Proceedings Of Joint Program Of World Bank And RA Ministry Of Enviro

PROCEEDINGS OF JOINT PROGRAM OF WORLD BANK AND RA MINISTRY OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION ENVISAGED TO FINISH IN JANUARY 2009

Noyan Tapan
Aug 03 2007

YEREVAN, AUGUST 3, NOYAN TAPAN. The proceedings of the joint
"Management of Natural Reserves and Reduction of Poverty" program of
the World Bank and the RA Ministry of Environmental Protection are
envisaged to finish in January 2009. As Armen Badalian, the Director
of the Office of the Program Implementation, mentioned during the
workshop held in Ijevan on August 3, the aim of this program, which
started in 2002, is to contribute to the improvement of the living
standards of the population through the application of the productive
mechanisms of the management of natural reserves.

According to him, the management of forests is one of the most
important components of this program. Particularty, forest-restoration
complex measures are being implemented in the territories of the
"Ijevan" and "Sevkar" forest economies of "Hayantar", such as
resoration of degraded forests, increase in productivity of forest
lands, as well as many others.

The proceedings of the above-mentioned component, according to
coordinator Ayser Ghazarian, started in November 2006 and only 30%
of the envisaged work has been done so far. He attached importance
to the choice of regions: Tavush and Gegharkunik, where the most
expansive deforestations were implemented in the 1990s.

According to A. Ghazarian, a space of 37641 linear meters of general
length is envisaged to be fenced, about 20 thousand out of which in
the forests of Ijevan and the rest in those of Sevkar. " In case of
implementing envisaged forest restoration and care measures in the
future years, an increase of afforested spaces by 282.2 hectares is
envisaged," he mentioned and added that a grove is envisaged to be
founded in the neighbourhood of the city of Ijevan by planting about
32 kinds of trees and plants within the framework of the program.

It was also mentioned that 16 million U.S. dollars, in general,
have been allocated for the implementation of this program by the
RA government, the Swiss SIDA company, the International Development
Association, and the Global Ecological Fund.

Despite Kosovo Fate Karabakh To Continue Its Way To International Re

DESPITE KOSOVO FATE KARABAKH TO CONTINUE ITS WAY TO INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION – OSKANIAN

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Aug 6 2007

YEREVAN, August 6. /ARKA/. Despite the fate of Kosovo, Nagorno-Karabakh
will continue its way towards the international recognition of its
independence, said Armenia’s Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian in his
interview to Interfax.

"Karabakh has its peculiar sides and Kosovo – specific ones. Today
Karabakh is clearly moving to its self-determination, despite the
final settlement of other conflicts," said Oskanian when answering
the question on possible influence of Kosovo on the settlement of
the Karabakh conflict.

Oskanian pointed out that each conflict is specific by its nature,
and in this aspect the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is not an exception.

He said that each conflict should be considered with the peculiarities
of the problem.

"Let’s not forget, that as compared to Kosovo conflict, when
international forces and NATO put an end to the war in Serbia, and
the UN and EU had been founding state structures for seven years,
for twenty years the NKR has been striving by itself to overcome the
consequences of the imposed aggression and reach success in forming
its statehood," Oskanian said.

Karabakh conflict broke out in 1988, when Nagorno-Karabakh populated
by Armenians declared secession from Azerbaijan.

On December 10, 1991, just a few days before the collapse of the
Soviet Union, a referendum was conducted in Nagorno-Karabakh with
the presence of international observers. At this referendum, 99.89%
of population voted for independence.

Responding to that, Azerbaijan launched a large-scale war against
Nagorno-Karabakh. The military offensives were stopped after a
cease-fire agreement was signed in May 12, 1994. The agreement is
observed now as well, and talks between Armenia and Azerbaijan are
under way.

Starting from 1992 negotiations on the peaceful settlement of the
conflict have being held within the OSCE Minsk Group, the Co-Chairs
of which are the USA, Russia and France.

Despite Kosovo Decision Karabakh Will Press For International Recogn

DESPITE KOSOVO DECISION KARABAKH WILL PRESS FOR INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION OF ITS INDEPENDENCE

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.08.2007 14:18 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "We suppose that each conflict is unique and the
Nagorno Karabakh conflict is not an exception. Peculiarities of each
conflict should be taken into account," Armenian Foreign Minister
Vartan Oskanian said. Karabakh and Kosovo have different features,
according to him.

Karabakh is moving towards self-determination irrespective of decisions
that may be taken on other conflicts, Minister Oskanian said.

"Let us not forget that unlike Kosovo, where the international
forces and NATO put an end to the war and where the UN and EU have
been founding state structures for seven years, Nagorno Karabakh has
been overcoming the consequences of the aggression imposed on it and
achieving success in state building for 20 years already. Despite
of Kosovo decision Nagorno Karabakh will press for international
recognition of its independence," the RA FM emphasized, Interfax
reports.

Andrew Goldberg’s The Armenian Genocide To Air For A Second Run On W

ANDREW GOLDBERG’S THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE TO AIR FOR A SECOND RUN ON WETA PBS IN WASHINGTON

armradio.am
02.08.2007 11:40

The Armenian Genocide, which received international critical acclaim
and aired nationally on PBS in 2006 will air for a second run on WETA
PBS in Washington DC, Sunday, August 5. Director Andrew Goldberg will
be in the studio live to discuss the documentary.

The Armenian Genocide is the story of the first Genocide of the
20th century – when over a million Armenians died at the hands of
the Ottoman Turks during World War I. This unprecedented and powerful
one-hour documentary, scheduled to air April 17th on PBS, was written,
directed and produced by Emmy Award-winning producer Andrew Goldberg of
Two Cats Productions, in association with Oregon Public Broadcasting.

The film received extraordinary reviews and coverage in almost every
major newspaper in the US including The New York Times where it
was described as "powerful" adding that it "…honors the victims
of the Genocide." It was also covered in the Wall Street Journal,
The LA Times, The Boston Globe and countless others.

The film has sold internationally to major networks in Canada,
Australia, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Finland and other countries.

Situation With U.S. Ambassador To Armenia Underwent No Changes

SITUATION WITH U.S. AMBASSADOR TO ARMENIA UNDERWENT NO CHANGES

PanARMENIAN.Net
01.08.2007 16:12 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The situation with the appointment of U.S. Ambassador
to Armenia underwent no changes, said Rudolf Perina, the U.S. Charge
d’Affairs in Armenia. The White House insists on Richard Hoagland’s
designation. It’s the Senate’s turn, according to him.

Mr Perina reminded that his stay in Armenia will last until the
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary assumes the office in
Yerevan, IA Regnum reports.

September 7, 2006 Senator Robert Menendez blocked Hoagland’s
candidacy in the Senate. December 1 the New Jersey legislator joined
with Majority Leader Harry Reid in calling on the Administration to
offer a new candidacy for this post. The negative attitude towards
Richard Hoagland’s nomination is connected with his outright denial
of the Armenian Genocide in response to questions posed during and
after his June 2006 confirmation hearing before the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee. Former U.S. Ambassador to Yerevan John Evans
was forced into early retirement last year, after he used the term
Armenian Genocide to describe the mass murders of Armenians in Turkey.

ANKARA: Museums Abound In Anatolia

MUSEUMS ABOUND IN ANATOLIA

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Aug 2 2007

With archaeological excavations constantly unearthing new discoveries
across Turkey, Anatolia’s museums are filling up with exciting new
discoveries.

Mevlana Museum

The graves of seven gladiators, including Achilles, are on display at
the Muðla Museum in the Yataðan district of the city. Museum Director
Þevki Bardakcý says there are 8,000 works from different periods at the
museum. "Gladiator graves, photos of 8,000-year-old stone portraits and
5-million-year-old fossils attract the most attention," he said. The
gladiator graves are on display in a special 60-square-meter hall. The
walls are decorated with giant images portraying wars from that
period, giving visitors a better sense of life of the period. One of
the gladiator graves belongs to Achilles.

"We learn from Greek writings that Achilles was immortalized as a
half god, half hero. Achilles dates back 2,000 years," Bardakcý said.

Noting that works from the Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine and modern
periods are on display at the museum, Bardakcý said: "There are
rhino, giraffe and elephant fossils that go from recent times back
5 million years. As a result of our efforts, there has been an 80
percent increase in visitors to the museum."

Photos of 8,000-year-old paintings from the Paleolithic period,
which were found by German archaeologist Aneliese Peschlow during
excavation in the ruins of Latmos in the ancient city of Herakli in
Milas, are also on display at the museum.

Museums in Antalya: The Antalya museum has some of Turkey’s richest
natural and historical works on display. The museum was established
by a teacher named Suleyman Fikri Erten. The museum first operated
in the Alaeddin Mosque in 1922, then moved to the Yivli mosque from
1937 and the moved to its present building in 1947. Winning the
Europe Council Special Award in 1988, items currently on display in
the Antalya museum were obtained during excavations in the region by
local and foreign archaeologists. The museum has 13 exhibition halls,
titled natural history and pre-history, ceramics, gods, mosaics, marble
icons, the Perge Theater, sarcophagi, underground, small artifacts,
icons and coins.

Museum Director Selahattin Eyup Aksu told the Anatolia news agency
the museum contain 53,000 works and is among Europe’s top 10 museums.

The hall of sarcophagi, which is a new addition in the museum,
contains a Dionsysiak sarcophagus from A.D. 2. A sarcophagus with an
image of a man and woman was found in Perge during excavations headed
by Professor Haluk Abbasoðlu.

Alanya Museum: The museum opened in 1967 as part of efforts to protect
and exhibit archaeological and ethnographical works. When the museum
first opened no artifacts were found in excavations in the region,
so old Bronze Age, Urartu, Frig and Lidya artifacts from the Ankara
Anatolian Civilizations Museums were transferred to the Alanya museum
for display. There are cooked earth, marble, bronze, glass and mosaic
findings from the Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantium period as well as
coins, bronze sculptures, mosaics and ethnographical works from 700
B.C. to the period of the Turkish Republic.

A 52-centimeter Hercules sculpture from 200 B.C. is on display in a
special room in the museum. The sculpture was found in Asartepe near
the Camlýca village of Alanya in 1967. According to myth, Hercules,
the icon of power and strength, killed the monstrous Nema Lion and
used its fur for armor. The sculpture depicts Hercules holding the
lion’s fur in one hand and a weapon in the other.

Museums in Konya: After the death of Sufi theologian and poet Mevlana
on Dec. 17, 1273, a mausoleum was built over his grave. The mausoleum
began to function as a museum in 1926. Many local and foreign tourists
visit this museum. The courtyard of the museum is entered from the
"Derviþan Kapýsý" (Gate of the Dervishes). There are dervish cells
along the north and west sides of the courtyard. The south side,
after Matbah and Hurrem Pasha Mausoleums, terminates with the gate
of Hamuþan (Sealed Lips), which opens to Ucler cemetrey. On the
eastern side of the courtyard there are mausoleums of Sinan Pasha,
Fatma Hatun and Hasan Pasha, the Samahane (Ritual Prayer Hall) next
to them and the small mosque (mesjidt) section. In the main building,
there is a total of 65 graves belonging to Mevlana’s family members.

Under the Green dome is the tomb of Mevlana and his son Sultan Veled.

The hall of the mausoleum is entered from a silver door, which was
donated in 1599 by Hasan Pasha, who is the son of Sokollu Mehmet
Pasha. Here, the oldest copies of the famous works of Mevlana, the
"Mesnevi" and "Divan-ý Kebir," are displayed in two glass fronted
cabinets.

The Karatay Madrasa, which is an important example of art from the
Anatolian Seljuk period for its encaustic tile workmanship,was opened
to the public as the Museum of Encaustic Tile Works in 1955. The
entrance is provided from the eastern side via a door made of sky and
white marble. The door is a masterpiece of Seljuk stone workmanship.

Other items on display are Kubad-Abad Palace encaustic tiles, plaster
ornaments, encaustic tile plates, candles, non-glazed ceramics,
encaustic tile ruins belonging to the Seljuk period and ceramics
belonging to the Seljuk and Ottoman period. In the domed hall,
visitors will find ceiling centres of Beyþehir Eþrefoðlu Mosque and
ceramics belonging to the Ottoman period.

The Sýrcalý Madrasa was constructed during the of Gýyaseddin Keyhusrev
II with cut and rubble stones. It was taken under repair and opened
to the public as the Grave Monuments Museum. Grave stones belonging
to Seljuk, Karamanoðlu and Ottoman periods that were collected from
the cemetreies, most of which have been lost to time, are exhbited
in the museum.

Among the exhibited works at the Konya Ethnography Museum there are
embroideries, sacks of various sizes and types, ornamented bundles,
hand towels, drawstrings, hand-painted cloth samples, samples from
recent periods of Turkish clothing, wedding clothes, short jackets,
robes, underwear, women’s ornamental goods, belt buckles, bracelets,
fez hangers, cap samples, coffee cups and envelopes, coffee boxes,
coffee pans, coffee mills and coffee set samples.

The Ince Minarat was constructed in the reign of Seljuk Sultan Izzeddin
Keykavuz II in 1264, and after various repairs that were started in
1936, it was opened to the public as the Stone and Wooden Works Museum.

In the museum, some exhibitions include construction and repair
inscriptions carved on stone and marble belonging to the Seljuk
and Karamanoðlu periods, high reliefs belonging to the Konya Fort,
door and window wings ornamented with geometric and plant motifs made
with carving technique on various wooden materials, samples of wooden
ceiling centers and marble tombstones.

The most beautiful samples of the double-headed eagle, which was the
symbol of the Seljuks whose capital city was Konya, and winged angel
figures are exhibited in this museum.

Museums in the East display region’s rich cultural assets: In museums
in Erzurum and Kars, located in the historically rich eastern Anatolia,
there are thousands of works from different cultures on exhibit. The
Erzurum Fort, the ancient ruins in Kars, and the genocide monument
in Iðdýr are among the most important historical assets in the region.

Erzurum Museum Director Mustafa Erkmen said the Erzurum Archeology
Museum, the Yakutiye Turkish Islamic Works Museums, Ataturk’s House
and the Erzurum fort are among the most popular tourist sites in the
region. The most important assets in the archeology museum are the
5,000-year-old works from Karaz culture and works from trans-Caucasian
culture and the Urartu period.

In the Yakutiye Turkish Islamic Works Museum, there are over 750
items on display. The museum stands inside a madrasa built in 1310
during the Ilhanli period. There are Ottoman costumes, jewelry,
hand-writings and inscriptions on display.

The Armenian Massacre Section: There is also a section on ruins
found during excavations in areas of genocide against the Turks by
the Armenians. "We have on display works obtained in excavations
conducted in front of the world. These findings are important in
proving that some misleading claims [of genocide] are groundless. In
this section, there are three different exhibitions of ruins found in
six or seven excavations," Museum Director Erkmen said. Referring to
the Erzurum Fort, Erkmen said the watch tower, the mosque, madrasa,
and tomb from the Celtic period have been preserved.

Kars Fort: The museum in Kars, an entry point into Anatolia from the
Caucuses, first opened to the public in 1981. There are works from the
Paleolithic period, stone axes, digging and cutting tools, a fossil of
a dinosaur’s ankle from 2 million years ago, cooked earth works from
the old Bronze Age, two bronze Urartu swords, a bronze war belt and
bronze bracelets found in the Sarýkamýþ Micingirl village on display.

Ocaklý village and the Ani Oren region: Ani Oren sits above a plateau
on the Arpacay nehri along Turkey’s border with Armenia. There are 10
churches, one bridge, three structural ruins and many building ruins
in the Ani Oren region. The remains of a castle, caravan palace,
two mosques and two Turkish baths built by Seljuk Sultan Alparslan
after he conquered the region in 1064 have been preserved in Ani for
tourists to view.

Þanlýurfa Museum: Turkey’s largest collection of historical artifacts
are in the Þanlýurfa museum.

In the archaeology hall, there are flint stones from the early and
middle Paleolithic periods, flint stones for piercing, stone idols
and cups, cup pieces decorated with different animal figures and
amphorae pieces marked with seals from the Neolithic period on display.

In the museum’s ethnographic section, visitors will be able to
see traditional costumes of the Þanlýurfa region, silver and bronze
jewelry, wooden doors, window frames with inscriptions carved on them,
calligraphic art and handwritten copies of the Koran.

Balýklýgol Sculpture: Þanlýurfa Museum Director Nurten Aydemir said
the museum opened to the public in 1969 and has 74,000 works on
display. The museum has four exhibition halls and many works. Most
works are stored in warehouses because the museum does not have enough
space to exhibit the vast collection, Aydemir said. All works were
retrieved during excavations in the city. One of the most important
works is the Balýklýgol Sculpture, which was obtained 13 years
ago during excavations by the Þanlýurfa Municipality Science Works
teams. Noting the sculpture belongs to the Neolithic Age, Aydemir
said the most important quality of the sculpture is that it is one
of the world’s oldest human-sized sculpture. It is 1.92 meters tall
and the eyes are original obsidian.

Museum in eastern Black Sea: There is a vast collection of
archaeological and ethnographical works in museums in Trabzon, Giresun
and Rize. Trabzon Regional Culture and Tourism Director Mehmet Oncel
Koc said there are stone, cooked earth, metal and glass works as well
as coins and icons from different periods between the Bronze Age to
the Ottoman Empire on display in the archaeological section.

The Ayasofya Museum in Trabzon is one of the most important historical
and tourist sites in the region. There are gravestones from the
Byzantium and Ottoman period on display in the courtyard.

The Trabzon Ayasofya Church was built by Byzantine Emperor Manual
Kommenos I and changed into a mosque by Fatih Sultan Mehmet after he
conquered Trabzon in 1461.

Giresun Museum: Giresun Museum Vice Director Hulusi Gulec notes that
the building was a church in the 18th century and served as church
until 1924. It remained empty for several years before it was used
as a prison between 1948 and 1968. In 1982 the Ministry of Culture
restored the church and opened it as a museum. Gulec said visitors
are from outside the city and many foreign tourists are from Greece
and Europe. " The reason Greek tourists are interested in this museum
is because their ancestors lived here in the past. Until 1924, Turks
and Greeks lived together in the region. Now people, whom we can call
the grandchildren of the Greeks, are visiting the museum. They come
to learn about the place their ancestors lived," Gulec said.

–Boundary_(ID_GmLPtCx5GVcuf7/1T5TrHw)–

Serge Sargsyan’s Weapon Is His Confidence

SERGE SARGSYAN’S WEAPON IS HIS CONFIDENCE
Hakob Badalyan

Lragir, Armenia
Aug 1 2007

An interesting situation has occurred in Armenia. Everyone or almost
everyone is waiting for the upcoming presidential election but at the
same time everyone or almost everyone is sure that Serge Sargsyan
will win the election. The opinions about the ways of winning the
victory are certainly different. Some people think Serge Sargsyan
will win through electoral fraud, even though it will be improved
to perfection. Others think Serge Sargsyan will win thanks to the
indifference of the society and inability of the opposition. Yet
others think the society will vote for Serge Sargsyan on seeing how
caringly he treats the citizens as a prime minister.

Perhaps the only person who is not so confident of Serge Sargsyan’s
victory is Serge Sargsyan himself. If he were convinced, no doubt
he would not try to appear as a public figure who often meets with
different groups of the public freely, discusses their problems
with them, promises to solve their problems. When one follows these
meetings, it is impossible not to notice that these meetings make
Serge Sargsyan feel uneasy. The figure who implemented his part of
government in the shadow for so many years and never was a public
figure now has to go on the stage. And the only reason is that he is
not quite confident of his victory.

In addition, not only he is unconfident but he also thinks that
this election will not be possible to make through the "traditional"
methods used in all the previous elections. And if the "traditional"
methods were reliable, the prime minister would not try to resist
to his psychological state and would not have to transform a shadow
manager into a public leader. For these psychological torment affects
the physical health of a person too. In the long run, the meetings
with the society do not have a major effect on the efficiency of Serge
Sargsyan the prime minister. Maybe he would work with equal efficiency
if he had fewer meetings with citizens. However, the upcoming election
requires being closer to the society, which allows supposing that the
prime minister nevertheless acknowledges that the importance of the
society in the presidential election will certainly be greater than
it was in the parliamentary election.

The problem is, however, that no one else besides Serge Sargsyan
acknowledges this reality. Not only they do not acknowledge but also
they are sure that the society will not determine anything, and there
will be no need because everything has been decided. For instance,
what is the quest for the common candidate of the opposition? It
means the opposition is already looking for justification of their
defeat because in the end they can say that someone from among the
united was a provocateur and thwarted the plan. Certainly, with the
common candidate the opposition stands a bigger chance to win but
when the opposition states either a common candidate or an imminent
defeat, it thereby displays its narrow political mind and inability
for anything else.

In this situation when Serge Sargsyan’s political opponents are
thinking about justification of their defeat rather than the mechanisms
of victory, perhaps the prime minister need not think about winning
over the society possibly fast and possibly more. Even there is no
need to think up new slogans for the election campaign.

One is enough with the portrait of Serge Sargsyan: "My Weapon is
My Confidence!"

Ceremony Of Handing Over Diplomas And Initial Officer Ranks To The A

CEREMONY OF HANDING OVER DIPLOMAS AND INITIAL OFFICER RANKS TO THE ALUMNI OF THE INSTITUTE TAKES PLACE AT THE MILITARY-AVIATION INSTITUTE

arminfo
2007-07-31 16:57:00

The ceremony of handing over diplomas and initial officer ranks
to the alumni of the institute took place at the Military-Aviation
Institute after Marshal Khamperyants on Tuesday. Head of the General
Headquarters of RA Armed Forces, General-Colonel Seyran Ohanyan, who
was present at the event, congratulated the alumni on the memorable
day. "The fact that our Army, being formulated during the years of
Artsakh war, continues to be replenished by the alumni of our national
military institutions, makes us proud", S. Ohanyan noted.

After a small parade a ballot was held for the alumni’s assignment.

Azerbaijan Hopes For Quicker Karabakh Settlement – Azimov

AZERBAIJAN HOPES FOR QUICKER KARABAKH SETTLEMENT – AZIMOV

Interfax, Russia
July 30 2007

BAKU. July 30 (Interfax) – Azerbaijan hopes for a quicker settlement
of the Karabakh conflict, Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov said
on Monday. "If the current situation persists, neither side will
benefit from it," he said. "We can only hope that the intermediaries
take serious and resolute attempts and continue the drafting of an
agreement which will lay down the settlement principles suggested
over the past three years," he said. "The Armenian president asked
for a timeout in St. Petersburg. He was given enough time. Probably,
the Armenian administration will analyze national interests correctly
and make positive changes in its position," Azimov said. First and
foremost, it is necessary to create conditions for the safe coexistence
of Azeri and Armenian communities in Karabakh, he said.

Demoyan: Armenian Genocide Resolution will pass if put on vote today

Hayk Demoyan: The Armenian Genocide Resolution will pass if put on vote
today

armradio.am
28.07.2007 15:15

If the Armenian Genocide Resolution is put on vote today, it will be
certainly adopted, Director of the Genocide Museum-Institute, historian
Hayk Demoyan said in an interview with Armenpress. According to the
historian, the initial provisions of the international relations are
important for the passage of the resolution. `The adoption of the
resolution cannot be an urgent issue for the US Congress after the
parliamentary elections in Turkey, since both Turkey and Washington
need time,’ Hayk Demoyan said, adding that although Europe anticipates
continuation of reforms by the leader of the winning `Justice and
Development’ Party, there will not be sharp changes in the approach to
the Armenian issue in the coming 1-2 years. According to the historian,
`abrupt progress in the Karabakh issue can lead to changes in the
Armenian Issue. `Nevertheless, as a historian I don’t see reasons or
optimism,’ Hayk Demoyan concluded.

Let us remind that introduced on January 30th by Rep. Adam Schiff along
with Representative George Radanovich (R-CA), Congressional Armenian
Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Joe Knollenberg (R-MI), Rep.
Anna Eshoo (D-CA), Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA) and Rep. Thaddeus McCotter
(R-MI), the Armenian Genocide resolution calls upon the President to
ensure that the foreign policy of the United States reflects
appropriate understanding and sensitivity concerning issues related to
human rights, ethnic cleansing, and genocide documented in the United
States record relating to the Armenian Genocide. A similar resolution
in the Senate (S.Res.106), introduced by Assistant Majority Leader Dick
Durbin (D-IL) and Sen. John Ensign (R-NV) currently has 31 cosponsors,
including Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and presidential
candidate Hillary Clinton (D-NY).