ANCA-WR Donates Film Library to Armenian Genocide Institute-Museum

Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region
104 North Belmont Street, Suite 200
Glendale, California 91206
Phone: 818.500.1918 Fax: 818.246.7353
[email protected]

PRESS RELEASE
November 28, 2006

Contact: Lerna Kayserian
Tel: (818) 500-1918

ANCA-WR DONATES FILM LIBRARY TO ARMENIAN GENOCIDE INSTITUTE-MUSEUM IN
YEREVAN

GLENDALE, CA – Earlier this month, Armenian National Committee of America –
Western Region announced the donation of the Armenian Film Foundation’s
documentary series to the Armenian Genocide Institute-Museum in Yerevan.

During a meeting at the museum this past August, ANCA-WR Chairman Steven J.
Dadaian and museum director Dr. Lavrenty Barseghian discussed ways in which
the ANCA-WR could assist the museum and its research efforts. As a first
step, the ANCA-WR found it fitting that the Armenian Film Foundation
documentary series would be a valuable resource to the institute’s
collection.

On October 28, 2006, Armenian Revolutionary Federation Western U.S. Central
Committee Chairman Avedik Izmirlian and member Hagop Tufenkjian visited the
Armenian Genocide Institute-Museum, a division of the National Academy of
Sciences of the Republic of Armenia, to deliver the documentary series on
behalf of the ANCA-WR. The gift was cordially accepted by Yeranouhi
Margaryan, Deputy Director of the Institute.

"I was impressed with the professional work the Institute has done at the
Museum, as well as the politeness and knowledge of Ms. Yeranouhi Margaryan,"
remarked Izmirlian. "I believe that the J. Michael Hagopian Film Library
donated by the ANCA-WR fills an important gap and is a great contribution to
the Museum".

Established in 1979, the Armenian Film Foundation (AFF) is a non-profit,
educational and cultural organization dedicated to the documentation and
preservation of Armenian heritage in multi-media formats. The ANCA-WR
honored AFF founder and board chairman, J. Michael Hagopian with its "Man of
the Year" award at its 2000 Annual Banquet.

The ANCA is the largest and most influential Armenian American grassroots
political organization. Working in coordination with a network of offices,
chapters, and supporters throughout the United States and affiliated
organizations around the world, the ANCA actively advances the concerns of
the Armenian-American community on a broad range of issues.

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www.anca.org

OSCE’s Year-End Draft Declaration Yields To Russia On Istanbul Commi

OSCE’S YEAR-END DRAFT DECLARATION YIELDS TO RUSSIA ON ISTANBUL COMMITMENTS
By Vladimir Socor

Eurasia Daily Monitor, DC
Nov 27 2006

With barely ten days remaining until the OSCE’s year-end conference
in Brussels, the draft ministerial declaration (the centerpiece of
the conference documents) would weaken the West’s hand and strengthen
Moscow’s on the most salient hard-security issue in Europe: Russia’s
1999 commitments to withdraw its forces from Georgia and Moldova.

Moscow has repeatedly tried to decouple this issue from the
1999-adapted Treaty on Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE), so as to
bring this treaty into force on the territories of the three Baltic
states and to place the Baltic states under treaty limitations.

Those commitments, as well as that treaty, were approved as a package
at the OSCE’s Istanbul summit in 1999. Consequently, the NATO and
European Union member countries have taken the position all along that
the Russia-desired ratification of the adapted CFE treaty is "linked
with" (that is, conditional on) Russia’s complete fulfillment of its
Istanbul Commitments. In 2005-2006 Russia made significant progress
toward withdrawing its forces from the Batumi and Akhalkalaki bases in
Georgia on a timetable running until 2008 — a fact welcomed in the
2006 draft ministerial declaration. Apart from that promising step,
however, Moscow has continued to breach its 1999 Commitments and CFE
treaty principles on multiple counts during 2006.

The relevant text in the OSCE’s 2006 year-end draft declaration would
— if adopted — loosen the linkage policy, relegate major elements
in Russia’s Istanbul Commitments to oblivion, and bring the adapted
CFE treaty’s ratification much closer. The treaty’s entry into force
would in turn trigger a procedure to extend its applicability to
the three Baltic states’ territories and negotiate with Russia about
setting limits to any possible allied deployments there.

Drafted largely by this year’s Belgian chairmanship and reflecting
some of Belgian Minister of Foreign Affairs Karel de Gucht’s publicly
stated views, the OSCE declaration’s relevant text reads:

"We urge State Parties to the CFE Treaty to fulfill the outstanding
commitments undertaken at the 1999 Istanbul Summit. We welcome the
[Russia-Georgia] agreements that have led to substantial progress
on the ground. We call for completion of this process. As regards
Moldova, no progress could be registered in 2006. We call on the
Russian Federation and parties concerned to allow the process of
withdrawal of ammunition and related military personnel to resume
expeditiously. We reaffirm our shared determination to promote the
entry into force of the Adapted CFE Treaty" (OSCE Ministerial Council,
Belgian Chairmanship, MC.DD/2306, November 23).

The paragraph on Moldova is phrased in a way that could all but
liquidate the remaining Istanbul Commitments there. It only mentions
withdrawal of ammunition, omitting the troops, although the Istanbul
Commitments require the complete withdrawal of Russian forces, a
term that focuses on the troops. From 2002 to date, the United States
and European allies as well as Moldova have consistently focused on
the Russian troops when calling for fulfillment of Russia’s Istanbul
Commitments. Earlier this year, however, De Gucht repeatedly called
for withdrawal of Russian ammunition only, omitting the troops. And
earlier this month, Belgium’s ambassador to the OSCE in Vienna,
Bernard de Combrugghe, heading a fact-finding delegation to Chisinau
and Tiraspol, similarly declared in both places that the OSCE sought
the withdrawal of ammunition, failing to mention the troops (Basapress,
Infotag, Regnum, November 12-14).

The reference to "ammunition-related personnel" is an innovation. In
the course of that visit to Transnistria, the OSCE group was told
by the Russian command that only about 100 Russian "personnel"
(sotrudniki), not army troops but a "militarized protection service"
(voyennizirovanaya okhrana), are guarding the vast Russian ammunition
stockpile there (Regnum, Infotag, November 13). Thus, it appears that
the ministerial declaration’s drafters would be content to see just
those 100 Russian personnel withdraw along with the ammunition. While
de Combrugghe did mention in Tiraspol the known fact that "one of
the sides" (Chisinau) does not accept the Russian "peacekeeping"
operation, that point remains academic if the OSCE releases Russia
from the Istanbul Commitments on troop withdrawal.

The document’s "call on Russia and parties concerned to allow"
ammunition withdrawal to proceed is a further innovation to
accommodate Moscow. Responsibility for the unlawful stationing of
Russian forces in Moldova has all along been Russia’s liability
and no one else’s. The Istanbul Commitments also hold Russia alone
liable for the unconditional withdrawal of its forces. However,
Moscow has attempted to offload those responsibilities onto
other "parties," thereby dividing its own political liability and
setting third-party preconditions to fulfilling what are Moscow’s
unconditional obligations. In the last few years, Moscow has falsely
claimed that Tiraspol’s authorities "do not allow" Moscow to withdraw
the ammunition, let alone the troops. Occasionally, Moscow has also
alleged difficulties with Moldovan railroads and rolling stock or
Ukrainian safety concerns about the transport of old and dangerous
ammunition, although the Tiraspol authorities (its appointees)
provide Moscow’s main alibi for blocking the withdrawal.

The OSCE’s draft declaration plays along with Moscow’s tactics by
asking unnamed other parties to unblock Russia’s withdrawal.

In its finely nuanced, trademark OSCE phrasing, the document calls
for the ammunition withdrawal merely to "resume, as an open-ended
"process," rather than asking for it to be completed within a certain
timeline. With Russia having breached several actual deadlines in
succession, the OSCE at its year-end 2003 Maastricht conference gave up
setting any deadlines or timelines, realizing that Russia’s persistent
noncompliance was exposing the organization’s ineffectiveness.

The document’s pledge to promote the adapted CFE treaty’s ratification
is not accompanied by a conditional clause that would have referenced a
linkage with Russia’s Istanbul Commitments. Nor is any reference made
to Moscow’s breaches of both the original 1990 and the 1999-adapted
treaties. The unfulfilled commitments and ongoing treaty breaches
include: Russia’s retention of the Gudauta base in Georgia, which was
due for closure in 2001; deployment of treaty-banned combat hardware
with secessionist forces in Abkhazia, Karabakh, and Transnistria;
and stationing of "peacekeeping" and other Russian troops in conflict
areas without host-country-consent, although such consent is a central
principle of both existing and unratified CFE treaties.

Adopting this section of the OSCE’s ministerial declaration for 2006
in this form could at one stroke erase most of Russia’s outstanding
Istanbul Commitments by the custodial organization itself. Such
a development, should it come to pass, would mark a high point of
Russian clout within the OSCE.

Masked Men Rob Money Exchange Office

Armenpress

MASKED MEN ROB MONEY EXCHANGE OFFICE

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 24, ARMENPRESS: Armenian
prosecutors reported today about a broad daylight
robbery of 1.5 million drams ($4,000) from a currency
exchange office in Yerevan.
They said three masked men entered the office and
pointing their guns at the man running it took away
the money that was on his table. The robbery was
reported on November 22 at 7 seven o’clock in the
evening.

Israeli Throw Stones On UN Commissioner

ISRAELI THROW STONES ON UN COMMISSIONER
By Hakob Chakrian

AZG Armenian Daily
23/11/2006

The Israelis attacked Louise Arbour, UN High Commissioner for Human
Rights, in Sderot city on borderline of Gaza, Palestine. Arbour arrived
in Sderot to study on the ground the harm made by the rockets shot
from Palestine. The local residents met her with acts of protest and
threw stones on her car.

Informing about this in its November 22 issue, the Turkish "Yeni
Saraf" newspaper added that the day before in the course of her visit
to Beyt Hanun city, in Gaza, Palestine, she assured the citizens of
the city who lost 20 civilians as a result of the Israeli attack that
"the world will not abandon them."

ICG Calls On Georgia To Do More For Its National Minorities

ICG CALLS ON GEORGIA TO DO MORE FOR ITS NATIONAL MINORITIES

Armenpress
Nov 22 2006

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 22, ARMENPRESS: The Georgian government must take
significant steps to avoid conflict in the country’s ethnic Armenian
and Azeri areas, says the latest report from the International Crisis
Group, that examines the grievances of these two communities.

Titled ‘Georgia’s Armenian and Azeri Minorities’ the report says while
there is no risk of the situation becoming Ossetian- or Abkhaz-like
threats to Georgia’s territorial integrity, tensions are evident in
the regions of Samtskhe-Javakheti and Kvemo-Kartli, where the two
predominantly live. There have been demonstrations, alleged police
brutality and killings during the past two years.

Georgia has made little progress towards integrating these minorities,
who constitute over 12 per cent of the population. Armenians and
Azeris are underrepresented in all spheres of public life, especially
government, and a lack of dialogue between them and Tbilisi adds to
perceptions of discrimination and alienation. This is aggravated
by economic problems, including high unemployment and decaying
infrastructure.

"Tbilisi needs to do much more to build confidence and to encourage
minorities to address their problems through state structures
rather then in the street", says Sabine Freizer, Crisis Group’s
Caucasus Project Director. While the government denies there is any
inequality, many minorities claim they are treated as second-class
citizens. Feeling betrayed by the Abkhaz and Ossetians, who declared
independent states on Georgian territory, Tbilisi has a deeply rooted,
if unfounded, fear that others may do the same. More sensitive and
effective minority policies would dampen such demands and might even
help build trust with the Abkhaz and Ossetians.

Some steps have been taken to improve the lives of minorities. With
donor support, Georgia has invested in road and infrastructure
rehabilitation in minority regions and created a ministry for civic
integration, established a public administration institute to train
minorities and ratified the Framework Convention for the Protection
of National Minorities.

None of this is likely to appease minorities’ political
grievances without policies that increase inclusion and
participation. Implementation of local government reform after the 2006
elections provides a new platform for minorities to affect decision
making through municipal bodies. More consultation by Tbilisi when
drafting legislation can also help.

The government needs to establish a comprehensive education system
to teach Georgian as a second language to minorities, but while a
new generation is educated, minorities should not be discriminated
against, especially in hiring for state jobs. The state should also
implement its international commitments, particularly allowing use
of minority languages for state affairs in municipalities with large
numbers of minority citizens, as is standard throughout Europe.

"Only by acting on both tracks will Georgia succeed in reducing
tensions and increasing minority integration", says Nicholas Whyte,
Crisis Group’s Europe Program Director.

Ara Abrahamian On Recent Notorious Events In Russia

ARA ABRAHAMIAN ON RECENT NOTORIOUS EVENTS IN RUSSIA

AZG Armenian Daily
22/11/2006

In the course of a meeting at RA Writers’ Union on November 20, Ara
Abrahamian, Chairman of the World Armenian Congress and the Union of
Armenians of Russia touched upon the recent notorious events in Russia.

"We live in the Russian Federation, according to its laws and
Constitution, I cannot bring the members of the World Armenian
Congress (WAC) and the Union of Armenians of Russia to the streets of
the Russian towns and declare war to the nationalists", he said in
response to a question about his attitude to the recent of murders
of Armenians and RA citizens in Russia. He stated that after each
murder in the territory of Russia, it becomes known in 5 minutes.

The attorneys of the World Armenian Congress work, an active
cooperation with the Russian law machinery is carried on and, as a
result, clearance of a number of murders of Armenians in Russia,
committed on a national ground. At the same time, Abrahamian
stated there is still much to do in this direction. He reminded
that the representatives of WAC and the Union of Armenians of
Russia hold meetings with the Russian youth, delivered lectures,
telling them about the history of Armenia and the Armenians. As for
the coming parliamentary elections, Ara Abrahamian stated the World
Armenian Congress (WAC) will define its preferences in the coming
2007 Parliamentary elections in Armenia by January 2007. Besides, he
called for the Armenian political parties to refrain from ambitions
and come out with clear program documents. "Having studied the
program of each political party, the WAC and the Union of Armenians
of Russia will define their position," Abrahamian said. Touching upon
the issue of Armenia’s relations with its closest neighbor Georgia,
Mr. Abrahamian said that Armenia should build its relations with
Georgia grounded on a well-developed governmental program. He added
that the Armenian authorities have to clearly explain the Russian
authorities that any economic sanctions against Georgia will also make
harm to Armenia. "They should explain to Moscow that Georgia does
not suffer from closing the Upper Lars checking point, but Armenia,
their strategic partner in the region suffers. So, be so kind to find
some alternative, some way out," Abrahamian said.

BAKU: Talks On Resolution Of Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict Intensifies –

TALKS ON RESOLUTION OF NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT INTENSIFIES – FRENCH CO-CHAIR AT OSCE MINSK GROUP
Author: A.Mammadova

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Nov 22 2006

The OSCE Minsk Group co-chair, Russian Ambassador, Yuriy Merzlyakov,
stated in Baku on 22 November that the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs have
further proposals on the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
which at present is being discussed confidentially, Trend reports.

Speaking on the results of the visit to Yerevan and talks held
with the Armenian leaders, the mediator said that the Armenian side
confirmed its willingness to participate in the talks. We hope the
same applies in Baku by the Azerbaijani President, Ilham Aliyev,"
he added. The diplomat also noted that the U.S. Ambassador, Matthew
Bryza, intends to meet with the leader of the Armenian community of
Nagorno-Karabakh, Arkadiy Gukasian in Los Angeles, and therefore,
was unable to visit the region with the Minsk Group mission.

Nevertheless, he voiced his hope that all 3 co-chairs would be present
at the meeting of the Presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia in Minsk
on 28 November 2006.

The French Ambassador Fassie announced that negotiations are continuing
intensively. "We have met with the Foreign Ministers three times
over the last few weeks. We are trying to build a wall in the hope
of establishing a base for future agreements on the resolution of
the conflict. We add a brick each time a positive step is taken,"
he stated .

RA President To Depart For Cyprus On First-Ever State Visit November

RA PRESIDENT TO DEPART FOR CYPRUS ON FIRST-EVER STATE VISIT NOVEMBER 22

PanARMENIAN.Net
20.11.2006 15:56 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian President Robert Kocharian will depart for
Cyprus on a first-ever state visit November 22, Victor Soghomonian told
a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter. The President will meet with the Cypriot
leadership to discuss the Armenian-Cypriot relations, specifically
establishment and expansion of the trade and economic relations
between the two states.

BAKU: Armenian Armed Forces Division Began Military Trainings In Occ

ARMENIAN ARMED FORCES DIVISION BEGAN MILITARY TRAININGS IN OCCUPIED AZERI TERRITORIES
Author: Sh.Jaliloglu

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Nov 20 2006

The division of the Armenian Armed Forces began large-scale military
training in the occupied territories of Agdam district of Azerbaijan
from 16:20, Trend reports. The training is mainly held in the Uzundere
village. Explosions can be heard in the territories where the Armenian
Armed Forces hold training. Observation of the training was deterred
by cloudy weather.

BAKU: Aliyev Says Economic And Political Cooperation Must Be Improve

ALIYEV SAYS ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL COOPERATION MUST BE IMPROVED AMONG TURKISH-SPEAKING COUNTRIES

Today, Azerbaijan
Nov 20 2006

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said on Friday that economic
and political cooperation among the Turkish speaking countries must
be improved.

Speaking at the 8th Summit of Heads of State & Government of
Turkish-Speaking Countries in the southern Turkish city of Antalya,
Aliyev remembered that Turkey was the first country recognizing
independence of Azerbaijan.

"Economy of Azerbaijan develops rapidly. We have left economic
difficulties behind. Other Turkish-speaking states also overcame the
difficulties," Aliyev added.

"World is changing. The incidents occurring in our region require
new relationships and cooperation," he recalled.

"Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline is a historic step. This will serve
economic development of the region. Inclusion of Kazakhstan to this
cooperation brings a new dynamism. Completion of Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum
natural gas pipeline means shipment of Azerbaijani gas to Turkey and
Europe," Aliyev said.

Emphasizing that countries of the Caspian region have very rich natural
resources, Aliyev said, "these resources bring financial prosperity
to the region. The cooperation which was considered as a dream before,
is now realized."

Stating that there were problems that create uneasiness in Azerbaijan,
Aliyev said, "ongoing Armenian occupation on Azerbaijan`s territory
is the biggest problem of our country. This is also a problem of
the region. We favor resolution of the problem through peaceful
means. The problem must be solved in line with the principles
of the U.N.. European Organizations do not have any effect on
Armenia. Azerbaijan lost 20 percent of its territory in the ethnic
cleansing. More than 1 million people were made refugee in their own
country."

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/32787.html