BAKU: OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs To Visit Armenia

OSCE MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIRS TO VISIT ARMENIA

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
May 21 2007

OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs Yuri Merzlyakov (Russia) and Bernard Fassier
(France)-mediators in the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
will arrive in the Armenian capital, Yerevan tonight, APA reports.

The visit aims to organize the meeting of Azerbaijani and Armenian
Presidents during the Economic Forum scheduled to June 10 in St
Petersburg and negotiate with Armenian authorities.

The co-chairs are also to visit Nagorno Karabakh.

The mediators will arrive in Baku and negotiate with Azerbaijani
President Ilham Aliyev and Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov on
May 25.

American co-chair, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matthew Bryza
and personal representative of OSCE Chairman-in-Office Andrzej Kasprzyk
are missing this visit of the co-chairs.

Mr.Bryza will arrive in Baku to attend Caspian oil & gas-2007
exhibition and conference scheduled for June 5-8. He is expected to
visit Yerevan due to the preparation for the Presidents’ meeting in
St Petersburg.

War fears in Kosovo as Moscow veto looms

War fears in Kosovo as Moscow veto looms

Serbs and Albanians know Russia holds the key to their future as the
rift between them widens

Sunday May 20, 2007
The Observer

In Kosovo now there is only one question. What will the Russians do?
It is asked in smoky cafes, on the countless building sites, and in
government offices. It is asked by the majority Albanians, hoping for
independence for this divided former Serbian province, who fear the
Russians will torpedo the dream for which they fought the Kosovo war
of 1998-99.

And it is asked by the minority Serbs, who ruled Kosovo for so long
and regard it as their cultural and spiritual heartland, trapped in
their ever-shrinking enclaves in the south and in their last
stronghold in the north around the city of Mitrovica. Their fear is
that their Slav ally, which opposes the independence plan drawn up by
UN mediator Martti Ahtisaari, might at the last moment abandon them
through the pragmatism of international diplomacy.

It is an issue troubling the functionaries of the international
community who oversee Kosovo and who are anxious to see an endgame in
sight eight years after the war in Kosovo was ended by Nato’s bombing
of Serbia and Belgrade.

What makes Russian thinking so important is that the Ahtisaari plan
has now been tabled by the United States before the Security
Council. A point of no return has been reached. And, crucially, a
Russia that is resurgent in its sense of its international importance
and hostile to both the US and the European Union over issues as
diverse as criticism of its democracy and a planned missile shield for
eastern Europe, has not only rejected the resolution calling for UN
endorsement of the Ahtisaari plan, but has warned it might exercise
its veto if there is a vote.

Instead, Russia is now circulating its own counter-proposal for Kosovo
that would keep it within the ‘general sovereignty’ claimed by
Belgrade and put off the question of Kosovo’s final status, risking,
some say, renewed violence.

A crisis eight years in the making is unfolding with a giddy
inevitability. For while the fighting in Kosovo stopped in 1999, the
conflict itself, as diplomats here acknowledge, has never really
ended. All that has been held in check has been forced to the surface
again.

For Kosovo’s Albanians, fired up by the repeated promises of their
political leaders, there is the prospect that independence may be only
weeks away. It is a prospect that has forced Serbs to confront the
fact that it may now likely require some act of partition on their
part, a gesture that risks retaliation and expulsion of the most
vulnerable Serb pockets. Suddenly all is to play for.

‘During these past years we have made Kosovo. It is done,’ insists
Kosovo’s Prime Minister, Agim Ceku, former chief of staff of the
ethnic Albanian Kosovo Liberation Army. ‘We have built functioning
institutions. We have built our vision for the future. The worst case
scenario now is a lack of clarity, an ambiguity.’

‘If you ask me what I think the risks of partition are at the moment,’
says Naim Rashiti of the International Crisis Group, which issued a
report last week warning of the risk of violence if the Ahtisaari plan
was abandoned, ‘I would say 50-50. And I am worried that, if there is
partition, it has the potential to be very dirty, precisely because no
one has any plan B.’

In an entity whose economy has survived for almost a decade on
international handouts, remittances from family members working
abroad, and a grey and black economy – the latter based in large part
on smuggling – independence has become a kind of spell that for its
Kosovo Albanian believers promises to transform a landscape of chronic
underemployment and pitiful wages.

It is a fact that is underlined during a visit to the memorial to the
Kosovo Liberation Army leader Adem Jashari – his bullet and
rocket-wrecked compound in the village of Prekaz, where he perished
with most of his family in the incident in the winter of 1998 that
triggered the descent to all-out war.

The preserved ruins are being visited by Nurlje Sadiku from the
ethnically divided city of Mitrovica. ‘I have never worked,’ says
Nurlje. ‘But we hope everything will be better when independence
comes. Then jobs will be easier. The World Bank will help out with
donations and everything will be good.’

It is an expectation that has been stoked in the years since the war
by Kosovo’s Albanian politicians, many of them former fighters. ‘There
is no alternative to independence,’ says Hashim Taqi, the president of
the biggest Albanian opposition party, the PDK.

‘Any attempt to delay the process is high risk. The people are ready
and want a decision. They are counting the days. We were ready
yesterday. Today is too late. Tomorrow,’ he adds, ‘is dangerous.’

Crossing the bridge into the Serb stronghold of northern Mitrovica
that borders Serbia is like entering another country. The cars that do
have licence plates have Serbian ones. The mobile phones are on the
Serbian network. The signs are written in Cyrillic. Even the beer is
different – Kneva, not the ubiquitous Peya brand drunk to the
south. It reflects a society in equally dire economic straits, but one
sustained not by Kosovo’s provisional institutions but by
Belgrade. And by a different dream.

For if Kosovo’s Albanian population is fixed on independence, the
Serbs here, and in the scattered enclaves in central and southern
Kosovo, are equally determined that they wish to remain a part of
Serbia.

‘The Serbs in the north around Mitrovica are not afraid,’ says Petra
Miletic, a journalist turned politician. ‘But the Serbs in the
enclaves are afraid.

I am afraid for them and, yes, I do know of Serbs in the south who are
selling up and leaving, as Albanians in their enclaves in the north
are also selling up.’

But even if population exchanges are continuing, he has no illusions
about the conditions for partition, if only in Kosovo’s north: ‘For us
to survive independently would require the support of Belgrade.’

It is one of Kosovo’s two as yet unanswered questions: whether the
Albanian population denied independence by a Russian veto would
declare independence on its own, and whether, faced with any kind of
independence for the Albanian majority, the Serb minority would
secede.

What it is driven by – as Miletic and many others on both sides
concede – is the utter failure of any reconciliation since the year’s
end.

Such failure was perceptible at the prom night for the graduating
high-school class of 2007 in Pristina – a city that once had a Serb
population of 40,000. As they turned out in their posh frocks and
dinner jackets, it was clear that, whereas their Albanian parents
could once speak Serbian, the new generation speaks it not at
all. Albanians and Serbs can no longer communicate.

In his deputy director’s office in the hospital in Mitrovica, the
reality is laid out by Milan Ivanovic of the hardline Serbian National
Council. ‘I don’t know if partition is possible,’ he says, although on
his wall hangs a large map showing his movement’s claim to 38 per cent
of Kosovo’s land for the Serbs.

‘What is true is that in the north we have a better possibility than
in the Serb enclaves in the south and centre. We have our own system
and no contact with the Albanian institutions. And we have freedom of
movement over the border into Serbia.

‘We believe that we are between two extremities: between Ahtisaari’s
plan and between that of [former President of Yugoslavia Slobodan]
Milosevic’s plan for Kosovo. There must be room for further
negotiation.’ What he means is room for further stalling.

It is what the Russians are calling for, but time is running out. For
as much as Serbs are calling for more time, Albanians are desperate
for results. And those who lost most in the war are most anxious for
a final resolution.

In the village of Krushe e Vogel, in the Kosovo Liberation Army
heartland to the south and the scene of one of the worst massacres of
the war, in which more than 100 residents remain ‘missing’, the
alternative is brutally outlined by Xhylferije Shehu, 48.

In her tomato frame among the fields, Shehu, who lost her husband
among nine family members, says: ‘We have waited eight years for
independence. I’m not optimistic that there won’t be trouble. If there
is no independence, then we will have to fight again.’

Money Wins Parliamentary Elections, Tigran Karapetian Says

MONEY WINS PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS, TIGRAN KARAPETIAN SAYS

Noyan Tapan
May 18 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 18, NOYAN TAPAN. "Money and why not, force, won the May 12
parliamentary elections," Chairman of People’s Party Tigran Karapetian
stated at the May 18 press conference. In his words, though the party
headed by him failed to get over 5% barrier, the votes received by PP
are "votes of the rest part of honest and pure voters" who are in the
"kind field" and it is impossible to tempt them by a bribe.

T. Karapetian said that he has many facts of violations. In particular,
during calculation of votes in Talin 300 ballot-papers voted in
favor of PP were added to the Republican Party. Nevertheless, as
T. Karapetian stated, he is not going to apply to the Constitutional
Court.

"The authorities have made elections a business, but they do not
imagine what kind of situation will be formed in the country if some
foreign force for strengthening its positions in Armenia starts to
give out not 5 thousand but 505 thousand drams to the people," the
PP leader said.

Armenie En Arabian

ARMENIE EN ARABIAN

Le Figaro, France
14 mai 2007

Une silhouette masculine realisee par Veronique Nichanian pour Hermès,
une installation olfactive signee Francis Kurkdjian, des creations
de K. Jacques, Stephane Kelian, Alain Manoukian ou Alain Mikli, un
hommage au costumier Sergueï Paradjanov… Dans le cadre de l’annee
de l’Armenie, le Musee de la mode de Marseille deroule l’histoire
des savoir-faire armeniens dans les metiers de la mode.

Une belle exposition qui offre carte blanche et sa première
retrospective a la creatrice de chaussures et de sacs Karine Arabian.

Se côtoient quelque 180 items issus de ses collections depuis 1993
ainsi que les pièces uniques qu’elle realise en collaboration avec des
artisans armeniens. Ne pas manquer ce soulier et ce sac faits de cuir,
de bois, d’agate et d’argent massif en 2003 et qui suspendent leur vol
dans leur ecrin de plexi. Karine Arabian et les Armeniens de la mode,
XVII e -XXI e siècle. Du 16 mai au 30 septembre, Musee de la mode,
11, la Canebière, 13001 Marseille. Tel. : 04 96 17 06 00.

–Boundary_(ID_rPSFCbxt4GtYFeDHZ9SmvQ)–

Presidency Of European Union Satisfied That Elections In Armenia "We

PRESIDENCY OF THE EUROPEAN UNION SATISFIED THAT ELECTIONS IN ARMENIA "WERE, ON THE WHOLE, CONDUCTED FAIRLY, FREELY AND LARGELY IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE INTERNATIONAL COMMITMENTS"

Mediamax News Agency, Armenia
May 14 2007

Yerevan, May 14. /Mediamax/. Presidency of the European Union (EU)
stated "with satisfaction" that the parliamentary elections held
in Armenia on 12 May "were, on the whole, conducted fairly, freely
and largely in accordance with the international commitments which
Armenia had entered into".

Mediamax reports that this is said in the statement of the Presidency
of the European Union.

"Presidency welcomes the fact that, compared to previous elections,
significant progress has been made", the document reads.

"The Presidency also welcomes the fact that the parliamentary elections
were observed and monitored closely and in a professional manner by a
comprehensive ODIHR election observation mission and by delegations
from the OSCE and Council of Europe Parliamentary Assemblies", is
noted in the statement.

Looking ahead to the presidential elections due to be held at the
beginning of 2008, the EU Presidency called on Armenia to investigate
and resolve the procedural problems which still exist, particularly
those concerning vote-counting but also the isolated cases of
irregularities which were observed.

"The Presidency of the European Union is very much in favor of
intensifying cooperation with Armenia. This would breathe new life into
the European Neighborhood Policy and the Action Plan agreed under it",
the statement reads.

Armenian President Promises Poll Fraud Probe

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT PROMISES POLL FRAUD PROBE

Agence France Presse — English
May 14, 2007 Monday 1:34 PM GMT

Armenian President Robert Kocharian Monday promised a thorough probe
into alleged violations during weekend elections won overwhelmingly
by a coalition of parties close to the current government.

"All violations which took place will be minutely studied and all
necessary steps will be taken so that the law can take its course,"
he said in a statement.

Armenia’s opposition claimed Saturday’s vote was deeply flawed but
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe said the vote
was a clear improvement over previous polls.

The opposition in this small country wedged between Turkey and Iran
claims violations were rife on election day, including instances of
pro-government parties bribing voters outside polling stations.

Country of Law, which with seven percent of the ballots won the
most votes among the opposition, backed away from earlier promises
to hold demonstrations, saying instead it would seek redress in
Armenia’s courts.

The German presidency of the European Union also said the vote had
"on the whole" been conducted fairly and freely.

With all the votes tallied, the Republican party of Prime Minister
Serzh Sarkisian was far ahead with 32.9 percent of the vote.

Sarkisian, Kocharian’s chosen successor for president, is now the
uncontested frontrunner in a presidential election set for the end
of next year.

The pro-presidential Prosperous Armenia party of millionaire former
world arm wrestling champion Gagik Tsarukian had 14.7 percent of
the vote. It was followed by the Armenian Revolutionary Federation,
a member of the former ruling coalition, with 12.8 percent.

Armenian Leaders Expect Tight Grip on New Parliament

EurasiaNet, NY
May 12 2007

Armenian Leaders Expect Tight Grip on New Parliament

By Emil Danielyan
Published May 11, 2007

With only one day to go before Armenia’s general elections, President
Robert Kocharian and his top political allies appear confident that
they will gain a commanding majority in the country’s new parliament.
Whether or not they will avoid post-election infighting remains an
open question, however. Kocharian’s most uncompromising opponents,
meanwhile, are gearing up for a campaign of anti-government
demonstrations that they pledge will follow what they expect to be a
fraudulent vote.

The ruling Republican Party of Armenia (RPA) ended its well-funded
election campaign with a rally in the center of Yerevan on May 10.
Its leader, Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian, addressed an audience of
thousands with what sounded more like an acceptance speech than a
last-minute appeal to voters.

`We will not let you down. We will not squander your trust. We will
not take any step which will make us feel ashamed,’ an
uncharacteristically emotional Sarkisian told the crowd, dominated by
civil servants and other public sector employees. The RPA, he said,
is now `stronger than ever before.’

In another campaign speech earlier this month, Sarkisian predicted
that his party will garner more votes than any other election
contender. Senior Republicans privately speak of grabbing at least 50
of the 131 parliament seats and even forming an absolute majority in
the next National Assembly.

Access to extensive government levers and sources of financing has
given the party a key advantage in its push to retain the largest
faction in parliament.

President Kocharian, however, sounded more cautious about the party’s
chances in televised remarks broadcast later on May 10. While
predicting that the main pro-presidential parties will dominate the
assembly, he said that none of them will likely be able to
`single-handedly form a government.’

Still, Kocharian did single out the RPA from the list of his
preferred election winners. `I believe it would be good if the
Republican Party had a weighty presence in parliament,’ he told
Armenia’s three largest TV channels. He argued that the number one
challenge facing the South Caucasus nation is the unresolved
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and Azerbaijan’s growing threats to settle
the dispute by force.

`Now let us think who is capable of coping with this threat,’ the
Armenian leader said. `Those politicians who went through a war, who
participated in the formation of our armed forces? Or those
politicians who can’t tell an [army] battalion from a company or a
rifle from a machine gun?’

It was an obvious reference to the fact that Prime Minister Sarkisian
was the first commander-in-chief of Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian army
during its 1992-1994 war against Azerbaijan. Kocharian was the
disputed region’s political leader at the time. The two Karabakh-born
men formed a powerful tandem after moving to top government positions
in Yerevan later in the 1990s. Sarkisian is now believed to be
planning to succeed Kocharian after the latter completes his second
and final term in office in early 2008. Kocharian does not seem to
object to those plans, but is clearly trying to remain in government
in another capacity, possibly as a prime minister. Local observers
say this does not necessarily sit well with Sarkisian. Some see
growing friction between Armenia’s two top leaders.

While Kocharian left no indication of such a rift in his televised
interview, he made a thinly veiled endorsement of another election
frontrunner, the Prosperous Armenia Party of Gagik Tsarukian, the
country’s reputedly richest `oligarch.’ He said the country’s
sustainable economic development hinges on `those in the private
sector who have created thousands of jobs, have gotten rich, don’t
conceal that, and are now doing charitable work.’

That charitable work, denounced by the Armenian opposition as
wholesale vote buying, has been central to Prosperous Armenia’s
election campaign, which has generated more popular enthusiasm than
the RPA’s government-organized meetings. [For details, see the
Eurasia Insight archive.]

Throughout the campaign Tsarukian was mobbed by scores of admirers,
most of them impoverished people impressed with his handouts ranging
from wheelchairs for disabled people to ambulance vans and promises
of a better life. Armenian law bans election candidates from
providing any goods or services to voters. In just about every
campaign speech, the beefy tycoon, who reportedly served a prison
sentence for rape in Soviet times, stressed that he has `everything’
and is not aspiring to any government position, reinforcing the
widely held belief that his party is a tool for securing Kocharian’s
political future.

Prosperous Armenia claims to have more than 400,00 members,
equivalent to 17 percent of the country’s eligible voters, and
intends to get at least as many votes in the May 12 elections. That
would almost certainly be enough for a landslide victory in the
polls. The RPA won the last elections in 2003 — amid reports of vote
rigging — with fewer than 300,000 votes. For this reason, potential
is seen for conflict between the two establishment parties.

Sarkisian attacked Tsarukian during an RPA campaign rally in
Yerevan’s northern Arabkir district on May 6. `Some of our rivals say
they don’t need power because they’ve got everything and simply want
the people to be better off,’ the Armenian premier said mockingly
before declaring that they `don’t want power because they don’t know
what power is.’

`I have said that I don’t want a government post because I already
have one,’ Tsarukian responded two days later. `I am the chairman of
Armenia’s National Olympic Committee.’

Also seeking a major role in the next government is the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation (ARF), the RPA’s junior partner in the
current governing coalition. ARF leaders indicated on May 9 that
their party wants to control the crucial post of defense minister in
the new government to be formed as a result of the elections. They
also repeated their threats to move into opposition against Kocharian
if the vote falls short of democratic standards.

None of the parliamentary and presidential elections held in Armenia
since independence have been judged to be free and fair by US and
European monitors. The country’s three most radical opposition groups
anticipate a repeat of serious vote irregularities, and have already
urged supporters to gather in Yerevan’s Liberty Square on May 13 and
fight for regime change in the streets.

Kocharian warned in late April that any post-election attempts to
topple him would provoke a tough government response. In his May 10
remarks, he expressed hope that only unspecified `constructive’
opposition forces will be represented in the next Armenian
parliament.

Two parties unlikely to feature on that list: the Country of Law
Party of former Parliamentary Speaker Artur Baghdasarian and the
Heritage Party of US-born former Foreign Minister Raffi Hovannisian.
In his statements, President Kocharian implied that he does not
consider either of the two pro-Western forces to be `constructive.’

Editor’s Note: Emil Danielyan is a Yerevan-based journalist and
political analyst.

Glendale: Center OKd For Next Step

CENTER OKD FOR NEXT STEP
By Robert S. Hong

Glendale News Press, CA
May 9 2007

Church members and members of Armenian Cultural Society pledge that
they’ll get along.

CITY HALL – After being displaced in 2003, the Armenian Society of Los
Angeles can move forward with plans to build its new cultural center
after the Glendale Redevelopment Agency’s unanimous vote Tuesday to
approve an environmental study and parking exception for the project.

The society has been without a permanent home since agreeing to vacate
its building on Brand Boulevard in exchange for another property
and $5 million from the city to help make way for the Americana at
Brand project.

After being given a lot adjacent to the Glendale Presbyterian church
on Louise Street, questions have arisen about how the influx of new
visitors and traffic would impact the area.

Members from both sides addressed the issues at Tuesday’s meeting.

At present, the society will be assigned 256 spaces in the Glendale
Marketplace parking lot, along with 14 spaces on site.

But some parishioners felt it was possible that more people would
park on-site than was allotted.

"We believe there are people that would understandingly want to park
[on-site] rather than go to highest level of Maryland [Avenue] garage,"
the Rev. Ken Baker said.

Others didn’t feel parking would be a problem, since the garage opened
up a lot of space for visitors.

"With parking, I don’t see a problem at all because the parking that
we have been promised is behind us so the traffic would be behind us,"
said Vaughn Gregor, chairman of trustees for the society.

Another issue some raised was the long hours the center would be open.

The center’s cafe could potentially be open from 6 a.m. to 1 a.m. on
weekdays and from 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. on weekends. But Albert Abkarian,
the society’s attorney, said that was the maximum time the cafe could
be open and not a typical scenario.

Normally, the facility would be open from 7 a.m. to 10 p.m., he said.

The agency was set to vote on the 26,000-square-foot project on March
27, but its members voted unanimously to hold off on a decision to a
later date, giving city officials a chance to review the environmental
impact study and other documents as well as allow the two soon-to-be
neighbors to discuss things.

Some were upset with the city for creating a situation that they said
is causing a rift between the two organizations.

"Overall, redevelopment money was supposed to be used to improve
the quality of life and community relations in a city. I don’t think
that’s the way it’s going," Glendale resident Margaret Hammond said.

"Instead of that, two community groups have become adversaries."

Though they have some conflicting interests, members from both groups
seemed to understand that it was a difficult position for both sides
and hoped things would be worked out.

"I see no problem in the future getting along with our neighbors,"
Gregor said.

The Rev. Craig Hall spoke along similar lines.

"Neither of us asked to be in this situation," he said. "We are trying
to work things out together for the common good."

Councilman Frank Quintero noted that the society deserved to finally
move forward with their center.

"It’s time to finish this, have the building built, and let them get
back to enjoying their association, and I think Glendale will be the
better for it," he said.

QUESTION

What do you think of the Redevelopment Agency’s decision allowing
the Armenian Society of Los Angeles to move forward with plans to
build on Louise Street? E-mail [email protected] or write to News-Press
Community Forum, 221 N. Brand Blvd., 2nd Floor, Glendale, CA 91203.

Please include your name and tell us your hometown and phone number
for verification purposes only.

I Do Not Believe Any Serious Developments May Happen On May 13, Igit

I DO NOT BELIEVE ANY SERIOUS DEVELOPMENTS MAY HAPPEN ON MAY 13, IGITIAN SAYS

Panorama.am
19:08 09/05/2007

Hovanes Igityan and Aram Manukyan, members of Pan-Armenian National
Movement (HHSh) board, have different opinion about developments
following May 12 elections. In a meeting with reporters, Igityan
said, "May be I am among the minority in the opposition, but I do
not think there will be any event on May 13, which may change the
illogical development of this country." He said so believing that
"there is no strong team among the opposition which may make serious
claims." Igityan hoped such a team may form before the presidential
elections and "Armenia may go back to its normal realm." The HHSh
board member also said the authorities are very afraid of May 13
and the arrest of Alexander Arzumanyan reflects that. Speaking about
Ukrainian and Georgian cases, Igityan said, "I believe there is no
such danger for the authorities."

Igitian’s co-party man, Aram Manukyan, said his meetings with voters
show that "the all administrative resources, blackmail and fear,
plus financial means together will not bring 10 percent votes to the
authorities." He said if 85-90 percent discontent electorate goes to
elections, the authorities will have to fake elections and will face
the danger of May 13. "I think the situation is very tense and may
bring to political changes," he said.

Riverside Armenian American Community Thanks Congressman Ken Calvert

RIVERSIDE ARMENIAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY THANKS CONGRESSMAN KEN CALVERT FOR COSPONSORSHIP OF H. RES. 106

ArmRadio.am
10.05.2007 13:21

Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) activist Ana Boyajian met
with Congressman Ken Calvert’s district office staff representative
Bill Essayli in the Congressman’s Riverside office. The meeting was
held in order to thank Congressman Calvert for his decision to sign
on as a cosponsor for H.Res.106.

Congressman Ken Calvert represents the 44th District of Southern
California which encompasses western Riverside County and parts of
Orange County.

Calvert is a member of the Armed Services Committee and the Resources
Committee.

Boyajian and Essayli spoke regarding the Armenian Genocide and the
importance of the resolution to the Armenian community. Boyajian
also told Essayli how much ANCA activists appreciate Calvert’s and
his colleagues’ support for the Resolution.

"The ANC and its local advocates welcome these opportunities to build
strong ties with our elected officials," said Haig Hovsepian, ANCA-WR
Community Relations Director. "The Riverside area Armenian American
community is happy to let Congressman Calvert know that his support
on this important issue is important to them and appreciated."