UN Chief Concerned About Clashes During Protests In Armenia

UN CHIEF CONCERNED ABOUT CLASHES DURING PROTESTS IN ARMENIA
Mu Xuequan

Xinhua

March 4 2008
China

UNITED NATIONS, March 3 (Xinhua) — UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
voiced his deep concern on Monday about the deadly clashes between
demonstrators and police forces in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia,
where the results of recent presidential elections have been disputed.

"It is his hope that these events, during which eight people died, will
be thoroughly investigated," Ban’s spokesperson said in a statement.

"The secretary-general calls on all parties to exercise full restraint
and to find a way out of the current crisis," the statement said. "He
also urges the Armenian authorities to take all necessary steps to
ensure a return to normalcy, including through a speedy lifting of
the state of emergency."

Protests began in Armenia after Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan was
declared the winner of the 19 February presidential poll, a result
that is disputed by the opposition candidate Levon Ter-Petrosyan.

www.chinaview.cn

Armenian Prosecutors Detain 15 Protesters

ARMENIAN PROSECUTORS DETAIN 15 PROTESTERS

ITAR-TASS
March 2 2008
Russia

YEREVAN, March 2 (Itar-Tass) -Armenian prosecutor general’s office has
announced the detention of 15 opposition activists, the prosecutor’s
press secretary Sonya Truzyan told Itar-Tass. The detainees are being
accused of violence against representatives of the authorities and
calls to disobey instructions to end unlawful actions.

In the meantime, army units have been moved to the key points in
Yerevan. After announcing the state of emergency, Armenian President
Robert Kocharyan said that the army would be used for restoring order.

According to police, the situation in the city is under control. The
square in front of the mayor’s office in Yerevan has been cleared
from protesters.

Armenia Imposes Emergency Rule After Eight Die In Riots

ARMENIA IMPOSES EMERGENCY RULE AFTER EIGHT DIE IN RIOTS

New York Sun
March 3 2008
NY

The Armenian government declared a state of emergency after clashes
between riot police and opposition protesters in the capital, Yerevan,
left as many as eight people dead.

"The president declared emergency rule late last night and we have
also stopped issuing accreditation for the foreign media," a spokesman
for the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Tigran Balayan, said by telephone
yesterday from Yerevan.

Violence erupted yesterday in the capital, where anti-government
demonstrators have held 11 days of rallies since the February 19
presidential election, in which former Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan
defeated Levon Ter-Petrosyan, a former president. The opposition
claims that the vote was rigged.

America "deeply regrets" the unrest in Yerevan, and "calls on all
sides to avoid further violence, act fully within the law, exercise
maximum restraint, and resume political dialogue," spokesman Sean
McCormack said Saturday in comments posted on the State Department’s
Web site. "We hope that the state of emergency declared today will
be lifted promptly and that political dialogue resumes."

Police used live ammunition and tear gas against the demonstrators,
and Ter-Petrosyan was placed under house arrest, his spokesman,
Arman Musinyan, said by telephone from Yerevan.

Mr. Ter-Petrosyan told reporters that he would continue his fight
within the law and called for Western support, Mr. Musinyan said.

The election in the ex-Soviet state largely met Europe’s standards for
democracy, though Mr. Sargsyan’s governing party denied media access
to Mr. Petrosyan during the campaign and intimidated his supporters,
according to election monitors of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe.

Head of the President’s staff told the foreign Ambassadors that the

Head of the President’s staff told the foreign Ambassadors that the
authorities are full of determination to bring to responsibility the
organizers of unrest

March 2, 2008

Yerevan /Mediamax/. By the order of the Armenian President Robert
Kocharian, the Head of the President’s Staff Armen Gevorgian met today
with the Ambassadors of the OSCE participant-states and the Heads of
Representative Offices of international organizations.

Mediamax reports that during the meeting, the situation, present in
Yerevan late March 1, was presented, the actions of the Armenian
authorities were made clear for the diplomats, in particular, the
facts for announcing state of emergency in Yerevan.

Armen Gevorgian stated that the Armenian authorities took up the
necessary measures established by the law for establishing order in
Yerevan and suppressing illegal actions.

Head of the Armenian President’s Staff stressed that the authorities
are full of determination to bring to responsibility the organizers,
instigators and the executors of disturbances.

15 Persons Arrested As Of 1 P.M. Of March 2

15 PERSONS ARRESTED AS OF 1 P.M. OF MARCH 2

YEREVAN, MARCH 2, NOYAN TAPAN. According to information on the website
of the RA prosecutor general’s office, "15 people were arrested as of
1 p.m. March 2, 2008, under the criminal case investigated by the RA
Special Investigation Service, on suspicion of making calls for not
obeying the demands to stop public events held in violation of the
order established by law and of committing violence dangerous for
life or health of a respresentative of authorities.

Artak Sargsian, Levik Khachatrian, Mushegh Saghatelian, Davit
Arakelian, Vardges Hayotsian, Masis Aivazian, Ashot Manukian, Davit
Matevosian, Petros Shahazian, Tigran Baghdasarian, Hovhannes Ghazarian,
Samvel Harutyunian, Isahak Malkhasian, Khachik Gasparian and Avetik
Nersisian are suspected of commiting an action envisaged by Article
225 Part 1 and Article 316 Part 2 of the RA Criminal Code.

The investigation is underway, the RA Special Investigation Service is
taking measures to reveal all circumstances of the incident and find
all persons who committed crimes, organized public events in violation
of the order established by law, involved other citizens in these
events and committed violence against policemen performing their duty".

‘Reasons to Believe’

b17,0,3282311.story

BOOK REVIEW

‘Reasons to Believe’ by John Marks

A former ‘born-again’ Christian’s journey among evangelicals

By Jonathan Kirsch

February 17, 2008

Reasons to Believe

One Man’s Journey Among the Evangelicals and the Faith He Left Behind

John Marks

Ecco: 366 pp., $26.95

Journalists and religious true believers stand on opposite sides of a
chasm. The journalist is trained to ask how he knows what he thinks
he knows; the true believer is satisfied that everything he truly
needs to know is contained in a text, a dogma, a practice. For some
evangelical Christians, for example, the New Testament reveals that
those who have embraced the truth as they see it will be "raptured"
to heaven when the world comes to an end; everyone else will burn
forever in a lake of fire.

"When a Bible-believing Christian talks about truth . . . he is not
talking about a theory or an idea. . . ," explains veteran reporter
John Marks. "The gospel is not conditioned by anything. It does not
dissolve in water or burn in fire. It is Truth. It is final."

Marks looks across that vast chasm in "Reasons to Believe," a work of
courageous investigative journalism as well as a memoir of startling
self-reflection. Marks was born again in Dallas at age 16, but he
soon left the narrow path of evangelical Christianity and ended up in
the latter-day Babylon of New York City, working as a producer for
"60 Minutes," married to a Jewish woman and raising his son in her
faith. Popular culture was calling. "If I thought that anything in
heaven would sound like either Chicago or Blood, Sweat & Tears,"
he writes, "I would willingly serve Satan for the rest of my days."

Marks explains that he was provoked into writing "Reasons to Believe"
while on assignment in Dallas for a "60 Minutes" piece about the "Left
Behind" series of bestseller novels loosely based on the end-times
scenario of the Book of Revelation. One of the interviewees confronted
him with the fundamental question of evangelical Christianity: "Will
you be left behind?" On reflection, Marks was forced to concede
that, by the lights of his questioner, he was "doomed to cosmic
incineration" because he had embraced the corruptions and temptations
of the secular world. "I will be destroyed, as will my wife, my son,
and my gay friends," writes Marks, summing up how he was regarded
by his born-again kin. "It’s nothing personal. They love me, but
salvation knows no loopholes."

His biggest surprise in researching the book was the reception from
the evangelical Christians he interviewed. "God was calling," they
believed. "The prodigal was returning." They witnessed to Marks,
confident he would see the error of his ways and return to the true
faith. Exactly here is the tension that makes the book seem so charged
and so consequential. "What if, having returned, I say no to the old
family on this final occasion? To God? . . . " writes Marks. "The book
came to feel an awesome weight. It felt like a coming act of treason."

Indeed, the enterprise sometimes seems like a secret mission into
enemy territory. Marks ventured into evangelical Christian communities
across America — classrooms, churches, gospel music festivals and
"God Dome[s]," — and reports on the remarkable sights he has seen
and the people he has met, some of whom are frankly described as
"bizarre" and "creepy." Even when he ponders the acts of kindness
and compassion performed by Christian missionaries at times of crisis
and in places of deprivation, he reminds us of their ulterior motives.

"Why in the world would men and women spend their entire lives —
risk their lives — in the service of telling other people how to
think?" he writes. "Believers will answer, first and foremost, the
mission is not about telling other people how to think. It’s about
telling them the Truth."

Still, Marks writes with unfailing intelligence, insight and deep
compassion about evangelical Christianity. He makes careful historical
distinctions between fundamentalism, which was marked in the 19th
century by "an adherence to the rules," and evangelicalism, which
he characterizes as "wary of dogma [and] focused on experience." He
detects a "fragile sense of self-esteem" and even "a deep strain of
self-loathing" in men and women who appear to be so full of conviction:
"You must think we’re all a bunch of idiots," one woman said after long
hours of conversation in Nashville. At the same time, he points out
"a seldom-mentioned and yet indispensable part of Christian life" —
"it can be the most delirious of pleasures to believe."

Marks confesses that he was tempted by the comforting certainties of
true belief and deeply affected by the scenes that summoned up memories
of his childhood. But he has clearly come too far and seen too much
to return. "The ace card, for me, is Jesus Christ," he had written
in his diary as a college freshman. Now, as a middle-aged journalist
and sometime amateur theologian, he insists on asking: "Once more,
I come back to the reality of Jesus. Who is he, this walking corpse?"

On the very last page of "Reasons to Believe," Marks consents
to answer the question that prompted him to write the book:
"Will you be left behind?" But first he points out why the
facts of history make it impossible for him to surrender to true
belief. "The twentieth century, my century, asks its own terrible
questions. Bosnia? Hiroshima? Rwanda? Armenia? . . . A god who can’t
stop it has no right to my loyalty or my belief." And then he declares:
"Leave me behind." *

Jonathan Kirsch is the author of numerous books, most recently,
"A History of the End of the World."

Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times

http://www.calendarlive.com/books/la-bk-kirsch17fe

Shooting in Armenian capital near rally – witness

Shooting in Armenian capital near rally – witness

Reuters, UK
March 1 2008

Sat Mar 1, 2008 12:29pm EST

YEREVAN, March 1 (Reuters) – Sporadic shooting rocked the centre
of Armenia’s capital on Saturday and tracer bullets flew across
the dusky sky near where the opposition had been holding a rally,
a Reuters eye-witness reported.

"I can hear sporadic shooting and see red and yellow tracers going
into the skies," Reuters correspondent Hasmik Lazarian reported from
a vantage point near the scene.

"This is all happening near the place where the opposition rallied
today," she said. "It’s not clear who is shooting at whom." (Reporting
by Hasmik Lazarian; Writing by Dmitry Solovyov; Editing by Keith Weir)

"Delay Of Current Situation Weakens Country," Vahan Hovhannisian Dec

"DELAY OF CURRENT SITUATION WEAKENS COUNTRY," VAHAN HOVHANNISIAN DECLARES

Noyan Tapan
Feb 29 2008

YEREVAN,FEBRUARY 29, NOYAN TAPAN. "Confrontation, separation and
intolerance are not ways for settling the problems. On the contrary,
the delay of the current situation deepens the inconfidence, and
disjoins our citizens: as a result, the country is getting weaker,"
is said in the February 28 statement of Vahan Hovhannisian, a member
of the ARF Bureau.

Welcoming all the sincere calls for tolerance and cooperation, he
mentions: "We are just obliged to exclude the possible clashes. We are
just obliged to discharge the atmosphere, we are obliged to find a way
out. Otherwise, with our weak national system and being so separate we
will not be able to solve not only the problems existing in our country
but we also will not be capable to resist the outside challenges. Let
us not forget that we are the same, the same kind of Armenians."

The not desible developments, according to Vahan Hovhannisian, can
be prevented only through negotiations. According to him, there are
three primary questions:

First: formation of such a new electoral system with co-thinking, which
will exclude the possibility of all kinds of electoral violations,
will sharply increase the self-confidence of people for the formation
of authorities by their own will. One of the ways is, for example,
the provision of a complete independence.

Second: to create a real plurality in the country and conditions for
freedom of speech. The first step, for example, can be the formation
of the leadership of the National Commission of TV and Radio and the
Public TV with the co-thinking of political forces.

Third: to create such conditions that guarantees for a full operation
of the opposition in the political system are provided. In this
respect, one of the numerous steps may be the making of cooresponding
amendments to the regulations of the National Assembly.

Vahan Hovhannisian mentions that he and the ARF Dashnaktsutiun have
concrete and thorough suggestions in these three directions, which
they are ready to introduce during the negotiations.

Robert Kocharyan: Azeri President Is Open To Communication

ROBERT KOCHARYAN: AZERI PRESIDENT IS OPEN TO COMMUNICATION

2008-02-29 17:34:00

ArmInfo. President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev is open to communication,
President of Armenia Robert Kocharyan said while meeting with students
of Yerevan State University today.

He said that at different forums he is usually seated near Aliyev
because presidents are usually seated in alphabetic order. "We are
on normal terms.

He is open to communication and we have had no problems so far. I
think that the new president of Armenia will continue active contacts
with President Aliyev till the autumn. In Sept Azerbaijan is holding
presidential election and the contacts will be stopped for some time
to be continued later," Kocharyan said.

Armenia Strengthened Positions On Karabakh During Past 10 Years

ARMENIA STRENGTHENED POSITIONS ON KARABAKH DURING PAST 10 YEARS

PanARMENIAN.Net
29.02.2008 16:31 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "I do not think we should drag out or speed up
resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict," RA President Robert
Kocharian said at a meeting with the students and teaching staff of
Yerevan State University.

"No compromise is possible in key issues. Meanwhile, some statements
heard from the Theater Square may mislead the international community,
including the OSCE Minsk Group co-chair states. They can think that
Armenia is ready for concessions. But 300 thousand people are not the
entire population of Armenia. I do state that Armenia strengthened
positions on Karabakh during past 10 years and possibility of return
of Karabakh to Azerbaijan has never been raised. As to Serzh Sargsyan,
he will never make inadmissible concessions in the Karabakh process,"
the President said, adding that his major achievement is that no
proposal on return of NKR under jurisdiction of Azerbaijan has been
made since 1998.