Armenia’s Flag Disappears From Territory Of CE Building In Strasbour

ARMENIA’S FLAG DISAPPEARS FROM TERRITORY OF CE BUILDING IN STRASBOURG

YEREVAN, AUGUST 1. ARMINFO. Armenia’s flag disappeared from the
territory of the CE building in Strasbourg Saturday evening. The
board presenting the country has been found damaged.

Armenia’s permanent representative to the CE informed the CE security
service of the incident right away and demanded that the flag be
restored as soon as possible. Director of Personal Bureau of CE
Secretary General Jean-Luis Loran was told about the incident today
morning and has apologized for it. His explained that the CE security
service is responsible for the building only and the surveillance
cameras record exclusively the entrance. It is for the French police
to control the area in front of the building. They have already been
informed of the incident.

The flag has already been restored. Armenia’s Foreign Ministry
has sent a note of protest to CE Secretariat General condemning the
stealing of the flag and demanding that the incident be investigated.
The FM expresses it protest against similar actions and demands that
CE take necessary measures to ensure the safety of and to prevent
vandalism against the national symbols of CE members states.

Aras free trade project to be launched next week

Aras free trade project to be launched next week

Sunday, July 31, 2005 – 2005 IranMania.com

LONDON, July 31 (IranMania) – Construction of the first phase of the giant
free trade and industrial zone in the northwestern region of the country
will begin next week, said a local official.
According to a report faxed to Iran Daily by the Public Relations Office of
Aras Free Trade and Industrial Zone, Ali Jalili, deputy managing director of
the zone, said the zone will be located on the border of Azerbaijan, Armenia
and Nakhichevan, adding that it will serve parts of Ardebil, East Azarbaijan
and West Azarbaijan provinces in northwestern Iran.
He further noted that the zone would observe environmental standards.
?Recreational centers, hotels, shopping centers, water sports facilities,
housing units and agriculture and processing industries will be created in
the zone,? he said, adding that the zone will have the potential to ensure
welfare for the inhabitants of the northwestern region.
The project was approved by the Parliament in 2003.
Experts say Aras free zone could contribute greatly to Iran?s efforts to
enter the large regional market in Central Asia and the Caucasus.
A member of the Parliament?s Economic Commission said earlier that once the
zone becomes operational, it could attract $20 bln in foreign investment.
Arsalan Fat?hi-Pour said it could help create greater trade interactions
between Iran and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), adding that
Russia could also meet its needs from Aras market.

Minister warns agianst further rise in Lake Sevan water table

ArmenPress
July 29 2005

MINISTER WARNS AGAINST FURTHER RISE IN LAKE SEVAN WATER TABLE

YEREVAN, JULY 29, ARMENPRESS: Armenian nature protection minister
Vartan Ayvazian warned today that further rise in the water level of
Lake Sevan, one of the largest high altitude lakes in the world,
hemmed in by dormant volcanic mountains, may result in a number of
ecological problems and called for a comprehensive study to learn all
positive and negative consequences of higher water table.
Speaking at a round table discussion today Ayvazian said a level
rise by 1.44 cm since 2002 has flooded 410 hectares of land of which
215 are forests. According to him, if the government sticks to its
previously declared goal of raising the lake’s water level by six
meters some 4,427 hectares of land would be flooded.
Last year the government released more than $100,000 for clean up
of a territory that was flooded. The lake is fed by 28 rivers and
streams, and is the source for the Hrazdan River, which connects
Sevan with the Arax River in the Ararat valley.

Let’s think this through – Islamic Terrorism

Opinion Editorials, VA
July 26 2005

Let’s think this through – Islamic Terrorism
Steve Rumsey

Some in the western world have been calling on Muslim leaders to
speak out more about the terrorist attacks going on around the world.
Some see this as the answer to terrorism. I would like to point out
some other facts that may put another angle on this issue. There is
much more to the terrorism problem than getting some Muslim leaders
to speak out against terrorism. Additionally, can we please get past
the point of thinking that a politician holds the answers about
Islam?

First, let’s look at the issue of violence as a means to an end.
Within my home, I often tell my kids that you may get angry about
something, which is ok, but how you deal with that anger is something
different. You can use words to tell me how you feel and discuss the
matter – That is acceptable. You may not, as a hypothetical example,
throw a chair through the window – That is unacceptable behavior.

I apply this to all of life, which includes religion. For a 21st
century Jew, if they hold to an Orthodox view of the Torah, and the
dietary laws set by Moses, they may not eat pork, for example,
whereas a more Liberal Jew may. A Christian who holds an Orthodox
view of the scriptures will share their faith with others through
proselytizing, due to the `Great Commission’ set about by Jesus,
whereas a more liberal Christian may not see that as a command. An
Orthodox Muslim may bow towards Mecca five times per day to pray,
while a more liberal or secular Muslim may not. All of these actions
are acceptable and are carried out every day around the world.
However, if a Holy Book sanctions unacceptable behavior, now we have
a problem. Terrorism is that unacceptable behavior. The problem isn’t
that hundreds of millions may participate in this behavior, but that
many tens of thousands will – and are.

The Koran says Allah’s will is for the world to be under Islamic
rule. When Ayatollah Khomeini said, `Holy War means the conquest of
all non-Muslim territories,’ he didn’t pull that out of thin air.
Notice which words he used – `conquest’ and `non-Muslim.’

Throughout it’s history, Islam was spread by military conquest. And
before anyone says, `What about the Crusades?’ please remember that
they were started after 500 years of Jihad. The Islamic Jihad, or, in
Ayatollah Khomeini’s words, `war of conquest,’ has been waged since
the 7th century, with relatively few pauses. Here is just a sampling
of Islamic Jihads and the well-known people and places involved: An
Islamic expedition raid was launched on Cyprus in 649 A.D., which, by
the way, became part of the `Barbary Coast pirates’ who terrorized
Mediterranean Europe until 1830. Ferdinand & Isabella of Spain
defeated the Muslims in 1492, in which Christopher Columbus was at
the turning over of power ceremony. A young John Smith, of Pocahontas
fame, helped fight against the Muslims in 1600. In North Africa,
Napoleon fought against Jihads in Egypt from 1798 to 1830. In 1804,
our Lt. Stephen Decatur launched a rescue of the USS Philadelphia,
which had been captured by Barbary Coast Muslims. Lawrence of Arabia
aided and advised the Arabs to attack Muslim Turkish strong points in
Arabia. When the Muslim Turks ransacked Smyrna, terrorizing its Greek
and Armenian residents, Ernest Hemingway was there, as a reporter for
the Toronto Star. In 1941, the Bosnian Muslims raised a Waffen SS
Division of 21,000 men known as the Handzar Division, named after the
fearsome scimitar weapon of former wars. During WWII, the Grand Mufti
of Jerusalem preached a holy war against the Jews and their British
allies. He later was photographed while doing the Nazi salute, while
reviewing the Handzar Division troops. One of his infamous radio
addresses on March 1, 1944 contained this memorable section, `…kill
the Jews wherever you find them…for this pleases God, history and
religion.’ See Paul Fregosi’s book on Jihad for more examples.

So, when Muslim extremist Mohammed Bouyeri, the murderer of Dutch
filmmaker Theo Van Gogh, says, `I was motivated by the law that
commands me to cut off the head of anyone who insults Allah and his
prophet,’ we don’t need a further explanation. Since there are plenty
of verses in the Koran that he and other extremists pull from, why do
we need to look further?

After the London bombings, Inayat Bungalwala of the Muslim Council of
Britain said, `The scale of disenchantment amongst Muslim youth is
very clear to see…Various factors are at play: underachievement in
education; a high rate of unemployment; discrimination in the
workplace; social exclusion, and also the government’s own policies,
especially in Iraq.’ Ironically, many minority groups all over the
world experience those same problems, but they don’t resort to
blowing up innocent people. When investigating the Iqra Learning
Centre in the UK, the shop owner, speaking about the suicide bombers
and a DVD he once viewed, said that the Muslim persecutions around
the world was probably the fuel that drove them to kill innocent
people in the UK. Interestingly enough, Christians have those same
types of DVDs showing Christian persecution in Africa, China and a
host of other places. I never hear of Christian Jihad’s in those
countries. Remember, Christians killed by lions in the Roman Empire
are called Martyrs, while Islamic extremists that blow up innocents
are also called Martyrs. Also, when the Taliban blew up ancient
Buddha statues in Afghanistan, I don’t remember reading about
Buddhist Jihads launched against the Taliban.

There is something different about the responses to persecution.
Fundamentalist Christians don’t launch Jihads and world domination
military conquests for several reasons, but two primary ones: One,
Jesus never commanded that of his followers and actually preached the
opposite. Two, the Christian Scriptures plainly state that Christians
will never be the majority in the world. Herein lies the problem: The
extremist Muslim’s view of their scared writings says the exact
opposite: One, Muslims are commanded to launch Jihads, wage military
wars of conquest, and to use violence if necessary to carry out
Allah’s will and two, it is Allah’s will that one day the whole world
be under Islamic rule.

I thank God that the vast majority of Muslims do not believe that
part of their sacred writings. Liberal or Secular Muslims are most
interested in fitting in to society, making a good life for their
families and being tolerant of other faiths. However, the Muslim
extremists are not `hijacking’ Islam nor twisting their sacred
writings to say what they want. No, they are simply taking, in
context, certain sections of their writings and putting primary focus
on them. Unfortunately, the Islamic texts that they’re focusing on
are those same texts that justify killing infidels.

The answer isn’t getting more Muslim leaders to stand up and denounce
bombings, hijackings, murders and `Muslim wars for independence’
being fought all over the world. No, the logical first step would be
for Muslim leaders to admit the violent Jihad sacred texts exist,
they are not being taken out of context by Bin Laden and others, and
that those sections of texts are to be banned or flatly repudiated by
all Muslim scholars. Can we please look at the facts and deal with
the problem on that level? Can we also commit to the idea that no
high-ranking politician is ever going to say these things? Can we
actually have scholars from both sides of the issue debate these
points in public, with radio or television coverage? Can we have
truthful, unbiased, non-politically correct coverage of these issues
by the media? After all, our lives and our family’s lives are at
stake.

Steve Rumsey, MBA is an investment advisor and resides in Southern
California.

http://www.opinioneditorials.com/freedomwriters/srumsey_20050726.html

Bus With Iranian Tourists Catches Fire

BUS WITH IRANIAN TOURISTS CATCHES FIRE

YEREVAN, JULY 26. ARMINFO. A Renault bus with 38 Iranian tourists
caught fire in Vayots Dzor region, Armenia, Monday evening.

The press service of the emergency department the fire did not injure
either the tourists or the driver but destroyed the bus despite the
firemen’s efforts.

The cause was the ignition of the rubber pad of the brakes.-

RAO EES and Gasprom Intend to Launch Jointly Hrazdan 5th Power Unit

RAO EES AND GASPROM INTEND TO LAUNCH JOINTLY 5TH POWER UNIT OF HRAZDAN
THERMAL POWER STATION

YEREVAN, JULY 22, NOYAN TAPAN. The Russian companies RAO EES and
Gasprom have set up a consortium with the aim of launching the 5th
power-generating unit of the Hrazdan thermal power station and
submitted the respective program to the Armenian government on March
15. Deputy Director of Interenergo Mikhail Mantrov stated at the July
22 press conference that the program is now under consideraion of the
RA Ministry of Energy. “We are somewhat concerned because time goes by
and no answer has been received yet,” he noted. According to M.
Mantrov, in Armenia, RAO EES has the right of property only with
respect to the Sevan-Hrazdan Cascade. The power generated by this
station makes up 10% of Armenia’s power capacities, and not 80%, as
some Armenian mass media reported. The Armenian nuclear power plant
belongs to Armenia – it is just managed by RAO EES. According to
M. Mantrov, in 2004, the plant’s profit made 18 mln USD.

Turkey tries to hamper opening of Armenian Genocide museum in Oslo

PanArmenian News Network
July 22 2005

TURKEY TRIES TO HAMPER OPENING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM IN OSLO

22.07.2005 05:54

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ One of Oslo-based private companies has set about
the founding of a Genocide Museum, where a section will be devoted to
the Armenian Genocide. According to the Yerkir newspaper referring to
the Haratch Paris newspaper, Ankara is already taking steps not to
allow the exposition on the tragic events of 1915. Thereupon
Norwegian Deputy FM Kim Traavik noted the museum is founded by a
private company, thus the Government does not have a right to
interfere. History professor of Berken University O. P. Furie is one
of the co-sponsors of the museum. The opening is scheduled August 30,
when Turkey marks the Victory Day – the liberation of the country
from «enemies.» Turkish FM Abdullah Gul stated at a meeting with Kim
Traavik that the availability of sections devoted to the Holocaust
and the Armenian Genocide in the same museum is «insulting the
Turkish people.» «We expect this to be banned,» Gul added.

A tale of two kickers

The Halifax Daily News (Nova Scotia)
July 21, 2005 Thursday

A tale of two kickers

Canwest News Service

Maybe it’s all the fault of Garo Yepremian. He was the soccer-style
Armenian field-goal kicker with the NFL’s Miami Dolphins, who was
built like George Costanza and specialized in making men’s ties.

If football was looking to redefine the typical kicker in the 1970s,
Yepremian didn’t do much to shape the image of his colleagues when he
awkwardly tried to throw a pass in Super Bowl VII off a blocked
field-goal attempt against the Washington Redskins.

Kickers have lived with that stereotype ever since. In the social
hierarchy of most teams, these guys have no status. They are
dismissed by teammates because they are not real athletes, but
flakes. Fair or not, it’s a perception that isn’t changing quickly.

The Lions’ last game against the Toronto Argonauts featured two
kickers who take opposite approaches to their job.

Noel Prefontaine set out to change the image of a kicker, then
allowed it to define him. The Toronto kicker/punter is fearless when
it comes to throwing his body at a special teams defenders on
kickoffs.

Job is to win

Duncan O’Mahony couldn’t care less how fans see him. The Lions
specialist knows his job is to win games when they are on the line,
and says he doesn’t do his team any good if he’s injured trying to
make a tackle.

Which approach is best? Judging from a recent incident, in which
Prefontaine took a shot from teammate Robert Baker on the sidelines,
O’Mahony seems to be a leg up.

Baker was incensed because it was a kicker who engaged him when he
was upset, which caused Prefontaine to alter his outlook.

“Some moulds you can’t break,” Prefontaine told reporters. “Out of
three people standing here, I might change the opinion of one of you,
but two are still against me. That’s life. You don’t get everybody on
your side.”

But not everyone feels every book can be judged by its cover.

“It’s lazy journalism and convenient to attach the kicker label to
every kicker,” Toronto coach Mike Clemons said.

Lions coach Wally Buono would not dream of asking his kicker to make
a tackle, even though O’Mahony made one on his own when he nudged
Bashir Levingston out of bounds last week.

Nor is O’Mahony making an effort to alter prevailing public opinion.

“I sit around in practice. I kick a few balls. I go home. I’m not
beat up. Other players beat their bodies up,” he said. “But when the
games are on the line, it’s a whole different mental approach. When
we went to the Grey Cup last year, too many guys were like, ‘You may
be a kicker, but I wouldn’t want to be out there kicking the winning
field goal.’ Well, I don’t want to be out there pounding my body all
game long.”

O’Mahony accepts that any mistake, such as his two misses against
Toronto, means he’s instant fodder for talk-show radio.

That said, Buono made the unsolicited observation that his icy
approach with some media members might aid in shaping his reputation.

Will keep trying

“I don’t know how well liked Duncan is,” Buono said.

So, Prefontaine will keep trying to make a tackle, and O’Mahony will
likely keep his thoughts to himself the day he sees his colleague
injured.

“I gave up trying to change people’s opinions years ago. It’s a waste
of your energy,” O’Mahony said.

“I know only one to way. It’s like telling a duck not to swim,”
Prefontaine said. “But regardless of what I’ve done, I’m still a
kicker.”

Blame Garo.

S.Caucasus has to define its corporate interests, Azeri analyst says

SOUTH CAUCASUS HAS TO DEFINE ITS CORPORATE INTERESTS, AZERI ANALYST SAYS

ArmenPress
July 19 2005

YEREVAN, JULY 19, ARMENPRESS: An exhibition of works created by young
painters from Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia and titled A Joint Step
Towards Future, opened today in Yerevan. The exhibition was organized
by an Armenia-based Caucasian Center for Peaceful Initiatives, Peace,
Democracy and Culture think-tank in Baku and All-Georgian Rustaveli
Association.

Mikhail Kurdiani, the head of Georgian think-tank said the three
Caucasian nations can boast of rich culture, a legacy that many
powerful nations lack. “If we draw the cultural map of the planet
Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan will take the bulk of its space,” he
claimed. The exhibition opening was followed by a seminar on seeking
ways out from deep-rooted stereotypes and surmounting communication
barriers.

Rauf Rajabov, head of Democracy, Peace and Culture, told the
seminar that none of the three South Caucasian nations is able to
succeed in building successful relations with the rest of the world
all alone. Rajabov argued that a compulsory condition for ensuring
stability and peace in the region is that all the three should give up
their efforts to solve their security problems separately, as well as
realize the fundamental truth that they cannot build their security and
prosperity at the expense of decreasing the security and prosperity
of others. The authorities and political forces in all three South
Caucasian countries have to realize and try to jointly determine and
specify their common corporate, geopolitical and regional interests, he
said, adding that resolution of the local conflicts would be the first
step. “Conflicts do not allow the three nations to come up jointly
at international organizations,” he said adding that the Karabakh
dispute should be resolved based on pragmatism and rationalism.