CSTO To Establish Regional Military Integration Systems

CSTO TO ESTABLISH REGIONAL MILITARY INTEGRATION SYSTEMS

RIA Novosti
17:42 | 02/ 03/ 2009

YEREVAN, March 2 (RIA Novosti) – The Collective Security Treaty
Organization (CSTO) plans to establish several different types of
regional integration military systems, the post-Soviet security
grouping’s general secretary said Monday.

"The collective security system within the CSTO framework is currently
being built according to a regional principle. There exist several
regional military groupings – Russian-Belarusian, Russian-Armenian and
now the issue of creating a Central Asian group is being considered,"
Nikolai Bordyuzha told journalists.

The CSTO comprises Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia,
Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.

Russia and Belarus recently signed an agreement to establish a united
air defense system.

"This is the first step toward the creation of such regional systems,"
Bordyuzha said.

He also said the CSTO’s collective rapid reaction forces would not
interfere in the domestic conflicts of its member countries, adding
however that the final decision on their deployment would rest with
the organization’s heads of state.

CSTO To Create Air Defense Regional Systems

CSTO TO CREATE AIR DEFENSE REGIONAL SYSTEMS

/PanARMENIAN.Net
02.03.2009 14:12 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Collective Security Treaty Organization considers
installation of several types of regional integration military systems,
the CSTO Secretary General said.

"Several military groups are functioning within the CSTO, namely
Russian-Belarusian, Russian-Armenian and the Central Asian groups. We
are planning to install regional communication and management systems
to facilitate their functioning," Nikolai Bordyuzha told a news
conference in Yerevan.

He also informed that Russia and Belarus have recently signed an
agreement on a joint air defense system installation.

"Currently, talks are held with the Central Asian countries," he said.

Newly published 2008 donor list shows five-fold increase in Armenia

PRESS RELEASE
Hayastan All Armenian Fund
Governmental Buiding 3, Yerevan, RA
Contact: Hasmik Grigoryan
Tel: +(3741) 56 01 06 ext. 105
Fax: +(3741) 52 15 05
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

27 February, 2009

Newly published 2008 donor list shows five-fold increase in Armenia
donations

As it published its 2008 list of Armenia- and Nagorno Karabakh-based donors,
the Hayastan All Armenian Fund noted a nearly five-fold increase in
contributions from the homeland compared with 2007, as well as considerable
growth in anonymous donations. The donor list was printed in the Republic of
Armenia newspaper and is posted on the fund’s website at himnadram.org. The
list will also be published in the fund’s annual Golden Book.

Ara Vardanyan, the Hayastan All Armenian Fund’s acting executive director,
expressed gratitude to the thousands of supporters whose names appear on the
list, and assured them that their donations today help significantly
accelerate the homeland’s economic, educational, and social development.
Vardanyan added that the increase in contributions was due in part to a
novel fundraising strategy implemented last year. Introduced in the fourth
quarter of 2008, that effort called for Armenia residents to make donations
of any size at their local post-office (HayPost) branch.

"Our experience and public surveys alike show that there is great potential
for the expansion of fundraising in Armenia proper," Vardanyan said,
pointing out the results of the 2008 campaign. "There is no such thing as a
big or small donation," he continued. "We are happy with the smallest amount
of money donated. This makes a tremendous difference in helping us carry out
our mission. Moreover, each and every donor, irrespective of contribution
size, will find his or her name in our annual report and Golden Book. We are
thankful to everybody: our long-term benefactors as well as thousands of
compatriots – whom we may not have the honor of knowing personally but
before whom we are equally responsible."

Vardanyan also conveyed the Hayastan All Armenian Fund’s gratitude to all
the major sponsors of the fund’s 2008 Telethon, including VivaCell-MTS,
Ardshinbank, Acba-Credit Agricole Bank, HayPost, and Armenian Public
Television.

http://www.himnadram.org/

Las Vegas: Legal Tempest Threatens To Break Up Family

LEGAL TEMPEST THREATENS TO BREAK UP FAMILY
By Timothy Pratt

Las Vegas Sun
mpest-us-law-threatens-scatter-family/
Feb 25 2009

Four years ago, when she was 10, Patricia Sarkisian wrote a letter
to President George W. Bush asking why her two older sisters were
jailed in Los Angeles, an order of deportation pushing them toward
a flight to Moscow any day.

Now she’s no longer "just a kid," as she signed off that letter, and
as of Feb. 2, another family member is in jail, awaiting deportation —
her mother, Anoush.

Her sisters, Emma, now 22, and Mariam, a year younger, were saved from
that fate in January 2005, by a cinematic, highly unusual last-minute
call from Sen. Harry Reid to then-Secretary of Homeland Security
Tom Ridge. Reid asked Ridge to "put personal attention" on the case,
which had caught the attention of the media and the public.

Now the Sarkisian family is again in the news, an unfortunate example
of the situation faced by an estimated 2 million families in the United
States: Some members of those families are born here, others become
citizens over time, some remain in limbo, and still others find no
legal recourse; the only thing keeping them from being deported is
the inability of the federal government to find them.

With an increased emphasis on enforcement, both in workplaces and
in neighborhoods, more of those people — like Anoush Sarkisian —
are being found and deported. A consequence is that more of those
families are ripped apart.

Federal officials found the 50-year-old through a circuitous route. In
May 2007, a car hit hers in the rear. Months later she and the other
driver engaged lawyers. In August, Immigration and Customs Enforcement
agents contacted the defendant in the case and discovered the place
and time of Sarkisian’s deposition. On Feb. 2, outside a Rancho Drive
law office, several agents ordered Sarkisian out of her car and into
handcuffs, in front of Emma, who looked on, stunned. The mother of
five, who suffers from diabetes, has been held in the North Las Vegas
jail since that day.

To immigration attorney Peter Ashman, in cases like that of the
Sarkisians, where a family is involved and the person of interest to
the federal government has no criminal history, no national interest
is being served by deportation.

"One of the pronounced reasons we have immigration law … is to
unite families," said Ashman, former head of the local chapter of
the American Immigration Lawyers Association. "Here we’re achieving
the opposite."

Virginia Kice, spokeswoman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
said the federal government is just enforcing the law.

"This woman has been under a final order of deportation for a decade
… We had been unable to locate her. Now we intend to carry it out."

For the family, the idea of someone being suddenly detained is
nothing new.

In 2005 Emma and Mariam were catapulted in a similar stunning fashion
from being teenage hands in their father’s family pizza business at
a suburban strip mall to the glare of national media attention.

Their story began years earlier however. Rouben Sarkisian, their
father, had come to the United States with Anoush in the early
1990s. They had three daughters together. He divorced Anoush and
remarried a U.S. citizen, entering a path to citizenship and, he
thought, putting his two older daughters on the same path. Anoush
sought political asylum from the U.S. government, being a native
Armenian claiming persecution from Russians in the Ukraine. She lost,
appealed, the years piled onand when the appeal was denied in 1999,
she was ordered deported. She stayed, unwilling to leave her daughters.

Rouben shared the job of raising them. When he took his two eldest
daughters to immigration authorities in July 2004 to inquire about
their status, the girls were arrested and sent to a cell in Los
Angeles.

The idea that teens who had spent most of their lives in the United
States could be sent to a country, Armenia, to which they had no
connection, and separated from their parents and sisters seemed
outrageous to many people.

After several weeks of dramatic back-and-forth, including a federal
judge at one point ordering the jail to give the teens access to
cell phones to communicate with family, Reid’s call saved them. The
federal government exercised its discretion to offer what’s known
as humanitarian relief. Four years later the young women still have
no legal status, but they’re allowed to stay in this country as
long as they check in with local Homeland Security officials on a
regular basis.

They both have been attending college and spending more time with
family at home, since their father sold his pizzeria and now spends
part of the year in the Ukraine on business trips.

Rouben has also finally become a U.S. citizen and petitioned for
his older daughters to do the same. But that will take years to
complete. So his daughters can’t petition for their mother, and
neither can Rouben, because he is no longer married to her.

The eldest of the U.S.-born daughters, Michelle, could petition
for Anoush to become a citizen, but only after she turns 21 — in
four years.

Meanwhile, Anoush waits in jail, refusing to sign a form that would
give the federal government permission to seek travel documents from
the Armenian government, a move her attorney says makes no sense
because the country didn’t even exist when she left it 20 years ago.

Four of the sisters sat on a dark blue leather couch in their northwest
valley home on a recent afternoon, awaiting their mother’s daily
calls from jail. Her lawyer, Arsen V. Baziyantis, says he tried to
get Anoush to sign a form that would allow her to have visitors, but
she refused because she didn’t want her daughters to see her in jail.

Michelle, sitting in the middle, says she misses her mother’s
advice and her strictness with teenage girl issues such as boys,
and with homework. To her right sits Patricia, the letter writer,
silent. Mariam strokes her hair. The 21-year-old says her mother is
"kind of like a fortune teller. She knows what you want, when you
want it." Without her at home, "it feels colder."

On a wall across the living room, a framed certificate names Elizabeth
"student of the month" for March 2004. She’s now 16.

She looks up, as if she senses the hour, about 3 p.m. She remembers
a daily ritual, tears welling in her dark eyes.

"(My mom) calls me on my cell every day after school. She asks how I
am. She calls each of us, one by one, wherever she is. When I heard
that she was in jail, I couldn’t believe it. I kept calling her. She
didn’t answer. I couldn’t believe she was gone."

http://www.lasvegassun.com/news/2009/feb/25/te

U.S. Department Of State Report: Setback In Armenia

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE REPORT: SETBACK IN ARMENIA

A1+
[06:30 pm] 26 February, 2009

There were significant setbacks for democracy in Armenia in 2008,
as stated in the annual report of the U.S. Department of State. The
reason for such a negative evaluation was the violent clashes that
took place after the February 19 presidential elections. The authors
of the report underline:

There were significant setbacks for democracy in Armenia, including
the worst post-election violence seen in the Caucasus in recent
years. After weeks of generally peaceful protests following a disputed
February presidential election, the government used force to disperse
protestors on March 1-2, which resulted in violent clashes and 10
deaths. The violence ushered in a 20-day state of emergency and a
blackout of independent media during which the government severely
curtailed civil liberties. During the remainder of the year, there
were significant restrictions on the right to assemble peacefully
or express political opinions freely without risk of retaliation,
and several opposition sympathizers were convicted and imprisoned
with disproportionately harsh sentences for seemingly political
reasons. Fifty-nine opposition sympathizers reportedly remained
imprisoned on seemingly political grounds at year’s end; no government
officials were prosecuted for their alleged role in election-related
crimes. Despite the mixed success of a politically-balanced
fact-finding group established by the government to investigate
the March events, the climate for democracy was further chilled
by harassment, intimidation, and intrusive tax inspections against
independent media and civil society activists.

The authors of the report touched upon the mass media in Armenia,
as well as the difficulties imposed on presses and journalists.

Censorship was imposed and freedom of press and media were severely
restricted during the March 1-21 state of emergency. According to the
decree enacting the state of emergency, "reports in the mass media on
issues concerning the internal situation and of state importance are
restricted to official information provided by state entities." The
decree resulted in the closing of all opposition media, all Web
sites critical of the government, and several days of broadcasts of
Radio Liberty. It did not, however, prevent other print and broadcast
media from airing strident criticism and unfounded charges against
the political opposition and its leaders. H1 was identified by the
country’s human rights defender as "a most vivid example of such
unacceptable coverage." While the state of emergency decree applied
only to Yerevan, there were numerous reports of the severe media
restrictions being imposed in many other parts of the country.

The authors also state:

A1 Plus television still remained without a broadcasting license
or frequency at year’s end. The station has unsuccessfully filed 10
applications for a television or radio license after the government
failed to renew its frequency use license in 2002, an action that
many considered to be politically motivated. Since 2002, A1 Plus has
operated as an Internet news agency, posting its video footage to
the Web. During and after the state of emergency, A1 Plus-produced
news footage appeared on a variety of international amateur video
Web sites. On June 17, the ECHR ruled that authorities had violated
Article 10 (freedom of expression) of the European Convention on
Human Rights by failing to give a written explanation for refusing
a broadcast license to A1 Plus. The ECHR’s decision stated that
"a procedure which did not require a licensing body to justify its
decisions did not provide adequate protection against arbitrary
interference by a public authority with the fundamental right to
freedom of expression." The ECHR awarded, and the government paid,
30,000 euros (approximately $42,000) to A1 Plus’ parent company,
Meltex, Ltd. On September 10, with essentially no prior notification or
public discussion, the National Assembly amended the Law on Television
and Radio to impose a moratorium until July 2010 on the issuance of
new television broadcasting licenses. The amendment was passed in an
unannounced, evening extraordinary session. The moratorium was enacted
shortly before a call for bids on several television frequencies that
were due to become available based on expiring licenses. The amendment
also gives existing stations the right to extend their licenses to
January 2011. Independent media, media analysts, and NGOs viewed the
measure as an effort to block issuance of a license to A1 Plus or
other applicants more sympathetic to the political opposition than
current license holders. On September 19, the OSCE’s representative
on freedom of the media sent a letter to President Sargsian warning
that the new law "may make Armenia unable to comply" with the ECHR
decision in the A1 Plus case.

In the nearly 54-page report, it is stated:

Ethnic Armenian separatists, with Armenia’s support, continued to
control most of the Nagorno-Karabakh region of the country and seven
surrounding Azerbaijani territories.

The same sentence appears in the State Department’s report on
Azerbaijan. In addition, it is stated that:

The government did not exercise any control over developments in
those territories.

BAKU: Iranian Minister On Ties With USA, Azerbaijan, Karabakh Confli

IRANIAN MINISTER ON TIES WITH USA, AZERBAIJAN, KARABAKH CONFLICT, CASPIAN STATUS

ANS TV
Feb 22 2009
Azerbaijan

Iranian Foreign Minister Mahuchehr Mottaki has expressed the hope
that correct steps will be taken in ties with the USA.

Asked if Washington may reconcile itself to Iran’s nuclear programme
in an interview with Azerbaijani commercial TV station ANS on 22
February, Mottaki said in Persian with superimposed Azeri translation:
"I generally support the inspection of work to be done. I mean not
only the nuclear programme issue, but all spheres. Talks around the
nuclear programme have already ended…We hope that, God willing,
correct steps will be taken in the sphere of bilateral ties between
the two countries".

Asked about developing Armenian-Iranian relations against the
background of the Nagornyy Karabakh problem, Mottaki said that Iran
was trying to develop its ties with neighbouring countries.

"These high-level relations may be used in the resolution of the
current problems. We support Azerbaijan’s position and territorial
integrity. Tehran is also behind Baku from the political standpoint. We
say this in all talks with the Azerbaijani leadership. Iran is ready
to render assistance to Azerbaijan from every standpoint to make sure
that the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict is resolved," Mottaki said.

Commenting on Iran’s mediatory mission, Mottaki said that "we think
that the current situation is unacceptable and we should therefore
look for a way out".

Asked about whether there had been any progress on the status of
the Caspian Sea, Mottaki noted that "the two countries have their
delegations, which are discussing the legal status of the Caspian. The
discussions are going successfully. The sides are trying to reach a
fair agreement on condition that the rights of the two countries [Iran
and Azerbaijan] are protected. We think that the discussions should be
conducted to the best level. During [Azerbaijani Foreign Minister]
Elmar Mammadyarov’s visit to Tehran, we agreed to continue the
discussions. We hope that the discussions will end at the best level
in the near future to make sure that all countries use opportunities
in the Caspian, first of all energy resources, successfully".

Speaking about programming on Iran’s Sahar TV channel, which an ANS
correspondent accused of trying to spoil Azeri-Iranian ties, Mottaki
said "there is such a common opinion in all political, economic and
cultural spheres, as well as media outlets in the Islamic Republic
of Iran that Iranian-Azerbaijani ties should further deepen. All
are interested in the development of friendship between these two
countries. If we meet those who run against these intentions, then
I would advise them to return to the right path".

Mottaki added that Azerbaijan and Iran should make efforts to boost
ties in the media sphere.

Mottaki described Azerbaijani-Iranian ties in the political sphere
as being at the highest level, saying that the interests of the two
countries coincided. He praised economic and cultural ties as well.

Mottaki said that Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s visit to Iran
in March was aimed at conducting bilateral talks and attending an
Economic Cooperation Organization summit in Tehran.

Memorial Postcard On The 90th Anniversary Of The "Ravished Armenia"

MEMORIAL POSTCARD ON THE 90TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE "RAVISHED ARMENIA" DOCUMENTARY

armradio.am
26.02.2009 16:03

On the occasion of the 90th anniversary of the "Ravished Armenia,"
one of the first documentary memoirs of an eyewitness of Armenian
Genocide, the AGMI has issued a memorial postcard and has created an
on-line exhibition at

"Ravished Armenia," was published in 1918, in New York. In this book
Arshaluys (Aurora) Mardiganian, a girl from Chmshkatsag, Armenian
populated town in the Ottoman Empire, gave a detailed account of the
terrible experiences she endured during the deportations. At the age
of fourteen Arshaluys was beaten and tortured in harems of Turkish
officials and Kurdish tribesmen.

The book "Ravished Armenia" was completed when American Committee
for Armenian and Syrian Relief offered to create a film based on
the scenario of the book and all the profit, which later on reached
$30 million, would be given to 60.000 Armenian orphans in the Near
East for relief purposes. In 1918, at Metro Goldwin Mayer studio,
director Oscar Apfel made "Auction of Souls" silent film, which
actually became not only the first movie on the Armenian genocide,
but also the first genocide movie ever made. More than 10.000 Armenian
residents of Southern California, including 200 deported children,
participated in the scenes.

The premiere of the=2 0"Auction of Souls" was held on February 16,
1919, in Plaza Hotel, New York under the auspices of Oliver Harriman
and George Vanderbilt, members of American Committee for Armenian
and Syrian Relief.

The film was shown in large cities of 23 U.S. states, in several
countries of Latin America, including Mexico and Cuba. It was a
success everywhere and was estimated as "epoch-making film".

The "Auction of Souls" was taken to Great Britain in December, 1919,
and censured. After long lasting negotiations the film was shown in
Royal Albert Hall, by the permission of Scotland Yard and played for
three weeks.

At the beginning of 1920s Mardiganian’s "Ravished Armenia" was censured
and taken off the British and American libraries.

For over eighty years film historians have been searching the world for
the nine reels of Ravished Armenia but failed to find any trace. The
remaining reels of the rare nitrate based film were lost. Some say the
reels presumably sunk with a ship on their way to the port of Batoum,
Georgia, or stolen by thieves. The full-length version of the film,
which lasting 85 minutes, unfortunately, hasn’t been saved. With the
efforts of Eduard Gozanlian, an Armenian from Argentina, a 20 minute
segment of the reel was found in 1994. One copy of that segment is
kept in the funds of Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute. The film
included English, Frenc h and Armenian subtitles for every scene. The
list of the original subtitles for Ravished Armenia is preserved in
The Selig Collection at the Margaret Herrick Library of the Academy
of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. They are also reproduced in
Anthony Slide’s book "Ravished Armenia and the Story of Aurora
Mardiganian". This book was published by Scarecrow Press in 1997.

It tells the story of the making of the film and reveals the young
girl’s survival story.

www.genocide-museum.am.

Jethro Tull British Rock Group To Give Concert In Yerevan

JETHRO TULL BRITISH ROCK GROUP TO GIVE CONCERT IN YEREVAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.02.2009 20:28 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Jethro Tull British rock group will give a concert
in Yerevan National Theater of Opera and Ballet on May 22.

Jethro Tull was formed in 1965-1968. Their music is characterized by
the songs, vocals and flute work of Ian Anderson, who has led the
band since its founding, and guitarist Martin Barre, who has been
with the band since 1969.

Initially playing blues rock with an experimental flavor, they
incorporated elements of classical, folk and ‘ethnic’ music, jazz
and art rock into their music.

The band has sold more than 60 million albums worldwide.

ANTELIAS: HH Aram I visits HB Ignatius Joseph III Younan

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version: nian.htm

HIS HOLINESS ARAM I VISITS HIS BEATITUDE IGNATIUS JOSEPH III YOUNAN
THE NEWLY CONSECRATED PATRIARCH OF THE SYRIAC CATHOLIC CHURCH

His Holiness Aram I accompanied with Bishops of the Brotherhood visited His
Beatitude Ignatius Joseph III to congratulate him on his election as
Patriarch to lead and serve his people.

During the visit, the two Heads spoke of the relationship between the two
churches while the new Patriarch served his church in Syria and the United
States of America as a Bishop. The two leaders also recalled the
relationships between the Syriac Catholic Church and the Armenian Orthodox
Church during the Armenian Kingdom (now Turkey), since the 11th century.

Patriarch Ignatius Joseph III asked Catholicos Aram I about his visit to the
Vatican in November 2008, and its follow-up.

At the end of the visit, His Holiness Aram I expressed the hope that the
ancient bonds of relationship between the two churches would be strengthened
under the leadership of Patriarch Ignatius Joseph III, and would find new
expressions in their common ecumenical task regarding Christian presence in
the Middle East.

##
View the photos here:
tos/Photos361.htm
*****
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the Ecumenical
activities of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician
Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is located in
Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Arme
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Pho
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org

$75K award announced in shooting death of father, daughter-Hollywood

LATimes.com
$75,000 award announced in shooting death of father, daughter in Hollywood
10:47 AM | February 24, 2009

Los Angeles police and city officials today offered a $75,000 reward
for information leading to the arrest of those involved in the killing
of a man and his 8-year-old daughter in Hollywood. Khachik Safaryan,
and his daughter, Lusine, were found shot to death in December inside
their Little Armenia apartment in the 1200 block of Tamarind Avenue.

Investigators think Safaryan and his daughter were killed in the
morning. Their bodies were not found until that afternoon when
Safaryan’s 15-year-old daughter returned home from school, police
said. The $75,000 award is being offered by Los Angeles Councilman
Eric Garcetti, whose district includes the area.

Anyone with information is asked to call Hollywood homicide detectives
at (213) 972-1203 or (877) 527-3247. Callers may remain anonymous.