New Undergound Station To Be Built In Yerevan Soon

NEW UNDERGOUND STATION TO BE BUILT IN YEREVAN SOON

Yerevan, July 31. ArmInfo. In 2008-2009, the construction of the new
"Achapniak" underground station will be completed in Yerevan. Yervand
Zakharian, Mayor of Yerevan City, said this at today’s press
conference.

He said that the construction of "Achapniak" underground station
began few years ago, but wasn’t completed because of the lack of
financial sources. According to the plans of the previous years,
about $22 million were required for the construction works. In 2007,
new project account documents will be elaborated for the construction
works. As for the transport issues, Zakharian said that in September
2006, new 76 "Bogdan" mini busses will be brought to Yerevan. Besides,
25 new Russian trolley busses will be purchased for the capital. Each
of the trolley busses costs $70 thousand. The Mayor’s Office also
envisages to complete the renovation works of the bus stations,
100 of which will be exploited already in September.

In total, AMD 1,6 billion of work was carried out in the sphere of
the capital’s transport.

OSCE MG US co-chair says his meeting with NKR president constructive

OSCE MINSK GROUP U.S. CO-CHAIR SAYS HIS MEETING WITH NKR PRESIDENT CONSTRUCTIVE

Arka News Agency, Armenia
July 31, 2006

YEREVAN, July 31. /ARKA/. U.S. co-chair of the OSCE Minsk group Matthew
Bryza said that his meeting with NKR President Arkady Ghukasyan in
Stepanakert was constructive.

"The atmosphere during the meeting was very constructive and
creative. We exchanged opinions and looked for joint approaches to
contribute to the progress," Bryza told reporters after the meeting
on last Saturday.

Commenting on this meeting, Ghukasyan said that "no doubt that one
of the issues was Nagorno Karabakh’s participation in the negotiations.

"I think that Mr. Bryza understands that the conflict cannot be
resolved without Nagorno-Karabakh. Not only him, but also all the
other mediators realize that," Ghukasyan said.

At the same time, he pointed out that without visiting the NKR and
being introduced to the situation there, Bryza could not have a full
idea of what takes place in the region.

NKR Foreign Minister Georgy Petrosyan, who was present at this meeting,
pointed out that "a rather creative approach both from the president
and the U.S. co-chair was displayed during the meeting".

He said that they talked over ideas, which are still to be clarified,
agreed and discussed for a long time.

"I am gland that Bryza visited us as he had promised. We agreed on
this in the USA. Mr. Bryza is rather energetic and ready to act in
a constructive way," Petrosyan said. R.O. -0–

Oklahoma guardsmen recognized Azerbaijan

OKLAHOMA GUARDSMEN RECOGNIZED AZERBAIJAN

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
July 31, 2006

A few days ago a delegation of the U. S. servicemen headed by the
Head of Okhlom-, sorry, Oklahoma National Guard Major General Harry
Wyatt visited Azerbaijan. According to the Azeri tradition, any
guest from the U. S. is received by the most high-ranked persons of
the identical profession. Naturally, the Major General was received
by the Azeri DM Safar Abiyev. The guest was shown the most important
sight of Baku: a monument to the Azeri nation’s outstanding chieftain
Heydar Aliyev situated on the square bearing his name. Having put
flowers to the legs of the bronze chieftain, the American General
with those accompanying him drove along the avenue named after the
father of the current President of Azerbaijan to the Republic MOD,
where he participated in a splendid banquet with black caviar and
Armenian cognac with the label "Khazar".

According to the tradition, a guest of any rank in the course of a
banquet in his honor must say a phrase, the point of which is that
he inveighs (recognizes, protects, respects – the options depend on
the guest’s professional activity and the degree of his modesty and
breeding) Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. The guest with shoulder
straps and stripes did not surprise anyone with his modesty.

In the course of the banquet the Oklahoma General, being deeply touched
by the caviar with cognac and unusual total attention managed to utter
what he has learnt: "the U. S. recognized and recognize Azerbaijan’s
territorial integrity". However, it was not enough for the brave
General, so he went on swaggering. As if getting ready for the
assault of the Afghan fortress of Tora Bora, behind the strong walls
of which Usama Ben Laden’s phantom is hiding, he resolutely exhaled:
"within the frames of the USSR’s era".

Oh, General, oh, maladroit person, who remembers about the USSR’s
existence and has forgotten (or did not know) the map of the U. S.

President Wilson. And yet it is said there are no former presidents
in the U. S. Though Wilson – it was so long ago, in the first years
of Azerbaijan’s Sovietization, so the present generals could forget
about it.

The Azeri generals, by the way, turned to be more diplomatic than
their colleague from abroad, who can feel comfortable everywhere.

Having pretended that they know nothing about the Azeri Republic’s
refusal from the Azeri SSR’s succession, they amicably applauded
following their Minister.

The Azeri MOD Press Service informed with unconcealed pride that the
MOD Chief delivered an address, having noted the successful development
of cooperation between Azerbaijan and NATO. "We highly appreciate
the role the U. S. has played in the development of cooperation
between Azerbaijan and NATO. The Subdivisions of Azerbaijan’s Armed
Forces actively participated in the peacemaking operations in Kosovo,
Afghanistan and Iraq".

Having paid tribute to decency and reminding the Oklahoma inhabitant
of Azerbaijan’s great contribution to the NATO peacemaking activity,
Abiyev came to the point: "the Armenian – Azeri conflict has not been
resolved yet, the activity of the OSCE Minsk group dealing with the
conflict settlement cannot be considered satisfactory. We speak up for
the conflict’s settlement within the frames of the standards of the
international right and on the basis of observance of the principle
of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity. We also request that the
Armenian troops should be immediately withdrawn from the occupied
territories. The Armenian party adopts a destructive stand in the
conflict’s settlement and does not wish to take into consideration
the current situation. Taking the above-mentioned into account,
Azerbaijan has to undertake adequate measures".

Abiyev did not verify who they "request" and who they have to
"undertake adequate measures" against. However, his expansive speech
made necessary impression: according to those present, without habitual
encirclement of the brave corporals the Oklahoma General worried,
not to say was afraid. What if the Minister has taken him as someone
else? Though he is a Minister, he tried cognac as well.

Worried Wyatt began to carefully remonstrate to his too zealous
interlocutor, stating that all the conflicts must be settled by
diplomatic way. "We are ready to help you in the issue", he said,
"the U. S. highly estimate the Azerbaijan’s efforts in the direction
and we are ready to help you. We believe Azerbaijan will demonstrate
its strong stand and will in the issue and at the negotiating table".

Abiyev, who a bit cooled off the words and affirmations, also started
affirming that personally he, Safar, was against any hostilities. In
general, Azerbaijan, which denied Soviet heritage, is still devoted
to the slogan "Peace to the world".

I do not know what about the American uncle, but I believe in his
words’ sincerity. Safar Abiyev really speaks up for peace and arms
race. First, arms race is the Azeri Minister’s favorite and quite
profitable business; second, it is easier, than to run around the
world searching for his own deserters and others’ disposable pilots.

Finally, being a son of a benefactor father, I. Aliyev every year
increases the Republic’s military budget twice. It should be noted
that Abiyev himself manages the state budget. According to the Azeri
proverb, a dog will not run away from meat, while Abiyev has been
brought up on the traditions of deep respect to the national wisdom of
his tribe. Why should one wage war, if it’s possible to buy armament
in Ukraine, on the points of collection of black and colored metal, and
then register it at the astronomic prices and put the difference in his
own pocket? And yet, a war is a war. What if after a current failure
one will have to lose his profitable post? For instance, the Karabakh
war made a lot of Ministers tender their resignation. Some were even
sent to jails. It should be noted that Abiyev is not Don Quixote.

Levon MELIK-SHAHNAZARYAN

Ambassador to Armenia designate responds to Senators’ questions

Ambassador to Armenia designate responds to Senators’ questions

ArmRadio.am
28.07.2006 15:43

As the Senate Foreign Relations Committee weighs the nomination of
Richard E. Hoagland as America’s next Ambassador to Armenia, the
Foreign Service officer says that if confirmed, he will uphold the
President’s policies with respect to the Armenian Genocide, which
neither denies nor properly acknowledges the events of 1915.

Several Committee Members including Senators Barbara Boxer (D-CA),
Lincoln Chafee (R-RI), Russell Feingold (D-WI), John Kerry (D-MA) and
Paul Sarbanes (D-MD) submitted a series of questions to Hoagland
following the June 28 proceedings. The lawmakers asked Hoagland to
clarify US policy on the Armenian Genocide and to explain what, if
anything, the State Department has directed him to say publicly on the
Armenian Genocide.

"The State Department has not directed me to make or avoid specific
statements about the tragic events that occurred at the end of the
Ottoman Empire, but has rather provided me with information on the
President’s policy which, if confirmed, I will represent faithfully,"
Hoagland stated in his response to Kerry. Hoagland did not deviate in
his response to Committee Members with similar policy questions.

Kerry also asked Hoagland to explain why the Administration refuses to
recognize the crimes as genocide. Hoagland provided the following:
"The US believes that the question of how to characterize these
horrific events is of such enormous human significance that it should
not be determined on the basis of politics, but through heartfelt
introspection among academics, civic leaders and societies."

Feingold asked Hoagland how he plans to respond to those in the
Armenian community who are upset by Ambassador John M. Evans’
premature departure. Hoagland replied that the US and Armenia have a
deep and robust relationship, stating "this relationship is based on
close ties and mutual interests on a variety of issues. We expect this
relationship to continue and deepen."

In response to a question from Chafee on what he might say to
Armenians and Armenian-Americans on April 24, Hoagland said he will
work to draw attention to the events as the President has done. "I
will work to encourage dialogue between Armenia and Turkey on this
issue and to encourage all parties to examine the historical events of
this time with honesty and sensitivity," he stated.

Hoagland, a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, currently
serves as United States Ambassador to the Republic of
Tajikistan. Prior to this, he served as Director of the Office of
Caucasus and Central Asian Affairs at the Department of State. Earlier
in his career, he served as Director of the Office of Public Diplomacy
in the Bureau of South Asian Affairs.

Semneby: EU for Solving Karabakh Issue Peacefully

Semneby: EU for Solving Karabakh Issue Peacefully

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.07.2006 17:11 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today Secretary of the National Security Council
at the Armenian President, Armenian MOD Head Serge Sargsyan met
with EU Special Representative for the South Caucasus Peter Semneby,
Spokesperson for Armenian Defense Minister, colonel Seyran Shahsuvaryan
told PanARMENIAN.Net. German and Finnish Ambassadors Haike Renate
Peitsch and Terry Akala were present at the meeting. During the meeting
the parties discussed the EU-Armenia action Plan. They exchanged
views on settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict and relations
with neighboring countries. Semneby reaffirmed EU is for peaceful
settlement of Karabakh issue. The interlocutors also discussed EU
involvement in coming parliamentary election in Armenia.

100 years of sorrow and joy

100 years of sorrow and joy

Montreal Gazette , Canada
July 24, 2006

Ask ‘Nene’ about the Armenian genocide, and her awful memories unfold
in novelistic detail. But through a life of quiet, patient dignity,
she has been a guiding light to her large family Article Tools

ANNETTE AGHAZARIAN, Freelance Published: Monday, July 24, 2006

Some people touch the lives of everyone they meet without ever
realizing the effect they have. They don’t need to write a book or
govern a country to hold such great power; in their own simple way,
they can restore your faith in God and humanity.

This month, Arousiag Aghazarian turned 100 years old. You would never
know it by looking at her, but if you take the time to listen to her
stories, she will transport you to a time and place unimaginable.
Although her health is failing, her mind and heart are still strong,
and she has forgotten nothing.

Memories unfold behind her now blind eyes, like the pages in a
history book. If you ask her about her life, she will describe it
in such detail that you might think she was reading passages from
a novel. She can tell you how she witnessed the horrors of genocide
as a child and travelled like a fugitive for more than a decade in
her bare feet. She has seen entire families, churches and villages
obliterated. She has experienced the ugly brutality of war but remains
strangely optimistic, because she has always lived her life as a true
survivor and never as a victim. If you listen very closely, you will
understand the concept of faith: someone who quietly and courageously
moves forward under tragic circumstances and never once asks, "Why me?"

Imagine sitting atop a family tree spanning five generations and
knowing that somehow, by the grace of God, your life was spared for
reasons you never would have expected. You lived through a massacre,
were married off at 13, and gave birth to your first child at 15,
when you were still a child yourself. You are the mother of six,
grandmother of 13, great-grandmother of 22, and you now await the
grandchild of your own grandchild. Would you have ever dreamed that
all these children would speak a language (Armenian) you were forbidden
to learn?

"Nene" means grandmother in Turkish. And all her children, from 85 down
to to 2 years old, call her Nene. She lives with her only daughter,
who refuses to put her in a convalescent facility. She has spent a
century washing and cooking and mothering for so many, and to take
her away from her home and her family would be unthinkable.

When I suffered through eight years of infertility and had given up
hope, Nene never once lost faith. She told me she would not leave
this Earth until I produced a child. Only after my son was born did I
truly understand the beauty of her perseverance. When I looked at his
perfect little face, I felt what she always knew: to feel great joy,
you must first know great sorrow.

Nene never blames anyone for the events of her life. She knows her
fate lies with a higher power. Through the atrocities of war, she
followed a divine path that only her eyes could see. With the birth
of each child, her heart grew stronger, as did her patience. When I
asked her through what miracles she survived, the simplicity of her
words fell heavy on my chest: "It was my silence that kept me alive.
My silence and my patience – that is what God gave me."

There are no diplomas on Nene’s shelves. There isn’t a Nobel Peace
Prize for all her accomplishments, but her house is full of awards.
On every wall, table or dresser there is the photo of a child Nene
has raised. Every single one of us holds a memory deep in our hearts
of a time when she made us feel worthy of her love.

Some people escape tragic circumstances but allow their pain to
consume them. Others live their lives with a quiet dignity and
lead by example. Like Holocaust writer Elie Wiesel, Nene has often
wondered why her life was spared when so many others were destroyed.
She never questions God’s will, but as she reached 100 years on this
planet she couldn’t help but ask why she’s still here.

Perhaps we, her family, need to be reminded to be grateful for what we
have and for how far we have come. And that without Nene’s strength
and courage, none of us would be here today. She has taught us the
importance of family and the appreciation of simple things.

There are far too many of us now to be seated at one table for a
Sunday meal, but we all can remember the wonderful smells that danced
in Nene’s kitchen. Until she went blind at 90, she still prepared with
her own hands the delicacies that take all day to make – the home-baked
bread, dolma, stuffed meatballs, roasted lamb, and her famous mantee.

Nene’s hands now lie still in her lap, but they are waiting. There is
one more child on the way and she wants to be ready. She must rock
him to sleep as she rocked so many of us when our own mothers were
too tired. It is her legacy to soothe our cries.

Annette Aghazarian is a Montreal writer and granddaughter of Arousiag
Aghazarian.

algazette/news/arts/story.html?id=5f03e5e0-b5a3-4f ef-98e7-f4daeb39e3ec

http://www.canada.com/montre

219 RA citizens and Armenians arrived in Yerevan from Aleppo this mo

219 RA citizens and Armenians arrived in Yerevan from Aleppo this morning

ArmRadio.am
21.07.2006 17:35

This morning 219 RA citizens and Armenians arrived in Yerevan from
Beirut with the assistance of RA Embassy in Lebanon. Acting Spokesman
of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Vladimir Karapetyan told "ArmInfo"
that they arrived in two planes. According to the source, the number
of the names included in the Embassy lists has not increased.

"Our citizens apply our Embassy," Vladimir Karapetyan noted, commenting
on the reports of the foreign media, according to which Armenians leave
Lebanon through Cyprus or with the assistance of foreign diplomatic
missions. Most probably the question here refers to Armenian citizens
of other states. Vladimir Karapetyan noted that there are no reports
on Amenians wounded or killed in the result of teh military actions.

Armenia evacuates citizens, ethnic Armenians from Lebanon

Armenia evacuates citizens, ethnic Armenians from Lebanon

AP Worldstream; Jul 19, 2006

More than 180 Armenian citizens were being evacuated from Lebanon
Wednesday amid intensifying fighting between Israeli forces and
Hezbollah guerillas, Armenian government officials said.

Foreign Ministry spokesman Vladimir Karapetian said diplomats in both
Lebanon and Syria were coordinating the pullout, with both Armenian
citizens and ethnic Armenians living in Lebanon converging on the
Armenian Consulate in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo.

A Syrian airliner carrying about 70 Armenians was expected in the
Armenian capital Yerevan Wednesday, he said, and more were expected
to arrive on an Armenian airliner later in the day.

About 1,200 Armenian citizens were reported to be in Lebanon as the
fighting erupted last week, Karapetian said.

Lebanon has a sizable population of ethnic Armenians, many of whom
are descendants of those who fled what is today Turkey after World
War I amid a series of mass killings. An estimated 120,000 ethnic
Armenians live in the country today _ some 50,000 in Beirut alone.

Russia, meanwhile, sent two planes to Latakia, Syria to begin
evacuating its citizens fleeing Lebanon. Buses brought more than 200
Russians to Syria on Tuesday, and about 1,000 others were to be bused
in on Wednesday and eventually flown to Moscow, officials and news
reports said.

Israeli Aircraft Continues Attacking Lebanon

Israeli Aircraft Continues Attacking Lebanon

ArmRadio.am
17.07.2006 12:18

Israel has extended its air campaign to northernmost Lebanon, killing
at least 14 people, including eight soldiers, in the port of Abdeh
near Tripoli.

The raids come after a Hezbollah rocket attack killed eight Israelis
in Haifa. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert warned that the Haifa
attack would have "far reaching consequences".

More than 130 Lebanese have died since clashes with Israel began
last week. At least 23 people were killed in air raids in southern
Lebanon on Sunday.

Early on Monday, Israeli air strikes targeted Tripoli, Lebanon’s
second-largest city located in the north of the country, and Baalbek
in the east.

Beirut’s port also came under attack, and a large area of the docks
was set on fire. Ten Lebanese soldiers were reported injured in the
strike that killed eight of their colleagues. The Israeli military
said it had been targeting radar stations in Abdeh because they were
used by Hezbollah to hit an Israeli ship on Friday, the Associated
Press news agency reported. At least six other people were reported
killed in Israeli raids in central and eastern Lebanon. Twelve Israeli
civilians have been killed by Hezbollah rockets since fighting began
on Wednesday, including the eight killed in Haifa.

The Israeli air strikes began after Hezbollah seized two Israeli
soldiers during a raid into Israel on Wednesday.

Editor-in-Chief of the Lebanon based "Azdak" newspaper Shahan
Kandaharyan told "Radiolur" there are no Armenians among the dead
and injured. He said also that different from Arabs, Armenians are
not rushing to leave the country.

OSCE Offices Co-Organize Study Tour for Armenian Groups on Fighting

OSCE offices co-organize study tour for Armenian groups on fighting human trafficking

ArmRadio.am
17.07.2006 16:54

Representatives of the Armenian non-governmental organizations Hope
and Help and Democracy Today together with the Ministry of Labor
and Social Issues and the Police participated in a study tour to
Odessa, organized by the OSCE Office in Yerevan and the OSCE Project
Coordinator in Ukraine.

The purpose of the trip was to exchange experience with NGOs providing
assistance to the victims of trafficking and state units dealing with
combating trafficking in Ukraine.

"In recent years, Ukrainian anti-trafficking actors have acquired a
lot of experience which can be useful for the Armenian side," said
Blanka Hancilova, Democratization Programme Manager at the OSCE Office
in Yerevan.

"This study tour was a unique opportunity for the representatives of
the two Armenian NGOs and government representatives to learn about
the work of their Ukrainian colleagues. We hope that this knowledge
will help further improve the conceptual and practical approaches of
Armenian anti-trafficking unit," Blanka Hancilova noted.