Heritage Headquarters Forcibly Vacated, Sealed

PRESS RELEASE
The Heritage Party
7 Vazgen Sargsian Street
Yerevan 0010, Armenia
Tel.: (+374 – 10) 58.08.77, 52.22.38
Fax: (+374 – 10) 54.38.97
Email: [email protected]; [email protected]
Website:

May 30, 2006

HERITAGE HEADQUARTERS FORCIBLY VACATED, SEALED:
WHAT ARE THEY AFRAID OF?

Yerevan–Today at noon, as Raffi Hovannisian and his colleagues were at
work, the Heritage Party’s main office was surrounded and entered by a group
of 10 uniformed bailiffs from the Service for Mandatory Execution of
Judicial Acts (SMEJA) of the Ministry of Justice.

In an unprecedented and incredible reversal of their execution yesterday of
the Court’s April 14 injunction against the defendant theater’s restriction
of access to Hovannisian’s premises and property, and without further court
order, the ministry officials, led by Vahram Yenokian and joined by Yerevan’
s commando-clad “chief evicter” Tigran Tadevosian, forcibly vacated the
premises, evicting Hovannisian and his staff from the headquarters which has
been theirs for 12 years and which they had succeeded in reentering just
yesterday, nearly three months after its initial closure. All office doors,
external and internal, were then sealed.

As part of the official report prepared by Yenokian and his underlings,
Raffi Hovannisian recorded that “the instant operation by the SMEJA
bailiffs, who are supposed to be servants of the law, is illegal, a travesty
of civil rights and justice, and a sad reflection of the subservience of the
judiciary to the whims, caprices, and personal interests of the executive
branch of power, in particular the incumbent presidency. I am being
compelled to leave under the threat of force and against my will.”

Upon the formal closing of his office within 24 hours of its hopeful
reopening, Hovannisian condemned the petty, parochial fear that drives such
acts of lawless retribution across the Republic, and vowed to continue his
quest, together with his fellow citizens, to achieve a nation of laws,
rights, and dignity.

Founded in 2002, Heritage has regional divisions throughout the land. Its
central headquarters are located at 7 Vazgen Sargsian Street, Yerevan 0010,
Armenia, with telephone contact at (374-10) 580.877, fax at (374-10)
543.897, and email at [email protected]

www.heritage.am

Stepan Demirchian Does Not Exclude Possible Coop of Ardaroutiun/OY

STEPAN DEMIRCHIAN DOES NOT EXCLUDE POSSIBILITY OF “ARDAROUTIUN”
FACTION’S COOPERATION WITH OYK

YEREVAN, MAY 29, NOYAN TAPAN. The opposition in Armenia is not
dispersed yet and still will say its word. Stepan Demirchian, the head
of the NA “Ardaroutiun” (Justice) faction and the People’s Party of
Armenia stated about it on May 26. “In general, one must put aside
wrangling, all arguments and join efforts against this illegal
administration,” he mentioned. As for the issue if the “Orinats
Yerkir” (Country of Law) party entered the opposition rows if it’s a
game of the authorities, according to Demirchian, the time will put
everything in its place. “We do not suffer from mistrustfulness, it’s
better to be mistaken by believing than not believing, a lie is always
seen later or sooner,” he emphasized. Responsing the issue about
possible cooperation with the OYP, Demirchian said that the
“Ardaroutiun” faction is ready to cooperate with different political
forces on concrete issues. In response to the Noyan Tapan
correspondent’s question which those concrete issues are on which,
after the 2003 April cases, the opposition may cooperate with the
political force headed by Artur Baghdasarian, Demirchian said that
such a cooperation between the “Ardaroutiun” and “Orinats Yerkir”
factions may be promoted at the Parliament connected with any
legislative initiative. Demirchian stated that “Ardaroutiun” would not
participate in the NA Speaker’s elections as it did in 2003. In
response to the question about possible cooperation with the OYP
during the state elections, the Chairman of the People’s Party of
Armenia said that his party is ready to participate in them alone:
alliances are not excluded either, but I can not answer concretely
today, there is time, we’ll think, decide.”

Book review: Our staggering appetite for death

The Daily Telegraph (LONDON)
May 27, 2006 Saturday

Books:

Our staggering appetite for death
REVIEWS

A sobering, provocative and highly readable history argues that
ethnicity was the central, explosive factor in 20th-century conflicts

by DOMINIC SANDBROOK

In 1931, Albert Einstein wrote to the elderly Sigmund Freud inviting
him to join an intellectual association dedicated to enlisting
“religious groups in the fight against war”. This might seem a
laudable enterprise, but Freud was having none of it. Man, he said,
had an urge “to destroy and kill”, an “impulse to destruction” that
stemmed from the “death instinct” of every living being. “There is
no likelihood,” he explained, “of our being able to suppress
humanity’s aggressive tendencies… Why do we, you and I and many
others, protest so vehemently against war, instead of just accepting
it as another of life’s odious importunities? For it seems a natural
enough thing, biologically sound and practically unavoidable.”

Three-quarters of a century later, Freud’s words ring truer than
ever. For as Niall Ferguson’s sobering new book shows, if there were
ever any doubts about mankind’s capacity for sheer bestial savagery,
the 20th century put them to rest. Mere statistics – the millions
stigmatised as sub-human, driven from their homes, deprived of their
liberty, slaughtered by their neighbours – barely convey the horror
of the past 100 years. From the bloodshed of the Western Front to the
massacres of the Armenians, from Stalin’s camps to the rape of
Nanking, from the butchery of Bosnia to the charnel house of the
Congo, men of all creeds and colours exhibited a staggering appetite
for death and destruction.

Ferguson’s book, which concentrates on the half-century from 1904 to
1953, started life as a history of the Second World War and evolved
into a broader exploration of what he calls “history’s age of
hatred”. Instead of simply retelling the familiar tales of
international diplomacy and totalitarian wickedness, he tries to
explain precisely why the mask of civilisation slipped so frequently,
and with such murderous consequences, during the early 20th century.
In the hands of a less accomplished writer, this might be an
unbearably depressing read. But Ferguson more than justifies his
lofty reputation in a book that fizzes with revisionist insights and
invites the reader to think again about the clichés of the world
wars.

Put simply, Ferguson believes that the bloodshed of the 20th century
was attributable to a lethal combination of economic uncertainity,
imperial breakdown and ethnic tension. Instead of looking to class,
like so many historians trailing in Marx’s wake, he concentrates on
ethnicity as the central, explosive factor in 20th-century conflicts
from the Balkans to East Asia. This doesn’t mean that he downplays
economics: the book is stuffed full of tables and statistics of all
kinds. But time after time, he argues, unsettling economic changes –
which include growth and urbanisation as well as recession or
depression – have acted as “the trigger for the politicisation of
ethnic difference”.

Ferguson develops these themes through 50 years of pogroms,
conferences, invasions and tank battles, his narrative sweeping from
the killing fields of the Third Reich to the utter anarchy of
war-torn China. Much of this is well-known territory, but Ferguson’s
great skill as a historian is his ability to make the familiar seem
fresh. Iconoclastic judgments come thick and fast. The Great War was
a bolt from the blue rather than the product of long-nourished
rivalries; the laws of the Treaty of Versailles were to do with maps,
not economics; Japan was more the Asian equivalent of Britain than an
oriental version of Germany. The Second World War, he suggests, began
in China in 1937, not Poland in 1939. Britain should have attacked
Germany in 1938, in a “war of pre-emption”, rather than waiting an
extra year. The Axis powers were stronger in 1942 than we usually
think; the Nazis’ racist empire was a paradoxically multi-ethnic
entity; and by allying with Stalin, the Allies jumped into bed with
“the ultimate Nazi collaborator”.

Whether the reader agrees with this or not – and there are surely few
who will agree with everything the book says – it is wonderfully
bracing, provocative stuff. Ferguson’s reputation is partly based on
his keenness to push a point, often a little too far for squeamish
academic tastes. But he knows his stuff, as an enormous bibliography
makes clear, and even if his acknowledgements thank a disturbingly
large team of research assistants, the sheer verve of the writing
suggests that this is the real McCoy. Although this is a long and
intricately argued book, it is nevertheless highly readable, flowing
nicely from bond markets to battlefields, and it brims with wit and
personality.

But whatever its qualities, it is hard to put this book down with
anything other than an abiding sense of gloom. In a thoughtful
epilogue, Ferguson points out that men slaughtered one another with
just as much relish after 1945; the only difference is that they
generally did it in the Third World, far from the breakfast tables of
Europe and America. In Korea, Guatemala, Chile, Cambodia, Bosnia and
Sudan, women were raped, infants eviscerated, men butchered with
pitiless relish. In his final pages, Ferguson even hints that our new
century could be the bloodiest yet, thanks to the rise of China, the
sensational demographic growth of the developing world and the
persistence of ethnic rivalries. We may fantasise about the “end of
history”, about a new age of globalisation and democracy, but there
will always be another war.

Delegation Headed by Finnish Archbishop Visits Tsetsernakaberd

Armenpress

DELEGATION HEADED BY FINNISH ARCHBISHOP VISITS
TSITSERNAKABERD

YEREVAN, MAY 26, ARMENPRESS: The delegation headed
by the leader of the Finnish Orthodox Church,
Archbishop of All Finland Leo Makkonen visited today
the Tsitsernakaberd Genocide Memorial and put a wreath
to it to commemorate the victims of the Armenian
Genocide.
The delegation also visited the genocide museum.
Today the delegation will meet with the Armenian
President Robert Kocharian. It will stay in Armenia
until May 29.

BAKU: Aliyev delivered report on occasion of Republic day

TREND, Azerbaijan
May 27 2006

Azerbaijan president delivered report on occasion of Republic day

Source: Trend
Author: R.Abdullayev

27.05.2006

The Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev delivered a report in the
official celebration of the national holiday – Republic day – in
`Gulustan’ palace on May 26, 2006 in Baku, Trend reports.

The state head highly assessed the establishment of Azerbaijan
Democratic Republic in 1918 by noting the historical role of the
founders of Azerbaijan state system.

Touching up on the processes taken place in Azerbaijan during USSR
and the repeat collapse threat of the national state system, Ilham
Aliyev noted that the state system was kept due to the force of
ex-president Heydar Aliyev .

The president stressed that next time Azerbaijan turned into a
dynamically developing country in result of the successful policy of
political-economical reforms carried out by the state head.

According to Aliyev, Azerbaijan is strengthening its position not
only in regional, but also international scale. `Economic concepts
are realized in Azerbaijan of which goal is to raise welfare of the
country population,’ told Aliyev.

Besides, the state head touched up on the solution of
Azerbaijan-Armenian Nagorno-Karabakh conflict by stressing that
Azerbaijan supports the peaceful solution of the problem. According
to Aliyev, if Armenia reflects unconstructive position in the
negotiation process, then Azerbaijan `will have to resolve the
question with its own forces’.

President Ilham Aliyev unambiguously declared that `Azerbaijan will
not allow the creation of the second Armenian state in its territory’
adding that `all occupied territories of Azerbaijan should be
released unconditionally’.

EU Lacks Knowledge about South Caucasus, Peter Semneby Says

PanARMENIAN.Net

EU Lacks Knowledge about South Caucasus, Peter Semneby
Says

26.05.2006 18:38 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ `Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia are
all members of the EU’s European Neighborhood Policy,
a development that Semneby said was deepening their
relationship with Brussels and would also entitle them
to increased aid. `We’re talking about hundreds of
millions of euros for each country. The EU will also
step up its representation in the countries, which
will mean there will be a larger degree of visibility
in the South Caucasus,’ European Union’s new special
representative for the South Caucasus Peter Semneby
stated in an interview with Thomas de Waal, the
Caucasus Project Coordinator and Editor at the
Institute for War and Peace Reporting.

`I will also spend some time trying to explain to the
public in the South Caucasus what the EU is about.
There is not a whole lot of knowledge to begin with.
To the extent that the EU is known, there are still a
lot of misunderstandings about what [it] is about.’

`I think there is also lack of knowledge in the EU
about the south Caucasus and its particular problems
and about the importance of this region for the EU,
and if possible this is something I would like to
engage on.’

Asked about the hopes of many people in the region who
dream of joining the EU one day, the special
representative was careful to reiterate that the
European Neighborhood Policy `does not contain a
membership perspective’.

`It does mean that the countries can achieve a lot of
the benefits of EU membership by working on the
implementation of the European Neighborhood Policy,’
he went on.

`There is a problem – and I am the first to admit that
– that since the membership perspective is not there
as a big carrot at the end, this deprives us of one of
the most powerful levers we had in encouraging the
countries of Central Europe to carry out painful reforms.’

Baku Assures Zhirinovsky Does Not Believe What He Says

BAKU ASSURES ZHIRINOVSKY DOES NOT BELIEVE WHAT HE SAYS

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.05.2006 18:33 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ “This is not the first time Vladimir Volfovich
Zhirinovsky permits himself statements, which run counter not only to
principles of Russia’s relations with former Soviet Union republics,
but also Russia’s common international doctrine. By saying that Nagorno
Karabakh can acquire independence Zhirinovsky makes a statement, which
conflicts with Russia’s official stance, which lies in recognition
of Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity,” stated Head of the Press and
Information Policy Department of the Azeri MFA Tahir Tagizadeh. In
his words, “similar statements only complicate Russia’s stand as a
co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group.”

“I do not know reasons, which urged Zhirinovsky to make an odd
statement like that, however it does not reflect not only official
Moscow’s stand, but also that of the Russian State Duma, of which Mr.
Zhirinovsky is a Vice-Speaker, and even the posture of the Liberal
Democratic Party of Russia, which he chairs. Besides, drawing parallels
between Montenegro and NK is inadmissible. The Russian State Duma
Vice-Speaker is looking for parallels where these cannot be found. Does
he believe his own words? I do not think so,” Tahir Tagizadeh assures.

Unrecognized republics, which were formed in the territory of
the former Soviet Union, will follow the path of Montenegro,
Russian State Duma Vice-Speaker Vladimir Zhirinovsky had
stated. “Abkhazia, Transnistria and Karabakh will follow the path of
Montenegro. Referendum on declaring independence in Montenegro is a
precedent in the international law,” he told journalists in Moscow
before the third congress of the Union of Armenians of Russia. “Time
will come and resolutions on referendums will be adopted in the South
Caucasus, e.g. Karabakh will acquire independence,” Zhirinovsky
added. “Karabakh is fully entitled to become an independent state
and for Baku not to feel hurt, it may not join Armenia, having allied
relations with it,” the Russian State Duma Vice-Speaker said.

The Protection Of Sevan Will Activize The Civic Society

THE PROTECTION OF SEVAN WILL ACTIVIZE THE CIVIC SOCIETY

A1+
[03:21 pm] 25 May, 2006

With the assistance and cooperation of Jinishyan Fund, “Public
Dialogues and Initiatives Centre” NGO, the State University of Gavar
and the Pedagogical Institute of Gyumri the program “Civic dialogue
and practical steps” has initiated in these two establishments since
June of 2005. The program is aimed at raising the level of students’
awareness and engaging them into the development of civic society.

Dialogues were held on 20 themes chosen by the students
beforehand. Experts were invited to participate in the discussions;
they introduced themes and commented on the issues arousing interest
among the students. The meetings were held through using interactive
methods.

The students of the two establishments worked out a joint
environmental-protection action with the slogan, “The environment
will keep its existence without us but we- will not.” The action was
held in Sevan and turned into a real holiday. The students planted
trees on their way to the Hayravank chapel.

The participants also visited the environmental museum of national
park “Sevan,” got acquainted with the problems of the lake and with
the measures which are being taken for recovering the ecological
balance of the lake. As a result of joint discussions a group was
formed which worked out the preliminary version of the protection
message of the lake.

TV Company “Kyavar” of Gavar

Sack Her Mayor

SACK HER MAYOR
by Paula Maud

Hume Moreland Leader (Australia)
May 24, 2006 Wednesday
HOV Edition

MAYOR Adem Atmaca is calling for a State Government MP to stand down
or lose her position as parliamentary secretary after an inflammatory
attack on Turkey last week.

Jika Jika MP Jenny Mikakos stirred up ethnic divisions within the Labor
Party and the community when she called on the Turkish Government to
acknowledge crimes against Pontic Greeks earlier last century.

Greek-background Ms Mikakos told parliament that more than 353,000
Greeks, 1.5 million Armenians and 750,000 Assyrians died when Turkish
nationalists embraced a “Turkey for the Turks” policy between 1916
and 1923.

“Unlike Germany which has taken responsibility for the Jewish
Holocaust, Turkey has never apologised to its victims,” she said.

Speaking after returning from the Anzac Day ceremony in Gallipoli, Cr
Atmaca said Ms Mikakos should be working in the interests of Victorians
and not other foreign governments. Cr Atmaca, of Turkish background,
said there was no need for hate speeches in parliament and voters in
Jika Jika should ask themselves how Ms Mikakos was serving them by
bringing this subject up.

Cr Atmaca said he would say the same regardless of what ethnic group
was being “attacked”.

“Politicians should be showing that living in harmony is in the best
interests of Victorians,” Cr Atmaca said.

Ms Mikakos did not respond to the Leader’s calls about her speech.

They Condemn The Act Of Serge Sargyan’s Brother

THEY CONDEMN THE ACT OF SERGE SARGSYAN’S BROTHER

A1+
[04:27 pm] 24 May, 2006

The Political Council of the party “Homeland and Honor” has made
a statement expressing indignation about the cynical behavior of
Alexander Sargsyan towards Taguhi Tovmasyan, the correspondent of
the newspaper “Iravounq”.

“The Political Council supports freedom of speech and the staff of
the newspaper “Iravounq”. We look forward to the hour when all the
people who have that kind of behavior will be punished regardless of
their position”, the statement says.