Armenia And Ukraine Build Military Cooperation

ARMENIA AND UKRAINE BUILD MILITARY COOPERATION
By Gohar Gevorgian

AZG Armenian Daily
26/05/2006

By the invitation of Colonel General Mikael Harutyunian, Commander of
Headquarters of RA Armed Forces, Colonel General Sergey Kirichenko,
Commander of Armed Forces of Ukraine, arrived in Yerevan May 23.

Harutyunian said this was the first visit of its kind to Armenia after
the establishment of diplomatic relations with Ukraine. By the end of
the day, Kirichenko and Harutyunian stated that the meeting was quite
a fruitful one. They discussed a number of issues, found solutions
to the defense issues and specified the cooperation spheres. They
expressed hope that this meeting will contribute to the military
cooperation of both sides.

In response to the question about rendering assistance to Azerbaijan,
Kirichenko said that Ukraine doesn’t offer any military assistance
to Azerbaijan. He added that Ukraine equally respects Armenia and
Azerbaijan.

As for the withdrawal of the Russian military bases from Georgia,
Harutyunian stated that the Russian military bases go to Russia. He
added that Gyumri’s Russian military base #102 gets only transport,
communication equipment. He emphasized that the Gyumri base doesn’t
get any military ground vehicle.

Haygachen Ouzounian, Leader Of Melkonian Struggle, Dies At 86

HAYGACHEN OUZOUNIAN, LEADER OF MELKONIAN STRUGGLE, DIES AT 86
By Massis Der Partogh in Cyprus

AZG Armenian Daily
26/05/2006

Haygachen Ouzounian, a prominent figure in the Armenian Diaspora and a
staunch supporter of the struggle to help save the historic Melkonian
school, died in Larnaca late Wednesday after a long illness at the
age of 86.

His funeral is expected to take place in Switzerland.

Ouzounian was born in Adana in 1920 and came to the Melkonian
Educational Institute in 1933 from where he graduated in 1938. He
continued his studies and became a civil engineer with an international
portfolio of achievements.

He got involved in politics and joined the ranks of the Armenian
Democratic Liberal Organization (ADL), also known as the Ramgavar
Party, rose to the post of co-president, and was a leading founder
of the party’s affiliated Tekeyan Cultural Society, an organization
with chapters around the world establishing various literary awards
and scholarships.

His dedication to community service attracted Haygachen Ouzounian to
rise to the leadership of the Armenian General Benevolent Union where
he served as Vice President to the late Alex Manoukian, the charity
organisation’s president for four decades.

Ouzounian was an inseparable part of the AGBU and was recently declared
a Director Emeritus for his contributions. He believed that one of
his biggest achievements was to realise the AGBU’s vision for the
Melkonian that involved the partial sale of land in the early 1980s
in order to fund the construction of modern boarding facilities, a
sports complex for the students and the Melkonian Commercial Centre
on Limassol Avenue, as a revenue earning project that would secure
the school’s long-term financial needs.

When he first suspected that the present leadership of the AGBU
planned to close the Melkonian and sell the land, he initiated
a campaign that immediately engulfed the worldwide alumni of the
school. He was a fervent supporter of the legal battle that has seen
two court cases filed against the AGBU in Cyprus and the U.S., with
the Armenian Patriarch of Istanbul as the plaintiff.

The Azg daily of Yerevan recently published Haygachen Ouzounian’s
memoirs that covered his adolescent and young adult years at the
Melkonian Educational Institute.

In an extensive report to the Armenian Mirror-Spectator published in
Boston, Ouzounian said: “It will be the most tragic move made by the
AGBU, and will cause the most harm to our nation. Those determining
the current policy of the Central Board will be subject to severe
indictment by our people in the court of history”.

Ouzounian, one of the early graduates of the Melkonian, blamed the
Central Board for the decrease in the number of boarding students. The
school, he said, could accommodate up to 350 boarders but this was
the thwarted by the Central Board, who hiked the fees to such that
Armenians from East Europe, the Middle East and Armenia could not
afford.

“There is reason to close the Melkonian,” he said in a recent
interview from his home in Larnaca. “Melkonian is very important for
our youth. Melkonian is not only important for Cyprus, but for all
Armenians in the Diaspora.”

“Unfortunately AGBU does not represent the image that it carried in
the past,” said Ouzounian. “It has lost its favorable facade among
the people and has been re-organised as a foundation in the hands of
only a few who do whatever they please. It is unfortunate that an
organization such as this after 100 years of earning our nation’s
trust is now falling apart and losing its credibility among our
people. How can they close the Melkonian?”

Ukraine And Armenia Agreed On Military Cooperation

UKRAINE AND ARMENIA AGREED ON MILITARY COOPERATION

ForUm, Ukraine
May 25 2006

In the course of the visit of Ukrainian delegation in Armenia, the head
of the delegation the Commander-in-Chief of Ukrainian Armed Forces
Colonel-General Serhiy Kyrychenko placed a wreath on the Memorial to
the victims of Armenian Genocide of 1915.

Ukrainian and Armenian military officials inked the protocol on
bilateral military cooperation. “The document provides for putting
bilateral military-technical cooperation into practise and the joint
participation in the peacekeeping operations,” said First Deputy
Defence Minister of Armenia Colonel-General Mikael Arutyunyan.

According to his words, the Ukraine-Armenia Cooperation Plan-2006
has been already made. “Armenia is ready to share its experience in
the military sphere and also implements some of the Ukrainian tips
and experience into the reformation of the Armed Forces,” stressed
Arutyunyan.

Are Turks Behind The 10 Points For Andre?

ARE TURKS BEHIND THE 10 POINTS FOR ANDRE?

AZG Armenian Daily
25/05/2006

The 10 points that Andre, Armenia’s representative at the
Eurovision-2006, received from Turkey have incited much talk. According
to Yerkramas newspaper of Russian-Armenians, Armenian reader from
Ankara told the paper that the Turkish population of the country did
not influence the voting during Eurovision-2006.

The reader stated that the ethnic Turks had boycotted the voting as
they were not allowed to vote for Turkey’s representative and that
most of the people behind the 10 points from Turkey were Armenians
(including Islamic converts and those hiding their ethnic background),
Kurds, Jews and other nationalities.

Grand Insurance Firm Starts Paying Compensations For Killed Airliner

GRAND INSURANCE FIRM STARTS PAYING COMPENSATIONS FOR KILLED AIRLINER PASSENGERS’ RELATIVES

Armenpress
May 24 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 24, ARMENPRESS: Grand Insurance firm said it is starting
the process of paying compensations to the families of passengers
who were killed when an Armenian Airbus-320 plunged into the Black
Sea on May 3 killing all 113 people aboard.

An official of the firm said relatives of the killed passengers can
apply any time. Grand Insurance company belongs to Mikhail Baghdasarov,
the owner of Armavia air company that operated the Airbus-320. The
firm has re-insured the assumed risks with 14 insurance companies in
Great Britain.

Baghdasarov earlier said compensations may amount up to $20,000
Meantime the second flight recorder of the plane has been recovered
from the site where the Airbus crashed into the Black Sea May 3. A
spokesperson for the Russian transport ministry overseeing the search
operation, said the second black box, which recorded flight data and
had been thought to be lying 3-5 meters (10-16 feet) away from the
first one, was actually located 16 meters (about 40 feet) from the
first recorder and was buried deeper in silt.

The first box was recovered on Monday. A special intergovernmental
investigation committee will be set up to decipher the flight data
from the plane.

Court Case On Issue Of “Zharangutiun” Party Office Delayed Till July

COURT CASE ON ISSUE OF “ZHARANGUTIUN” PARTY OFFICE DELAYED TILL JULY 1

Noyan Tapan
May 23 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 23, NOYAN TAPAN. Heritage (Zharangutiun) Party Chairman
Raffi K. Hovannisian’s legal claim against the administration of the
Paronian Theater was heard on May 19 at the Court of First Instance of
Yerevan’s Central and Nork-Marash communities. The hearing was presided
over by Judge Edward Avetisian. The events leading to Hovannisian’s
petition began on March 4, 2006, when party representatives witnessed
the unlawful replacement, without prior notice, of the already-smashed
lock of the outside door to the party’s main office, whose space,
located at 7 Vazgen Sargsian Street, Raffi Hovannisian has leased
since 1994. The lock was replaced by the chief engineer and two
members from the auxiliary staff of the theater. In the meantime, the
entire process was supervised by two unknown men who were sitting in
a nearby car. The very same day, the theater’s administration assumed
responsibility for this act and concealed its true architects. Since
then, the party’s seal and documents necessary for normal operations,
as well as personal and family belongings of Hovannisian and his staff,
are kept under the control of the theater’s management. Hovannisian
had sent a communique to Armenia’s Attorney General Aghvan Hovsepian
and Police Chief Haik Harutiunian in regard to the unlawful operation
carried out against the office and formally requested that they give
an imperative legal assessment of what had occurred and bring those
responsible to justice. They, however, sent a reply stating that the
dispute between Hovannisian and the administration of the theater
is a civil disagreement and thus must be resolved by the courts. An
official claim was filed on April 11 at the Center-Nork Marash Court
against the Paronian Theater’s management wherein it was demanded that
the infringement upon the right of control and usage of property be
lifted. In order to prohibit the taking of certain actions by the
theater’s management against the property under its control, the
plaintiff simultaneously submitted a petition to restore the right
of access to the belongings of Raffi Hovannisian and the Heritage
Party. The court ruled in favor of this petition, and the order was
forwarded to the Service for Mandatory Execution of Judicial Acts at
the Ministry of Justice. However, in an unprecedented action that
lacked clear explanation, this body returned the petition and the
order back to the Court. On May 19, Judge Avetisian sent the same
ruling to the aforementioned service a second time. On May 19, the
first hearing of the case opened in the absence of the defendant,
which had not presented a formal request for the continuance of the
trial. It had instead previously informed the court of its position
that the lease signed between the theater administration and the tenant
was not officially notarized and consequently void, and so the petition
is unsubstantiated and subject to dismissal. This “objection” by the
defendant became grounds for Vahan Grigorian, Raffi Hovannisian’s
attorney to submit, by way of introducing relevant evidence, a request
for making additional claims, in particular those which derive under
the law by consequence of nullification of contracts. The Court,
taking all submissions into account, adjourned and set a new hearing
on June 1.

The Search Works At The Site Of Crash Of The A-320 Resumed In TheMor

THE SEARCH WORKS AT THE SITE OF CRASH OF THE A-320 RESUMED IN THE MORNING

ArmRadio.am
23.05.2006 17:31

This morning the search works in the Black Sea resumed. Although the
Russian Minister of Transport Igor Levitin said that the works would
continue the whole night, last evening the rescuers had to stop the
search because of the storm.

To remind, yesterday one of the recorder boxes was extracted from
the depth of 496 meters, and the commission investigating the case
hopes to hear the voices of the pilots soon.

The Russian General Prosecutor’s Office informed that the box was
seriously damaged, and its decoding will not be easy.

The second box recorded the parameters of the flight: the height,
the speed and the angle degree for certain periods of time. It is no
less important than the other recorder lifted.

And The Winner Is Mr.V.Mahdesian 21-05-2006

AND THE WINNER IS MR.V.MAHDESIAN 21-05-2006

Ma y 21 2006

LARNACA LIMASSOL NICOSIA TOTAL PERCENTAGE
Dr.V.Atamian 162 124 524 810 47.4%
Mr.V.Mahdesian 183 140 576 899 52.6%
Blanks/Void 5 7 41 53
Total 350 271 1141 1762

OCTOBER 2005 BY-ELECTIONS RESULTS

LARNACA LIMASSOL NICOSIA TOTAL PERCENTAGE
Dr.V.Atamian 160 113 496 769 52%
Dr.A.Ashdjian 140 89 420 649 44%
Mr.P.Zartarian 6 13 41 60 4%
Blanks/Void 10 8 42 60
Total 316 223 999 1538

http://www.hayem.org/index.htm?p=58

A tightly woven family tradition

Salt Lake Tribune, Utah
May 21 2006

A tightly woven family tradition
Utahn keeps art of Armenian rug-weaving alive

By Brandon Griggs
The Salt Lake Tribune

George Aposhian Jr. and his daughter, Diane Moffat, display a rug.
(Danny Chan La/The Salt Lake Tribune )

As a structural engineer, George Aposhian Jr. helped design
buildings. As a rugmaker, he knots ornate wool carpets. Guess which
project takes more time.
“It doesn’t take as long to build a skyscraper as it does to make
a carpet,” says the Holladay man, whose first carpet took him nine
years to finish. “It takes a lot of patience.”
That patience will be on display this afternoon at the 21st annual
Living Traditions Festival, where Aposhian and his daughter Diane
will demonstrate the time-honored and time-consuming art of Armenian
rug-weaving. It’s a skill Aposhian learned from his father, who
learned it from his father.
The carpets are beautiful and functional, but to Aposhian they are
more than that – they are physical links to his Armenian heritage.
The first rug he made was based on a decorative pattern passed down
by his grandfather, who immigrated to Utah in 1909. Without his
carpets, the man may not have completed the journey.
The story, and it’s a good one, goes like this: Zadik Moses
Aposhian was a successful rug merchant in Turkey in 1898 when two LDS
missionaries gave him a copy of The Book of Mormon. He read the book
in three days, felt divinely inspired and, along with his wife,
Catherine, converted to Mormonism three weeks later.
But the Aposhians’ new religion did not sit well with the other
Turks in their village, who shunned them and stopped buying Zadik’s
rugs. After a decade of persecution, the Aposhians decided to flee
with their seven children to Utah. It was an arduous journey that
took them from Turkey to Lebanon, to Egypt, to France and then to
England. Along the way they were robbed twice.
Their odyssey stalled in Liverpool, where Zadik was forced to work
as a laborer to support his family. To fund their trans-Atlantic
crossing, Zadik sold his two remaining carpets, which had been hidden
from thieves at the bottom of his trunk. But when it came time to
depart, their three oldest children accidentally boarded the wrong
ship. By the time their parents realized the mistake, the ship had
sailed.
The remaining six Aposhians traveled by boat to Montreal, and then
by train to Salt Lake City. On the train they bought several oranges
from a man who took Zadik’s last $20 and promised to return with the
change. He never came back. When the family finally arrived in Utah,
they were penniless. The couple finally got some good news when their
three oldest children were located in Mexico and reunited with them
in Salt Lake City.
In Utah, Zadik Aposhian found work in a silver mine and later in a
brick factory. He never sold his carpets again. But he continued to
make rugs for his family’s use, and passed along his skills to a son,
George Sr. George owned an automobile-repair shop but made a few rugs
in his spare time and eventually built a loom for his son, George Jr.

The elder George manned an Armenian rug-weaving booth at the first
Living Traditions

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festival in 1986 before turning it over to his son several years
later. An Aposhian has shown the family’s handsome rugs at the
festival ever since.
“It’s about preserving the family tradition,” says George Aposhian
Jr., 78, who thinks of his late grandfather every time he works on a
rug. “He was a man who made his living making carpets. I couldn’t see
not carrying it on.”
Like most Oriental rugs, an Aposhian carpet represents countless
hours spent meticulously knotting thousands of colored wool threads
into a pattern stretched vertically on a hand-made wooden loom.
Completing a horizontal row of knots takes about an hour, and each
carpet has hundreds of rows.
“People will watch me . . . and say, ‘How can you stand to do
that?’ ” says Aposhian, who works on a loom in his living room. “It’s
fun to watch the pattern grow. But the real satisfaction is cutting
[the finished carpet] off the loom and putting it on the floor.”
Aposhian made looms for each of his four children. But only one,
Diane Moffat, has kept the family tradition going. Moffat began
weaving on her own about 10 years ago, thanks largely to years spent
assisting her father at Living Traditions.
“I doubt I would have ever started if it wasn’t for the festival,”
says the Salt Lake City woman, who likes rug-weaving because she
feels connected to her Armenian ancestors. “Your fingers are doing
the same thing that their fingers were doing . . . back in history as
carpetmakers.”
Moffat and her father hope to give people a deeper appreciation
for the artistry and hard work that go into crafting a carpet. In an
age when machines can crank out a credible-looking Oriental rug in a
few hours, the Aposhians also hope to keep their family’s heritage
alive.


Contact Brandon Griggs at [email protected] or 801-257-8689. Send
comments to [email protected].

Dream weavers

George Aposhian Jr. and his daughter, Diane Moffat, will
demonstrate the art of Armenian rugweaving from noon to 7 p.m. today
in Canopy C on the grounds of the City-County Building, 450 S. 200
East, Salt Lake City. The crafts demonstrations are part of the 21st
annual Living Traditions festival, which celebrates Utah’s ethnic
diversity with food, crafts and live music. Festival hours today are
noon to 7 p.m. Admission is free.

Tehran: EDBI To Finance Power Line Project In Armenia

EDBI TO FINANCE POWER LINE PROJECT IN ARMENIA

Mehr News Agency, Iran
May 19 2006

TEHRAN, May 19 (MNA) — The Export Development Bank of Iran (EDBI)
will finance construction of a power transmission line in Armenia.

The bank will offer 85 percent of the contract fee to the project
contractor for the building of the power transmission line. Repayment
of the credit will be made over a five-year period, noted the bank’s
chairman Noruz Kohzadi.

The project will offer new venues for the exchange of 800 megawatts of
electricity between the Islamic Republic and the Republic of Armenia,
he asserted.

The project aimed at development of the exports of the technical and
engineering services is to receive its insurance coverage through
Export Guarantee Fund of Iran (EGFI), he explained.

The line to be built in the Armenian territory will totally extend
312 kilometers, the official said.