BAKU: Official Of State Commission On Prisoners Of War, Hostages And

OFFICIAL OF STATE COMMISSION ON PRISONERS OF WAR, HOSTAGES AND MISSING PERSONS FIRUDIN SADIGOV SEEKS SPIES AMONG JOURNALISTS

Azeri Press Agency
19 Sep 2007 17:23

Rashid Hajili: Firudin Sadigov’s acts contradict Azerbaijani
legislation

Chief of the State Commission on Prisoners of War, Hostages and Missing
Persons of separatist Nagorno Karabakh regime Victor Kocharian said
a unilateral decision was passed on handing over Azerbaijani Ashraf
Jafarov who was captured by Armenians on June 30 this year. But
relevant bodies of Azerbaijan have not yet taken a stance on this
information.

APA could not get information about it from chief of the working
group of State Commission on Prisoners of War, Hostages and Missing
Persons Firudin Sadigov.

Considering the probability of a spy posing as a journalist, Firudin
Sadigov first asked to send the question in written form in the
agency’s blank. Then Sadigov said: "What do you want? I will not
contact press."

Firudin Sadigov several times treated APA and other media outlets
in this way. He obeys neither the law on mass media, nor ethic norms
and insults journalists Director of Media Rights Institution, lawyer
Rashid Hajili told the APA, Firudin Sadigov’s activity is contrary
to Azerbaijani legislation.

"Journalists questions should be replied due to law on
"mass media". State bodies should reply to journalists’
questions. Journalists’ questions should be replied at once. If the
question demands investigation, then it can be replied later. State
Commission on Prisoners of War, Hostages and Missing Persons should
make statements on any captured before journalists ask questions. If
any question is raised, Commission representatives should reply to
it. If Working Group does not reply to questions, it means that they
ignore their duty.

"Measures should be taken on him due to law on "state service". As such
activity harms image of the above-said State Commission. Commission
should think about its image," he said.

Armenian Araratbank To Complete Restyling Program By Oct

ARMENIAN ARARATBANK TO COMPLETE RESTYLING PROGRAM BY OCT

ARKA
September 17 2007

The Armenian Araratbank intends to complete its restyling program
late in September, the bank’s press service reported on Monday.

Late in September, the Araratbank will complete the restyling program,
which has been implemented over the last two months. In October,
the bank will have a new logo, new colors, a new advertising policy
and new services, the report says.

Specifically, the bank’s new logo, with two mountain tops on it, means
not only the bank’s name but also the dynamics of its development.

"As the most rapidly developing bank of Armenia’s banking system, the
third open joint-stock bank, which is expanding its branch network,
list of services and improving their quality, increasing the crediting
of the real economic sector and has found its niche on the bond,
mortgage, consumer crediting and deposit markets and is preparing for
an initial public offering in Armenia, expanding its relations with
international and European organizations, Araratbank intends to hold
a dominant position in Armenia’s banking system and financial market,"
the report says.

The Araratbank public corporation was founded on September 2, 1991. On
October 31, 1996, was received Banking License #4.

By June 30, 2007, the bank’s assets had amounted to 8.5bln AMD,
credit investments and other holdings 5.2bln AMD. The bank’s capital
had totaled 4.2bln AMD, and authorized capital 3.44bln AMD. ($1 –
341.02 AMD).

Success Of Turkey’s AK Party Must Not Dilute Worries Over Arab Islam

SUCCESS OF TURKEY’S AK PARTY MUST NOT DILUTE WORRIES OVER ARAB ISLAMISTS
Mona Eltahawy

Diplomatic Traffic, DC

bate.asp?ID=629
9/17/2007

It has been unsurprising that since Abdullah Gul became president of
Turkey on 27 August that much misguided analyses has been wasted on
how "Islamists" can pass the democracy test. His victory was bound to
be described as the "Islamist" routing of Turkish politics. And Arab
Islamists – in the form of the Muslim Brotherhood, their supporters
and defenders – were always going to point to Turkey and tell us
that we’ve been wrong all along to worry about the Arab Islamist’
alleged flirtation with democracy. "It worked in Turkey, it can work
in the Arab world," they would try to assure us.

Wrong. Wrong. And wrong.

Firstly, Gul is not an Islamist. His wife’s headscarf might be the
red cloth to the bull of the secular nationalists in Turkey, but
neither Gul nor the AK Party which swept parliamentary elections in
Turkey in June, can be called Islamists. In fact, so little does the
AK Party share with the Muslim Brotherhood – aside from the common
faith of its members – that it’s absurd to use its success in Turkish
politics as a reason to reduce fears over the Muslim Brotherhood’s
role in Arab politics.

The three litmus tests of Islamism will prove my point: women and sex,
the "West", and Israel.

As a secular Muslim who has vowed never to live in Egypt should
Islamists ever take power, I never take lightly any attempt to blend
religion with politics.

So it has been with a more than skeptical eye that I’ve followed
Turkish politics over the past few years.

But the 2004 reforms to Turkey’s Penal Code which were passed by an AK
Party-dominated parliament have been nothing short of miraculous. To
appreciate how the AK Party has turned upside down Islamist notions on
women and their rights to sexual autonomy – and thereby signaled its
own distance from Islamism – consider the following, quoted from the
European Stability Initiative (ESI) June 2007 report "Sex and Power
in Turkey: Feminism, Islam and the Maturing of Turkish Democracy":

All references to vague patriarchal constructs such as chastity,
morality, shame, public customs or decency had been eliminated from
the Penal Code.

The new Penal Code treats sexual crimes as violations of individual
women’s rights and not as crimes against society, the family or
public morality.

It criminalised rape in marriage, eliminated sentence reductions for
honour killings, ended legal discrimination against non-virgin and
unmarried women, criminalised sexual harassment in the workplace
and treated sexual assault by members of the security forces as
aggravated offences.

Provisions on the sexual abuse of children have been amended to remove
the possibility of under-age consent.

As well as highlighting the AK Party’s willingness to traverse
far beyond any Islamist notions of women’s rights, the reforms also
signaled the party’s ability to listen and to work with Turkish civil
society, particularly women’s groups which so successfully lobbied and
campaigned for the reforms that they have since emerged as influential
political players in their country.

No wonder the ESI described the changes as revolutionary.

"It was not just a victory for Turkish women, but also for Turkish
democracy," said the ESI, a Berlin-based non-profit research and
policy institute. "With the new Penal Code, Turkey’s legislation
entered the post-patriarchal era."

In stark contrast, patriarchy stubbornly maintains its stranglehold
on legislation in the Arab world, helped to no end by increasingly
vocal Islamist groups which take it as a point of pride to stand in
the way of legislation that would – God forbid! – boost women’s rights.

In Kuwait, just ask women about the Islamist parliamentary deputies who
until last year blocked legislation giving them the right to vote. In
Jordan, ask women who but Islamist parliamentarians consistently reject
moves to toughen sentences against honour crimes and who besides the
Islamists opposes legislation granting women the right to divorce. And
in Egypt, where the Muslim Brotherhood are the largest opposition
bloc with 88 members, little attention is paid to women’s rights.

Yes, Gul and Prime Minister Recep Tayyep Erdogan both were members of
the unabashedly Islamist Welfare Party which first entered the Turkish
parliament in 1991 before it was ousted by Turkey’s infamously secular
army and subsequently banned from politics by the country’s Supreme
Court in 1997. But at the time of its demise, Welfare Party debates
on women still centered on whether a man was permitted to shake hands
with a woman. Now, both men belong to a party that has placed women
as the equals of men

After authorities closed down the Welfare Party, Gul and Erdogan
joined its successor, the Virtue Party, which in 2001 ended up
splitting into two new parties.

One was the AK Party, to which Gul and Erdogan called like-minded
reformers, fed up with the traditional Islamists views of party elders.

While the Welfare Party used to emphasise that a woman’s place was at
home with her family, and while it didn’t have a single woman among
its 62 members of parliament when it first made it there in 1991 and
while it continued to count not a single woman among its 158 deputies
in 1995 when it was the largest party in the Turkish parliament,
the AK Party followed a starkly different path on women. It had 71
founding members in 2001, of whom 12 were women (half with headscarves,
and half without).

As the ESI report points out, the AK party programme avoided direct
reference to Islam, proclaiming adherence to Turkey’s secular
traditions and promising to encourage women to participate in public
life and be active in politics; to repeal discriminatory provisions
in laws; to work with women’s NGOs; and to "improving social welfare
and work conditions in light of the needs of working women".

How was the AK Party able to pull all that off? Enter the "West",
in the form of the European Union and Turkey’s determination to join
it. Gul himself has been a key player in promoting Turkey’s ambitions
to become a member of the pan-European bloc. As foreign minister,
he helped secure European Union-accession talks for Turkey. And don’t
forget it was Gul who facilitated the defection of fellow moderates
from the overtly Islamist Welfare PartyWhile the Muslim Brotherhood
and Arab Islamists pride themselves on virulent anti-Western stances
– it seems at times that a twin obsession with women and the West is
the defining characteristic of Arab Islamists – the AK party has been
listening to both women’s groups and the European Union, which had
demanded a reformed Penal Code as a prerequisite to starting talks
in 2005 on allowing Turkey into its club.

Internally, modern Turkish politics for decades now have been shaped
by the secular vision of its founder Kemal Attaturk. In effect
a fundamentalist mix of secularism and nationalism, Kemalism has
created a Muslim majority-country where the army has toppled four
governments since 1960 for being too religious; where women cannot
wear headscarves in government buildings or public schools; and where
writers and intellectuals can face jail time, or worse, if they dare
to question Kemalist state tenets such as denial of the Armenian
genocide and the systematic discrimination against the country’s Kurds.

Kemalism might have made inroads in the metropolises of Turkey but
it brought little comfort for the uneducated and poor women of the
countryside whose lives continue to be determined by archaic codes of
honour. While their urban sisters were forced to shun the headscarf
as a divisive religious symbol, girls and women in the countryside
were subject to arbitrary virginity tests and the death sentences of
their families for the merest suspicions of violating family honour.

Legislation alone doesn’t fix such problems of course – and Turkey
must continue to improve its human rights record, particularly with
regard to Kurds – but it’s a start and it’s a safety net for those who
worry that the law leaves them vulnerable to Islamist machinations. And
it’s a start that puts Turkey miles ahead of the Arab world and its
increasingly vocal Islamists.

In Egypt for example, the secular-in-name regime of President Hosni
Mubarak has for years now fought the Islamist influence of the
Muslim Brotherhood with a conservative and increasingly hysterical
interpretation of Islam that is painful to watch. The regime has
filled Egyptian television screens with conservative clerics whose
views are shameful in a country that is home to al-Azhar, the Sunni
bastion of learning which supposedly prepares clerics from around
the Muslim world to lead their flock.

Whereas Turkey has criminalized rape in marriage, in Egypt we witness
ever more outlandish fatwas. Witness the breast-feeding fatwa which
declared that unmarried men and women could be alone together in an
office at work without violating Islamic law as long as the woman
breast-fed her male colleagues five times. Or the urine fatwa in
which the Mufti of Egypt wrote in a book, and then retraced after
an outpouring of ridicule, that drinking the urine of the Prophet
Muhammad was deemed a blessing.

Such an environment can never produce the monumental changes that
propelled Gul and Erdogan from the Welfare Party to the AK Party.

The irony for Egypt is that a few years ago, several members of the
Muslim Brotherhood did indeed try to engineer a similar movement to
that Gul and Erdogan led away from traditional Islamism. The founders
of the Wasat Party in Egypt say they left the Muslim Brotherhood
after they became disillusioned with the authoritarianism of its
Supreme Guide. They invited Christians to join them and applied for
a license to operate as a political party. Their applications have
repeatedly been rejected by the parliamentary committee which oversees
the approval of new parties in Egypt. Not surprisingly, the committee
is dominated by the ruling National Democratic Party. In other words,
the government decides who can and can’t be its legitimate opposition.

And the reason the Wasat party has consistently been blocked is quite
simple – allowing a moderate Islamist party to function in Egypt
would scuttle Mubarak’s bogeyman scenario, the one in which he plays
the good guy to the Muslim Brotherhood’s bad guy and successfully
scares his western allies into believing he is the only alternative
to fundamentalist lunatics.

It is a game that many Arab dictators successfully play.

Attitudes towards religion in Turkey and Egypt are likewise poles
apart. According to the ESI report, a recent survey in Turkey shows
Turks are becoming more religious in private – the number of people
who say that they are ‘very’ or ‘quite’ religious increased from 31
to 61 percent between 1999 and 2006.

But the same survey shows that support for the secular state
has grown stronger. In 1991, 21 percent of Turks polled said they
supported Shariah (Islamic law), but that figure fell to 9 percent in
2006. Judging from the fuss over Gul’s wife’s headscarf – which will
make her the first First Lady of modern Turkey to cover her hair –
you would think that veiling was on the rise.

In fact, the same survey shows the number of women appearing uncovered
in public increased from 27 percent in 1999 to 37 percent in 2006. In
Egypt, an estimated 80 percent of women now cover their hair in public.

The final litmus test of Islamists that the AK Party has scuttled
is Israel. Turkey is a long-time ally of the Jewish state, much to
the chagrin of many of its neighbours which behave as if it’s a duty
of every Muslim-majority country to hold the same stance on Israel
as the frontline Arab states which have fought several wars against
it. The AK Party has not given any indications that it will change
Turkey’s stance on Israel.

In an interview in June 2005, the Muslim Brotherhood’s deputy supreme
guide Mohammed Habib told me if the Muslim Brotherhood ever came to
power they would put to a popular referendum the Camp David peace
treaty that Egypt signed with Israel in 1979. It was the first peace
accord between an Arab country and Israel.

"The Zionist entity has raped the land of Arabs and Muslims. Power
is the only language that the Zionist entity understands. How can we
recognize it (the treaty)? Who has recognized Camp David ? Have the
people? We will put it to the people as a referendum of course. The
people are the ones who decide and have the right to determine this. If
the people say no there won’t be a treaty," Habib told me.

That fact that the deputy leader of a political organization would not,
in the year 2005, even utter the name of another country was the least
worrying aspect of his statement. Such a revisionist attitude towards
internationally recognised treaties reflects both the recklessness
and the stubborn denial of reality that has become a trademark of
many Arab Islamists.

And there you have it – women, the West and Israel.

The AK party happily fails the Islamist test on all three.

www.monaeltahawy.com
www.diplomatictraffic.com/de

Armenia To Give A Try To Russian Superjet

ARMENIA TO GIVE A TRY TO RUSSIAN SUPERJET

Russia-InfoCenter

18.09.2 007
Russia

Armenia has become the first amongst the former states of the
Commonwealth of Independent States to order made-in-Russia planes of
Superjet family, as the press-service of the aircraft manufacturer
Sukhoi reported yesterday, September 17.

The company Civil Aircraft of Sukhoi (Grazhdanskiye Samolety Sukhogo)
and the Armenian air company Armavia have signed a firm contract on
purchasing of two planes Superjet-95LR with an improved flying range
and two more Superjet planes were registered as purchase option. The
deal, that was estimated at US$55-60 million, is to be financed by
the Bank of Foreign Trade of Russia (Vneshtorgbank).

The press-service of Sukhoi marks that supplying of the first
Superjet-95LR to the air company Armavia is scheduled for the end
of 2008.

www.rosbalt.ru

Chess Today Celebrates

CHESS TODAY CELEBRATES

Washington Post
Monday, September 17, 2007; Page C10
United States

"Chess is an art and should be played in a creative way," opined Czech
President Vaclav Klaus during his visit to the Czech Coal Carlsbad
tournament, played under his auspices. The president presented Viktor
Korchnoi, 76, with the Chess Legend Award and stayed on for four hours
to follow the first-round games. The eight-grandmaster tournament was
a centennial celebration of the great 1907 event in the popular Czech
spa. It was also 100 years ago that the idea of creating a tournament
world championship, similar to the current FIDE world championship
underway in Mexico City, was considered.

The Carlsbad tournament finished Saturday as follows: Ruslan Ponomariov
(Ukraine) and Sergei Movsesian (Slovakia), 4 1/2 points in seven games;
Vladimir Akopian (Armenia) and the Czech David Navara, 4 points;
Alexei Shirov (Spain), 3 1/2 points; Jan Timman (the Netherlands) and
the Czech Viktor Laznicka, 3 points; Viktor Korchnoi (Switzerland),
1 1/2 points.

Navara, who defeated England’s Nigel Short 7-3 in a match earlier
this month in Prague, was in great position to win in Carlsbad. But in
the penultimate round he blundered a piece in a winning position and
lost to Movsesian. Ponomariov’s last-round victory against Laznicka
helped him to share first place.

Laznicka-Ponomariov

1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.f3 (Laznicka’s pet variation against the Grunfeld
defense.) 3…d5 (In her well-researched book "Play the Grunfeld" the
Greek international master Yelena Dembo recommends the Adorjan gambit,
3…e5 4.dxe5 Nh5, as an equalizing line. Her book, recently issued
by Everyman Chess, offers a fresh, succinct look at the aggressive
defense from the black side.) 4.cxd5 Nxd5 5.e4 Nb6 6.Nc3 Bg7 7.Be3
0-0 8.Qd2 Nc6 9.0-0-0 f5 10.h4 fxe4 11.h5 gxh5 12.Rxh5 Bf5 13.Rg5
Bg6 14.Be2 e5 15.d5 Nd4 16.fxe4 c6 17.dxc6 (The recommended 17.Nf3
is best met by the sharp 17…cxd5!, for example 18.Nxe5 Nxe2+ 19.

Qxe2 Bxe5 20.Rxe5 Qc7 21.Bd4 dxe4 with roughly equal
chances.) 17…Nxc6 18.Qe1 Qf6 19.Qg3 Nd4!?

(Ponomariov’s improvement on the game Laznicka-Krasenkow, Ostrava 2007,
where after 19…Rad8 20.Nf3 white was slightly better.) 20.Bh5 Bxh5
21.Rxh5 Rac8 22.Kb1? (Allowing a decisive exchange sacrifice. White
should have played 22.Bh6!?, although after 22…Qg6 23.Qxg6 hxg6
24.Bxg7 gxh5 25.Bxf8 Rxf8, black’s position is more pleasant.)

22…Rxc3!! (A smashing sacrifice, leading to an unstoppable
attack.) 23.bxc3 Na4! (Threatening 24…Qb6+.) 24.Bxd4 exd4 25.Kc2
(After 25.cxd4 Qb6+ 26.Qb3+ Qxb3+ 27.axb3 Nc3+ 28.Kc1 Nxd1 29.Kxd1
Rf1+ black wins.) 25…Qf7 (25…Qb6! was a faster way to victory,
with the idea 26.Rb1 Rf2+! 27.Qxf2 d3+ winning the queen.) 26.Rxd4
(26.Rd5 does not help either because of 26…Nxc3 27.R1xd4 Nxd5
28.Rxd5 Qf1 29.Nf3 Rc8+ 30.Kd2 Kh8 31.Rd6 Bb2! threatening 32…Bc1
mate.) 26…Qxa2+ 27.Kd3 Qb1+ 28.Kd2 Qb2+ (Black wins either after
29.Ke3 Qc1+ 30.Rd2 Qxg1+; or after 29.Ke1 Qc1+ 30.Rd1 Rf1+ 31.Kxf1
Qxd1+ 32.Kf2 Qxh5.) White resigned.

President Kocharyan Met With Russia’s Transport Minister

PRESIDENT KOCHARYAN MET WITH RUSSIA’S TRANSPORT MINISTER

armradio.am
14.09.2007 17:20

President Robert Kocharyan today received the Co-Chair of the
Armenian-Russian Intergovernmental Commission for Economic Cooperation,
Russiaï~^’s acting Transport Minister Igor Levitin, Presidentï~^’s
Press Office reports.

Co-Chairs Igor Levitin and Ra Prime Minister Serge Sargsyan
presented to the President the results of the recurrent sitting of
the Commission.

The parties highly appreciated the current level of economic
cooperation between the two countries.

–Boundary_(ID_wb8h3M+Xc97/gRVvXAsp4w) —

Turkish court overturns academics’ acquittal

EUbusiness (press release), UK

Turkish court overturns academics’ acquittal
13 September 2007, 22:21 CET

(ANKARA) – A Turkish appeals court on Thursday overturned the
acquittal of two academics who put out a government-sponsored report
urging greater rights for minority groups such as Kurds, opening the
way for their possible re-trial for sedition.

The court ruled against the acquittal, saying the October 2004 report
by professors Baskin Oran and Ibrahim Kaboglu constituted a threat to
the state.

"Creation and recognition of a new minority… would endanger the
unitary state and the nation’s indivisibility," the appeals court said
in its verdict, carried by the Anatolia news agency.

Ankara recognizes only the Greek, Armenian and Jewish communities as
religious minorities under the 1923 Lausanne Treaty, the founding
accord of modern-day Turkey.

The court also objected to the report’s recommendation that people be
allowed to identify themselves with different ethnic roots along with
their Turkish citizenship.

"With this recommendation, the report has stepped over the boundaries
of criticism and freedom of thought, and its accusatory content
borders on a threat to social peace," it added.

The court said both professors should be convicted of inciting racial
hatred.

The Ankara court that acquitted Oran and Kaboglu of sedition last year
said they were protected by free-speech laws.

The two men were members of the Human Rights Advisory Board, a body
attached to the prime minister’s office which penned the controversial
report.

The report was never published and was disowned by the government amid
charges by nationalists groups that it was treasonous.

According to excerpts leaked to the press at the time, the report
maintained that Turkey’s understanding of minority rights had fallen
behind universal norms and proposed far-reaching amendments to the
constitution and related laws.

It described as "paranoia" widespread concerns that equal cultural
rights for minorities could lead to the country’s break-up, fuelled by
a bloody Kurdish rebellion in the southeast in the 1980s and 1990s.

Minority rights are a thorny issue in Turkey’s bid to join the
European Union, as is the prosecution of writers and intellectuals for
peaceful expression of opinion.

Text and Picture Copyright 2007 AFP. All other Copyright 2007
EUbusiness Ltd. All rights reserved. This material is intended solely
for personal use. Any other reproduction, publication or
redistribution of this material without the written agreement of the
copyright owner is strictly forbidden and any breach of copyright will
be considered actionable.

Deputies "drink Toast For General Prosecutor

DEPUTIES "DRINK TOAST FOR GENERAL PROSECUTOR"

Panorama.am
19:40 13/09/2007

As already reported by panorama.am, the National Assembly has,
for the first time, reelected the previously serving general
prosecutor, Aghvan Hovsepyan, who has already served in the post
for six years. Representatives of the ruling bloc of Dashnaktsutyun,
Prosperous Armenia, and the Republican party all voiced their support
for Hovsepyan. Not only that, Raffik Petrosyan, of the Republican
party, challenged all deputies to vote for Hovsepyan.

Concerning the Heritage party, deputy Vardan Khachatryan stated that
even though the position is of an intellectual nature, they voted
from their conscious. He then said all in his party would support
Hovsepyan in his future work. Through all this, Legal Party members
remained silent, saying nothing about their position on the matter.

Before the actual vote, praise from the podium for Hovsepyan was
unlimited. The most lavish praise was received from Republican and
Prosperous Armenia party members. "He is a man of action, a poet
and artist, a strong public figure," said Hranush Hakopyan, who
was followed by Arevik Petrosyan, of Prosperous Armenia, who said,
"Respectable parents, obedient son, his work is of an international
stature." (She has in mind the "Circle Dance for Unity" and tree
planting…author).

And Hamlet Harutyunyan, of the Republicans, said Hovsepyan was an
"admirable person, with both professional and human qualities."

After listening to all this, Larissa Alaverdyan, of "Heritage,"
said it seemed as if it was merely an occasion for everyone to give
toasts. "It seems we have gathered only to give someone toasts,"
she said, adding that it was a general prosecutor they were electing,
from whom they must demand much. "We are now choosing between a lawful
future and a criminal present," stated Anahit Bakhshyan, of "Heritage."

Whatever. Of the 125 participating in the vote, four were abstentions,
118 for, and 3 against in the secret voting for Hovsepyan’s election,
nominated, as it happened, by the president of Armenia.

In Partnership with US Embassy, Vanadzor American Corner Opened

EMBASSY OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
NEWS RELEASE

1 AMERICAN AVENUE
YEREVAN, ARMENIA
TELEPHONE (+374 10) 464700
FAX (+374 10) 464742
E-MAIL: [email protected]

September 12, 2007
In Partnership with the U.S. Embassy, the Vanadzor American Corner
Opened in Armenia
On September 12, the Vanadzor American Corner, in partnership with the
U.S. Embassy in Armenia, officially opened.
In his opening remarks, Ambassador Rudolf Perina, U.S. Chargé
d´Affairs a.i. said, "This American Corner will make accessible to the
residents of Vanadozor and Lori Marz the diverse resources available
at the Corner and will facilitate the dialogue and mutual
understanding between Armenia and the United States."
American Corners are small American-style libraries located throughout
the world that help increase mutual understanding between the United
States and the host country. A network of over 370 American Corners is
operating globally through partnerships between the U.S. Department of
State and local host organizations. American Corners provide
information about America in a variety of formats, including reference
books, works of fiction, journals, and videos. These resources focus
on such topics as studying in the United States, American society,
U.S. history, conducting business in the United States, and English as
a Second Language. The Corners also provide computers with Internet
access, and offer a variety of public programs including speakers and
workshops. The American Corners are open to the general public and
access is free of charge.
Currently American Corners are in operation in Yerevan, Gyumri and
Vanadzor. Soon, on October 1, the U.S. Embassy will open the American
Corner in Kapan.
The American Corner program officially started in Armenia in 2005. The
Corners hold a variety of public events, including "Americans at the
American Corner" public lecture series in English by U.S. diplomats
and "Armenians at the American Corner" Armenian presentations by USG
education and exchanges program alumni, American movie showings, and
English conversation club meetings initiated by U.S. Peace Corps
volunteers.
For more information, please visit
.php

http://www.americancorners.am.
http://www.usa.am/news/2007/september/news091207_1

Russian Embassy In Baku Receives Numerous Complaints About Christian

RUSSIAN EMBASSY IN BAKU RECEIVES NUMEROUS COMPLAINTS ABOUT CHRISTIAN CEMETERY DEMOLITION

PanARMENIAN.Net
12.09.2007 19:01 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Every day the Russian Embassy in Azerbaijan received
complaint about the decision of Baku authorities to replace the graves
of the Nariman cemetery also known as Montinskoe or Armenian cemetery,
where Russians, Jews, Tatars, Georgians and Armenians were buried.

Nariman cemetery director Kyamran Mammadov assures that "the
replacement of graves is conducted at the state’s expense in compliance
with the decision on construction of a highway to extend through
the cemetery." "No problems with the relatives of the deceased have
emerged so far," he added, IA Regnum reports.

As it was reported earlier, under the pretext of building a highway
Baku demolishes a Christian cemetery (the Nariman cemetery), where
Armenians, Jews and Russians were buried.

Although local authorities assure of reinterment, photos in Internet
show a complete dump. The photographers say the bulldozers just raze
the graves to the ground depriving the relatives to rebury the remains.

The city administration says exhumation and reinterment is performed
in accord with ethnic and religious traditions in the presence of
relatives of the deceased. Meanwhile, the Jewish News Agency reports
that "observance of Jewish traditions is restricted to the fact that
grave-diggers throw the ashes into sacks and then give them to the
relatives."