchestra of Armenia. Rafal emphasized the melodic part of Aram
Khachatrian’s music, making the melody an intermission line of the
piece. Performing Khachatrian in Polish way, putting him by the side
of Karol Shimanovsky, his contemporary, Rafal revealed the sad lyrics
of the piece in all of its parts.

Zambzhicky performed as a soloist playing “Hayastan 88” concerto for
violin by Alexander Harutyunian during his second visit. His concert
was organized by Regina Pargev, the manager. Thanks to Regina Pargev,
Rafal played Armenian music in London, including the pieces by Komitas,
Aram Khachatrian and Arno Babajanian. In April of 2004, Zambzhicky
performed Harutyunian’s concerto for violin in Wigmore Hall, in London.

Rafal said in the interview that “the value of the piece is
more important for him, than its national value,” when choosing a
piece. As for the Armenian musical pieces, the violinist emphasized
“the sadness and the feeling of grief” that are peculiar to them. He
sees the same in violin concerto of Harutyunian. “That is a great
music. I played that twice in England and if I have the opportunity,
I will play it again.”

The presence of the music~Rs author and Rafal Zambzhicky Pane imparted
additional festive shades to the concert dedicated to 85th anniversary
of Alexander Harutyunian. Besides the concert for violin and “The
Dance of Sassoon People” by Alexander Harutyunian, “Armenian Songs
and Dances” by Komitas-Aslamazian, and “Holberg~Rs Times” by Edward
Grieg, two suits, were also included in the concert.

The harmony of the concert was secured by the ethnic expressionism of
the music, as well as Aram Gharabekian~Rs talent of a conductor. He
managed to create an orchestra of true international level that lives
and creates by Lege Artis, i.e. by the law of arts. Rich repertoire
and professional stability gained deserved fame to the orchestra,
making it one of “calling cards” for Armenia.

The soloist secured high-level performance of the concert for violin.
Zambzhicky managed to reflect the sadness and the pathetic element of
the piece, that were based on the components of the Armenian monody
and rhetoric elements of baroque taste. Zambzhicky performed his part
with warmth and sincerity peculiar to him.

The lyric talents of the violinist were displayed in a quite
interesting way when performing Scherzo and Adagio recitative.

Alexander Harutyunian’s concert is dedicated to Ruben Aharonian,
prominent violinist. Ilya Grubert and Levon Hambardzumian also
performed this concert. The young Polish musician managed to make a
very interesting interpretation of the piece.

By Svetlana Sargsian, Dr. of Arts

Oskanian called adoption of Armenian Genocide Resolution by Budestag

OSKANIAN CALLED ADOPTION OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION BY BUNDESTAG TURNING POINT

Pan Armenian News
17.06.2005 03:31

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia positively evaluates the German Bundestag
passing the Armenian Genocide Resolution, Armenian Foreign Minister
Vartan Oskanian said. In his words, it is a very important step on the
way of international recognition of the Armenian Genocide. It spite
the resolution language does not include the term «genocide,» as the
Bundestag does not consider itself competent to estimate the events
taken place in 1915, however the word «genocide» is included in the
descriptive part of the document and the term «massacre of Armenians»
is used in the part of the decision, the Armenian FM remarked. Taking
into account the circumstance that Germany has avoided discussion
of the issue for many years and rather tended to silence or denial,
the Bundestag Resolution is a turning point. Specifically, Germany
recognizes its complicity to events in 1915 and urges Turkey to put off
with its past. As noted by V. Oskanian, the Bundestag Resolution is
another step to inclusion of Armenian issues in the agenda of talks
on Turkey’s accession to the EU, reported the Press Service of the
Armenian Foreign Ministry.

–Boundary_(ID_1HKUogULPMKqrWTax0uSKA)–

German chancellor candidate will continue to fight Turkish EUmembers

German chancellor candidate will continue to fight Turkish EU membership

Agence France Presse — English
June 16, 2005 Thursday 9:42 AM GMT

BERLIN June 16 — German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder’s conservative
challenger said Thursday she would not budge on her objection to
Turkey joining the European Union if she wins a September election.

Angela Merkel told parliament that she would stand by her position
that the EU would be better served by a “privileged partnership”
with Ankara as opposed to full Turkish membership.

“We will not renounce our position and will continue to repeat that
negotiations for a privileged partnership are the best option for
integrating Turkey in Europe,” she said.

Merkel said that the fact that Turkey had still not established
diplomatic relations with Armenia or Cyprus, the latter of which
joined the EU one year ago, was a “quite catastophic situation”.

Schroeder has strongly backed full EU membership for Turkey. Ankara
is due to begin EU accession talks on October 3.

Merkel’s Christian Union bloc is leading Schroeder’s Social Democrats
in opinion polls by a double-digit margin.

The debate was the first face-to-face clash between the two since
Schroeder announced last month that he would seek early elections
following a string of drubbings for his party in state polls.

German resolution on Armenian massacre sparks Turkish anger

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
June 16, 2005, Thursday
15:21:15 Central European Time

German resolution on Armenian massacre sparks Turkish anger

Berlin/Ankara

Straining relations with Turkey, the German Bundestag parliament
adopted a resolution Thursday condemning the massacre of up to 1.5
million ethnic Armenians in the Ottoman Empire 90 years ago.

The resolution criticised the current government of Turkey for
“neglecting to address the issue” in a forthright manner.

Turkey’s Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul denounced the resolution as
“irresponsible, appalling and injurious” to relations between the
two countries.

“We note this decision with regret and we strongly condemn it,” said
a statement released by the Foreign Ministry. The statement accused
the resolution of being rooted in “domestic politics” and called it
“irresponsible and narrow-minded”.

Turkey acknowledges the tragedy of hundreds of thousands of deaths in
“civil strife” during 1915-17 but denies there was a state- sponsored
extermination plan – a stance that has complicated its efforts to join
the European Union. Accession talks are due to start later this year.

On April 24, 1915, the Ottoman Turkish government arrested hundreds
of Armenian intellectuals and community leaders, most of whom were
quickly executed.

This was followed by the mass relocation of Christian Armenians from
Anatolia through desert to Mesopotamia and what is today Syria.

Starvation, disease, attacks by bandits and the brutality of the
escorting troops resulted in mass fatalities. Most Western sources
maintain that more than a million deaths took place.

The incident has been widely referred to as the first genocide of
the 20th Century.

Turkey said Thursday’s resolution is not historically correct, saying
claims that “almost all Armenians living in Anatolia were exterminated”
have “no basis”. dpa eg cw sc ch

Drawn to the Quarter

Ha’aretz, Israel
June 16 2005

The Jewish Quarter in Jerusalem. After the Six-Day War in 1967, it
was restored and important archaeological digs took place there.
(Lior Mizrahi / BauBau) Many years ago, when I was writing my
doctoral thesis, I used to visit the Jewish Studies reading room in
the Jewish National and University Library at the Hebrew University
in Jerusalem. I arrived when the library opened, so I could be the
first to get to all the necessary books on the shelves.

Drawn to the Quarter

By Yehoshua Schwartz

One day a stranger stood next to me, a man of average height with a
thick mustache, and asked for one of the books on my desk.
Incidentally, he also asked about the subject of my research. I told
him I was working on the Jewish community in Judea during the
Roman-Byzantine period, and that I was now researching the Ayalon
Valley. He immediately asked if I was familiar with a large number of
archeological artifacts from the region, which were relevant to my
research. I was disheartened. I thought I had already read
everything, that I knew everything. He recommended that I order from
the library storehouse the Kibbutz Nahshon newsletter from the
mid-1960s, and look for a personal column called “Al Harekhes” (On
the Mountain Ridge).

The man standing next to me was Rami Yizrael, the writer of the
column and of the book under review. I learned from him that day not
only about the Ayalon Valley region, but also about modesty,
particularly academic modesty: There are serious scholars who are not
a part of the academic world, and important things are published not
only in the “research literature,” but also in popular journals, and
they and their writers should not be regarded with scorn.

The book before us includes Yizrael’s most important articles
published over the years, in addition to several new studies, and
deals mainly with three areas: the Jewish Quarter in Jerusalem’s Old
City, various sites and places in Jerusalem and its environs and
various sites in Israel, especially Tiberias and Safed. The articles
are research studies in the full sense of the word, but they have a
practical aspect as well, and are highly recommended reading when you
are on a tour or a field trip.

Advertisement

We cannot deal with the broad variety of subjects in the 20 chapters
of the book, and will have to make do with drawing several
conclusions from Yizrael’s studies about the Old City in Jerusalem,
the subject of the first section of the book and its first seven
chapters. These articles were written in the wake of a comprehensive
study conducted by the writer at the initiative of the Association
for the Restoration and Development of the Old City, and as part of
an attempt to strengthen its tourist potential.

The Jewish Quarter was a “quarter,” but not a European-type ghetto
(or the “voluntary ghetto” that covered an area of 30 dunams in the
Armenian Quarter), or the harat in Eastern countries. It was not
surrounded by an (interior) wall, and was not restricted only to
Jews. In medieval cities, residents were concentrated according to
their ethno-religious origin, and in Jerusalem, which is sacred to
the three religions, this phenomenon was especially prominent. In the
Jewish Quarter, one could find Jews and Muslims alongside one
another, and the same was true in the Muslim Quarter, an area that
was popular among the Jews because of its proximity to the Temple
Mount, and in light of the fact that it was impossible to settle in
the closed Armenian Quarter, or in the Christian Quarter, which the
Church leaders closed to Jewish residents.

An interesting phenomenon in the Jewish Quarter is the connection
between the Jewish residents and the synagogues, especially starting
in the middle of the 19th century. Until then, there were synagogues
in the Jewish Quarter, but because of the Omar Laws, which restricted
the construction of non-Muslim houses of prayer, these were not
particularly impressive buildings. In the 1860s, the Ottomans
moderated the laws restricting the rights of minorities concerning
the construction of houses of prayer, and the residents began to
build synagogues. As a result, the Jewish population multiplied
sevenfold in the 19th century, and the number of synagogues
multiplied by 13, almost double the increase in the population. These
synagogues attracted many worshipers, about 600 on average per
synagogue in the middle of the 19th century.

Overcrowding and poverty

The increase in the number of residents in the Jewish Quarter led to
terrible overcrowding and poverty. The development of the new city
led the educated, the rich, laborers from the First and Second Aliyah
(waves of immigration to Palestine in the late 19th and early 20th
centuries), and most of those who could afford it, to leave the
Jewish Quarter for the new city. By World War I, only poor people
remained in the Old City, as well as the religious leadership of
Jerusalem and most of its institutions. The process of abandoning the
Jewish Quarter accelerated during the British Mandatory period
(beginning in 1922), since the gap between the standard of living of
the new city and the old one, only continued to grow.

The situation continued to deteriorate in the wake of the Arab riots
that began during Pesach in 1920. These were the first riots against
the Jews of Jerusalem in generations. They were not limited only to
the Jewish Quarter, or even to the Old City, and were renewed every
few years until the 1948 War of Independence. The British forces
often included Arab policemen, who did not interfere with the
rioters, and sometimes even helped them. During these first riots,
several members of the Haganah defense forces exhibited initiative
and heroism. Rachel Yanait Ben Zvi, for example, penetrated the Old
City wearing a disguise, passed via Hagai Street and Hashalshelet
Street, and exited via the Jaffa Gate, in order to report on the
situation to the Haganah. Nehemiah Rabin (a member of Hagdud Ha’Ivri
– the Jewish Brigade, and father of the late prime minister Yitzhak
Rabin) and Zvi Nadav (one of the veterans of the Hashomer defense
group) evacuated the wounded.

During the 30 years of the British Mandate, the number of Jewish
residents in the Old City steadily decreased. In the new city during
that period, another 28 Jews were added for every 10 residents,
whereas in the Old City barely two out of every 10 Jewish residents
remained. The buildings in the Jewish Quarter, which were hundreds of
years old, were decrepit, and the sanitary conditions and other
services were also in a bad state.

After the Arab Revolt of 1936-1939, it was mainly an impoverished
population that remained in the Jewish Quarter, with a large number
of children and elderly people. In addition, there was a lack of
authorized leadership there to confront the large number of problems
that made life difficult for the residents. The Jewish Quarter was
not fortunate during the War of Independence. After 13 consecutive
days of fighting, it fell into the hands of the Arab Legion, on May
28, 1948, about two weeks after the establishment of the State of
Israel.

Yizrael believes that the fall of the Jewish Quarter was the greatest
and most scathing failure of the War of Independence. During that
war, other communities fell as well, but the Jewish Quarter was the
largest, and the only urban community. Other Jewish neighborhoods
fell as well, but the Jewish Quarter was much more than a
neighborhood. The author believes that the failure was worse because
there were several opportunities to save it, which were not
exploited.

Jordanian rule

The 19 years of Jordanian rule in the Jewish Quarter only accelerated
the process of neglect. The Jewish Quarter was not restored during
this period, but turned into a kind of refugee camp for those Arabs
who had been uprooted from the Western neighborhoods of Jerusalem and
from the surrounding villages. No real new buildings were
constructed, and the infrastructure, which had been damaged during
the war, was poorly maintained. However, this situation preserved the
physical character of the quarter.

After the Six-Day War in 1967, a new chapter in the history of the
Jewish Quarter began. It was restored, important archaeological digs
took place there, and the writer, as well as other researchers, began
to tour and to research it. In recent years, the political-security
situation has led to ups and downs in the fate of the Jewish Quarter.
During periods of calm, Jews streamed into the Jewish Quarter and
into the entire Old City. In times of crisis and attacks, people
rarely tour its alleyways.

Recently, we were informed (Haaretz, May 1) that “Israelis are
returning to the Old City in Jerusalem.” We can hope that they will
return with Yizrael’s book in hand, and tour there – as in Tiberias,
Safed and Petah Tikva, and all the other sites researched in the
author’s book – out of the enjoyment of learning and the love of the
country that underlie the research studies and are so deeply
ingrained in the heart of soul of the writer.

The writer is dean of the faculty of Jewish Studies at Bar-Ilan
University

Azeri deputy minister says Russia’s Caucasus combat experience’valua

Azeri deputy minister says Russia’s Caucasus combat experience ‘valuable’

Interfax
June 16 2005

Moscow, 15 June: The Azerbaijani deputy interior minister and
commander-in-chief of the country’s Interior Ministry troops,
Lt-Gen Zakir Hasanov, has described as valuable the combat experience
gained by the Russian Internal Troops in the North Caucasus and other
“hot beds”.

“We are also interested in an exchange of experience in the sphere of
combat training of troops,” Hasanov told journalists after a meeting
with his counterpart, the commander-in-chief of the Russian Interior
Ministry’s Internal Troops, Col-Gen Nikolay Rogozhkin, in Moscow on
15 June.

Touching on the situation in Nagornyy Karabakh, Gen Hasanov said
that “almost the entire world recognizes Azerbaijan’s territorial
integrity”.

“Our internal troops will carry out their tasks in Nagornyy Karabakh
fully once the issue is solved by political means,” the general said.

He underlined that the internal troops were preparing for performing
the tasks during the parliamentary elections due in November.

Elections in NKR directed to regulation of domestic life

ELECTIONS IN NKR DIRECTED TO REGULATION OF DOMESTIC LIFE

Pan Armenian News
15.06.2005 05:25

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The parliamentary elections in Nagorno Karabakh
are first of all directed to the regulation of domestic life,
NKR Foreign Minister Arman Melikian stated in his interview with
H2 Armenian TV Channel. “We do not purpose the objective to be
praised by the international community for conduction of exemplary
elections. We ourselves need these elections and their correspondence
to international standards will do much good. But I would like to
reiterate that it is the issue of our internal life and due to this
reason the conduction of transparent and democratic elections is
essential”, NKR FM noted. “As for the presence of international
observers, Karabakh sent invitations to lots of international
and public organizations and individuals from the CIS, US, Europe
and Islamic states. Many of them have already agreed to watch the
elections”, the minister resumed.

Yerevan Authorities Call Citizens Not To Use Service Of Street Trade

YEREVAN AUTHORITIES CALL CITIZENS NOT TO USE SERVICE OF STREET TRADERS

YEREVAN, JUNE 13. ARMINFO. “We call the public of Yerevan not to use
the service of street traders and not to drink the unhealthy juices
made directly in the street.” Vice Mayor of Yerevan Arman Sahakyan
made such a statement at a briefing today.

He said that 21 of 38 territories for mini-markets are functioning
at present. As regards still functioning “trading tables,” Sahakyan
said that municipality has no relevant levers to settle this issue,
however, it will clean the streets, and then the problem with the
street traders will be solved through the police.

In his turn, Head of the Public Health Department of Yerevan
Municipality Armen Soghoyan states that the Hygienic and
Anti-epidemiological Inspection cannot examine the quality of the
street products as the traders are not legal entities. “So it remains
for us to call the public not to buy the products from the street to
avoid possible poisoning.” According to him, no cases of poisoning
from street products have been registered in the current year so far.