We Have Liberated Our House

WE HAVE LIBERATED OUR HOUSE
ANAHIT YESAYAN

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
Published on May 09, 2008
Armenia

But to what extent do we realize it?

Interview with SAMVEL KARAPETYAN, Head of the Armenian office of the
Center of Studies of Architectural Monuments in Armenia

`Due to the power of spirit and arms, we liberated Shoushi 16 years
ago, and the town is now viewed as a symbol of victory. However, apart
from being a symbol of victory, Shoushi also used to be a large
cultural center. To what extent are these two factors appreciated now?’

`There was a period in the 19th century when the population of Shoushi
exceeded the population of Yerevan by 1/3. That’s to say, the town
really had the largest Armenian population in the territory which
historically belonged to Armenia and was now under the Russian
protectorate. It had everything: a theatre, printing-houses and
libraries. Naturally, investments were being made in such a town, as it
is done in Yerevan now.

Tiflis had a larger population of Armenians in comparison with Shoushi,
but it was not an Armenian town. There were simply a lot of Armenians
here. And those who made their investments in Tiflis were devoid of the
realization of the fact that they weren’t making their investments on
the Armenian land. The same can be said about Baku.

Shoushi prospered, and I don’t know which of the two towns was the
`Paris’ of the Caucasus in that period.

It had a population of around 45 thousand. In the 19th century the
sects began penetrating into Shoushi, as they do in Yerevan now, and
our church was not the defender of its flock, just the same way as it
isn’t now.

Let me bring a simple example. According to written records (`Pigeon of
Masis’, 1867) the history of the Armenian Church was taught in the
Russian language in the Armenian schools of Shoushi. The local
population asked the Catholicos to intervene and settle the problem.
But Catholicos Makar was indifferent to the issue.

This state of neglect and lack of protection comes from those times,
and it contributed to the activities of the sects. And although the
Armenian society was an overwhelming majority there in comparison with
the Muslims, the town remained absolutely unprotected when the
confrontations with the Turks began. The Turks managed to set the
entire Armenian district on fire. A few building remained wholesome by
some accident; one of them was the `Reality College’ of Shoushi (this
is what we emphasized in the Soviet times) and the other was the
hospital of the Zhamharyans.

Strange though it may seem, the `Reality College’ of Shoushi was burnt
by the people who had liberated the town from the Turks in 1992. There
was absolutely no need to burn the Turksih district of the town which
was saved from fire in the 1920’s. It was our house that we liberated.
We banished the Turks who had thrust in it; they had come and taken
possession of our property and used violence. We lost our patience and
dismissed them from our house. And there was no need no burn the part
of our house that was ever crossed by the Turks.

Hot Line of Legal Initiative Program Continues Operating

HOT LINE OF LEGAL INITIATIVE PROGRAM CONTINUES OPERATING

YEREVAN, MAY 8, NOYAN TAPAN. The Institute of Civil Society, the
Armenian Committee of Helsinki Civil Assembly, and the Free Chair of
Civil Initiatives implemented the Legal Initiative program during the
RA presidential elections. As Gayane Markosian, a member of the
initiative, said at the May 7 press conference, the program was to have
finished on March 1, but it was delayed until late May due to the
well-known events. In her words, the 080-080-804 hot line continues
operating within the framework of the program.

Lawyer Ani Nersisian said that after the March 1 events they receive up
to 10 telephone calls daily, part of which regard cases of illegal
arrests. According to the program’s initiators, legal security and
protection of citizens in Armenia should be done permanently. They said
that in most cases citizens prefer rather obeying than protecting their
rights. According to the initiative’s members, in that respect also
there is a need to continue the program.

It was also mentioned that during the presidential elections the hot
line received 475 calls on technical details of elections turnout, as
well as on the violations having impact on the voting process and the
total normal electoral process.

ADP chairman" "I feel Levon Ter Petrosyan regrets"

Panorama.am

20:51 08/05/2008

ADP CHAIRMAN: `I FEEL LEVON TER-PETROSYAN REGRETS’

`I feel Levon Ter-Petrosyan regrets for his previous
actions, and it seems he is ready to the dialogue, but
he still puts some conditions. He accepts that the
ongoing authorities are established,’ said Aram G.
Sargsyan in a discussion with Panorama.am reporter,
commenting on the speech of the former president of
Armenia made in oppositional congress.

As for the political developments in the country, he
said that it will be a long process as people have
expectations, but those expectations will die out
within the time.

According to the politician the current government has
six month time limit to create trust towards it and
its activities. `If they do not manage to reach it,
then people won’t wait for its leader and will do
whatever they wish to,’ he said and added that serious
changes in government staff did not took place, which
proves that thing which need to be conducted are not
fulfilled.

Source: Panorama.am

Participation at Eurovision is already a victory

Participation at Eurovision is already a victory

armradio.am
05.05.2008 18:15

Georgia’s entrant at Eurovision 2008 Diana Gurtskaya is in Yerevan.
According to her, the visit to Armenia greatly differs from the rest of
her promo-tour. `I’m very glad to be in Yerevan. You can’t even imagine
how dear everything is to me here. I will represent Georgia at
Eurovision 2008. For me participation is already a victory. Sirusho and
I will do our best to present our countries with dignity.’

Sirusho, Armenia’s representative at Eurovision 2008, has recently
traveled to Georgia, Russia, France, the Czech Republic, Belgium,
Finland, the Netherlands, Germany and Spain. The next stop will be in
Athens. `We were even joking, saying that we had to visit seven
countries within seven days, but we visited even more.’

`In every country the Armenian delegation was welcomed with special
attention and warmth,’ Hrach Keshishian, responsible for the show,
said. People in the streets of Brussels were singing `Qele-Qele." I
think we worked well.’

Diana Gurtskaya said she is admires Sirusho’s performance and noted
that the Eurovision is not a place to compete. `The Eurovision is a big
show. We go there to present good music and good show, and not to
compete. The contest itself is very unpredictable. You must simply sing
well and open your heart. I like Sirusho’s song, where the Armenian
national color is reflected.’

BAKU: Bernard Fassier: FMs may need to meet once more

Today.Az, Azerbaijan
May 6 2008

Bernard Fassier: "The foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia may
need to meet once more before the meeting between the presidents"

06 May 2008 [13:58] – Today.Az

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov met with Armenian
foreign minister Edward Nalbandian on Tuesday in Strasbourg for the
first time, OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair Bernard Fassier told APA.

The co-chairs held consultative meeting on Monday in Strasbourg.

Today Bernard Fassier, Yuriy Merzlyakov and Matthew Bryza will hold
another meeting and then they will meet with Elmar Mammadyarov and
Edward Nalbandian separately.

Just only after that meeting, the foreign ministers and co-chairs will
come together.

Bernard Fassier said the co-chairs would give a dinner in honor of the
foreign ministers in the evening and would continue talks in an
unofficial atmosphere.

French Co-Chair said he was hopeful for the constructive negotiations.

"It is the first meeting between the ministers and of course, it has a
character of acquaintance and it is too early to speak about the
results".

The co-chair noted that the sides could discuss in which direction to
continue the talks.

"We hope necessary atmosphere will be created for continuation of the
talks. The foreign ministers may need to meet once more before the
meeting between the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia. If it will
be necessary we are ready to organize this meeting. All things will
depend, of course, on the results of Tuesday meeting".

/APA/

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/44806.html

Defense Minister Visits North-Eastern Section Of Border With Azerbai

DEFENSE MINISTER VISITS NORTH-EASTERN SECTION OF BORDER WITH AZERBAIJAN

ARMENPRESS
May 4, 2008

YEREVAN, MAY 4, ARMENPRESS: Defense minister Seyran Ohanian traveled
on May 3 to north-eastern province of Tavush where he visited the
town of Noyemberian and military units located close to the villages
of Koghb and Voskepar.

During the visit the minister met with local leadership and senior
army officers for a consultation. The minister was also eager to
learn about housing and living conditions of the servicemen.

Some 40 apartments were built for officers who have their service
in the region. There is also a special area for cultivation of
vegetables. A string of additional facilities, including a gym and
a swimming pool, will have been built by the end of the year to
facilitate and improve the border protection.

The minister then traveled to the military unit located close to
the village of Voskepar, one of the most dangerous sections of the
Armenian-Azeri border.

According to Armen Azizbekian, a deputy commander of the unit, Azeri
soldiers have been reinforcing their positions across the border
without interruption in the last 16 years.

He said the Armenian side is doing the same. In the past a section
of the road that connects the town of Ijevan with Noyemberian came
under fire from the other side and that was why several years ago a
circumventing road was built.

Speaking to journalists the minister said he was making his first
visit to this region as it has many settlements which are close to
the border and which sometimes come under Azeri fire.

He said within the current year a series of reforms will be enforced
in the army to significantly raise its efficiency. These reforms are
designed to make structural changes and upgrade the military equipment.

During the visit the minister ordered to grant a one-week leave to
Zohrab Mstoyan, who was recognized as the most diligent serviceman
of the Koghb unit.

ANKARA: Freedom House highlights challenges for Turkish democracy

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
May 3 2008

Freedom House highlights challenges for Turkish democracy

Turkey has made significant progress in democratization in the past
decade, but major challenges remain in terms of local and national
governance, the electoral process, minority rights, the strength of
civil society and press freedoms, a US-based international think tank
announced yesterday in İstanbul.

The content of a report titled `Turkey in Transit,’ prepared by the
European chapter of Freedom House, an organization famous for its
ranking of countries’ levels of freedom, was shared with journalists
at a press conference on Friday morning.

Turkey has seen a `positive trend of reform’ in the past few years,
the report’s author, Nigar Göksel, said, noting that the trend
had been stalled in the years 2006 and 2007. According to the report,
increasing polarization in Turkey caused by growing tension between
the governing Justice and Development Party (AK Party) and segments
that see the party as an Islamist threat is an obstacle on Turkey’s
path of reform. Other problems that remain as challenges to democracy
in Turkey include the executive branch of the state being too strong
vis-à-vis the legislature and judiciary, too much
centralization in public administration, problems implementing new
reforms passed in the past few years, cronyism in many institutions,
low female representation in politics, a higher rate of taxes on civil
society organizations compared to other countries and persistent
corruption, particularly in public tenders.

Göksel also noted that intolerance toward non-Muslim religious
minorities was creating concern, despite a law adopted earlier this
year that returns property seized from non-Muslim foundations by the
state. The brutal killing of three Christians in the eastern province
of Malatya last year and the shooting of a Catholic priest in 2006
made their way into the report as examples of intolerance and violence
against non-Muslims. Turkey’s overloaded and sluggish judiciary was
also cited as one of the significant obstacles to a better and sounder
democracy.

The report said the corporate structure of Turkish media, where large
conglomerates with interests in other sectors own media outlets,
raises concerns that newspapers might be `prone to try and remain on
good terms with politicians.’ The division of the media primarily
along pro and anti-government lines also poses a problem for press
freedoms, the report warned.

Yesterday’s press conference followed a report released this week by
Freedom House — ahead of May 3, World Press Freedom Day — that ranks
countries on the basis of media freedom. In this year’s report, Turkey
is the only country ranked as `Partly Free’ in Western Europe. Out of
195 countries and territories covered in the report, 72 (37 percent)
were rated `Free,’ 59 (30 percent) `Partly Free’ and 64 (33 percent)
`Not Free.’ The evaluations are based on an assessment of the legal,
political and economic environments in which journalists worked during
2007.

Turkey’s press freedom rating declined to 51 in this year’s report,
two points down from the previous year, said Balint Molnar of Freedom
House Europe. He said the continued prosecution of large numbers of
journalists under an anti-free speech penal code article and the 2007
murder of Turkish-Armenian editor Hrant Dink had played a clear role
in the decline. Monlar added that press freedoms were declining on a
global scale.

03.05.2008

E. BARIÅ? ALTINTAÅ? İSTANBUL

Peter Semneby To Visit Karabakh

PETER SEMNEBY TO VISIT KARABAKH

AZG Armenian Daily
02/05/2008

Karabakh issue

EU Special Representative to South Caucasus Peter Semnebey is planning
to visit Nagorno Karabakh in the middle of May.

The visit aims at establishing confidence between communities of
Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan.

Peter Semnebey acted with the same initiative last summer and expressed
willingness to accomplish it in September, but the visit didn’t take
place for some reasons, "Noyan Tapan" agency reported.

Armenia’s ‘Christian Holocaust ‘

AZG Armenian Daily #084, 03/05/2008

Genocide

ARMENIA’S ‘CHRISTIAN HOLOCAUST’

In late August 1939, the day before his invasion of
Poland, Adolf Hitler gathered his commanders at his
home and informed them he had placed "death’s head"
military formations in the east with orders "to send
to death mercilessly and without compassion men, women
and children of Polish derivation and language."

He assured his commanders the world would not long
condemn them, justifying his brutality by asking
rhetorically, "Who, after all, speaks today of the
annihilation of the Armenians?" Hitler was referring
to the massacre of 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman
Turkish forces beginning in April 1915. Until today,
the Turkish government denies the authenticity of both
Hitler’s statement and the genocide itself.

Tel Aviv University professor Israel Charny, chief
editor of the Encyclopedia of Genocide, insists the
statement was recorded by "an indisputably serious"
Associated Press correspondent, and that other remarks
were made by Hitler that "confirm that the Armenian
genocide was an active guiding concept in the
monster’s mind."Kevork Kahvedjian, son of Jerusalem
photographer and Armenian genocide survivor Elia
Kahvedjian, explains his father was personal testimony
to the genocide and its savagery. "When it started, he
was only five years old, but he remembered it very
clearly. Especially the last year of his life he
remembered it…" Kevork continually slipped into the
first person while recounting his father’s story, as
if it had happened to him: "I used to see lots of dead
people, piles of them. Some had been burned. Until
today I remember the smell of burned flesh," he
narrated, detailing the death march through the
desert.

He remembered the sound of the German cannons pounding
the city, then a lull of about a month before the
Turkish soldiers entered his home and took Elia, his
mother, a sister and two brothers – one brother was
just a few months old. Two older brothers had already
been hanged.

"Soldiers came and started pushing my mother. She
tried to go back to the house but the soldiers hit her
with rifle butts and she had to take the children and
start walking." The Armenians were allowed only what
they could carry. They walked for weeks through the
desert of Deir Zor with soldiers on both sides. The
soldiers offered neither food nor water, but the
prisoners ate some plants and drank brackish water on
the way.

After weeks of carrying her six-month-old baby, Elia’s
mother, exhausted, set the infant in the shade of a
tree and abandoned him, hoping some kind person would
find him. The older sister, about 12 years old during
the march, was abducted. Elia found her 18 years later
and discovered she had been forced to serve in a
harem.

In a wadi, near the end of the trek, "I heard my
mother say, ‘Today, I think they’re going to kill
us.’" It happened that that a Kurd was passing by. She
called the Kurd and told him, "Take this boy and go."
The Kurd took Elia and the boy remembered, "At the top
of the hill we turned around and saw the soldiers
killing everyone." The Kurd took Elia, burned his
clothes, gave him medicine for dysentery, and sold him
to a blacksmith, who eventually sent him away. Elia
sought refuge in a Syrian convent. In 1918, when the
war was over, the American Near East Relief Foundation
began to gather Armenian orphans and distribute them
in its orphanages throughout the Middle East.

Elia was transferred to Lebanon, then to Nazareth in
1920. There, one of the teachers was a photographer
and Elia worked for him. Elia learned the photography
trade and became a prominent photographer. Many
beloved pictures of early 20th-century Jerusalem were
taken by Elia; the album, Through My Father’s Eyes,
celebrates his work. Turkish authorities strive to
discredit accounts such as Elia’s, although his
testimony is confirmed by an abundance of contemporary
journalism, eyewitness accounts by statesmen such as
American ambassador to the Ottoman Empire Henry
Morgenthau, as well as German and Austrian
documentation.

Charny claims there was "most certainly" a religious
element in the persecution of the Armenians, the first
empire to embrace the faith. (Armenia officially
adopted Christianity as the state religion in 301 CE,
about 25 years before the Roman Empire did so.) "There
are even some who want to refer to this period overall
as ‘The Christian Genocide,’ because the victims of
the Turks’ genocide were not only Armenians but also
Assyrians and Greeks," he explains. Still, he is
reticent to use that term as it "could seem to remove
from the Armenian community their hard-won gains for
recognition of the genocide of their people."

According to Charney, "What stands out about the
denials of the Armenian genocide is that for many
years, the full power of the Turkish government has
been devoted to denials of the genocide. Turkey
literally spends millions on advertising agencies and
on publicity efforts. It also throws the considerable
weight of its government behind coercing denials from
other countries, with threats to the United States of
not allowing American military planes to use Turkish
air space or threatening to pull out of joint NATO
military exercises, as well as with threats of major
economic retaliation should or when a country, such as
France, confirms recognition of the Armenian genocide.

"Israel is regularly the object of threats by the
Turks and, regrettably to say the least, for many
years has kowtowed to these threats. But then too so
has the stronger United States".MK Haim Oron (Meretz)
proposed in March that the Knesset appoint a committee
to consider recognizing the Armenian genocide, adding,
"It is unacceptable that the Jewish people is not
making itself heard." Although the measure passed, MK
Shalom Simhon (Likud) responded, "this has become a
politically charged issue between Armenians and Turks,
and Israel is not interested in taking sides."

Many Israelis are eager for their country to recognize
the genocide. The Hebrew University of Jerusalem will
hold an event titled "A Symposium in Commemoration of
the Armenian Genocide" at its Givat Ram campus on
April 29 at 6:30 p.m. Both Kevork Kahvedjian and
Charney will speak.

Israel will eventually recognize the genocide, insists
Kevork, who manages his father’s business, Elia Photo
Service, in Jerusalem’s Old City. Kevork, named for
the baby left under a tree in the desert, believes,
"One day they are going to say, ‘Yes, it happened.’ If
not now, then in 50 years!"

Otherwise, Armenians worry, states that refuse to
recognize the genocide risk rendering Hitler’s
rhetorical question a reality.

Hovnanian School’s Secret: To Learn With Love And Not Under Compulsi

HOVNANIAN SCHOOL’S SECRET: TO LEARN WITH LOVE AND NOT UNDER COMPULSION

Noyan Tapan
April 30, 2008

YEREVAN, APRIL 30, NOYAN TAPAN. It is several years benefactor
Vahagn Hovnanian, the Chairman of the Hovnanian International and
some other companies, organizes a visit to Armenia for pupils and
latter-day leavers of Hovnanian College founded by him in U.S. city
of New Milford, New Jersey state, in 1976. As V. Hovnanian said in
his interview to Noyan Tapan correspondent, this year also the school
pupils were in Armenia from April 19 to May 1. This visit was a unique
present by the parents of school leavers to their children.

This year’s travel plan of American Armenian children was also large:
Amberd church, Byurakan Observatory, Oshakan, where Mesrop Mashtots,
the inventor of the Armenian alphabet, is buried, Tsakhkadzor, Lake
Sevan, Dilijan orphanage, Etchmiadzin, Sardarapat, Matenadaran,
on April 24 to the Memorial of victims of Armenian Genocide
(Tsitsernakaberd), Khor Virap, Noravank, Artsakh, Lori (House-Museum of
Hovhannes Tumanian, Haghpat, Sanahin), Garni, Geghard, House-Museum of
S. Parajanov. The children were impressed, they asked many questions,
which, according to Hovnanian College teacher Azat Kalajian, mainly
regarded history and culture of Armenia.

The children were accompanied by school teachers. Armenian
language teacher Silva Mesropian has been working at the college
for 23 years. She and her children have also attended Hovnanian
College. According to her, but for this college, "many generations
would be lost, as every minute they struggle against waves of
a huge sea, for the children living in the Diaspora to remain
Armenian." According to S. Mesropian, study is free in American
schools, but Armenians strive for taking their children to Armenian
colleges. Any parent wishes his child to receive Armenian upbringing,
and in America, according to the teacher, one has to struggle every
minute for his child to remain Armenian. Such visits to the homeland
are organized for the very purpose.

S. Mesropian said that 220 children attend the college at present. This
year the college will have 16 leavers.

H. Hovnanian said that the U.S. Education Department has given a
conclusion that Hovnanian School works at the highest level. In
his words, once every ten years the above mentioned department’s
commission studies correspondence of schools to education and
management standards. In 1997 the commission had given many tasks
to the school and gave a positive conclusion about their fulfilment
already during the 2007 visit. Besides, the commission has proposed
school administration sharing the secrets of successful management
to spread that experience throughout the United States. While,
according to V. Hovnanian, "the secret is learning with love and not
under compulsion."

Many of Hovnanian School leavers after studying at authoritative
universities return to the school already as teachers, many teach
at universities, take high posts, and are successfully engaged in
business.