Damascus: Syrian and Armenian Officials Hold Talks

SANA – Syrian Arab News Agency, Syria
Jan 28 2007

Syrian and Armenian Officials Hold Talks

Sunday, January 28, 2007 – 05:05 PM

DAMASCUS, (SANA)-A discussion session was held on Sunday between
Syrian delegation headed by Assistant Foreign Minister Ahmad Arnous
and Armenian delegation headed by Armenian Deputy Foreign Minister
Gegham Gharibjanian.

Talks dealt with situation in Iraq and Palestine in addition to the
necessity of seeking to realize just and comprehensive peace in the
region in line with the relevant United Nations resolutions, Madrid
terms of reference, principle of land for peace and the Arab
initiative.

Talks dealt with situation in Iraq and Palestine in addition to the
necessity of seeking to realize just and comprehensive peace in the
region in line with the relevant United Nations resolutions, Madrid
terms of reference, principle of land for peace and the Arab
initiative.

both sides discussed bilateral relations between the two countries
and means of developing and boosting them in all domains.

Both sides discussed bilateral relations between the two countries
and means of developing and boosting them in all domains.

Thawra- Ghossoun

BAKU: Armenian journalist’s killing ordered by Chechen-trained man

AssA-Irada, Azerbaijan
January 22, 2007 Monday

ARMENIAN JOURNALISTS KILLING ORDERED BY CHECHEN-TRAINED MAN – REPORT

The individual who ordered the murder of the editor-in-chief of
Istanbul-based Armenian-speaking Agos newspaper had been trained at a
Chechen camp in Azerbaijan, The International Herald Tribune
newspaper has claimed. A story, entitled More suspects in Hrant Dinks
murder case maintained that Yasin Hayal, who had earlier served a
year-long sentence over the 2004 explosion at a McDonalds restaurant
in Trabzon, learnt to make bombs at a Chechen training camp in
Azerbaijan.

Turkish TV channels have issued reports suggesting that Hayal had
indeed gone to Chechnya to fight and was then detained in Azerbaijan
and extradited to Turkey. The Azerbaijan National Security Ministry
spokesman Arif Babayev dismissed the reports as groundless. I am very
disappointed that such an influential newspaper has published the
erroneous report. Allegations that there are Chechen training camps
in Azerbaijan have been made before, but none of them have been
confirmed, Babayev said. He did not rule out that Azerbaijans
long-time foes Armenians had a hand in publishing the outrageous
story. Hrant Dink was gunned down by unidentified individuals on
Friday while he was leaving the editorial office. On Sunday, the
17-year-old Ogun Samast believed to have committed the crime was
arrested. Samast testified that his close friend Yasin Hayal, 26, who
was a member of the clandestine Nizami-Alem religious organization,
ordered the killing and provided him with the needed weapon. After
the testimony, Turkish police arrested Hayal and ten more persons on
suspicion of involvement in the crime.

Armenian Catholics in Iraq get new archbishop after 5-year vacancy

Catholic News Service
Jan 26 2007

Armenian Catholics in Iraq get new archbishop after five-year vacancy

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — For the first time in more than five years, the
tiny Armenian Catholic community in Iraq has its own archbishop.

The Vatican announced Jan. 26 that Pope Benedict XVI had given his
assent to the Armenian Catholic bishops’ election of Father Emmanuel
Dabbaghian, 73, as the Armenian Catholic archbishop of Baghdad.

The post had been vacant since the October 2001 retirement of
Archbishop Paul Coussa at the age of 84.

The Armenian Catholic Archdiocese of Baghdad covers all of Iraq, and
since 2001 Vatican statistics have given the Armenian Catholic
population of the country as 2,000 faithful.

But Deacon Michel Jeangey, head of the Armenian program at Vatican
Radio, told Catholic News Service Jan. 26 that "probably more than
half" the Armenian Catholics have moved, at least temporarily, to
Armenia or Syria.

"They will return if there is peace," he said.

Still, Deacon Jeangey said, one Armenian Catholic priest and a group
of Armenian Catholic nuns continue ministering at the church’s
parishes in Baghdad, Mosul and Kirkuk as well as running a social
center and two schools in Baghdad.

Archbishop-elect Dabbaghian was born Dec. 26, 1933, in Aleppo, Syria.
After studying philosophy and theology at Rome’s Pontifical Gregorian
University, he was ordained to the priesthood in 1967.

He has served as director of an orphanage in Lebanon, as a seminary
rector and as pastor of Armenian parishes in Lebanon and in Georgia.

At the time of his election, he was pastor of the Armenian Catholic
parish in Tbilisi, Georgia, and director of the seminary there.

Gazprom Oil confirmed considering oil processing factory in Armenia

Mediamax, Armenia
Jan 26 2007

`Gazprom Oil’ confirmed that it is considering the possibility of
constructing an oil processing factory in Armenia

Yerevan, January 26 /Mediamax/. The `Gazprom Oil’ Company confirmed
that it is considering the possibility of constructing an
oil-processing factory (OPF) in Armenia.

As the Russian `Kommersant’ newspaper writes today, here they mean a
factory on the border with Iran, which would have the might to
process up to 7mln tons of oil per year.

The construction cost of the OPF is estimated to make minimum $1,7bln
without taking into consideration the transport infrastructure, which
will make about $1mln.

According to the data of the newspaper, the Armenian side primarily
proposed Russia to build a factory with the might to process 3-4mln
tons.

`However, Moscow made a counteroffer, increasing the might of OPF
almost twice. The oil demand of Armenia itself does not exceed 250
thousand tons per year. Why it is needed is easy to understand from
the location of the future factory – it was proposed to be built on
the Armenian-Iranian border, in the region of Meghri. The oil will be
arriving to the factory from Iran, for which it will be necessary to
build a 200 km pipeline from the Iranian Tebriz, where there is
already an OPF, up to the border with Armenia. The transportation of
the oil back to Iran is proposed to realize by railroad, which also
does not exist’, the newspaper writes.

`Experts consider the given project meaningless from the economic
point of view, explaining the interest for the project by political
motives. Indeed, an OPF in Armenia is a political project, the
potential participants of which count on receiving first of all
political dividends’, `Kommersant’ writes.

Massis Weekly Online – VOLUME 26, NO. 51 (1301)

Massis Weekly Online
MassisWeekly.com
VOLUME 26, NO. 51 (1301)
SATURDAY, JANUARY 27, 2007

– Tens of Thousands Attend Dink Funeral In Istanbul
– Thousands Of Armenians Mourn Hrant Dink in Yerevan
– SDHP Sarkis Dkhrouni Union Protest March
– Southern Californian Armenian Community Mourns Hrant Dink
– Hrant Dink?s Final Article
– Elegy For An Armenian
– Armenia:College Bribery Rife

——

– Tens of Thousands Attend Dink Funeral In Istanbul

Some 100,000 people thronged the streets of Istanbul on Tuesday to take part
in the funeral of outspoken Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink whose
assassination sparked an uproar in Turkey and around the world.

Dink?s body was laid to rest at a local Armenian cemetery at the end of a
huge funeral procession that stretched for several kilometers and shut down
much of central Istanbul.

The procession, broadcast live by Turkish television and retransmitted by
Armenia?s state-run First Channel, began outside the offices of Dink?s
?Agos? weekly newspaper, the scene of Friday?s deadly shooting that shocked
many Turks and Armenians.

The crowd greeted a hearse carrying the editor?s coffin, decorated with
flowers, with rapturous applause. Some people also chanted ?Murderous state
must be held accountable!? and ?Shoulder to shoulder against fascism!?

Dink?s widow Rakel, surrounded by her three children, delivered an emotional
speech to the crowd. ?Seventeen or 27, whoever he was, the murderer was once
a baby,? she said, referring to a teenage man who has confessed to killing
her prominent husband.

?Unless we can question how this baby grew into a murderer, we cannot
achieve anything.? The mourners then marched behind the coffin to the
Armenian cathedral where a religious service was held before the burial.

Many of them carried black-and-white placards reading, ?We are all Hrant
Dinks? and ?We are all Armenians,? in Turkish and Armenian.

Patriarch Mesrob II Moutafian, the spiritual leader of Turkey?s
60,000-strong Armenian community, presided over the service attended by
Deputy Prime Minister Mehmet Ali Sahin, Interior Minister Abdulkadir Aksu
and other senior Turkish officials. Armenia, which the Turkish government
invited to the ceremony, was represented by Deputy Foreign Minister Arman
Kirakosian. He delivered a letter
of condolences and a wreath sent by Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian to the
Dink family.

In a speech read out in Armenian and Turkish, Patriarch Moutafian thanked
the Turkish authorities for promptly arresting the presumed perpetrator of
the killing and for ?standing by the grieving family of the deceased and our
community at this difficult moment.? ?But this is not enough. The real
masterminds of the crime must also be identified,? he said, indicating his
belief that the 17-year-old suspect, Ogun Samast, could not have acted on
his own. Patriarch Moutafian also stressed that individuals like Dink, who
openly question official Ankara?s vehement denial of the 1915 Armenian
genocide, should not only be spared death but also ?not be tried and
imprisoned.? It was a clear reference to a six-month suspended prison
sentence handed to Dink under a highly controversial Turkish law dealing
with ?insults to Turkishness.? Turkey is under growing international
pressure to scrap the clause.

?It is our expectation that our state and the Turkish people will not forget
that we Armenians have lived in these lands for thousands of years and are
now citizens of the Turkish Republic, and that they will not regard us as
aliens and potential enemies,? continued the Armenian patriarch. ?We also
hope that efforts, starting from textbooks and schools, will be made to
eliminate notions portraying us as enemies.?

Turkish authorities took tight security measures for the massive outpouring
of grief, deploying hundreds of police along the eight-kilometer route from
the ?Agos? office to the Armenian church of Virgin Mary. Snipers could be
seen positioned on the rooftops of nearby buildings and a police helicopter
roared overhead during the funeral procession.

– Hrant Dink Assasinated
Hrant Dink was shot dead outside his newspaper office in Istanbul on Friday.

Dink, a frequent target of nationalist anger for his comments on the mass
killings of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War One, was shot as he
left his weekly ?Agos? around 1300 GMT in central Istanbul.

Dink was shot three times in the head and neck. Muharrem Gozutok, a
restaurant owner near the newspaper, said the assailant looked about 20,
wore jeans and a cap and shouted ?I shot the non-Muslim? as he left the
scene. Protesters outside the ?Agos? office on one of Istanbul?s busiest
streets chanted ?the murderer government will pay? and ?shoulder-to-shoulder
against fascism?. Television footage showed Dink?s body lying in the street
covered by a white sheet, with hundreds of bystanders gathering behind a
police cordon. ?This bullet was fired against Turkey … an image has been
created about Turkey that its Armenian citizens have no safety,? said CNN
Turk editor Taha Akyol.

The attack provoked widespread international condemnation, with the European
Union urging Turkish authorities to fully investigate the ?brutal act of
violence.? Dink was ?a campaigner for freedom of expression in Turkey,? EU
Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn said in a statement. ?I trust that the
Turkish authorities will fully investigate this crime and will bring the
perpetrators to justice,? Rehn stressed.

The United States was also quick to express concern. ?Clearly this is a
tragic incident,? State Department deputy spokesman Tom Casey told
reporters. Casey said that while he has no information on who was
responsible and Turkish authorities are still investigating the shooting,
Dink?s slaying ?does raise some concerns? for the United States. ?This was
an individual who had received threats for his writing,? he said.

In Yerevan Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian said Armenia, which Dink visited
regularly, is ?deeply shocked? by the news. ?We categorically condemn this
act, regardless of the circumstances, and call on the Turkish authorities
indeed to do everything to identify those responsible,? Oskanian said in a
statement.

?A bullet has been fired at democracy and freedom of expression. I condemn
the traitorous hands behind this disgraceful murder,? Prime Minister Tayyip
Erdogan said. ?This was an attack on our peace and stability.? Erdogan told
a hastily called news conference in Ankara that two people were detained in
connection with the murder.

The attack is bound to raise political tensions in would-be EU member
Turkey, where politicians of all parties have been courting the nationalist
vote ahead of presidential elections in May and parliamentary polls due by
November.

Turkey?s main stock market index fell sharply on the news.

– Murder Suspect Arrested
Turkish prosecutors say the teenager suspected of murdering Turkish-Armenian
journalist Hrant Dink has confessed. Ogun Samast was arrested after he was
identified by his father from CCTV images taken near the scene of Friday?s
killing in Istanbul.

Prosecutors say he confessed after being detained in the Black Sea port of
Samsun, before he was returned to Istanbul for further questioning. Istanbul
governor Muammer Guler announced the details of the capture in a live
television broadcast late on Saturday.

He said police captured Ogun Samast, aged 16 or 17, late on Saturday on a
bus in Samsun still carrying the gun allegedly used in the murder. He was
apparently returning to his hometown of Trabzon from Istanbul.

Six other suspects were picked up in Trabzon and four have been returned to
Istanbul.

One was named as Yasin Hayal, a friend of Ogun Samast, who has spent 11
months in jail for a 2004 bomb attack outside a McDonald?s restaurant in
Trabzon.

Ogun Samast was identified by his own father when he saw television images
taken by a security camera near the scene of the murder. Turkish television
showed images of a young man apparently
running from the scene, tucking what officials said was a gun into his belt.

– Thousands Of Armenians Mourn Hrant Dink in Yerevan

Thousands of people took to the streets of Yerevan to pay homage to the
slain Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink on Wednesday. A large crowd of
mourners marched through the city center to the hilltop memorial of the
Armenian Genocide. Some of them carried Dink?s pictures and banners holding
the Turkish authorities responsible for his shock assassination.

The choice of the final point of the demonstration, organized by the
Armenian Writers? Union and the Yerevan municipality, was meant as a tribute
to Dink?s public calls for Turkish recognition of the Armenian genocide
which are believed to have cost him life. ?We want the world to know that
the genocide is continuing,? said one woman.

?I hope that Hrant Dink was the last victim of the genocide,? said another
protester, a 14-year-old boy.

– SDHP Sarkis Dkhrouni Union Protest March

Large crowds attended a protest in Yerevan on January 23 decrying the murder
of prominent Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in Turkey. The protest was held
by the Social Democratic Hnchakian party?s Sarkis Dkhrouni student
association and The Yerevan State University Student Council.

The organizers of the protest pointed out that it is not of principal
importance who the murderers are, however, the murder is the result of a
continued policy of denial toward the Armenian Genocide and establishment of
a falsified history by the Turkish Government. ?The predominate feeling of
hatred toward Armenians in Turkey and the unwillingness of the Turkish
government to recognize the crimes that were committed against the Armenians
in 1915 is the cause of this murder? said Sahak Manukyan the chairman of the
Sarkis Dkhrouni youth organization. ?The Turkish regime is above all
responsible of Mr. Dink?s murder.?

?How can a nation that murders one of the very few journalists who was not
afraid to openly speak about the Armenian Genocide call itself Democratic
and join the European Union?? added Manukyan ?We urge the European Union to
reject dialogue of Turkish membership until Turkey acknowledges the
appalling actions of its ancestors, acts to rectify those actions and truly
establishes democratic principles.?

The protesters also presented a letter of condemnation to European Union
officials in Armenia.

– Southern Californian Armenian Community Mourns Hrant Dink

The news of the assassination of Hrant Dink, prominent Turkish Armenian
intellectual and editor in chief of the Agos newspaper in Turkey pulsated
throughout the world and shook the Southern California Armenian community
prompting hundreds of thousands to mourn the loss and remember the man who
has been hailed by many as a martyr of free speech.

The Western Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church held a special vigil
Friday at the Diocesan headquarters in Burbank with over 300 hundred
mourners present. A brief video presentation of Dink?s recent visit to the
Diocese on November 5 was shown to the audience made up of community
activists, leaders and members. In the video Dink proclaimed that just like
any other human he was at times scared of the reaction his position on the
Armenian Genocide would bring about in Turkey.

Following the vigil at the Diocesan headquarters, the Armenian American
community held a candlelight vigil in memory of Hrant Dink in front of the
Turkish Consulate in Los Angeles. The event which was organized by the
Armenian Assembly of America, Armenian Council of America and the Social
Democrat Hunchakian ?Gaidz? Youth Organization brought together Armenian
Americans of all age groups and political affiliations from throughout the
southland.

The organizers voiced their dismay towards the brutal murder of an
exceptional human being, civil rights advocate and the rising leader of
marginalized Armenians in Turkey. ?Hrant Dink?s voice was silenced by
assassinating him, but the truth that he represented has become amplified
and each of us has the duty to be ambassadors of this truth, said Narine
Zardarian, Community Relations Director of the Armenian Assembly. ?We are
here today, to embrace that responsibility and to acknowledge that this is
not just an Armenian issue, but a human rights cause!?

Chris Garsevanian chairman of the SDHP ?Gaidz? youth organization added: ?We
must continue pressing the Armenian Cause internationally. Turkey must come
to grips with its past and must change its tone towards its minorities,
Armenians and Armenia. A crime was committed in 1915
and now in 2007. The cause of both crimes are the same, thus Turkey must not
only prosecute the assassin of Hrant Dink, but must prosecute its own
history.?

– Joint Commemorative Event
Over 800 community members gathered at the St. Mary?s Apostolic Church hall
in Glendale Sunday evening to express their united condemnation of Dink?s
slaying.

The gathering was jointly organized by the Western Executive Committees of
the Social Democratic Hunchakian party, the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation, Armenian Democratic League (Ramgavar party), Western Diocese and
Prelacy, the Organization of Istanbul Armenians, Armenian Society of Los
Angeles (Iranahye Miutiun) and the Organization of Iraqi Armenians.

Dink?s biography and career as a pioneer journalist was discussed by Simon
Acilacoghlu of the Organization of Istanbul Armenians. Following the
presentation representatives of the three major political parties expressed
their condolences and condemned the killing as an act against all Armenians,
and that such a crime will not deter Armenians from further pursuing the
Armenian Cause. ?We can unequivocally state that the Turkish government has
full responsibility toward the assassination, regardless of the motives of
the assassin and the forces behind it. When a country systematically
discriminates against its minorities, stifles freedom of speech and incites
hatred against
Armenians it creates an atmosphere of hatred and intolerance which
encourages extremists and chauvinists to act with impunity.? Said Dr. Hampik
Sarafian, member of the Western Executive Committee of the Social Democratic
Hunchakian party. ?If the Assassin?s intention was to silence justice and
truth with bullets then he was gravely mistaken. Witness the thousands of
people around the lifeless body of Hrant Dink chanting ?we are all
Armenians, we are all Hrant Dink.??

– Joint Declaration On Hrant Dink’s Murder

Noted Armenian intellectual and editor of the Agos newspaper, on Friday,
January 19, fell victim to the vicious bullet of a Turk, creating widespread
anger in the Armenian world and the international community.

It is a reality that Hrant Dink was murdered because of:
Using his right to free expression and for having the conviction to speak
the truth
His unwavering position on recognition of the Armenian Genocide
His opposition to the Turkish government’s policy of discrimination against
its minorities and its ultra-nationalist posturing.

To avoid the assassination of new Hrant Dinks, we demand that:
The Turkish government end its denial of the Genocide and its policies of
discrimination The Turkish state reexamine those elements of its
constitution and laws–especially Article 301–that prevent it from being a
part of civilized society The US government end its policy of denial of the
Armenian Genocide, which fuels Turkey’s ability to continue its policies.

Finally, we hope that the academic community in Turkey will continue its
just and humane approach demonstrated in the wake of Dink’s murder, and will
serve as the basis for Dink’s ideal that Turkey completely own up to its
history and its ramifications, especially the un-refutable fact of the
Armenian Genocide.

Social Democratic Hunchakian Party
Western US Executive Committee

Armenian Revolutionary Federation
Western US Central Committee

Armenian Democratic League
Western US Regional Executive

– Hrant Dink?s Final Article

The following are extracts from the final article by Turkish-Armenian
journalist Hrant Dink, published in his newspaper Agos on 19 January, the
day he was shot dead in Istanbul.

At first when an investigation was launched against me for insulting
Turkishness I did not feel troubled. This was not the first time… I had
complete trust in what I?d written and what my intentions had been.

Once the prosecutor had the chance to evaluate the text of my editorial as a
whole, not that single sentence which made no sense by itself, he would
understand that I had no intention of ?insulting Turkishness? and this
comedy would come to an end. I was sure of myself.

But surprise! A lawsuit was filed…In covering every hearing the
newspapers, editorials and television programs all referred to how I had
said that ?the blood of the Turk is poisonous?.

Each time, they were adding to my fame as ?the enemy of the Turk?.

In the corridors of the courthouse, the fascists physically attacked me with
racist curses. They bombarded me with insults. Hundreds of threats hailed
down for months by phone, email and post increasing all the time.

I persevered through all this with patience awaiting the decision that would
acquit me. Then the truth would prevail and all those people would be
ashamed of what they had done. ?False information? My only weapon was my
sincerity.

But when the decision came out my hopes were crushed. From then on, I was in
the most distressed situation a person could possibly be in. The judge had
made a decision in the name of the ?Turkish nation? and had it legally
registered that I had ?denigrated Turkishness.? I could have coped with
anything but this.

In my understanding, the denigration of a person on the basis of any
difference – ethnic or religious ? is racism, and there was no way this
could ever be forgiven… Those who tried to single me out and weaken me
have succeeded. With the false information they oozed into society, they
created a significant segment of the population who view Hrant Dink as
someone who ?insults Turkishness?.

The memory of my computer is filled with angry, threatening lines sent by
citizens from this sector… How real are these threats? To be honest, it is
impossible for me to know for sure.

What is truly threatening and unbearable for me is the psychological torture
I place myself in. The question that really gets to me, is: ?What are these
people thinking about me??

Unfortunately I am now better known than before and I feel people looking at
me, thinking: ?Oh, look, isn?t he that Armenian guy?? I am just like a
pigeon, equally obsessed by what goes-on on my left and right, front and
back. My head is just as mobile and fast.

?Heaven and hell What did Foreign Minister Gul say? Or Justice Minister
Cicek? ?There is no need to exaggerate about Article 301 (on insulting
Turkishness). Has anyone actually been put in prison??

As if going to prison was the only way to pay the price. This is the price.

This is the price.

Do you ministers know the price of making someone as scared as a pigeon?

What my family and I have been through has not been easy. I have considered
leaving this country at times… But leaving a ?boiling hell? to run to a
?heaven? is not for me. I wanted to turn this hell into heaven. We stayed in
Turkey because that was what we wanted – and out of respect for the
thousands of people here who supported me in my fight for democracy… I am
now applying to the European
Court of Human Rights. I don?t know how long the case will take, but what I
do know is that I will continue living here in Turkey until the case is
finalized.

And if the court rules in my favor I will be very happy and will never have
to leave my country.

2007 will probably be an even harder year for me. The court cases will
continue, new ones will be initiated and God knows what kind of additional
injustices I will have to face. I may see myself as frightened as a pigeon,
but I know that in this country people do not touch pigeons.

Pigeons can live in cities, even in crowds. A little scared perhaps, but
free.

– Elegy For An Armenian
A Tribute To Hrant Dink
By: Adam Garrie, UCLA

The questions with answers that dare not speak,
A life dedicated to all who seek,
To lift the veil from tired eyes,
Craving justice?s shelter from both truth and lies.

The adopted children of a wandering world,
Where dreams are written but scarcely heard,
A warrior armed but with a pen,
And by the bullet met untimely end.

The stewardship of a refugee,
So perhaps a shrunken world could see,
The fields of death whose blood is dry,
When overdue tears do cease to cry.

The debt of honour without a price,
Ignorance for paradise,
The consequence of the words one speaks,
In times of bounty when men grow meek.

But undeterred by time and place,
Running marathons in a thankless race,
A progressing world on a circular track,
History is the shadow behind your back.

Modern men with medieval souls,
Could not hallow such noble goals,
The ancient streets a witness bear,
Soldiers are those who dream to dare.

Time makes legends but martyrs are made by man,
Forgiveness is for the living and those who understand,
The shadow that walks behind you?once was a child too,
Your world is always given?but your path you have to choose.

>From India?s rivers and Persia?s ancient sands,
On both sides of the Bosporus to the New World?s foreign lands,
A people live not by soil but by unspoken fact,
That no swords, empires, or bullets can from this world extract.

With mourning comes tomorrow,
And duty must fulfill,
To answer destiny?s horn call,
That bows before our will.

– Armenia:College Bribery Rife
Survey Exposes a System of Payment For Good Test and Exam Results at Some
Universities
By Karine Asatrian

A group of ten students at Armenia?s State Agrarian University laughed
loudly when asked if there was corruption in their college. ?How can they do
without it?? claimed third year student Armen. Now, the issue of alleged
bribes being given in order to receive good marks has been brought out into
the open after the results of a startling new poll, conducted by the Sargis
Tkhruni Youth Student Union, affiliated to Armenia?s Social Democratic
Hunchakian Party.

Out of 2000 students – five per cent of all the students in Armenia – 1821
said that there was corruption in their colleges, according to the survey.

Sargis Tkhruni Union has already submitted the results of the study to the
country?s education minister and asked him to take action to tackle the
problem. Education Minister Levon Mkrtchian has been non-committal so far.

?We must get an understanding of the quality of this poll,? Mkrtchian told
IWPR.

?If it?s been conducted professionally, we will send the results to colleges
and ask to have them discussed by these colleges? management boards.

?Definitely, if we are convinced that they are serious and well-founded,
and the boards have their say, it is possible that this will raise
organizational issues.? The survey appears to have exposed a system of
?fixed prices? for tests and exams at some universities. Lilit, a third-year
economics student,
said a top exam mark – a ?five?- cost 250 US dollars at her faculty, while a
?four? could be bought for 200 dollars. ?I?ve never had to pay myself, but
I?ve heard about others who did pay,? she said. ?It?s all a matter of
learned habits. If they come to expect to be paid, teachers begin demanding
it themselves. Between themselves, they know who will pay and who won?t. Out
of every 60 students, at least twenty will give a bribe.?

Students told IWPR that prices for good exam results at certain colleges
ranged between 15,000 and 50,000 drams (between 33 and 135 dollars). Anna, a
second-year student, said teachers tended not to demand a bribe openly,
confining themselves to hinting that a student should pay up.

?They tire you to death to make you pay,? she said. One student described
how palms were greased at his college, ?An assistant [lecturer] comes and
names the price. The situation is beneficial to us – we pay, if we are
unable or don?t want to study, and thus escape expulsion.?

Students agree that it is possible to resist giving bribes and that there
are honest teachers, who refuse to be bought. ?There is corruption, but if
you study well and give no bribes, no one will ask you to pay anything,?

said Ruzanna, a political science student. ?If you have knowledge and show
it, not money, to your teacher, you will pass your exams.?

A striking 93 per cent of respondents to the poll suggested that lecturers?

salaries should be increased to discourage them from taking bribes. However,
Laert Hovannisian, pro-rector of Yerevan?s State Engineering University,
said lecturers? salary were not actually so small. ?The situation has
improved, and the average salary amounts to 87,000 drams (230 dollars),? he
said. ?I wouldn?t say this is a lot, but there was a time when we dreamt of
a 100 dollar salary for lecturers.?

Hovannisian said his university was tackling corruption by having students
examined by more than one person or not by the person who was teaching them.

He argues that Armenia should move to the ?credit system? used by most
American universities where marks are accumulated in the course of the year
through course work. In 2005, Armenia joined the Bologna Process, which aims
to regularize academic standards across Europe.

It?s hoped this will lead to the overhaul of the current Soviet-era system
of marking. Most believe that change needs to be implemented from above.

Eighty seven per cent of the polled students said that there should be a
tightening of discipline in the management of higher education
establishments. Some said that the minister of education should be sacked,
others suggested exiling bribe-taking teachers to Siberia. Amalia
Kostandian, head of the Transparency International Armenian office, said
that corruption in higher education was a systemic problem.

?Corruption will persist in the country, the system will remain unhealthy
until a top-down revolution happens,? said Kostandian.

The organiser of the survey, Sahak Manukian, head of Sargis Tkhruni Union,
warns that in the meantime the culture of corruption is very deep-rooted.

?Nowadays those who pass their exams with a bribe are regarded with respect
and envy, and not with pity,? he said. ?Instead of being condemned
these students are examples for others to follow.?

Karine Asatrian is a journalist in Yerevan

[iso-8859-1] Co-Chairs’ views split

Co-Chairs’ views split

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.01.2007 18:18 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On January 25 in Stepanakert OSCE MG Russian
Co-Chair Yuri Merzlyakov said that in Nagorno Karabakh both the current
situation and the perspectives of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict have
been discussed. "We exchanged ideas and tried to come to a joint
opinion on a number of issues," said Y.

Merzlyakov. Answering the question on Kosovo settlement, the Russian
mediator underlined that "it will create a precedent, since for the
first time on the European territory the matter goes about a former
autonomous region."

Alongside, OSCE MG French and American Co-Chairs Bernard Fassier and
Matthew Bryza spoke against using the Kosovo settlement model as a
universal means.

"Every conflict has its own characteristics and difficulties, and
every conflict needs to be found its own solution," stated Matthew
Bryza, Mediamax reports.

ANKARA: Journalist’s funeral to take place on 23 January – Mesrob II

Anatolia News Agency, Turkey
Jan 20 2007

Turkey: Journalist’s funeral to take place on 23 January – Armenian
patriarch

Istanbul, 20 January: Hrant Dink, editor-in-chief of bilingual
Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos, will be laid to rest on Tuesday [23
January] in Balikli Armenian Cemetery following a funeral in Virgin
Mary Church at Kumkapi district. Mesrob II, the Patriarch of the
Armenians in Turkey, said the funeral for Hrant Dink will be staged
on 23 January at 2.00 p.m.

S. Korea: Editor of Armenian-Turkish Paper Shot Dead

OhmyNews International, South Korea
Jan 20 2007

Editor of Armenian-Turkish Paper Shot Dead
Hrant Dink’s murder a ‘shock and insult’ to nation, says Erdogan

Ludwig De Braeckeleer (ludwig)

Published 2007-01-20 07:47 (KST)

The editor of the Armenian-Turkish language weekly Agos newspaper was
shot dead as he was leaving his office building on Jan. 17.

Top Turkish officials have immediately denounced his killing and
promised that the perpetrators will be swiftly found and sentenced.

"The dark hands that killed him will be found and punished," Turkish
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in televised remarks.

His murder is "a shock and an insult to the Turkish nation… It is a
bullet fired against free speech and democracy," Erdogan said.

"I am deeply saddened by the assassination of Hrant Dink in front of
the Agos newspaper. I strongly condemn this ugly and shameful act,"
declared President Ahmet Necdet Sezer.

Hrant Dink, 53, was the leading voice of Turkey’s shrinking Armenian
community. He is best known for his writing on the genocide of the
Armenians by the Ottoman Empire in the early 20th century.
Once-populous, the Turkish Armenian community now numbers around
60,000.

Lying in front of the newspaper’s entrance, Dink’s body was covered
with a white sheet. Four empty shell casings were found on his side.

Dink was shot twice in the head by a man who appeared to be 18 or 19
years old. The teenager, wearing blue jeans, a denim jacket and a
white hat, was caught on tape by a surveillance camera of the Agos
building.

The owner of a nearby restaurant, who witnessed the assassination of
Mr. Dink, said that the killer left the scene shouting "I shot the
non-Muslim."

Erdogan said two suspects had been arrested and the police are
looking for the teenager caught on tape. He provided no details about
those held and the motivation of the killer. The French journal
Liberation claims that the two men arrested have been released.

Journalist and writer, Dink has faced a number of cases in connection
with "insulting" the Turkish identity.

"Some of the trial hearings have been marred by violent scenes inside
and outside the courtrooms, instigated by nationalist activists
calling for Dink to be punished," one can read in his profile on the
Web site of Pen American Centre, a group of writers promoting free
expression.

In 2005, Dink was charged for an article in which he alleged the
killings of hundreds of thousands of Armenians by the Ottoman army in
1915-17. In October 2005, he was given a six-month suspended
sentence.

Dink has always rejected the characterization of his work made by
Turkish nationalists. He claimed that his writing aimed at improving
the difficult relationship between Turks and Armenians. He failed to
convince the court. Last year, his appeal was rejected by a court.

Article 301 of the Turkish penal code makes negative remarks about
"Turkishness" or the Turkish state a crime. In recent years, the
Turkish Authorities have used Article 301 as a convenient tool to try
several prominent intellectuals.

The European Union considers this ambiguous provision as an
infringement on free speech.

"I am shocked and saddened by this brutal act of violence. Hrant Dink
was a respected intellectual who defended his views with conviction
and contributed to an open public debate. He was a campaigner for
freedom of expression in Turkey," said EU Enlargement Commissioner
Olli Rehn.

The murder of Dink is likely to complicate the already difficult
relation of Turkey with the European Union.

The Turkish Foreign Ministry has promptly issued an official
statement. "We strongly condemn this act. Actors will be caught in
the shortest time […] We offer condolences to the people of Turkey,
its press, and particularly to the Armenian community and Dink’s
family," the statement reads.

Last September, Dink was once more charged with violation of Article
301 and, if convicted, would have been sentenced to three years in
jail for affirming that the killing of the Armenians was a genocide.

"People have lived on these lands for four thousand years. And you
can see that they have been eliminated. Therefore I tell you it is a
genocide because it corresponds to the definition of this word," he
had written.

The Turkish government has never acknowledged the existence of an
Armenian genocide and claims that, Armenians, as well as Turks, were
killed in civil warfare during World War I. To this day, Turkey and
Armenia still have no official diplomatic relations.

A Turkish citizen of Armenian descent, Dink recently wrote that he
had received numerous threats from nationalists. "My computer hard
drive is full of death threats," he wrote in a column.

"I do not know how real these threats are, but what’s really
unbearable is the psychological torture that I’m living in. Like a
pigeon, turning my head up and down, left and right, my head quickly
rotating," he wrote.

"Like dozens of other Turkish journalists, Hrant Dink has faced
political persecution because of his work. Now it appears he’s paid
the ultimate price for it," said Joel Campagna, the Mideast program
coordinator for the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Dink had been thinking of leaving in exile. "I don’t think I could
live with an identity of having insulted the Turks in this country…
if I am unable to come up with a positive result, it will be
honourable for me to leave this country," he told the Associated
Press news agency.

"Turkey must ensure that this crime does not go unpunished like other
cases in the past and that those responsible for his murder are
brought to justice," Campagna said.

"Those who wanted to harm Turkey couldn’t have chosen a better
target. As opposed to other killings in the past, Turkish public
reaction against this murder will show us where Turkey stands in the
world," said Haluk Sahin, a columnist for Radikal, a newspaper that
supported Dink’s legal struggle.

A crowd of supporters immediately gathered at the scene of the murder
to pay their respect and chant their outrage. Many were carrying
signs claiming: "We are all Armenians."

The Agos newspaper is a bilingual Turkish and Armenian weekly founded
in 1996.

Over the last 15 years, 18 Turkish journalists have been killed,
making Turkey the eighth deadliest countries in the world for
journalists. Iraq, Russia and Colombia are the most dangerous
countries for the media workers with about 150 journalists being
killed over the last five years.

Journalists associations have promptly reacted to the murder of Dink.

"This murder will distress and disturb all those who defend the
freedom of thought and expression in Turkey and elsewhere. The
Turkish government must weigh the extreme gravity of this crime and
ensure that a thorough investigation identifies those responsible as
quickly as possible," wrote Reporters Without Borders.

"Through his journalism Hrant Dink sought to shed light on Turkey’s
troubled past and create a better future for Turks and Armenians.
This earned him many enemies, but he vowed to continue writing
despite receiving many threats. An assassin has now silenced one of
Turkey’s most courageous voices. We are profoundly shocked and
saddened by this crime, and send our deepest condolences to Hrant
Dink’s family, colleagues, and friends," said Joel Simon, the
Executive Director for the Committee to Protect Journalists.

Hrant Dink received many honors for his distinguished work among
which the 2005 Turkish Human rights organization "Ay-e Nur Zarakolu
freedom of thought and speech," the 2006 German Stern "Freedom of
thought and brave journalism," the 2007 Holland "Pen Award for idea
and thought" and the 2007 Norwegian "Bjornson Human rights award."

The Armenian Patriarch of Turkey, Mesrob Mutafyan, has declared a 15
days period of mourning for the Armenian community of Turkey.

Hrant Dink is not Dead

Archinect
Jan 20 2007

Hrant Dink is not Dead

I know, perhaps this is not a right place for this, I know many
people don’t know him, but today I am deeply saddened by the
assasination of Hrant Dink, a Turkish citizen of Armenian descent, a
large soul, a father, a husband, a fighter against the belligerent
racists and a great journalist, the publisher of Agos, Istanbul’s
only Armenian weekly.
His trained murderer, perhaps an ultra nationalist, an ugly racist, a
coward, shot him from the back. He was murdered on a sidewalk and his
killer sent the majority people of this nation of 70 million into the
darkness with four bullets. Today there will be thousands of
eulogies, billions of tears and angry protests in Turkey and in
Armenia and the rest of the world. But those will not be enough to
honor the humanity of one man who has been abandoned, unjustly tried,
and humiliated in his own country for speaking out in defense of free
speech and peace. Please remember, the name is Hrant Dink, a friend
of liberty and a beautiful human being. God bless him.

_24_0_C

http://archinect.com/news/article.php?id=50887_0

UN FAO to Release $3mil to S. Cauc. to Fight FMD and Other Diseases

Armenpress

UN FAO TO RELEASE $3 MILLION TO SOUTH CAUCASUS TO
FIGHT FMD AND OTHER DISEASES

YEREVAN, JANUARY 19, ARMENPRESS: The United Nations
Food and Agricultural Organization (UN FAO) is set to
release $3 million to the South Caucasian countries to
help them step up fight against extremely contagious
disease that hit farm cattle.
The program is designed for prevention of spread of
foot and mouth (FMD), brucellosis and other diseases
across borders. Modern laboratory and communication
devices, as well as vaccines will be supplied to
anti-epidemic laboratories in frontier regions of the
three countries.
"The funding will enable to improve foot and mouth
surveillance and control activities across the country
by strengthening veterinary services," said Avetik
Nersisian, head of UN FAO Armenia office.
"In case of an FMD emergency, a rapid response is
crucial for the success of any control measures. With
the new funds, we will now be able to send experts to
affected areas within hours to analyze the situation
in order to provide technical support and assist in
mobilizing additional emergency resources," he added.
He said as part of this program tens of
veterinaries will be trained.