Oskanian To Depart For Strasbourg To Participate In CoE Committee Of

OSKANIAN TO DEPART FOR STRASBOURG TO PARTICIPATE IN COE COMMITTEE OF MINISTERS SESSION

PanARMENIAN.Net
17.05.2006 13:09 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ May 18 Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian
will depart for Strasbourg to participate in the 166th Session of
the Council of Europe Committee of Ministers, reported RA MFA press
office. Within the visit framework Vartan Oskanian and the Foreign
Ministers taking part in the session will meet with CoE Secretary
General Terry Davis to discuss the status of Kosovo. Special Envoy
of the U.N.

Secretary-General for the Future Status of Kosovo Martti Ahtisaari
will also be present at the meeting.

Vartan Oskanian is also scheduled to meet with Azeri Foreign Minister
Elmar Mammadyarov. May 19 the RA FM will address the session.

On the same day Vartan Oskanian will depart for the U.S. and Canada
to meet with the Armenian communities of Los Angeles, Boston and
Ottawa. He will discuss a wide scope of issues referring to the
Armenia-Diaspora third forum scheduled for September 18-20. The
Armenian Minister will return to Yerevan May 24.

Ara Abrahamian Presents Vartan Oskanian Forthcoming Programs Of Worl

ARA ABRAHAMIAN PRESENTS VARTAN OSKANIAN FORTHCOMING PROGRAMS OF WORLD ARMENIAN CONGRESS

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
May 15 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 15, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Issues relating to
events to be organized soon in Yerevan on the initiative of the
World Armenian Congress were discussed at the May 15 meeting of
Foreign Minister of Armenia Vartan Oskanian with Ara Abrahamian, the
Chairman of the World Armenian Congress and the Union of Armenians
of Russia. Ara Abrahamian presented details of organizing and
expections from the “Caucasus without Conflict, Terrorism: Dialogue
of Civilizations at Caucasian Crossroad” international conference
and the sitting of the experts’ commission engaged in the Armenian
Genocide Issues.

Mentioning modernity of the issues to be discussed during the
conferences, the Minister expressed readiness concerning RA Foreign
Ministry’s participation in the events at corresponding level. Ara
Abrahamian presented his structure’s future activities and programs. As
Noyan Tapan was informed by the RA Foreign Ministry’s Press and
Information Department, the interlocuters touched upon in details the
Armenian rural communities’ development program which is the pivot of
the agenda of the Armenia-Diaspora third conference to take place in
Yerevan in September of the current year. The interlocuters touched
upon international events, regional issues.

ANKARA: France’s Bill

FRANCE’S BILL
By Ozdemir Ince

Turkish Press
May 16 2006

HURRIYET- Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper labeled the Armenian
Events of 1915 a ‘genocide’. Some deputies in France are preparing
a bill to criminalize denial of the so-called Armenian genocide. I’m
certainly angry about France and the US, both of whom are using the
‘genocide’ as a political tool and can’t get rid of the fixed idea
of genocide. But there are also people in these two countries working
against this shell game.

If this bill is passed, then France will contradict its history of
freedom and make things worse while trying to erase the opprobrium
of colonialism. My wise French friends are saying that comparing the
Jewish Holocaust with the Armenian genocide is absolute nonsense. But
they aren’t the majority among French intellectuals. Moreover they
grow more intense when this issue is debated. The ‘genocide’ is so
deep in their subconscious that many of them can’t get rid of it.

A total of 400,000 Armenian people are integrated into France, and all
of them are French citizens. France is certain about Armenians being
French. This is very important. Armenian society is very influential
in every field of daily life and every profession. It has a strong
middle class.

So it’s natural that a French person supports a French Armenian. Also
it’s almost impossible to publish an article espousing the opposite
view in top newspapers like Le Monde, Liberation and Le Nouvel
Observateur. Le Monde published the views of Orhan Pamuk, Murat Belge,
Halil Berktay and Baskin Oran, but wouldn’t publish my article even
in the readers section. I wrote about the tricky maneuvers of the
French and Armenians in Cukurova between 1919 and 1921. This is one
of France’s most shameful eras, but nobody wants to learn about it
and they even aren’t interested.

Like Elisabeth Badinter, there are historians who say: ‘Turkish and
Armenian historians should study if there was a genocide in Turkey
or another place. But it’s not the business of the French Parliament
to deliver an opinion on this issue. Moreover, legal determination
of discussion about a historical event and making it criminal is
unacceptable.’ But I don’t know if this will be enough to convince
even her husband Robert Badinter, an influential politician, jurist
and writer.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan called representatives of French
firms and warned them to support Turkey’s stance. I don’t think that
this will work. Then France will play its European Union card. As a
matter of fact, their ambassador spoke about this a few days ago.

Turkey has to find another method, but it is difficult with this
government.

Leaving The Base: Russian Tanks Are Leaving Akhalkalaki

LEAVING THE BASE: RUSSIAN TANKS ARE LEAVING AKHALKALAKI
by Vladimir Novikov
Translated by Elena Leonova

Source: Kommersant, May 15, 2006, p. 10
Agency WPS
What the Papers Say Part B (Russia)
May 15, 2006 Monday

A trainload of Russian military hardware will leave Georgia today; The
first echelon of armored vehicles being withdrawn from Russia’s 62nd
military base at Akhalkalaki will leave Georgia for Russia today. The
process of shutting down the Akhalkalaki base started late last week,
in accordance with Russian-Georgian agreements reached on March 31
in Sochi.

The first echelon of armored vehicles being withdrawn from Russia’s
62nd military base at Akhalkalaki will leave Georgia for Russia
today. The process of shutting down the Akhalkalaki base started late
last week, in accordance with Russian-Georgian agreements reached
on March 31 in Sochi. According to those agreements, the Akhalkalaki
base will be shut down by the end of 2007, but all military hardware
must be withdrawn a year earlier – by the end of 2006.

Colonel Igor Konashenkov, an aide to the Commander of the Russian
Ground Forces, said at a press conference in Akhalkalaki that the
first echelon withdrawn to Russia will include seven tanks, about
10 armored personnel carriers and armored patrol vehicles, and some
other military property. According to Konashenkov, Georgian Railroads
delivered an echelon of nine railway carriages and specially-reinforced
platforms to the Tsalka station on Friday, May 12, for the purpose
of transporting the Russian military hardware.

The echelon is scheduled to depart on the morning of May 15.

The echelon’s path from Georgia to Russia runs through Azerbaijan.

Colonel Konashenkov said: “Georgia will ensure security for the
Russian military cargo on Georgian territory, Azerbaijan will do so
on Azeri territory, and once it crosses the Russian state border,
security will be provided by a military patrol from the Russian Group
of Forces in the Trans-Caucasus.”

Loading of Russian armored vehicles to be withdrawn from Akhalkalaki
started on the morning of May 13 and continued through May 14.

Loading was supervised by General Alexander Popov, commander of
the Group of Russian Forces in Georgia, and his deputy, Colonel
Vladimir Kuparadze. According to statements made at a press conference
yesterday, no complications were involved in loading Russian hardware
and any difficulties were only technical. “We aren’t having any
particular problems. Just a shortage of personnel, so each person has
to do the work of three,” said Colonel Kuparadze. General Popov made
a similar statement, adding that after troop withdrawal is completed
in 2008, he’d like to visit Georgia as a tourist.

Despite reassuring statements from the Russian military, tension
in Akhalkalaki over the impending withdrawal of Russian hardware
persisted until the very last moment. Special forces from the Georgian
Interior Ministry were transferred to the town of Akhalkalaki in the
early morning hours of May 13; if necessary, they were to stop any
protests by local residents who oppose the decision to close the 62nd
base. The special forces officers, armed with batons and shields,
were took up their position at a district police station.

It’s worth noting that shortly before this, tension was exacerbated
by none other than Georgian Defense Minister Iraklii Okruashvili. In
an interview with Imedi television on May 1, Okruashvili alleged
that “Russia is organizing provocations in Akhalkalaki, with the
aim of halting troop withdrawal on the pretext that local residents
are obstructing it.” Given this war of nerves, a reinforced mobile
artillery battalion from the Russian Armed Forces was sent from
Akhalkalaki to the Tsalka railway station for loading and guarding
the cargo.

All the same, none of the apprehensions and suspicions of recent
days and weeks were borne out; contrary to expectations, there were
no unusual incidents during the withdrawal of Russian hardware.

In late April, a number of non-governmental organizations from the
Dzhavakheti region in southern Georgia, which has a predominantly
Armenian population, organized a picket outside the main gates of the
Russian military base at Akhalkalaki. Protesting against the closure
of the base, they said that thousands of local residents will lose
their jobs after the Russian military leaves. Moreover, the Armenian
protestors said that they fear aggression from neighboring Turkey
and don’t believe that the Georgian Armed Forces would protect them
from it.

Although the withdrawal of Russian hardware from Akhalkalaki has
already begun, the NGOs of Dzhavakheti say they won’t stop their
attempts to prevent the closure of the 62nd Russian military base in
southern Georgia.

A Syrian Monastery Lies At The Nexus Of Islam, Christianity

A SYRIAN MONASTERY LIES AT THE NEXUS OF ISLAM, CHRISTIANITY

AZG Armenian Daily
16/05/2006

It is late afternoon at the monastery of Deir Mar Musa on the edge
of the Syrian desert and the only sounds are the call of desert birds
and the whisper of the breeze over time-worn stones.

Until, that is, a group of Muslim schoolgirls arrive from a nearby town
to fill the monastery’s valley with laughter and joyful chattering.

“Keep the noise down. This is a monastery,” bellows the Rev. Paolo
Dall’Oglio, the monastery’s Italian Jesuit founder, looking stem for
a moment before breaking into a broad, proud smile.

The monastery of Deir Mar Musa was first built by Greek monks in the
sixth century as a remote retreat from the material and political
world. Abandoned in the 19th century, it once again houses a small
religious community. But now, under its second founder, Father
Dall’Oglio, it is on the forefront of politics with a fresh approach
to bridge-building with the Islamic world.

“When I arrived here 25 years ago, Syria was [a] center of the struggle
between communism and capitalism,” says Dall’Oglio, dressed in a
worn gray pullover. “And today it is the crossroads between Islam
and Christianity.”

“For us, dialogue really starts from being curious about others,” he
says, explaining that instead of proselytizing, the Catholic Church
now advocates building bridges with Islam.

Through day-to-day interaction, bridge-building is what the Deir
Mar Musa’s six monks and nuns and several lay assistants are working
toward. Traveling to local Muslim communities they work with Muslim
leaders to improve opportunities for young people, promote ecological
awareness, and arrange theological discussions between religious
leaders.

“It’s really just a simple, evangelical life,” he says, stroking
silvery beard. “I accept pluralism as a gift from God.”

In 1977, DeU’oglio began studying Arabic in Damascus, where he soon
heard about a ruined Byzantine monastery 50 miles away on the edge
of the Syrian desert.

Five years later he made his first visit. After leaving the main
road and trekking into barren hills, he arrived at a crumbling
building. Clambering through the ruins, he found himself in a roofless
church staring at medieval frescos slowly dissolving beneath the sun,
wind, and rain.

“I came here for 10 days of prayer and meditation,” he says. When he
returned to Damascus, he began laying plans for nearly a decade to
restore the ruins and make it the home for a new sort of monastery.

Now on one typical April day, the restored monastery is visited by
a busload of noisy Muslim schoolgirls on a field trip, two Syrian
Christian soldiers in camouflage uniforms, and a stream of foreign
backpackers and tourists. “Sometimes on Fridays thousands of people
come,” says Dell’oglio. “For Muslims, a Christian monastery is a holy
place. And Muslims know that monasteries like this were protected by
the prophet Muhammad himself.

The monastery also combines medieval monasticism with Arab traditions
of hospitality by extending free accommodation to all travelers –
provided they help with cleaning, washing the dishes, and collecting
Jitter from, the- surrounding hills.

“Our hospitality is really a political program,” he says. “I would
say to the [American] people ‘come to Syria and discover the human
values of these people – Muslims and Christians.'”

“Yes, we have problems [in the region] but let us consider the
problems of the Middle East as a problem within one family and not
as the problems of an enemy.

Let us look for another logic beyond the logic of military aggression
and occupation and see that we are one humanity. Peace is something
that you build with your enemies.”

Ironically the monastery’s very success at attracting visitors means
that the monks now have little time for meditation or study. Recently
they have refurbished another old monastery 30 miles further north
as well as ancient caves throughout the surrounding stony hillsides.

“We consider ourselves at home when we are surrounded by guests,”
says Dell’oglio. “But obviously sometimes we get tired and so we have
caves where people can go for some quiet.”

Not surprisingly, many visitors find it difficult to leave. One young
French woman is coming to the end of nearly two years of living in the
monastery and working with local people as an agricultural engineer.

“This place is like something wonderful,” she says.

“Every day I wake up here and think that I just want to live here
for always and always.”

But Dell’oglio rubs his eyes tiredly when asked about the future of the
region, and particularly of Syria’s 1 million native Christians. He
says if relations with the West worsen, it will get more difficult
for Christians to stay in Syria.

His concerns are shared in the Syrian capital, Damascus.

“The Christians in Syria are very worried about the future,” says
Ayman Abdul Nour, a Syrian reform leader in Damascus. He notes that
a disproportionate number of visa seekers at North American embassies
are Christians.

But while Dell’oglio is concerned about Syrian Christians, he’s also
thinking globally.

“The big issue is whether there can even be a future without religious
harmony,” says Paolo. “To build religious harmony is to build a future
for humanity.

It’s not going to be easy but I say let’s do it. Bring it on.”

The Christian Science Monitor, Monday 1 May 2006.

Place of Holding Matches Between Armenia and Azerbaijan teams TBD

The place of holding matches between national football teams of
Armenia and Azerbaijan to be determined today

ArmRadio.am
12.05.2006 10:30

At a special meeting in Nion, Switzerland, Heads of Football
Federations of Armenia and Azerbaijan will decide today the place of
holding qualification matches of the 2008 European Championship
between national teams of the two countries.

The Armenian delegation comprises President of the Football Federation
of Armenia Ruben Hayrapetyan, Executive Director Armen Minasyan and
Plenipotentiary Representative of RA President and Government,
President of the Public Radio and Television Council Alexan
Harutyunyan.

BAKU: CoE Committee Of Ministers Session’s Agenda Announced

COE COMMITTEE OF MINISTERS SESSION’S AGENDA ANNOUNCED

Today, Azerbaijan
May 11 2006

Azerbaijani and Armenian Foreign Ministers Elmar Mammadyarov and
Vardan Oskanyan will attend the 116th session of the Council of
Europe Committee of Foreign Ministers scheduled for 18 and 19 May
in Strasbourg.

Human rights and cooperation between the Council of Europe and the
European Union will be priority on the agenda. The Russian Federation
will take over the presidency of the Committee of Ministers from
Romania, for a period of six months.

At the invitation of Council of Europe Secretary General Terry Davis,
the Ministers will hold an informal meeting with Martti Ahtisaari,
the United Nations Special Envoy for the future status of Kosovo.

The Ministers will also discuss other major priorities resulting
from the Council of Europe’s Third Summit in Warsaw, namely: the
reinforcement of the Council’s action in support of democracy and
good governance, the development of intercultural dialogue and the
Organisations process of internal reform.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov will present the priorities
for his presidency at the end of the session.

Within the session, Elmar Mammadyarov and Vardan Oskanyan will hold
next round of negotiating process for the settlement of the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict in the framework of the Prague process.

The Ministers will exchange views on new opinions OSCE Minsk Group
co-chairs presented to the conflicting sides in early May. It will be
determined after the meeting of the two Ministers whether there will
be a need for the meeting of the Azerbaijani and Armenian Presidents,
APA reports.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/25969.html

“Orinats Yerkir” Party Withdraws From Ruling Coalition Of Armenia

“ORINATS YERKIR” PARTY WITHDRAWS FROM RULING COALITION OF ARMENIA

Yerevan, May 12. ArmInfo. Thursday, 10:30 PM, “Orinats Yerkir”
Party Board resolved to withdraw from the country’s ruling political
coalition.

In addition, the “OY” Board adopted a decision on resignation of “OY”
Leader, Parliamentary Speaker Arthur Baghdasaryan from his post.

Arthur Baghdasaryan intends to made public the party’s decision today
at 2:00 PM. Sources close to the party report that approximately an
hour before the party meeting yesterday, A. Baghdasaryan met with
President Robert Kocharyan and then convened immediate meeting of
the party Board.

To recap, 10 big businessman-members of the “OY” parliamentary faction
have recently left the party. The party representatives connected the
developments around the party with a certain pressure by the ruling
circles that are dissatisfied with the recent harsh statements by
Arthur Baghdasaryan as well as with his criticism of the privatization
program 2001-2003. At present the most probable nominees to the
post of the parliamentary speaker are considered Karen Karapetyan,
the head of deputy group “People’s Deputy,” Vahan Hovhannissyan, Vice
Speaker a member of ARFD Bureau, Tigran Torosyan, Vice Speaker, Vice
Chairman of RPA. To note, the ruling coalition of Armenia comprises
the Republican Party of Armenia, ARF Dashnaktsutyun, and “OY.” It
was formed immediately after the parliamentary election in 2003.

Transfers Of Syunik Customs-House To State Budget Increase By 207 Ml

TRANSFERS OF SYUNIK CUSTOMS-HOUSE TO STATE BUDGET INCREASE BY 207 MLN DRAMS IN FIRST QUARTER OF 2006 ON SAME PERIOD OF LAST YEAR

Noyan Tapan
May 11 2006

KAPAN, MAY 11, NOYAN TAPAN. Considerable work was done both at the
Syunik regional customs-house and the Agarak customs point in recent
months. Borik Sargsian, Head of Syunik regional customs-house of
the State Customs Committee adjunct to the RA government, said this
during an interview to the newspaper “Syunats Erkir”. According
to him, particularly the customs-house in Agarak underwent major
repairs, including the putting into operation a 5 thousand sq.m
area of examination zone, as well as the separation of passenger
and cargo spaces and rooms of frontier guards and passport service
employees. Besides, 100-ton capacity electronic scales were
installed. B. Sargsian said that in the first quarter of 2006,
VAT and customs duties of 2 bln 40 thousand drams (about 4.4 mln
USD) were transferred to the state budget, which exceeds by 207 mln
drams the index of the same period of last year. At the same time,
a growth in exports was registered. In the first quarter of 2005,
goods of the total amount of 4 bln 895 drams were exported, while in
the same period of this year, exports amounted to 6 bln 910 mln drams.

Number Of Births Increases In Hrazdan Region

NUMBER OF BIRTHS INCREASES IN HRAZDAN REGION

Noyan Tapan
May 10 2006

HRAZDAN, MAY 10, NOYAN TAPAN. According to data of the Hrazdan
Territorial Department on Civil Status Acts Registration, 755 births,
473 cases of death, 293 marriages and 42 divorces were registered
in 2005 in city communities of Hranzdan, Tsaghkadzor and rural
communities of the region. 207 births, 64 marriages and 9 divorces
were registered in the above-mentioned settlements during the first
quarter of 2006. Those indexes made correspondingly 178 births,
80 marriages and 4 divorces during the same period of time of the
previous year. 140 certificates were given by the Hrazdan Territorial
Department for Civil Status Acts Registration during four months of
the last year. 120 of those were given to young people to register
their marriage in other countries.