ANKARA: Ergenekon Linked To Mumcu Murder

ERGENEKON LINKED TO MUMCU MURDER

Today’s Zaman
Aug 5 2008
Turkey

Evidence included in an indictment on Ergenekon, a shady gang with
links to the media, business, military and bureaucracy which is being
accused of having incited a number of political murders and attacks,
suggests that journalist Ugur Mumcu was assassinated in 1993 because
he was trying to find out what happened to 100,000 firearms that
disappeared from the Turkish Armed Forces (TSK).

Cumhuriyet daily columnist Mumcu, a leading figure in investigative
journalism, was killed by a remote-controlled bomb placed under his
car on Jan. 24, 1993. He was long believed to have been assassinated
by Islamic extremists. Documents seized from Ergenekon suspect Veli
Kucuk’s house that were included in the evidence section of the
Ergenekon indictment explain in detail that Mumcu was killed while
he was investigating how 100,000 firearms ended up in the hands of
men under Jalal Talabani, one of the Kurdish leaders of northern
Iraq. EÅ~_ref Bitlis, a senior general who was investigating the
same issue, died in a plane accident 25 days after Mumcu. Experts’
reports on the accident indicated that the incident was most likely
caused by sabotage.

The report found in the house of Kucuk — a retired general who
is one of the prime suspects and possibly one of the leaders of
the Ergenekon organization – is now part of the nearly 2,500-page
Ergenekon indictment. Kucuk’s document reads: "In January of 1991, an
interesting message was delivered from the [state weapons manufacturer]
Turkish Mechanical and Chemical Industry Corporation [MKEK] demanding
that the serial numbers of 100,000 firearms be erased in an operation
that would be conducted ‘very secretly.’ After the operation, which
lasted four nights, a senior ranking official who said, ‘I am a JİTEM
[a shady gendarmerie intelligence unit whose existence is denied by
officials] commander,’ received the guns from me. One day before the
guns were brought to the Iraqi border on Jan. 15, 1991, forces under
the command of gendarmerie Col. CoÅ~_kun Kıvrak brought under siege
nearly 700 Kurdistan Workers’ Party [PKK] supporters.

However, an order from Ankara at this point demanded the soldiers
be pulled back. The reason for this was the risk that an armed clash
could attract attention to the arms delivery. When Col. Kıvrak and
some other soldiers reviewed the order, which was also sent to MKEK
officials, they were shocked. In a later period, one of the soldiers
there that day photocopied the file and sent it to journalist Mumcu."

Mumcu’s fatal mistake

In the same document, a chapter with the title "Ugur Mumcu’s Mistake"
has a record of a number of phone calls Mumcu made to confirm the
validity of the document that had been sent to him. When the person
who sent the file to Mumcu found out about the phone calls he made,
he called him, saying: "The end of this is very shady. Do you want to
die?" and demanded that he forget about the file. On Jan. 23, Kıvrak
spent an entire day trying to get in contact with Mumcu. However,
he gave up after several attempts. He left a note with Mumcu’s
secretary, which said: "It is a matter of life and death. You have to
see me." Mumcu never had the chance to see Kıvrak as he was killed the
next day by the car bomb planted under his automobile. His death came
exactly two years after the "very secret" message sent to the MKEK.

Gen. EÅ~_ref Bitlis was killed in connection with the same firearms,
the document suggests. In addition to Bitlis, gendarmerie Maj. Cem
Ersever was also allegedly killed for knowing about Ergenekon’s gun
sales to armed Kurdish groups.

—————————————– —————————————
Too many irregularities in records of Ergenekon-linked associations

Associations chaired by individuals detained during the Ergenekon
investigation have been inspected by auditors from the Interior
Ministry upon a request from Prosecutor Zekeriya Oz.

In most of the investigations, associations hid necessary documents
from inspectors, saying the documents were seized during the Ergenekon
operation and that inspectors should request them from the prosecutor’s
office. However, further investigations revealed that the police have
not seized any documents that might be of interest to state auditors
and that the administrators have been trying to hide the documents
from auditors by making false statements. The audit reports on these
associations have been included in the indictment. These associations
include the Ayasofya Association, headed by Ergenekon suspect Sevgi
Erenerol; the Grand Attorneys Association, chaired by Ergenekon
suspect Kemal Kerincsiz; the Nationalist Forces Association and the
Nationalist Industrialists and Businessmen’s Association (USİAD).

Grand Attorneys Association Deputy Chairman Mehmet Demirlek did not
share any of his organization’s records with the auditors, citing as
an excuse their chairman being in jail since January of this year. He
said a large number of documents have been seized during the detention
of Kerincsiz. However, a query from the Interior Ministry at the
prosecutor’s office showed that none of the documents the auditors
wanted to see were seized during the investigation.

Irregularities revealed during the investigation include necessary
stamps lacking on the organizations’ records, the first general
assembly meeting of the association was not done in full compliance
with legal procedures, people who are not members were elected to the
association’s branches, and the year-end financial statement includes
false figures. Similar problems were found with the Kuvvacılar
Association, the Grand Force Union Association, the Private Security
Sector Businessmen’s Union Association, the New National Forces
Movement Association, the Association of National Forces Warriors
and the New Protection of Rights Association.

———————————— ——————————————–
Backg round: The Ergenekon indictment in a nutshell

The indictment made public last month claims the Ergenekon network is
behind a series of earth-shattering political assassinations over the
past two decades. The victims include a secularist journalist, Ugur
Mumcu, long believed to have been assassinated by Islamic extremists
in 1993; the head of a business conglomerate, Ozdemir Sabancı, who
was shot dead by militants of the extreme-left Revolutionary People’s
Liberation Party/Front (DHKP/C) in his high-security office in 1996;
secularist academic Necip Hablemitoglu, who was also believed to have
been killed by Islamic extremists, in 2002; and a 2006 attack on the
Council of State that left a senior judge dead. Alparslan Arslan,
found guilty of the Council of State killing, said he attacked the
court in protest of an anti-headscarf ruling it had made. But the
indictment contains evidence that he was connected with Ergenekon
and that his family received large sums of money from unidentified
sources after the shooting.

The indictment also says Veli Kucuk, believed to be one of the leading
members of the network, had threatened Hrant Dink, a Turkish-Armenian
journalist slain by a teenager in 2007, before his murder — a sign
that Ergenekon could be behind that murder as well.

The Ergenekon indictment accuses a total 86 suspects, 47 of whom
are currently in custody, of links with the gang. Suspects will begin
appearing in court as of Oct. 20 and will face accusations that include
"membership in an armed terrorist group," "attempting to destroy the
government," "inciting people to rebel against the Republic of Turkey"
and other similar crimes.

—————————————– —————————————
Ergenekon evidence supports Ornek’s coup diary claims

A controversial journal allegedly kept by former Adm. Ozden Ornek,
giving a detailed description of a number of generals’ attempts to
stage a coup d’état against the Justice and Development Party (AK
Party) government in 2004, have not made their way into the indictment,
but documents found during raids on the homes and offices of Ergenekon
suspect Muzaffer Tekin, a retired captain, support the allegation
that the generals were indeed seeking to stage a coup.

A file found in Tekin’s archive in which every single word of officers
serving as force commanders at the time has been meticulously noted
includes minutes from a two-day July 2003 meeting of a number of
generals. According to the minutes, the then chief of general staff,
Fleet Commander Ornek and Aegean Army Commander Gen. HurÅ~_it Tolon
(currently in custody as part of an investigation into Ergenekon, a
crime network), the commander of the War Academies and the commanders
of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd armies participated in the meeting. Notes from
the meeting and speeches made by the commanders establish the facts
noted in the journal allegedly belonging to Ozden. The journal was
made public when the March 29, 2007 issue of Nokta magazine published
lengthy excerpts from it, allegedly written by Adm. Ornek. According
to the journal, some former force commanders had planned two separate
coups under in 2003 and 2004.

——————————————- ————————————-
Ergenekon officers promoted

Two officers whose names are included in the indictment of a criminal
network named Ergenekon were promoted during a Supreme Military Council
(YAÅ~^) meeting that concluded yesterday. The National Intelligence
Organization (MİT) prepared a report on Ergenekon in 2002 that
included an organizational chart detailing the hierarchy within
Ergenekon. The report was submitted to the General Staff in July 2003
and then to the Prime Ministry in November 2003. Famous politicians
and journalists as well some members of the military were included in
the chart, a report released by Taraf daily last month showed. Officers
Ramazan Cem Gurdeniz and Serdar Okan Kırcicek were among the military
members in MİT’s Ergenekon report who were promoted. Others members
of the military mentioned in the report but not promoted include
Bekir Kalyoncu, Deniz Kutluk and Ali Feyyaz Ogutcu.

–Boundary_(ID_agqjBhM2k+00OBU5LVx2fQ)–

Armentel Dealt $1US-Mil. Fine For Internet Dominance

ARMENTEL DEALT $1US-MIL. FINE FOR INTERNET DOMINANCE
by Michael Lacquiere

World Markets Research Centre
Global Insight
August 4, 2008

Armenian fixed-line incumbent Armentel has been fined around 300
million dram ($1US million) for abuse of its dominance of the domestic
internet market, reports ARKA. The fine was imposed by Armenia’s
State Commission for Protection of Economic Competition, whose chief,
Armine Hakobyan, reported that it was handed out as a result of the
"unequal conditions for providers and operators" created by Armentel’s
‘Hi-Line’ internet service. The service offers cheap internet, but
Armentel has not leased its lines to rivals to enable them to provide
similar services. The operator now has 15 days to settle the matter.

Significance:The fine represents success for rivals, such as Arminco,
CrossNet and Web, which have frequently complained of a lack of
access (seeArmenia: 29 July 2008:). While Armentel had insisted
that it would respond to all applications for network sharing from
local internet service providers, news of the fine is a positive
step forward for the country’s internet market, indicating that,
as well as measures to liberalise the marketde jure, the regulator
is willing to act in order to ensure thatde factoliberalisation also
occurs. The process of equalising competition will take some time,
but progress is undoubtedly being made.

ANKARA: Ali Birinci New TTK President

ALI BIRINCI NEW TTK PRESIDENT

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Aug 2 2008

Police Academy lecturer Professor Ali Birinci has been appointed to
the presidency of the Turkish Historical Society (TTK).

The decision to move Birinci to the TTK presidency was published in
the Official Gazette yesterday. Birinci is highly respected for his
books and articles on historical issues. Professor Yusuf Halacoglu,
the former TTK president, was removed from office by a Cabinet decision
and will serve as a professor at Gazi University as he did prior to
his nomination to the presidency.

Halacoglu is known as a strong denier of allegations that Armenians
were subjected to genocide at the hands of Ottoman Turks during World
War I. He used to fervently claim in conferences and panel discussions
that claims of genocide were completely false and that the TTK has
100,000 pages of archived documents that refute Armenian claims of
genocide in 1915. İstanbul Today’s Zaman with wires

–Boundary_(ID_JW+fh+OjOfLhYIx/Y70PlQ)–

EU: Karabakh Talks Should Be Continued In Compliance With Basic Prin

EU: KARABAKH TALKS SHOULD BE CONTINUED IN COMPLIANCE WITH BASIC PRINCIPLES

PanARMENIAN.Net
31.07.2008 22:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ EU Envoy for the South Caucasus Peter Semneby met
with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov to discuss the
ways of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement.

"We discussed the meeting between the Azerbaijani and Armenian
Foreign Ministers due in Moscow on August 1 and concluded that the
talks should be continued in compliance with the basic principles,"
Mr Semneby told reporters, Trend Azeri news agency reports.

Even Worse Index

EVEN WORSE INDEX

A1+
[12:55 pm] 01 August, 2008

Life in the Regional Center Ijevan, Tavush Region is rather
active. There are many shops and food stores in the city. Besides
the city is under construction, but the economic activity is not
reflected in the community budget.

The City Council considered the writ of execution of the second
quarter of community budget. Private income of AMD 54.152.000 had been
scheduled for the second quarter, while the factual writ of execution
stated only AMD 16.833.000, i.e. only 31.1% of the predetermined
sum. This index is even worse than those of some border villages.

Senate Foreign Relations Committee Approves Yovanovitch As U.S. Amba

SENATE FOREIGN RELATIONS COMMITTEE APPROVES YOVANOVITCH AS U.S. AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan

Ju ly 30, 2008

WASHINGTON, JULY 30, ARMENIANS TODAY – NOYAN TAPAN. Senate Foreign
Relations Committee approved Marie L. Yovanovitch as Ambassador
Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the United States of America to
the Republic of Armenia.

According to the Armenian Assembly of America, Senator Barbara Boxer
was recorded as a no vote stating that it was "a vote in support of the
truth," while Senator Robert Menendez wanted to make it clear that his
affirmative vote was in no way an endorsement of the Administration’s
flawed policy on the subject of genocide affirmation.

Senator Boxer stated that "where the U.S. stands on genocide is
no small matter" and expressed her continued frustration with the
Administration’s policy, stating that Ambassador Yovanovitch "still
cannot use the word genocide."

Echoing Senator Boxer, Senator Menendez recounted the series of
questions he posed during the confirmation hearing and expressed his
continued concerns about Yovanovitch’s inability to provide her own
opinion regarding the historical fact of the Armenian Genocide and the
Administration’s failed policy in this regard. Menendez also pointed
out the absurdity of the Administration’s stance, which sends the
Ambassador every year to commemorate the genocide at Tsitsernakaberd
Memorial, in Yerevan, but does not affirm it.

Senator Ben Cardin also agreed that the Administration’s policy is
not helpful. He also reminded his colleagues of the International
Center for Transitional Justice, which concluded that the events of
1915 was indeed genocide.

Chairman Joseph Biden thanked the Armenian-American community, as
he acknowledged the presence of Armenia’s Ambassador to the United
States, Tatoul Markarian, at today’s proceedings.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=116165

Armenian Lawyer Turned Lawmaker Is Fearless In Face Of Authority

RFE/RL
On The Frontlines

Armenian Lawyer Turned Lawmaker Is Fearless In Face Of Authority
July 21, 2008
By Ruzanna Khachatrian, Suren Musayelyan

Zaruhi Postanjian at her seat at the National Assembly chamber in Yerevan

Armenian lawmaker Zaruhi Postanjian is known for her tireless activism
in the cause of human rights.

It was a sensational statement made amidst one of the most controversial
court cases in Armenian history.

"If I fail to win the case, I swear I’ll tear up my lawyer’s license,"
Zaruhi Postanjian publicly vowed before taking up the appeals of Razmik
Sargsian, Musa Serobian, and Arayik Zalian.

The three men, all soldiers in the Armenian Army, had been charged with
murdering two of their fellow conscripts, Roman Yeghizarian and Hovsep
Mkrtumian, whose beaten bodies were found in the Sarsang reservoir in
the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh in January 2004. Sargsian says
videotaped testimony in which he confessed to his and his fellow
soldiers’ role in the deaths was obtained under torture. Serobian and
Zalian also say they were abused and mistreated while in detention.

They all pleaded not guilty, but were convicted in 2005 and sentenced to
15 years in prison. Their sentences were increased to life in prison by
an appeals court in May 2006.

So, when in December 2006, Armenia’s appeals court, the Court Of
Cassation, overturned the murder convictions in a surprise move, the
family and supporters of the three soldiers could not hold back their
tears, including Postanjian.

The court said the case against the three men was flawed and lacking in
evidence.

"It is not just a victory of lawyers, it is a victory of the whole
society," Postanjian said after her clients were released, after having
spent nearly three years behind bars. Though they are free, they have
not been acquitted and still face an additional investigation into the
killings.

Postanjian (lower right) overturned the convictions of Musa Serobian
(left), Arayik Zalian, and Razmik Sargsian.

Nevertheless, the 35-year-old Postanjian had achieved the impossible —
winning a case in the highest court of criminal justice in Armenia, a
country where, according to rights watchdog Freedom House, the judicial
branch is subject to political pressure from the executive branch and
"suffers from considerable corruption."

Such a U-turn in a high-profile judicial proceeding had never been
achieved by a defense counsel in Armenia, nor has it since.

In February 2007, Postanjian was awarded a medal of courage for her
efforts by the Zoravar Andranik All-National Armenian Union, named after
the freedom fighter and national hero.

Following the verdict, Postanjian suddenly found herself thrust into the
media spotlight in Armenia. Since then, she has become well-known in the
country for her tireless activism in the cause of human rights, for her
fearlessness in the face of authority, and for her flamboyant personal
style, both in the courtroom — where she’s been known to cry, scream,
and jump up and down — and in parliament, the latest arena in which she
is continuing her crusade.

Dramatic Career Change

Postanjian moved from applying Armenia’s laws to writing them in May
2007 when she was elected to the country’s 131-seat National Assembly on
the list of the opposition Zharangutyun (Heritage) party, along with six
other political newcomers. The move meant she had to quit her legal
practice, and give up a handsome income far exceeding her deputy’s
salary of about $600 a month.

She says she’s not sure why she made the dramatic career change. "I ask
myself this question every day," she says, "and cannot find an answer to
it."

The first major test for the opposition in the new Armenian parliament
was consideration of a government-sponsored package of draft legislation
that included amendments to the country’s media-regulation bill that
would have banned, or severely restricted, the retransmission of foreign
broadcasts, including those of RFE/RL.

Postanjian poses in the home of her father, which served as campaign
headquarters of the Heritage Party in 2007.

Opposition deputies called the proposed amendments an infringement on
free speech and said that, if adopted, the legislation would further
cement the government’s already pervasive control over electronic media
in the country.

In the end, the package was rejected by just one vote.

"What we’ve got in the end shows that everything is in our own hands,"
Postanjian said after several days of heated debate. "When I say ‘we,’ I
mean those who have a wish to achieve a change of quality in our life,
those who have a desire to put up a struggle."

Since her election, Postanjian has authored a number of draft laws aimed
at improving the human rights situation in the country.

For example, she presented a draft law in autumn 2007 proposing that
controversial Article 301 in Armenia’s Criminal Code be abolished. The
article calls for the leveling of a heavy fine and up to three years in
prison for anyone publicly calling for the violent seizure of power or
the overthrow of the constitutional system in Armenia. Human rights
advocates say the article can be easily abused for the purposes of
political persecution.

These draft laws have not yet come up for debate, however, and, in
Armenia’s current political climate, may never come up.

‘Where Are You Taking This Child?’

As expected, Postanjian could be found in the thick of things earlier
this year during Armenia’s tumultuous presidential campaign and
election.

For 11 days in February, tens of thousands of opposition supporters
rallied in Yerevan, in a mass challenge to the narrow first-round
victory of former President Robert Kocharian’s ally, Prime Minister
Serzh Sarkisian, in the presidential election on February 19. Opposition
leader Levon Ter-Petrossian — Armenia’s first post-Soviet president —
lost the vote to Sarkisian by more than 30 percentage points.

Clashes eventually erupted on March 1 that left nine people dead and
hundreds injured. Kocharian then imposed a state of emergency, which
ended the rallies.

A man injured in the postelection violence in Yerevan on March 1.

During the demonstrations, Postanjian appeared to be everywhere —
"policing the police," so to speak — particularly on March 1 as she
tried to protect demonstrators against police brutality and heavy-handed
tactics, both in her capacity as a deputy and as a civil rights
defender.

On one occasion, an RFE/RL reporter heard Postanjian verbally sparring
with police in an effort to prevent them from imprisoning a child along
with the child’s father.

"Where are you taking this child?! What right do you have to take a
child to a detention center?!" Postanjian screamed. "How will you look
into your own children’s eyes?â’

Following the unrest, Postanjian, along with her fellow faction members,
was a consistent critic of the restrictions on rights and freedoms
during the state of emergency.

Where are you taking this child?! What right do you have to take a child
to a detention center?!
She has also distinguished herself through her efforts to support three
opposition deputies — Hakob Hakobian, Sasun Mikayelian, and Miasnik
Malkhassian — arrested for their alleged roles in the March 1 violence
and stripped of their parliamentary immunity. They remain in custody,
charged under articles of the Criminal Code that deal with "usurpation
of state power" and "incitement to mass disturbances."

She, like many opposition supporters, considers the three to be
political prisoners.

According to the Prosecutor’s Office, 40 opposition members and
supporters remain in pretrial detention and 30 others have been
sentenced to up to six years in prison on charges mainly stemming from
the postelection opposition protests and the March 1 unrest. Another 32
opposition supporters have been given suspended prison sentences.

Postanjian and her faction have been putting pressure on the authorities
to comply with the demands of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe (PACE), which has given Yerevan until the end of this year to
lift restrictions on public rallies, launch an independent inquiry into
the events of March 1, set up a dialogue with opposition parties, and
release those individuals imprisoned "on seemingly artificial and
politically motivated charges."

‘Credulous And Trusting’

Her new position as a lawmaker has done nothing to suppress Postanjian’s
flair for the dramatic gesture.

Last summer, Postanjian found herself at a Yerevan police station,
lodging a complaint of police harassment against officers whom she
accused of forcibly confiscating her handbag, as well as leaflets she
had been distributing. Postanjian and one of her aides had been passing
out flyers in defense of imprisoned military commander Zhirayr Sefilian
as tens of thousands of Armenians — including President Robert
Kocharian — had gathered in the capital’s main stadium to watch the
opening ceremonies of the Pan-Armenian Games.

Sefilian, a Lebanese-born Armenian, was a decorated commander during the
war over Nagorno-Karabakh. He and opposition activist Vartan Malkhasian
were arrested in late 2006. Both were charged with publicly calling for
the violent overthrow of the government. In 2007, the court found
Sefilian guilty of illegal arms possession and sentenced him to 18
months in jail. Malkhasian was jailed for two years.

The predominantly ethnic-Armenian region of Nagorno-Karabakh lies within
Azerbaijan’s borders. Karabakh seceded in 1988 with Yerevan’s help.
Armenian forces gradually took control of the mountainous region before
seizing a number of adjacent Azerbaijani administrative districts, which
they continue to occupy. The conflict claimed an estimated 35,000 lives
and drove hundreds of thousands of people from their homes. A cease-fire
was brokered in 1994. Negotiations continue on Karabakh’s future
status.

Sefilian has been a vocal critic of the Armenian government’s
negotiations with Baku. Many human rights activists in Armenia,
including Postanjian, believe Sefilian and Malkhasian are, in fact,
political prisoners, an assertion which the government denies.

Postanjian’s support for Sefilian’s case didn’t stop there. On September
21, 2007, Postanjian was invited along with other parliamentary deputies
to a reception held by Kocharian on Armenia’s Independence Day.
Postanjian used the occasion to wear a short-sleeved T-shirt emblazoned
with an image of the wartime commander that said: "Freedom to Zhirayr
Sefilian."

Postanjian now and then.

Her daring outfit had the effect of repelling many of the celebrating
guests, who all appeared to do their best to stay as far away as
possible from Postanjian in the president’s reception hall.

Parliament speaker Tigran Torosian of Armenia’s ruling Republican Party
says he considers Postanjian to be an energetic, yet overly emotional,
lawmaker. He thinks she goes too far with her human rights efforts,
however.

"Parliament is not a human-rights protection body," he says. "A
lawmaker’s work does not directly relate to human-rights protection.â’

But Zharangutyun faction leader Raffi Hovannisian sees Postanjian as the
embodiment of a modern-day human-rights champion.

"She lives in order to defend the rights of her fellow citizens and the
interests of her nation," says Hovannisian, who also served as the
country’s foreign minister. "She is a citizen of law and will never
become a deserter. And her shortcoming is the same as the shortcoming of
the whole faction — we are credulous and trusting. The vision of
Armenia that we have is, indeed, different from the reality in which we
live."

Passion For Environment

Postanjian’s work in parliament hasn’t deterred her from more
grass-roots activism, especially when it comes to environmental issues.
In the mid-1990s, she worked as a senior inspector in the Environmental
Prosecutor-General’s Office, and the environment remains one of her
passions.

Last summer, construction was set to begin on a high-rise building in
downtown Yerevan. The only problem was that residents of a nearby
apartment block had long been using the land for a well-tended garden.
Bulldozers, escorted by police, began to clear the site. The residents,
desperate for help, sounded the alarm and called in whomever they could,
including the press. And, of course, Postanjian, who once again found
herself on the forefront of protest.

She lives in order to defend the rights of her fellow citizens and the
interests of her nation.
With wet hair, holding her 5-year-old daughter, Greta, by the hand,
Postanjian arrived and stood between an imperiled apricot tree and a
bulldozer, shouting, "I won’t let you do that!" Postanjian had jumped
out of the bath and hadn’t even had time to take Greta to her
grandmother’s. As others, emboldened by Postanjian’s courage, joined in
the defense, Greta stood by, calmly watching.

"I wasnâ’t afraid," she remembers. "My mom was working."

The garden on Pushkin Street was eventually saved, and Postanjian and
her daughter planted an apricot tree there. To their surprise, the local
authorities, including the prefecture of Yerevan’s central district,
also joined hands with the building’s residents to plant new trees in
the area.

Environmentalists have drawn attention to the lack of green zones in the
capital and the deforestation taking place, exacerbated by an energy
crisis in Armenia in the early 1990s, when many of Yerevan’s trees were
cut down. The crisis has been compounded by expanding construction
projects and emissions from the ever-growing number of cars on the
roads.

In November 2007, Postanjian also was instrumental in efforts to halt
construction of a new building on another tree-studded site in the city.
During a question-and-answer session with government members, Postanjian
asked Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian about the matter. After that, the
logging of trees and construction on the site were suspended.

Postanjian was among a group who visited the Teghut forest to study
firsthand how many trees will be logged as a result of a mining plan put
forward by the company ACP.

Zaruhi has also been behind protest actions against the company ACP
(Armenia Copper Program), which wants to cut down 1,500 acres of virgin
forest near the village of Teghut, in northern Armenia, to mine for
copper and molybdenum ore. The forest is home to hundreds of species of
birds, mammals, reptiles, fish, and plants, including many that are
registered in the International Red Book of Endangered Species. On
January 13, 2008, Postanjian led a few dozen activists on a bicycle ride
through Yerevan’s streets to express opposition to the clear-cutting.

Fitting In Her Family

As a deputy, Postanjian dresses casually, and without embarrassment.
It’s not unusual for her to turn up for a parliament session wearing
jeans tucked into cowboy boots, dressed more for a night out than for a
daytime debate. It’s the same insouciance she displayed as a teenager
when, as the Soviet Union was crumbling, Postanjian renounced her
membership in Komsomol, the communist youth organization, and began
attending demonstrations and public rallies in the city.

Postanjian often dresses in jeans and cowboy boots while she’s in the
National Assembly in Yerevan.

Born in Yerevan, Postanjian attended Russian School No. 132 and
graduated from Yerevan’s MYUD Law Institute in 1994. She received her
lawyer’s license in 1999, and subsequently pursued advanced work in
criminal law through the American Bar Association in Florida. Her
personal passions sent her to Lund University in Sweden in 2003 to study
human rights law, and to the Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights in
Warsaw in 2004-05.

Today, Postanjian says, she’s too busy for friends, and sometimes even
for family.

"My parents have done and are doing everything for all my intentions to
be realized, but I can spare very little time to spend with them. I
don’t see them often," she confesses. "When I myself became a mother, I
was very young, only 20, and at that time it was purely an obligation
for me. I didn’t feel the pleasure. Now, with the 5-year-old daughter, I
am starting to understand what motherhood is."

She married Suren Drampian, a dentist, in 1993. He says he understands
his wife’s passion in pursuit of human rights, but admits that sometimes
he tells her: "You’ve had enough. Stay at home. You know what predators
are out there. Who are you fighting against? We have children, don’t
we?"

Recently, Postanjian told faction head Raffi Hovannisian that she wants
to have a fourth child.

"Only Zara can do both things at one time," Hovannisian said, "carrying
out the highest and most sacred mission of giving birth to a child and
providing mothering and being peopleâ’s elected representative and an
active parliament deputy."

Says Postanjian: "I want every Armenian to be willing to live in
Armenia, to have children here and to see their children’s future only
in Armenia."

Postanjian with her daughters Lusine, Lilit, and Greta. Her husband,
Suren Drampian, watches over.

r_Turned_Lawmaker_Is_Fearless_In_Face_Of_Authority /1185068.html

http://www.rferl.org/content/Armenian_Lawye

RA MFA closely watches situation in Javakhk

PanARMENIAN.Net

RA MFA closely watches situation in Javakhk
25.07.2008 15:48 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian Foreign Ministry closely watches the
situation in Javakhk and maintains contact with the Georgian
authorities, said Tigran Balayan, RA MFA acting head of the media
relations division.

`We are hopeful that the situation will be stabilized peacefully and
in the framework of the law,’ he said.

On July 20 Georgian special forces and police rushed into the house
belonging to United Javakhk leader, Vahagn Chakhalyan, and arrested
his and his family members ` his parents and brother.

Another United Javakhk member, Aram Batoyan, is also kept in custody.

Policemen Arthur Berujanyan and Armen Gabrielyan were killed. Local
police chiefs said the latter commented suicide.

United Javakhk was founded in 2006, with a goal to improve the social
and economic conditions of the Armenian-inhabited region and make
Armenian the second state language in Samtskhe Javakheti.

Armenian singer fifth in "New Wave-2008"

Panorama.am

14:09 26/07/2008

ARMENIAN SINGER FIFTH IN `NEW WAVE-2008′

In the second day of the `New Wave-2008′ International Competition of
Young Singers of Popular Music Russian singer 19-year-old Iris has
become the leader. Armenian singer Mger Mesropyan is in the fifth
horizontal.

Armenian singer presented `Armenia’ song in Armenian. See below the
results of second day of the contest.

Russian singer Iris is in the first horizontal, she is followed by
Georgian group `Georgia’, then comes Italian Alessandro Ristori,
fourth horizontal is occupied by Latvia Dons, fifth horizontal `
Armenian singer Mger, etc.

Source: Panorama.am

Yerevan-Djur To Reduce Water Supply In Erebuni, Center Communities O

YEREVAN-DJUR TO REDUCE WATER SUPPLY IN EREBUNI, CENTER COMMUNITIES ON JULY 25

ARKA
July 23

The Yerevan-Djur Water Company informs residents of Erebuni and Center
communities water supply will be reduced on July 25 as a result of
street reconstruction activities in these district areas.

The communities will be supplied with water from 7:00 a.m. to
10:00 p.m. and from 19:00 p.m. to 22:00 p.m., the press service of
Yerevan-Djur reports.

The company apologizes for causing inconvenience to its
customers. Z. Sh.