Armenian state guard service chief dismissed

Interfax News Agency, Russia
May 27 2008

ARMENIAN STATE GUARD SERVICE CHIEF DISMISSED

Armenian State Guard Service Chief Grigory Sarkisian has been
dismissed, the press service of the Armenian president told Interfax
on Tuesday.

It is also expected that Armenia’s police chief Aika Arutyunian will
resign in the next few days, a source in Yerevan told Interfax.

The leading candidates to replace Arutyunian as Armenian police chief
are Sarkisian and head of the Ararat region Alik Sarkisian, the source
said.

Fresno: Historic homes can’t be moved

Fresno Bee (California)
May 30, 2008 Friday
FINAL EDITION

Historic homes can’t be moved

Appellate court says Fresno was wrong to OK relocation of Old Armenian
Town buildings.

by Brad Branan The Fresno Bee

The city of Fresno disregarded state law when it tried to relocate
historic homes for a major downtown redevelopment project, a state
appellate court has ruled.

The decision means developers can’t immediately proceed with plans to
build a parking structure for the Old Armenian Town project. And that
could complicate plans for office buildings there.

The city could decide how to respond as early as June 10, when the
City Council will discuss the project in a closed session, City
Attorney James Sanchez said.

"There are a number of options on how to proceed," Sanchez said. "They
could decide to accept the decision and see if the development can
continue around that site. Or they could decide to petition the state
Supreme Court for review of the case. We’re not wedded to any options
yet."

Sanchez said city officials were disappointed about the ruling.

"It delays redevelopment of downtown Fresno south of Ventura Street,"
Sanchez said.

City officials have long touted Old Armenian Town as a key part of
their downtown revitalization plans.

But so far, only the 5th District Court of Appeals building has been
finished on the site, while three office buildings, retail space and
the parking have yet to be completed.

In 2005, two preservation groups challenged the city’s plans to
relocate five small historic homes to make space for parking. The
homes are representative of the city’s original Armenian town and
shouldn’t be moved to a nearby industrial area south of Highway 41 as
the city proposed, they said.

The homes are now on a lot at N Street and Santa Clara Street. They
are nearly all that remains of a neighborhood where Armenian
immigrants settled beginning in the 1880s.

Jeanette Jurkovich of Friends of Armenian Town, one of the groups that
challenged the city, applauded this week’s appellate court ruling. The
decision upheld a 2006 Superior Court ruling.

"This is very consistent with what we were trying to have the
government do," she said.

"Maybe now we can protect and preserve a little part of Armenian
Town."

Jeff Reid, an attorney representing developers Richard Gunner and
George Andros, said he couldn’t comment on the ruling because he
hasn’t seen it. But he said removing the proposed parking location
throws the whole development plan into question.

"Losing that parking affects the overall development potential — it’s
all up in the air," he said.

The court’s decision focused on an environmental review process.

An initial report by the city found that Andros and Gunner couldn’t
build the parking structure where they wanted, because the historic
homes would need to go there, the court’s ruling says. Keeping the
homes there was a necessary "mitigation measure" required to meet the
state’s rules governing the effect of projects on the surrounding
area.

Nevertheless, the city proceeded with the developers’ plans for the
parking structure, ignoring what its own review had found earlier, the
court found.

The city "never justified its abandonment of the previously adopted
mitigation measure, and no substantial evidence supports the change,"
the court said.

ANKARA: Minister: Armenia Gate Won’t Be Opened Unless Conditions Met

MINISTER: ARMENIA GATE WON’T BE OPENED UNLESS CONDITIONS MET

Today’s Zaman
May 26 2008
Turkey

Turkey will not open its border with neighboring Armenia, closed for
more than a decade, unless Yerevan resolves its problems with Ankara
and regional ally Azerbaijan, a government minister has said.

Economy Minister Mehmet Å~^imÅ~_ek, while attending a meeting on
regional development in the far eastern province of Igdır, located
near the border with Armenia, said Turkey, with its large purchasing
capacity of $950 billion, does not need economic ties with Armenia,
emphasizing that Armenia should be the one to take steps to normalize
its ties with Turkey. "We don’t need them, they need us. Turkey wants
good economic ties with its neighbors. If they see this fact and take
a step toward us, we will take a step toward them," Å~^imÅ~_ek said.

"We have no commercial or political dialogue with the Armenians
due to the problems caused by them. Opening of the border gate is
unfortunately not possible for the time being without Armenia resolving
its problems with Azerbaijan and changing its stance toward Turkey,"
Å~^imÅ~_ek, who was accompanied by Rıza Nur Meral, chairman of the
Turkish Confederation of Businessmen and Industrialists (TUSKON), and a
200-strong delegation of investors and businessmen, said late Saturday.

Turkey severed its diplomatic ties and closed the border gate with
landlocked Armenia in the last decade, following Armenian occupation of
Nagorno-Karabakh, an Armenian enclave within Azerbaijan. The Armenian
occupation of the Azerbaijani territory has been maintained. Ankara
also refuses to normalize its relations with Yerevan because Armenia
seeks a worldwide recognition for claims that 1.5 million Armenians
were subject to genocide at the hands of the late Ottoman Empire
during World War I in eastern Anatolia and fails to declare that it
has no territorial claims on eastern Anatolia despite Turkish demands
to that effect.

Hopes for reconciliation between the two countries resurfaced when
President Abdullah Gul sent a congratulatory message to Serzh Sarkisian
following his election to power in February. Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign Minister Ali Babacan had also sent similar
messages to their Armenian counterparts following the establishment of
the new government in the neighboring country, expressing hopes for a
new era that will contribute to regional peace, stability and welfare.

But no visible progress has been achieved on the contentious
issues. Armenia rejected a 2005 call from Turkey to jointly examine
archives to find out what happened during World War I and Sarkisian
vowed in April to step up efforts for international recognition of
the genocide claims.

Å~^imÅ~_ek said trade with neighboring countries was vital for
the economy of the border provinces and lamented that Igdır and
neighboring Kars lagged behind compared to provinces located on borders
with other neighbors. He noted that the government would continue to
channel funds to regional development projects, supporting particularly
the agriculture and livestock sectors, and also emphasized that Mount
Agrı (Ararat) could become a tourist attraction.

–Boundary_(ID_YLeMiQDninC9gkTk08zKpw )–

Les Parisiennes au musee

Le Monde, France
25 mai 2008 dimanche

Les Parisiennes au musée

Nées dans les années 1950, les Parisiennes, gracieuses créatures
longilignes et nonchalantes créées par le dessinateur Kiraz, n’ont pas
pris une ride. De parents arméniens, Edmond Kirazian est né en 1923 au
Caire et a découvert Paris à l’ge de 23 ans. Il en a observé les
habitantes depuis les cafés du boulevard Raspail, en face de son

atelier. Les jeunes visiteurs de l’exposition, qui regroupe 230
oeuvres, reçoivent un livre de jeux, dont l’un permet de comprendre
comment les dessins de Kiraz, initialement réalisés pour Jours de
France et Gala, ont été récupérés par la publicité. Les Parisiennes
ont successivement vanté, de 1962 à 2003, les mérites de l’eau

Perrier, de la lingerie Scandale, du lait Candia, des stylos Parker,
des édulcorants Canderel, de la Clio Chipie et de la crème Nivea.

M. BO.

Jusqu’au 21 septembre au Musée Carnavalet, 23, rue de Sévigné, 75003,
Paris. De 10 heures à 18 heures, sauf lundi et jours fériés. Entrée :
5 ¤ (tarif jeune : 2,50 ¤),

www.carnavalet.paris.fr

"CoE Is Not A "Devil" To Be Afraid Of"

"CoE IS NOT A "DEVIL" TO BE AFRAID OF"

A1+
[07:25 pm] 23 May, 2008

Armenia has not implemented any recommendation of the PACE Resolution
1609, Zharangutiun MP Stepan Safarian said in reply to Radio Free
Europe / Radio Liberty.

Zharangutiun MP Vardan Khacahtrian added that the recommendations
cannot be carried out within the mentioned time.

All other factions sounded optimistic of the matter.

For instance, BhK MP, Chairman of the National Assembly’s Standing
Committee on European Integration Avet Adonts notes that Armenia
will present in Strasbourg everything done within the short period,
including the activity of working groups and the intention to form
an independent expert’s panel.

And yet, Adonts thinks that Armenia’s delay with the recommendations
will affect the country’s reputation on the international
level. Moreover, no documents are significant unless vital changes
are made in the home life.

"Let them deprive us of the right to vote and impose punishment on
us but the documents will not important for me unless home problems
are solved," said Avet Adonts.

BhK member Naira Zohrabian added that the amendments to the Law on
"Meetings, demonstrations, marches and rallies" will be passed during
the June sittings.

ARF Dashnaksutiun member Ara Nranian thinks an overall approach to
problems is needed.

OYK member Artashes Avoyan noted that two sittings have been convened
to consider the recommendations. He hopes the country will implement
all the recommendations in due time.

"The Council of Europe is not a "devil" to be afraid of. We carry out
the reforms ourselves because they are in the interests of Armenia,"
HHK member Hermine Naghdalian told journalists.

Who Was Giving Bottles Of Gasoline?

WHO WAS GIVING BOTTLES OF GASOLINE?

A1+
[02:40 pm] 21 May, 2008

Armenian citizen Gnel Tovmassian has been arrested in connection with
organizing and provoking mass disorders in Yerevan on May 1. He is
charged with distributing bottles of gasoline to demonstrators.

According to the release of the Procurator’s Office, the bottles
were used to burn the cars parked near the Yerevan City Hall, to
incite disorders and to inflict various injuries on representatives
of police forces.

To note, HZhK member Grigor Harutiunian announced during a spontaneous
meeting that demonstrators had found bottles of gasoline in a police
car parked near the City Hall at about 5, March 1.

Catholicosate Of Great Cilician House Takes Part In Meeting Of World

CATHOLICOSATE OF GREAT CILICIAN HOUSE TAKES PART IN MEETING OF WORLD COUNCIL OF CHURCHES AND CHURCH FAMILIES

Noyan Tapan

Ma y 19, 2008

ANTELIAS, MAY 20, ARMENIANS TODAY – NOYAN TAPAN. Bishop Narek
Aleemezian, the Head of the Interchurch Relations of the Catholicosate
of the Great Cilician House, was the chairman of the second meeting
of the consultation commission of secretaries of the World Council
of Churches and Church Families, which took place in the Geneva
headquarters of the World Council of Churches on May 13-15. The
objective of the commission is to make the existing cooperation
between the World Council of Churches and the Church Families deeper.

His Holiness Narek stressed the importance of this meeting as
a meeting link for regional and world interchurch relations and
attached importance to the imperative needs of the cooperation and
common posture on the issues all the churches are interested in.

It was decided to convene the next sitting of the commission in June
2009 in Geneva.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=113551

RA President, Gazprom CEO Discuss Refinery Construction In Armenia

RA PRESIDENT, GAZPROM CEO DISCUSS REFINERY CONSTRUCTION IN ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
20.05.2008 13:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan met Monday with
Gazprom CEO Alexei Miller, the RA leader’s press office reported.

Welcoming the guest, the President said that in the name of Gazprom,
Armenia has a reliable and promising partner. He voiced confidence that
the cooperation will develop successfully, acquiring new dimensions.

The parties mentioned with satisfaction that in recent years
ArmRusgazprom’s activities have been rather efficient, the figures
impressive and the very fact that the company has increased the volume
of gas consumption speaks not only about the company’s growth but also
proves the sustainable growth of the Armenian economy as a whole. Among
other achievements, the recent increase in gas consumption by the
population of Armenia was mentioned. According to the President, as
a result of a large-scale gasification of the country, today Armenia
is among the countries with the highest level of gas consumption.

Referring to the gas tariffs and price making, Mr Miller informed
that starting from 2011 Gazprom plans to introduce equal tariffs
for the internal consumption as well as for the exported gas. It was
agreed to change the prices gradually until 2011, taking into account
that Gazprom holds 72 per cent of the ArmRusgazprom as well as the
necessity to make the entire process predictable and affordable for
the Armenian consumers.

M Sargsyan and Mr Miller also negotiated construction of a refinery
and other investment programs implemented by Gazprom within the energy
system of Armenia.

AMAA News: The 90th Anniversary of the Armenian Republic

The 90th Anniversary of the Armenian Republic
By Rev. Dr. Vahan H. Tootikian
AMAA News
Publication of the Armenian Missionary Association of America
March/April 2008
The year 2008 is the 90th anniversary of the Republic of Armenia. On May 28,
1918, the independent Republic came into existence amidst the most trying
conditions. Three years after the Turkish Genocide of the Armenians, in May
1918, the Armenians in their homeland were once again threatened by their
enemies. The Turkish forces had encircled the region of Yerevan and intended to
destroy the Armenian Remnant. Surrounded by mortal foes, with no avenue of
escape and no one around to extend a helping hand, Armenians of every age and
rank, including women and the very old took a heroic stand. At the battlesof
Sardarabad, Kara-Kilisa and Bash-Abaran, the little Armenian force of about
35,000 fought against the Turkish army and triumphed. These triple battlesof May
1918 led to the establishment of the Republic of Armenia in a small part of
our historic Fatherland. If these three battles, particularly that of
Sardarabad, had not been won, it is almost certain that the remaining Armenians in
the Caucasus would have been murdered by the invading genocidal Turkish
armies. Had the Turks broken the Armenian army they would have finished the rest of
the Armenian people in that part of the world.
The Armenian folk who survived because of their heroic valor later became
the citizen nucleus of the Republic of Armenia and still later constitutedthe
population of present-day Armenia.
Much like the proverbial phoenix rising from its ashes, the victorious
Armenian people proclaimed the independence of Armenia on May 28, 1918. Six
hundred years after the fall of the last independent Armenian kingdom we had
conquered our land for ourselves!
The creation of the Republic, born out of the threat of annihilation, was a
miracle. It was our only haven in the sea of despair. Preserving the infant
Republic was an even greater challenge. The economic conditions within the
country were catastrophic. Famine and privation, cholera and typhus epidemics,
the presence of enemy armed bands who attacked the Armenian populace were
devastating. World War I continued for another five months and the future of the
Armenian state remained uncertain until the Armistice and the surrender of
Turkey to the Allies. Armenians breathed a sigh of relief in November 1918.
With the defeat of Turkey, the Allied nations demanded the Ottoman troopsto
withdraw from some of their occupied Armenian territories. As a result, the
Armenian Kars, Ardahan and Nakhichevan territories were added to the Republic.
The territory of independent Armenia was considerably larger than that of the
present-day Republic of Armenia. But in spite of the fact that its economy
was a shambles, half its population scattered, the Armenian government did
the best it could for its people. For two and a half years, Armenians clung to
their independence and built a whole new infrastructure, a university,
institutes and schools, with industries budding here and there. With great hopes
they sent their representatives to the Paris Peace Conference and presented
their demands for a united Armenia that encompassed Western Armenian territories
as well. In August 1920, the Treaty of Peace with Turkey, signed at Sèvres
(France), recognized the independence of Armenia and its right to Western
Armenia. Woodrow Wilson, the President of the United States of America, drew the
borders of Armenia-a country with an area of around 87,500 square miles
(227,500 square kilometers). Unfortunately, the signatories of the Treaty of
Sèvres had disagreements with one another. Meanwhile, in Turkey a newleader came
forth in the person of Musafa Kemal (Ataturk), who launched a new Turkish
national movement, organized an army and was chosen president of the newly
formed parliament. He made an agreement with socialist Russia and challenged the
disunited Allies.
Thereafter, the Turks and the Soviet Russians put pressure on little Armenia
to renounce the Treaty of Sèvres. Armenia was caught between the Turkish
anvil and the Russian hammer. The Turks tried to gain control of the Armenian
Karabagh-Zankezour-Nakhichevan belt and unite with Azerbaijan; they attacked
Armenia without any provocation. Meanwhile, the Armenian Socialists, with
seventy thousand Russian soldiers, entered and occupied the northern Armenian city
of Dilijan.
The Armenian government asked the Socialist government of Russia to stop the
Turkish advance but the Russians considered friendly relations with the
Turks more important than the security of an insignificant Armenia. They
suggested that the Armenians accept the Turkish conditions. On November 29, 1920,
the Armenian Republic fell under the Socialists’ dominion. Armenia signed the
Treaty of Alexandropol, making huge territorial concessions to the Turks.
In December 1920, a socialist system was set up in Armenia, and in 1921, the
peoples of the Caucasus united to form the Transcaucasian Federated Republic,
subject to Socialist Russia. With the new Soviet Constitution in 1936, each
nation of the Caucasus formed a part of the Soviet Union as separate
republics.
Under the aegis of the Soviet Union, the Second Republic lasted from 1920 to
1991. Despite the dictatorial political system and violation of human rights,
the people of Armenia developed their economy and culture. With Soviet
assistance great industrial advances occurred. Along with economy and industry,
great impetus was also given to the educational, scientific and artistic ar
eas. Illiteracy was almost completely eliminated.
Soviet Armenia became a highly advanced and industrialized republic and
major center for the development of Armenian arts and culture and maintained for
more than 70 years the continuity of the Armenian state.
With the decline of the USSR, Soviet Armenia was one of the first republics
to declare independence. After a national referendum, 95.6% of over two
million eligible voters overwhelmingly voted for independence on September21,
1991. Thus, the Third Republic burst forth.
The Third Republic, present-day Armenia, is just a tiny part of the historic
Armenia. It covers 29,800 square kilometers, or 11,506 square miles. It
represents only one-sixth of the Armenian territories delineated in the Treaty of
Sèvres. Its current population is estimated 3.5 million.
Considering the challenges that Armenia has faced since the creation of the
Third Republic, the fact that it survived all the odds against it, is itself
a miracle. After its devastating 1988 earthquake, the country was hardly
prepared for the moment of destiny when it declared its independence. It was
subjected to Turkish-Azeri attacks and an economic blockade.
During the past sixteen years, the Republic has made every effort to
consolidate its independence. Economic reforms are made to ensure smooth transition
from the old system to a free market economy. Land reforms are made. The
government has been working hard toward a peaceful resolution of the conflict in
Nagorno Karabagh and the establishment of friendly relations with all its
neighbors.
On the other hand, however, there are some concerns about the free and
democratic process in elections. There is corruption in the government. There is
an increase in disparity on economic and social levels. There is also an exodus
of Armenians from Armenia because of the aforementioned and other problems.

But despite all of these difficulties, the Republic of Armenia has grown and
prospered during the past 16 years and has become the actualization of the
dream that a people without a land and a land without a people would be
reunited.
The Republic of Armenia, with all its faults and foibles, has given
Armenians all over the world the pride of national identity, that they area people
with a country, and have a national flag which readily identifies them and
with which they are identified. And as someone once said, `Armenianism and
pessimism are not compatible.’ This has been our strength and our salvation-that
we have lived with hope.
This hope endured even during centuries in which Armenian history was the
saga of Armenian endurance and suffering. Now the older chapter of passivity has
ended, and the new chapter of creativity has begun. We can no longer be
called `Starving Armenians,’ or `Wandering Armenians.’ We are no longer `a
homeless people,’ or `a captive nation,’ but a nation in control of its
destiny.
Armenia is our beacon of hope because it is the best guarantee of our
survival as a nationality. It is the irreplaceable base upon which our future can
be built, especially when we consider the fact that the Diaspora faces a
downhill struggle in the preservation of the national character as a new
generation come along.
For Armenians, the Republic of Armenia is a dream come true, a prayer
answered and a faith renewed. It is the indomitable will of an undying people
inspired by its divine assurance. It is a land made fertile by the work and sweat
and hope of men and women, standing together in the valley with the Prophet
Ezekiel and seeing dry bones come to life.
Yes, the Republic of Armenia is 90 years old. Our ancestors pledged
themselves never to forget the land of their inspiration, and we once morerenew the
ancient pledge.
We pray that God will protect the Republic of Armenia and keep our people
filled with grace and reinforced with faith to live and work for the love and
well being of our fatherland.

# # #
The Rev. Dr. Vahan H. Tootikian is the Minister Emeritus of the Armenian
Congregational Church of Greater Detroit. He was the senior pastor of the church
for 30 years, from 1975-2005. Rev. Dr. Tootikian is a graduate of the Near
East School of Theology, and did his graduate work at Harvard and Andover
Newton Theological seminaries, earning two masters and a doctorate. He andhis
wife Rosette, live in Royal Oak, Michigan. Along with his pastoral duties,
Rev.Tootikian has been a lecturer at Lawrence Technological University,
Southfield, MI, and also a lecturer at the University of Michigan. He has authored
twenty-eight books, and is a regular contributor to several papers and
magazines. Since January 2003, Rev. Dr. Tootikian has been the Executive Director of
the Armenian Evangelical World Council.

Pupils Of Nareg School Of Cyprus Participate In Sports Event

PUPILS OF NAREG SCHOOL OF CYPRUS PARTICIPATE IN SPORTS EVENT

Noyan Tapan

Ma y 15, 2008

NICOSIA, MAY 15, ARMENIANS TODAY – NOYAN TAPAN. The annual Sports Day
of Nareg School took place on May 14. As the Gibrahayer electronic
medium reports, the Nareg schools of Nicosia, Limassol and Larnaca
took part in this sports event.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=113365