Erdoghan Cries For Help

ERDOGHAN CRIES FOR HELP

Hayots Ashkharh Daily
Oct 6 2007
Armenia

Turkish Prime Minister Taip Erdoghan appealed to the US President
George Bush and Israeli President Shimon Peres, to prevent resolution
106 on the Recognition of Armenian Genocide from being adopted by
the US Congress.

Erdoghan warned Bush the adoption of the resolution included in
the agenda of the US Congress, "Will harm the USA – Turkey strategic
partnership ties." "Not only will it harm Turkish – American relations,
but also damage the efforts to improve the relations between Turkey
and Armenia."

As reported by "Anatolu" agency, in his response Bush underscored,
" they will do their best to prevent the adoption of the draft, that
harms Turkish-American relations." He also added that he is also deeply
"concerned" about the draft.

Glimpses of ‘An Anthology of Selected Writings on East Bengal’

The Daily Star, Bangladesh
Oct 6 2007

Glimpses of ‘An Anthology of Selected Writings on East Bengal’ from
the ‘India Collection’ at the India International Centre Library,
Delhi

Raana Haider

Introduction

The ‘India Collection’ at the India International Centre Library in
New Delhi earlier constituted the ‘Collection of British Books on
India’ of the British Council, New Delhi. Numbering over 3000 rare
and old books, documents, personal accounts, prints, memoirs, maps
and manuscripts; the ‘India Collection’ consists largely the works of
British authors on India, particularly covering the British period.
The Collection spans the period from the 17th century (the earliest
title is dated 1672) to 1947.

The extracts presented below draw on expansive archival material
pertaining to selective original works in the form of memoirs,
records and travel accounts primarily on nineteenth-century East
Bengal. Rich in topographical and architectural documentation and
social customs the topics include administration, animals,
architecture, climate, customs, geography, lifestyle, mores and
manners and the rulers; by generations of British civilian and
military officers, scholars and traders in India. These ‘voices that
speak’ from a bygone era are an introduction to a larger literary
canvas of the British presence in East Bengal that will be explored
in a forthcoming book.

‘Memoirs of a Bengal Civilian’ by John Beames

Published by Chatto & Windus, London, 1961.

(R.H. Note): John Beames arrived in Calcutta in March 1858 at the age
of twenty-one; as one of the last batch of cadets appointed by the
East India Company. He served in Chittagong from 1878-1879, was
appointed District Magistrate of Balasore and retired from India in
1893. His other accomplishments were a translation from the ‘Turki of
Babar’s Memoirs’ and an unfinished ‘Historical Geography of India’.

Extract:

`We were supremely unhappy at Chittagong. In fact we spent there two
of the most miserable years of our existence. The contrast to Cuttack
where we had been so happy, was cruel. Sir Ashley Eden, the
Lieutenant-Governor, was unfriendly to me and put junior men into
good appointments over my head. The pay of the appointment of
Commissioner and Judge of Chittagong was less by some Pounds 350 a
year than that of other Commissionerships, though, as everyone said,
a man ought to have been paid higher, and not lower, for having to
live in such a place. And it was a terrible burden to have the work
of Judge, work of which I had no previous experience, added to the
already very heavy work of Commissioner. The two posts were, in fact,
incompatible. The work of one interfered with that of the other. If I
devoted time to the administrative work of Commissioner, I got into
trouble with the High Court for neglecting my judicial work as Judge,
and vice versa. The arrangement was an unworkable one. Fortunately
circumstances arose (though after my time) which compelled the
Government to sever the two posts and appoint a separate officer as
Judge.’

`…We were engaged on a very difficult, in fact an almost impossible,
task with these Mughs. The tangled maze of hills in which they live
is densely wooded and contains a great deal of valuable timber. It
had been placed under the charge of the Forest Department. A
department of any kind in India always assumes that the world exists
solely for the use of itself. And considers that anything that
interferes with the working of the department ought to be
removed…Finally some wise man observed that it was not so much the
Mughs themselves as their practice of ‘jhuming’ that did harm, and he
suggested that they should be taught to till the soil by ploughing
like the Bengalis…Every year the steamers of the British India
Company carry from Bengal to Chittagong, Akyab and Rangoon thousands
of Bengali labourers, who go to earn good wages for two or three
months by cutting and garnering the crops, while the lazy Mugh
proprietors sit in their verandas smoking their long, rank cheroots
and cutting jokes at the hard-working Bengalis…’

‘The Hand-Book to India: A Guide to the Stranger and the Traveller
and a Companion to the Resident’ by Joachim-Hayward Stocqueler

Published by W.H. Allen & Company, London, 1845.

Extract:

`Calcutta to Dacca (186 miles)

…The trip from Calcutta is effected by means of boats of large
barthen at all period of the year. Dacca is both a civil and a
military station, and many indigo-planters likewise reside there, or
in the neighbourhood. The following is the best description of the
place that we have fallen in with:

`The city of Dacca, with its minarets and spacious buildings,
appears, during the season of inundation, like that of Venice in the
West, to rise from the surface of the water, and, like the generality
of native towns presents an irregular appearance…There is an Armenian
church at Dacca. The floor of the interior of the building is divided
into three parts: one enclosed by a railing, for the altar; a central
portion, into which two folding-doors open; and another railed off,
which is exclusively occupied by the women and children, has a
gallery over it…The floor of the verandah contains many tomb-stones,
in memory of departed Armenian Christians, who formerly abounded in
the city of Dacca, where there are still an influential and wealthy
body.’

(RH Note): there is no mention of the source of the above account of
Dacca.

`…But the chief cause of the destruction of the city of Dacca is to
be traced to the loss of the muslin trade, which has almost entirely
disappeared. It is true that, by giving a commission, an extremely
delicate article may be still procured, at the rate of 150 rupees, or
Pounds 15 for ten yards; but at that rate, as may be readily
imagined, little can be sold, as the demand must be necessarily very
small. The working of shawl-scarfs with flossed silk is carried to
great perfection, and many are despatched by banghy to Calcutta.
Beautiful ear-rings and other ornaments, made of the purest silver,
and of an infinite variety of patterns, can be supplied at a very
short notice, and at reasonable prices. The suburbs of Dacca were
formerly inhabited by thousands of families of muslin-weavers, who
from the extreme delicacy of their manufacture, were obliged to work
in pits, sheltered from the heat of the sun and changes of the
weather; and even after that precaution, only while the dew lay on
the ground, as the increasing heat destroyed the extremely delicate
thread…’

‘Mercantalism and the East India Trade’ by P.J. Thomas

Published by Frank Cass & Co. Ltd., London, 1926. New impression,
1963.

Extract:

`…A Persian ambassador, returning from India in the seventeenth
century, presented his royal master with a cocoanut set with jewels,
containing within it a muslin turban thirty yards long. But such
excellence has long passed away, and is not even attempted at the
present time. (RH Note: In a footnote Thomas adds): `This industry is
now practically dead. The Exhibition at Wembley (1924) has only one
old specimen of the old Dacca work.’

`…Some of the poetic names of muslin tell their own tale. `Subnam’
(or evening dew) is the name for a thin pellucid variety, because it
is scarcely distinguishable from the dew or sand. Another of the
chefs d’oeuvres of Dacca is called "Abravan" (running water) because
it is supposed to be invisible in water. `Alabalee’ (very fine),
`Tanjeb’ (ornament of the Body), `Kasa’ (elegant) are also
interesting examples of poetic nomenclature. These goods were called
by similar fanciful names in other countries also. It has been called
in Europe ventus textiles (textile breeze) ‘web of woven air’,
‘cobweb’, and so forth. The woollen manufacturers of England said
that muslin was the shadow of a commodity rather than a commodity by
itself. This was indeed great praise.’

`Narrative of a Journey through the Upper Provinces of India from
Calcutta to Bombay 1824-1825 by the Reverend Reginald Heber D.D. Vol.
1. (3 Vols. Third Edition).

Published by John Murray, London, 1828.

Reverend Reginald Heber was the Lord Bishop of Calcutta.

Extract:

`To the Right Honourable Charles W. Williams Wynn,

Dacca, July 13, 1824.

My Dear Wynn,

…Two thirds of the vast area of Dacca are filled with ruins, some
quite desolate and overgrown with jungle, others yet occupied by
Mussulman chieftains the descendants of the followers of Shah
Jehanguire, and all of the `Lions of war,’ `Prudent and valiant
Lords,’ `Pillars of the Council,’ `Swords of Battle,’ and whatever
other names of Cawn, Emir, or Omrah, the court of Delhi dispensed in
the time of its greatness. These are to me a new study. I had seen
abundance of Hindoo Baboos and some few Rajahs in Calcutta. But of
the 300,000 inhabitants who yet roost like bats in these old
buildings, or rear their huts amid their desolate gardens,
three-fourths are still Mussulmans, and the few English, and
Armenian, and Greek Christians who are found here, are not altogether
more than sixty or eighty persons, who live more with the natives,
and form less of an exclusive society than is the case in most parts
of British India. All the Mussulmans of rank whom I have yet seen, in
their comparatively fair complexions, their graceful and dignified
demeanour, particularly on horseback, their shewy dresses, the
martial curl of their whiskers, and the crowd, bustle, and
ostentation of their followers, far outshine any Hindoos; but the
Calcutta Baboos leave them behind toto coelo, in the elegance of
their carriages, the beauty of their diamond rings, their Corinthian
verandahs, and the other outward signs of thriving and luxury. Yet
even among these Mahommedans, who have, of course, less reason to
like us than any other inhabitants of India, there is a strong and
growing disposition to learn the English language, and to adopt, by
degrees, very many of the English customs and fashions.’

`…The most whimsical instance of imitation, is perhaps that of Mirza
Ishraf Ali, a Zemindar of 100,000 acres, and with a house like a
ruinous convent, who in his English notes, signs here hereditary
title of `Kureem Cawn Bahadur’ in its initials, K.C.B.’

`…a desire of learning our language is almost universal even here,
and in these waste bazaars and sheds, where I should never have
expected any thing of the kind, the dressing-boxes, writing-cases,
cutlery, chintzes, pistols, and fowling-pieces engravings, and other
English goods, or imitations of English, which are seen, evince how
fond of them the middling and humbler classes are become…’

‘British India: Its History, Topography, Government, Military
Defence, Finance, Commerce and Staple Products with an Explanation of
the Social and Religious State of One Hundred Million Subjects of the
Crown of England’ by Robert Montgomery Martin, Esq.

Published in London, 1855. Reprint1983.

(RH Note): Robert Montgomery Martin was Treasurer to Queen Victoria
in Hong Kong and Member of Her Majesty’s Legislative Council in
China.

Extract :

`Dacca, – on the Burha Gunga, an offset of the Koniae or Jabuna; 4 m.
long, and 1 and ¼ m. broad. It is at present a wide expanse of ruins.
The castle of its founder, Shah Jehangir, the noble mosque he built,
the palaces of the ancient newaubs, the factories and churches of the
Dutch, French and the Portuguese, are all sunk into ruin, and
overgrown with jungle. The city and suburbs are stated to possess ten
bridges, thirteen ghauts, seven ferry-stations, twelve bazaars, three
public wells, a variety of buildings for fiscal and judicial
purposes, a gaol and gaol-hospital, a lunatic asylum, and a native
hospital. Population, 200,000.

Raana Haider is a writer and researcher on global cultural heritage.
Her book India: Beyond the Taj and the Raj, India Research Press, New
Delhi will be out soon.

http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=6717

ANKARA: Armenian Lobby Slams Oomen-Ruijten For Excluding ‘Genocide’

ARMENIAN LOBBY SLAMS OOMEN-RUIJTEN FOR EXCLUDING ‘GENOCIDE’
Selcuk Gultaþlý Brussels

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Oct 3 2007

While making clear their satisfaction over the barring of a Dutch
candidate for the European Parliament, the Armenian lobby is now
calling on another Dutch member of the European Parliament, Ria
Oomen-Ruijten, who is currently drafting a resolution on Turkey,
to heed the lesson of the Turkish candidate.

In a written statement from the European Armenian Federation,
the Dutch Christian Democrats (CDA) were congratulated for their
"principled stance" on the Armenian "genocide" in light of their first
retraction of candidate Ayhan Tonca, after he refused to recognize
the mass killings of Armenians in Turkey in 1915 as genocide.

While praising the CDA’s decision on both the retractions of Tonca and
Osman Elmacý, the second CDA candidate for membership in the European
Parliament, the federation accused another Dutch Christian Democrat,
Oomen-Ruijten, of evading the Armenian question in her resolution on
Turkey, which will be discussed today at the Committee on Foreign
Affairs of the European Parliament . The Armenian lobby called on
the CDA to follow the same principle d line in Oomen-Ruijten’s case,
as well as implying that she should be barred from office if she does
not refer to "genocide" in her resolution.

"We call on the CDA party to treat Mrs. Oomen-Ruijten’s case with
the same moral demands it made with Mr. Elmaci, i.e., by charging
her to comply with her own party line against any form of denial,"
said Laurent Leylekian, executive director of the European Armenian
Federation.

Elmacý was ousted from the party list in the general elections of
November 2006 after he rejected pressure to characterize the 1915
events as genocide. Elmacý ran in the European Parliament election in
2004 and received 13,749 preferential votes. After the resignation of
Joop Post and the refusal of the seat by Barto Pronk, it was thought
to be Elmacý’s turn to have a place on the European Parliament.

However, as revealed on Elmacý’s Web site, apparently the CDA
again pressured Elmacý to accept the 1915 events as genocide, which
he refused to do, and consequently was removed from the European
Parliament list. The first member of Turkish origin, Dutch State
Secretary Nebahat Albayrak, was only elected after she recognized
the Armenian killings as genocide.

Armenian lobbies will host a two-day conference at the European
Parliament on Oct. 15 and 16 to celebrate the 20th anniversary of
recognition of the 1915 Armenian killings as genocide by the European
Parliament in 1987. Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian is
expected to attend the conference together with many members of the
European Parliament.

–Boundary_(ID_nub3GaRvKQg8LvM2bMnt/Q )–

Special Representative Of Europarliament Offers To Replace France In

SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE OF EUROPARLIAMENT OFFERS TO REPLACE FRANCE IN OSCE MG BY EUROPEAN UNION

ArmInfo News Agency, Armenia
Oct 5 2007

ArmInfo. Special Representative of the European Parliament on South
Caucasus Isler Beguin offers to replace France in OSCE Minsk Group by
the European Union, he said during hearings on South Caucasus in the
Europarliament’s Committee on Foreign Relations, the "Trend" reports.

"The European Union should participate more closely in settlement
of conflicts in the South Caucasus. This concerns Nagorno Karabakh
conflict as well", Beguin said. "I am French, however, I think
that the mandate of France in Minsk Group should be passed to the
European Union", Beguin said. He thinks that EU, thus, will be able
to regulate the conflict at a high level. He also paid attention to
the fact that the Turkish-Armenian border is closed. According to him,
this is a factor which deepens the problem. Special Representative of
the European Parliament on Nagorno Karabakh conflict Lydia Paulfer
expressed concern over two issues. "Armenia remained aside of
Baku-Tbilisi-Jeyhan oil pipeline and other regional projects. This
circumstance may lead to the country’s instability in a long-term
perspective. Moreover, extension of Azerbaijan’s military budget will
tense the situation in the region", L. Paulfer said. As deputy Chairman
of the Europarliament on South Caucasus, Slovakian parliamentarian
Duka-Zolyomi said, each conflict is specific and requires an individual
approach. He thinks that Russia, in many cases, plays a role of a
power which destabilizes the situation in the region. It was also
noted that Kosovo cannot become a precedent for other conflicts.

Deputy of the Europarliament from German socialists Vural Oger blamed
Armenia for occupation of Nagorno Karabakh and its adjacent regions.

He demanded of EU to take an unambiguous position. "Azerbaijan is
important for Europe in the energy policy and this is limited not
only to availability of energy resources", Oger said.

Armenian Delegation Suggests Karabakh Participation At Berlin Forum

ARMENIAN DELEGATION SUGGESTS KARABAKH PARTICIPATION AT BERLIN FORUM

Panorama.am
15:33 02/10/2007

Today European Parliament president Van der Linden, while meeting with
the Armenian delegation, expressed his disappointment at the lack of
progress in the Karabakh peace process. Talking about his July visit
to the region, he noted the tension between the participants in the
process. The leader of the Armenian delegation, Davit Harutyunyan,
explained that this was because of the military threats emanating from
Baku. Armenian delegation member Avet Adonts added that the European
Parliament played an important part in the solving of this issue and
should exert further efforts in the South Caucasus.

About the forum to take place in Berlin on Oct. 5, concerning frozen
conflicts, Harutyunyan suggested the participation of Karabakh,
saying that their participation would add balance to the process.

We note that in the meeting that began yesterday the Armenian
delegation consisted of Davit Harutyunyan, head of the NA permanent
legal committee, Armen Rustamyan, leader of the NA committee on
foreign affairs, Raffi Hovhannisyan, of Heritage, Mher Shageldyan,
of Orinats Yerkir, and deputies Grigor Margaryan and Vahe Hovhannisyan.

Putin’s Aspiring To Post Of Prime Minister. How About Kocharyan?

PUTIN’S ASPIRING TO POST OF PRIME MINISTER. HOW ABOUT KOCHARYAN?

Lragir, Armenia
Oct 2 2007

In the conference of the Yedinaya Rossia Party yesterday the Russian
president agreed to lead the party ticket. Putin said he accepted the
proposal of the post of prime minister of Russia from 2008. Putin
set forward two conditions: if Yedinaya Rossia wins the upcoming
parliamentary election and if the next president is a decent and
able person.

Apparently, an attempt of applying a similar political scheme in
Armenia will be made. At least, the political circles often discuss
this option.

Kasparov picked to fight Russia presidential election

Kasparov picked to fight Russia presidential election
September 30, 2007

MOSCOW (AFP) – Chess great Garry Kasparov was named Sunday as the
Other Russia opposition coalition’s candidate for 2008 presidential
polls, and vowed to fight for democracy against the Kremlin’s
political juggernaut.

Kasparov overwhelmingly won a party congress vote against five other
contenders to run in the March 2, 2008, election to replace President
Vladimir Putin.

"I will do everything possible for the ideas of Other Russia to win.
This will work only if we stay united," he told the meeting, adding
the coalition stood for a "democratic and just Russia."

"I know that the road will be difficult," he said, referring to the
group’s regular run-ins with the police and possible negotiations with
other opposition leaders.

He won 379 of 494 votes cast, out-polling other nominees including
former prime minister Mikhail Kasyanov and former Central Bank chief
Viktor Gerashchenko.

The Other Russia coalition, comprised of a variety of small groups
opposed to Putin, is heavily handicapped by internal divisions and has
been marginalised by the authorities.

The latest poll by the independent Levada agency shows only some three
percent of Russians will vote for the Other Russia candidate, in a
race certain to be dominated by Kremlin-backed candidates.

While Putin has promised the elections will give Russian voters a free
choice, most observers expect a carefully managed transition to a
figure favoured by the current administration.

Putin is obliged to stand down having completed two presidential
terms, although he has said he will retain an unspecified influential
role.

Kasparov frequently attacks Putin’s Kremlin for its alleged corruption
and "dictatorship," and its dominance of the media to silence genuine
opposition parties.

Other Russia is planning a "March of the Discontented" protest in
Moscow on October 8, the first anniversary of the murder of journalist
Anna Politkovskaya.

Previous Other Russia rallies have been violently suppressed by riot
police, while Kasparov himself was detained at a Moscow airport just
before flying to attend a rally in the city of Samara earlier this
year.

The largest elements within the Other Russia coalition are Kasparov’s
United Civil Front party and the National Bolsheviks of writer Eduard
Limonov.

In the end, the entire congress — which met in an old concert hall to
pick a candidate — revolved around the personality of Kasparov.

"We must concentrate our minds on who is best-known in the outside
world," said one delegate casting a vote for Kasparov.

The coalition was co-founded by Kasparov, 44, who turned to politics
in 2005 after a chess career that marked him as one of the game’s
greatest.

He has compared his current political battles with his famous chess
duels with Anatoly Karpov in the 1980s.

"Back then the chess system wanted to maintain a cosy status quo,
avoiding any candidate worthy of the name to fight Karpov," he has
said. "The political situation in Russia today reminds me of that
time."

Born of Armenian-Jewish parents in Baku, the capital of the former
Soviet republic of Azerbaijan, in 1963, Kasparov took up chess at the
age of six.

He was USSR junior champion by the age of 13, before becoming the
youngest world chess champion at the age of 22 in 1985, having beaten
his compatriot Karpov.

Copyright © 2007 AFP

Lexington: Commentary: Town must break from the ADL

Commentary: Town must break from the Anti-Defamation League

By Eric Eid-Reiner
GateHouse News Service
New! Thu Sep 27, 2007, 05:02 AM EDT

Lexington –

Regarding the issue of the No Place For Hate committee’s ties with the
Anti-Defamation League (ADL) in light of the national ADL’s refusal to
acknowledge the Armenian Genocide as a genocide, I have come to
conclude that disassociation from the ADL’s No Place For Hate program
is the right choice for our town to make.

As a Jew and citizen who values the ideals of the No Place For Hate
program as well as the Lexington No Place For Hate committee’s work,
and as someone who like the vast majority of genocide scholars and
historians acknowledges the Armenian genocide as precisely that – a
genocide – I have carefully considered both sides of this important
and complex issue.

Some may feel that it is unnecessary to withdraw from this program
simply because we disagree with the ADL’s position on the issue of the
Armenian Genocide and want them to change it. But this is about more
than that.

The way I see it, this is also a matter of choosing whether our town
should have a connection to an organization that is advancing an
inaccurate stand on the Armenian Genocide – a stand that hurts many of
our friends and neighbors, and does a disservice to the general
public, which ought to know the truth of this matter. Why would we
want to maintain this connection?

It is fully possible for a committee in town to exist under a
different name and do the same great work that the current No Place
For Hate committee does. I hope that this will be the action that the
town decides to take, given the valuable role that the committee has
played in Lexington since its inception, consistently working to
combat bias and prejudice through education and action in our schools
and greater community.

In not acknowledging the Armenian Genocide, the ADL has not done
justice to our Armenian friends and neighbors or to our town’s core
values – nor for that matter have they really been consistent with the
missions of the No Place For Hate program and No Place For Hate
committee in Lexington when it comes to this issue.

Certainly, as individuals and as members of various communities and
organizations, we do not always agree with all that organizations we
are a part of do or say. However, combating genocide denial is so
central to the mission of the ADL that its stance on the Armenian
Genocide is inexcusable and disturbingly hypocritical. Genocide denial
by a prominent organization lends credibility to a damaging and false
position.

As a Jew who is largely supportive of Israel and what the ADL does to
aid it, disassociation – and the potentially negative publicity for
the organization that it would inevitably garner – is a particularly
troubling idea.

However, I keep thinking, "If an anti-prejudice group in town were
affiliated with an organization that denied that the Holocaust was a
genocide – an organization that argued that the Holocaust was not an
effort to wipe out Jews and many other groups – could I support that
group’s work?" For me, it would be extremely difficult to do so. And
it would pain me deeply that my town would be willing to stay with
this group despite their damaging view on the Holocaust, even if that
group had done many wonderful things in the past in its overall
anti-prejudice mission.

I think that if we want what to do what is right for all the citizens
of Lexington, we should not hold our breath waiting for the ADL to
change its viewpoint. We can and should take a stand immediately.

I urge you to join in taking the position that the citizens of
Lexington strongly support the work of the No Place For Hate committee
and will continue to do so, but we believe that the committee can
successfully continue its anti-prejudice and related work without ties
to an organization that denies that the Armenian Genocide was truly a
genocide. I have complete confidence in the abilities of our town
leaders, committee members, and community members to make such a
transition. I feel that making this change and being active on this
issue is in the best interests of the citizens of Lexington, and that
while it may be tough, it really is the right thing to do.

Eric Eid-Reiner is a resident of Russell Road. He is in his first year
at Wheaton College.

Source: 67763

http://www.townonline.com/lexington/opinions/x4283

BAKU: IDP Mehluge Atakishsiyeva’s Suit Against Armenian Taisa Osipov

IDP MEHLUGE ATAKISHSIYEVA’S SUIT AGAINST ARMENIAN TAISA OSIPOVA TO BE CONSIDERED ON OCTOBER 11

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
Sept 26 2007

Court hearing on the suit of IDP Mehluge Atakishiyeva, concerning
the privatization documents in the name of Armenian Taisa Osipova,
will continue in Binagadi district court on October 11. The court
told APA that the court hearing was put off, since Real Estate
Registration Service had not submitted the documents necessary for
the investigation.

Atakishiyeva’s lawyer Mukhtar Mustafayev said that the documents
privatized in the name of Osipova in the Real Estate Registration
Service, contain forged points and they have to be investigated.

The lawyer mentioned that Binagadi district executive power allocated
the flat for Atakishiyeva and her family from the Housing Stock.

"Since the flat is at the disposal of the State Housing Stock, it is
impossible to privatize it. This flat could not be privatized in the
name of Taisa Osipova," he said.

The flat, where Atakishiyeva lives now, was uninhabited, and allocated
to the IDP family on August 3, 1993, by the order of the head of
Binagadi executive power. Four months later, the flat was privatized
in the name of Taisa Osipova.

Inquest In Process

INQUEST IN PROCESS

Hayots Ashkharh, Armenia
Sept 25 2007

In response to the question about the inquest regarding the murder of
Lory province Procurator, Prosecutor General Aghvan Hovsepyan said,"
The inquest and operative-searching activities are in process with
the same productiveness. At the moment the investigation group is
in Vanadsors. We have hypotheses, which are under inquest. But at
present I can’t introduce anything specific."

As for the rumors about violence against the witnesses linked to this
case the Prosecutor Genera said," I have instituted not a service
investigation but a criminal case regarding those reports.

Later I will inform you about the results."