Turkish Parliament Meeting Early To Work On EU Reforms

TURKISH PARLIAMENT MEETING EARLY TO WORK ON EU REFORMS
Joshua Pantesco at 8:12 AM ET

JURIST
Monday, September 18, 2006

[JURIST] The Turkish parliament, the Grand National Assembly [official
website], is scheduled to meet Tuesday, two weeks earlier than usual,
to work on passing reform measures aimed at gaining membership to the
European Union [JURIST news archive]. The EU has cautioned [JURIST
report] Turkey that its EU bid [EU backgrounder] will not be accepted
unless the country improves its record on torture and other human
rights violations, including the restriction of freedom of expression.

EU lawmakers especially oppose Article 301 of the Turkish Penal
Code [Amnesty backgrounder], which makes it a crime to insult
Turkish identity. One Turkish lawmaker said that Article 301, which
has been used to prosecute writers Hrant Dink and Orhan Pamuk for
discussing the alleged Armenian genocide, will be revised to rebut EU
criticism. Earlier this month, the EU Parliament said Turkey has been
slow to deliver promised legal reforms [JURIST report], including
"persistent shortcomings in areas such as freedom of expression,
religious and minority rights, the role of the military, policing,
women’s rights, trade union rights and cultural rights."

RA Pupils Can Study In The USA

RA PUPILS CAN STUDY IN THE USA

A1+
[03:17 pm] 19 September, 2006

The Government of the United States of America is pleased to announce
the open competition for the Future Leaders Exchange Program (FLEX)
for high school aged students for the 2007-2008 academic year.

The FLEX Program is managed and funded by the United States Department
of State and administered by the American Councils for International
Education.

FLEX scholarship winners will be selected on the basis of merit
to live in the United States with an American host family from
August 2007 until May 2008, to attend high school and to experience
community life, as well as share their culture with Americans. All
students enrolled in the eight and ninth forms are eligible to
apply. Applicants must have a good command of English language,
have a good academic record, and must possess the personal skills,
qualities, attitude and motivation that will enable them to succeed as
exchange students. Students with disabilities enrolled in the eight,
ninth and tenth forms are encouraged to apply.

American Councils for International Education is responsible for
testing, screening and interviewing applicants in Armenia. American
Councils will establish several regional testing centers in which they
will register applicants and administer a qualifying exam. Candidates
who are successful in passing this exam will advance to the second
stage, in which they will sit for a more extensive English exam and
prepare a written essay. Adapted materials and special accommodations
are offered to students with disabilities. American Councils will
grade the exams at a central location. The essays will be graded by
bi-national teams.

Students who are successful at the second stage will be interviewed
by an American Councils member and will be asked to prepare a detailed
written application.

The written application, test results, and notes made by the
interviewer will be collected and sent to Washington, D.C., where
they will be reviewed by volunteer selection committees consisting
of educators and international exchange specialists. All selection
decisions are made in the United States. Finalists and Alternates
(reserved candidates) selected in this process will be notified after
March 31, 2007.

Awaiting Another Kondopoga

AWAITING ANOTHER KONDOPOGA
By Nabi Abdullaev – Staff Writer

St Petersburg Times
September 19, 2006

MOSCOW – Stoking fears of escalating xenophobia, a man died in a
brawl involving ethnic Armenians in the Saratov region last week and
three people were hospitalized after an attack on an anti-migration
rally in St. Petersburg on Sunday (see story, this page).State Duma
deputies sounded the alarm about a surge in violence. But they also
approved legislation that would increase penalties for those who
employ illegal migrants – a populist vote, critics said, that tapped
into widespread xenophobia.

The country is on edge after clashes and riots targeting Chechens in
the Karelian town of Kondopoga killed two people earlier this month.

Local residents clashed with four ethnic Armenians in a cafe in the
town of Volsk on Sept. 10, Saratov regional police said Friday. Three
ethnic Russians suffered knife wounds, and one later died in the
hospital.

Police and the local Armenian diaspora downplayed suggestions that
the fight was racially motivated. But Ekho Moskvy radio reported the
fight was followed the next day by an attack on ethnic Armenians at a
Volsk technical college that injured one student. Police denied the
report and said two ethnic Armenians involved in the cafe fight had
been placed on a national wanted list.

On Sunday, masked people attacked a rally by the radical Movement
Against Illegal Immigration in St. Petersburg, sparking a fight that
led to three people being hospitalized, Interfax reported.

About 30 activists were attending the rally to demand the expulsion
of Caucasus natives from Kondopoga, where people raided and destroyed
small businesses run by Caucasus natives after two locals were stabbed
to death in a fight with Chechen migrants.

The Movement Against Illegal Immigration also organized a
rally Thursday in Moscow to protest Caucasus natives in Russian
universities. Police tried to prevent the rally by detaining about
200 young men near the Dobryninskaya metro station.

Also Thursday, several dozen young men, some of them described by
witnesses as skinheads, participated in a fight inside the Oktyabrskaya
metro station. No one was detained.

In the Duma on Friday, nationalist Liberal Democratic Party Deputy
Sergei Ivanov likened the situation around the Moscow rally and metro
fight to that in Kondopoga. He said many of those detained at the
rally were carrying knives. As for the metro fight, Ivanov said,
"This was not a routine clash, and it happened in the capital,"
Interfax reported.

United Russia Deputy Alexander Khinshtein deplored a clash between
Chechen youths and police in the city of Saratov on Aug. 29 that
killed one officer and injured three others.

"Police are afraid to bring these people to justice," he said,
accusing the youths of being "closely related to the Chechen
authorities." The fight occurred after the officers quarreled with
three Chechen youths in a cafe, Saratov press reported. The three
left the cafe and later returned with a dozen friends, armed with
knives and baseball bats. Three suspects have been detained.

Several nationalist web sites reported Friday that revenge attacks were
being carried out in Volsk after the Sept. 10 fight. A spokesman for
the Saratov regional police, Alexei Yegorov, said police were worried
and had dispatched more street patrols in Volsk. But he denied any
escalation in ethnic tensions. "There have not been any pogroms in
Volsk after that drunken brawl, no friction whatsoever between the
locals and members of the Caucasus diaspora," he said.

Araik Kosyan, vice president of KRUNK, the biggest Armenian diaspora
organization in the region, said he was not aware of any revenge
attacks. "I’ve talked to representatives of other diasporas, the
Azeris and the Chechens, and they also do not confirm any attacks
against their people," he said.

Politicians might be overreacting to incidents involving Caucasus
natives after Kondopoga, said Boris Makarenko, an analyst with the
Center for Political Technologies. "Now the voices of the ‘hawks’
will be much better received by the public than those of sober-minded
politicians and media," he said.

The public seems to be ready for ethnic violence: Over 57 percent of
Russians believe violence could break out in their towns, according to
a survey this month by the state-controlled VTsIOM pollster. Russians’
belief that their town could be affected grew in proportion with the
size of the town, reaching 89 percent in Moscow and St. Petersburg.

Human rights activists said the authorities needed to intervene
to prevent routine clashes from escalating into Kondopoga-style
violence. "Authorities need to state clearly that any calls to expel
natives of the Caucasus will never be met because they are against the
law," said Galina Kozhevnikova of Sova, which tracks ethnic violence.

Alexei Mukhin, an analyst with the Center of Political Information,
suggested that the flare-up in xenophobia might be used by the
government to push through stricter anti-migrant laws.

Political Analysts: "Settlement Of The Nagorno Karabakh Conflict Has

POLITICAL ANALYSTS: "SETTLEMENT OF THE NAGORNO KARABAKH CONFLICT HAS REACHED ITS DEADLOCK"

Today.Az
18 September 2006 [15:29] – Today.Az

"Official Yerevan’s stance on the Nagorno Karabakh problem is
expected. Armenia thinks it has won the war, and Azerbaijan should
make a trade-off. But, official Baku will not award Armenia," said
Azerbaijani political scientist Rasim Musabeyov while commenting on
official Yerevan’s statement on deviation from the negotiating and
inefficient results.

The political scientist told APA there was only one way of solution
of the Nagorno Karabakh problem, "Super power states should influence
Armenia.

Otherwise, the negotiations will give no results and Yerevan will
continue its unconstructive position as usual," he underlined.

Another political scientist Zardusht Alizadeh told the APA there are
no real negotiations but only a view.

"None of the parties want to retract their positions.

There is no real ground for a compromise. Official Yerevan
claims independence of Nagorno Karabakh and its unification
with Armenia. Azerbaijan says it will never consent to Armenia’s
occupying any part of its territory. Outside these principles,
there is no serious search for a trade-off and appeal to public
and international organizations in the negotiating process. Taking
surface political interests, both the parties to the conflict and
the co-chairs are trying to find a solution option that will satisfy
certain interests. However, the interests do not coincide. The parties
should make public that they will not make any trade-off instead of
creating a view. The U.S co-chair Matthew Bryza sated this. He said the
parties do not seem to withdraw from the core principles they insist
on. But, one of the parties need to withdraw from core principles in
order to reach an agreement," the political scientist underlined.

Alizadeh also said there are some strong forces, who are making efforts
for freezing and delaying the conflict. The political expert said the
resolution of the conflict has reached a deadlock and the negotiations
are held only for the sake of negotiations.

Political scientist Vefa Guluzadeh called the processes for the
settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict nonsense.

Armenian MP backs sentence handed down on editor

Arminfo, Yerevan, in Russian
13 Sep 06

ARMENIAN MP BACKS SENTENCE HANDED DOWN ON EDITOR

Yerevan, 12 September: The Armenian Revolutionary
Federation-Dashnaktsutyun has always spoken out and is still speaking
out against the suppression of journalists’ professional activities
and violence against them, a member of the party’s supreme body, MP
Spartak Seyranyan, said at a news conference today.

However, he said that the faction of the party did support the editor
of Zhamanak Yerevan newspaper, Arman Babadzhanyan, who was sentenced
to four years in prison, because his trial had nothing to do with
freedom of expression. Babadzhanyan was convicted of dodging military
service. All are equal before the law. It does not matter if a person
is a journalist, a bus driver or a teacher if he refuses to carry out
his civic duties, Seyranyan said.

The Subbotniks: An Armenian Community On The Fringe Of Extinction

THE SUBBOTNIKS: AN ARMENIAN COMMUNITY ON THE FRINGE OF EXTINCTION
by Yasha Levine, Jewish Telegraphic Agency

The Jewish Journal
2006-09-15

A community of rural residents in the former Soviet Union, descended
from Russian peasants who converted to Judaism two centuries ago,
may soon be consigned to the dustbin of history.

Mikhail Zharkov, the 76-year-old leader of Armenia’s tiny Subbotnik
community, said only 13 of the 30,000 people living in his small alpine
town of Sevan are Subbotniks. There are three men and 10 women, and
all are nearing the age of 80. The community in Sevan is part of an
estimated 10,000 to 15,000 Subbotniks spread across the former Soviet
Union. Zharkov, a retired welder who is wiry and full of energy,
estimated that about 2,000 Subbotniks lived in Sevan during the
community’s zenith in the 1930s.

Located at an altitude of 6,000 feet, Lake Sevan’s turquoise waters
were seen as a vast exploitable natural resource. After Armenia became
a Soviet republic in the 1930s, the lake fell victim to disastrous
Soviet planning and industrial expansion.

During Soviet rule, the Subbotniks’ religious freedom, which had
helped preserve their identity for almost two centuries, vanished,
along with their prime waterfront real estate.

According to Zharkov, Soviet authorities confiscated the Subbotnik
synagogue in the mid-1930s. It has since been privatized, and the
building no longer belongs to the community.

An unknown number of Subbotniks from elsewhere in the region immigrated
to Israel after the fall of the Soviet Union, but community members in
Sevan never dreamed of leaving for Israel. In Sevan, Soviet repression,
combined with Armenia’s difficult economic conditions after the fall
of communism 15 years ago, tore into the fabric of the community.

"My son, who is 48, and daughter, who is 36, are in Moldova. And of
course, they have been baptized," Zharkov said. "They did it without
consulting me or my wife. My daughter had to. She married a Russian
Orthodox man."

Zharkov’s family situation is mirrored in the rest of the
community. Sevan’s Subbotniks have dispersed all over the former Soviet
Union and offer no financial assistance to their parents, Zharkov said.

"We lead a simple life, but life has become very expensive. Without
the aid of the Jewish community, we would have a very tough time,"
he said. "Our pensions are meager, not even enough to cover utilities."

The Armenian office of Hesed Avraham, a welfare center sponsored
by the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, periodically
provides the Subbotniks with food packages.

The Subbotniks’ mysterious 19th century conversion to Judaism,
strict adherence to the Torah and staunch refusal to convert back to
Christianity exposed them to repression and persecution. During the
rule of Czar Alexander I in the first quarter of the 19th century,
Subbotniks were deported en masse to remote parts of the Russian
empire.

According to Michael Freund, founder of Shavei Israel, an Israel-based
organization that reaches out to "lost Jews," the Subbotniks are spread
out in small pockets across remote corners of the former Soviet Union.

Sevan’s Subbotniks do not know what part of Russia their ancestors
came from or what prompted them to convert to Judaism.

"Maybe they thought it a purer form of religion," Zharkov
speculated. Subbotniks derived their name from their observance of the
Sabbath on Saturday — Subbota in Russian — rather than Sunday. Most
Subbotnik communities practice circumcision, but otherwise, the
Subbotniks do not differ in outward appearance from other Russian
peasants.

The women wear head scarves and long skirts; the men dress in simple
slacks and shirts. They do not observe kashrut or Jewish dietary
laws, and their melodic Shabbat prayers, chanted in Russian, could
be mistaken for Russian folksongs. According to Gersh-Meir Burshtein,
who heads a small Chabad-sponsored synagogue in the Armenian capital
of Yerevan, the fact that the community owned two Torah scrolls is
proof that Sevan’s Subbotniks once were well-versed in Hebrew.

Some years ago, one of the old Torah scrolls was taken to the Yerevan
synagogue, where it remains to this day. The other was stolen from
the small community.

Sevan’s Subbotniks now sing and read out of their own Torah-based
Russian-language prayer book.

"Maybe at some point one of their elders realized that the community
was losing its Hebrew knowledge and adapted the Torah into a
Russian-language prayer book that they use now," Burshtein said.

Kenya: Our People Have A Long History Of Self-Hatred

KENYA: OUR PEOPLE HAVE A LONG HISTORY OF SELF-HATRED
Koigi Wamwere

allAfrica.com
September 13, 2006
The East African Standard (Nairobi)

OPINION

Since the white man set foot in Kenya in the 19th century, consciously
or unconsciously, Africans have had to wrestle with the problem
of self-image.

Like other people, our self-image is what shapes our destiny. Before
slavery and colonialism, we lived at peace with the world and ourselves
and had no problem with our self-image.

But when the white man came, enslaved and conquered us, he embarked
on a process of eroding our self-image and pride to maintain his
conquest. Through laws, the media, religion and education, he taught
us that we were inferior and he superior. Now we accept our inferiority
and self-hate and seek more.

Knowingly, we get less African the more we imbibe foreign education
and religions. The Mzungu has certainly bewitched us!

For many years, freedom fighters resisted cultural conquest while
loyalists, home guards and the Western-educated accepted it. At
independence, Kenyans thought that with the exit of the white man and
the coming of independence, they would recover not just their stolen
lands but self-image. They were wrong.

When colonialism formally ended in 1963, the white man’s cultural and
ideological conquest did not vanish. African caricatures of Western
political parties, civil service, parliaments, courts, schools,
churches and media perpetuated, promoted and perfected the white
man’s ideology.

Today, our inferiority and regard for foreigners as superior to us
is total and instinctive. Indeed, the older our independence gets,
the more mentally enslaved we become, not by the efforts of the West
but our own.

And most unnaturally, the more enslaved, the more we loathe
liberation. We now have become a nation of self-haters and
self-enslavers. And here, I am not talking about individual
self-hate. You may love yourself, but be a self-hater if you believe
your kind is less able and others are better.

The malaise of our collective inferiority has sunk into depths
of great shame. We have lost our confidence. We seek foreigners’
approval in what we do and say. We consider something said only when
foreigners say it. When they walk half-naked in New York or Paris,
we walk naked in Nairobi. Whom they crown, we make a hero. Whom they
attack, we kill. We seek them to anoint us as leaders. Without them,
we feel impotent!

Oppressed nations look up to the youth for salvation.

For youth to liberate, however, they must desire freedom more and be
less mentally shackled.

Unfortunately, this is not so in Kenya and I hope I am wrong.

When I look at three recent generations – Mau Mau freedom fighters,
perpetuators of the White man’s values after independence and today’s
youth – the oldest are the best, the youth the least inspiring.

Black Europeans are, however, our worst enemies. They made a whole
generation – their children – robots in the delusion that they can
be white. Their worst crimes are adulation of foreigners and things
foreign, worship of money, self-interest, ethnic myopia and mind
conformism.

A good example will suffice. Recently, the Kenya Football Federation
kicked out our national team, Harambee Stars, out of the Moi
International Sports Centre, Kasarani, and invited the better-known
Cameroon’s Indomitable Lions to practise at Kenya’s best stadium.

Instead, the national team was taken to Ruaraka, a field not as good
as Kasarani. It mattered little that at the time, Harambee Stars was
preparing for a match with Eritrea. In the end, Kenya lost to a team
that had been dismissed as minnows.

I was surprised that the media found it odd. What KFF did is what
we all do all the time. Though United States Senator Barack Obama
has done nothing spectacular other than that he has a Kenyan father,
when he visited Kenya recently, our media put him at a pedestal with
Jesus, the Superstar.

They followed him wherever he went, covering his speech at the
University of Nairobi live and generally giving him inordinate coverage
in the papers and on television.

The Kenyan media gave Senator Obama coverage they or American media
would never give a Kenyan MP, President, Nobel Laureate Wangari Maathai
or South African nationalist and former President Nelson Mandela or
any of their own.

Momentarily, I thought they believed an American senator means
president-elect and not the American equivalent of a Kenyan MP. When
they said they found him, "a born leader, star quality with youthful
looks and deep-voiced", I wondered why the qualities in Obama were
not noticed in the other countries he visited, including South Africa.

Mr David Mendell, the American journalist travelling with him said of
the senator in South Africa: "He could walk down the street without
any trouble. A few people noticed and said: ‘This is that senator’,
but nothing more."

Why did the Kenyan media see more in Obama than others? This is because
he, like the Indomitable Lions, is foreign and successful. That is
what we worship. Before Senator Obama were the Artur brothers.

For weeks and months, all we heard from the media before some ended
in their laps was Artur Margaryan and Artur Sargysyan.

The notoriety of the Armenian brothers may have deserved some coverage,
but no Kenyan equivalent can get pages and pages of coverage, week
after week.

The foreign suspects got far more coverage than the good works of great
Kenyans such as Prof Ngugi wa Thiongo, Prof Ali Mazrui or Dr Calestus
Juma would ever get. To our media, flamboyant foreigners with suspect
credentials deserve preference over unassuming Kenyan greatness!

I cannot conclude without mentioning Sir Edward Clay, the former
British High Commissioner, another foreign darling of Kenyan
media. When Clay lambasted corruption, Kenyan media gave him tonnes of
coverage as if they were hearing it for the first time. They applauded
more loudly than when a Kenyan said the same.

We may agree with whatever foreigners say, but there is something
seriously wrong if an issue makes sense and a song sounds sweet
only when a foreigner says or sings it. It is time we stopped being
parrots and apes of other people. Otherwise, we will remain behind,
poor and crippled.

Les Armeniens Du Liban Manifestent Contre La Participation Turque a

LES ARMENIENS DU LIBAN MANIFESTENT CONTRE LA PARTICIPATION TURQUE A LA FINUL

Agence France Presse
8 septembre 2006 vendredi 12:02 PM GMT

Les Armeniens du Liban, qui n’ont pas oublie les massacres en 1915
sous l’empire ottoman, ont manifeste vendredi a Beyrouth contre une
participation de la Turquie a la Force interimaire des Nations unies
au Liban (Finul).

Brandissant des drapeaux libanais et des banderoles denoncant la
Turquie comme un "Etat assassin", plusieurs centaines d’Armeniens
ont manifeste a Bourj Hammoud, une banlieue de Beyrouth où ils sont
majoritaires et appele l’Onu a revoir la participation de la Turquie
a la Finul.

"Genocide, massacre, deportation: la definition turque de la paix",
"Non a la participation turque aux troupes de l’Onu", proclamaient
les banderoles.

"Un million et demi de notre peuple a ete massacre par les Turcs et
vous vous attendez a ce qu’on les recoive a bras ouverts?" demande
Arous Ghougassian, proprietaire d’une galerie d’ameublement.

"Je peux vous assurer que je ne leur vendrai rien s’ils viennent dans
ma galerie", dit-elle.

"Regardez mes mains, j’ai la chair de poule lorsque vous me parlez
d’eux", s’insurge Hagop, employe d’un restaurant en levant son poing
en signe de defi. "S’ils osent venir dans ce quartier nous prendrons
soin d’eux", dit-il.

Les Armeniens qui ont trouve refuge au Liban il y a 90 ans sont bien
integres dans le pays et leur communaute, qui a droit a six sièges
au Parlement (sur 128 membres), ne compte plus que quelque 140.000
personnes, selon ses responsables politiques et religieux.

Plusieurs centaines d’Armeniens avaient deja manifeste fin août devant
l’immeuble des Nations unies a Beyrouth pour protester contre une
participation de la Turquie a la Finul.

Ankara entend deployer jusqu’a un millier de soldats pour renforcer la
FINUL chargee de consolider la treve a la frontière israelo-libanaise.

–Boundary_(ID_Irkxkow6JJ4uGg7 Bkuffvw)–

The Republican Party Is A Caste

THE REPUBLICAN PARTY IS A CASTE

Lragir.am
07 Sept 06

The Republican Party has a type of thinking typical of a caste. This
is the opinion of Member of Parliament Hmayak Hovanisyan, the chair
of the union of political scientists in connection with the election
of the head of the community of Ajapniak, namely the developments
connected with the decision of the political party not to support
the candidate Arman Sahakyan. Hmayak Hovanisyan was amazed by Galust
Sahakyan’s statement that the state starts from the family, and for
him the family is above everything.

"You see today I have every reason to argue that there isn’t such
a political party, a Republican Party is where man is guided by
the moods, approaches Stalin expressed when he said I will not
exchange the commander with the soldier. This was the resource of
the victory. When his son was captured, and they offered to exchange
Pauliss with his son, he announced, I will not exchange the commander
with the soldier," says Hmayak Hovanisyan, comparing with the state of
the Republican Party, when the political party, in fact, decided not
to support the son of one of its old members. And the political party
is said to have made this decision on the initiative of the chair of
the council of the Republican Party Serge Sargsyan, who also accused
the Sahakyans for the decision they made by themselves. Therefore, it
is interesting to know what Hmayak hinted at by citing Stalin’s words.

"In other words, in this case we may consider supporters, people
with common ideological purposes. And what is this when someone is
preoccupied with supporting his family, the placement of his son?

This clanization, formation of castes has taken place, these closed
castes have been set up and he says the interest of his caste,
his family is above all. What does the other say? Aghvan says for
him the interests of the people of Aparan are important of all. Both
cases are clear manifestations of sectarianism. People are unable to
understand that if you are a politician, you have to treat every young
man equally, like your own son, and not distinguish them. You have to
realize that your son is one of them," says Hmayak Hovanisyan. However,
after defining clearly the caste origin of the decisions of Aghvan
Hovsepyan and Galust Sahakyan, political scientist Hmayak Hovanisyan
declined to interpret, make suggestions about or analyze (which
Hmayak Hovanisyan prefers to all the others) the motivation of Serge
Sargsyan’s decision. Meanwhile, if Aghvan and Galust think about the
interests of their families each, it is interesting to know whose
interests Serge Sargsyan thinks about, who decided not to support
Galust Sahakyan’s son, his fellow party mate.

"You should ask the question about his motives to him," says Hmayak
Hovanisyan, recalling the Russian proverb, "Another man’s soul is a
dark forest".

Texas ANC Meets with Congressman Al Green

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Armenian National Committee of Texas
11301 Richmond Ave. # K108
Houston, Texas 77082
Phone: 281.558.1918
[email protected]
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

PRESS RELEASE +++ PRESS RELEASE

For Immediate Release: Tuesday, September 5, 2006

Contact: Vatche Hovsepian

Tel: (281) 558-1918

Texas ANC Meets with Congressman Al Green

-Meeting Is Part of Western Region Effort to Increase Understanding
of Armenian Issues

HOUSTON, TX – The Armenian National Committee of Texas met with
Congressman Al Green (D- Houston)at his district office on Tuesday,
August 8th as part of series of meetings to connect Armenian Americans
with their representatives and update them on issues of concern to
the community.

Vatche Hovsepian, Chairman of ANC Texas, was joined by community
members Ani Frankian and Ellen Hovsepian in thanking Congressman
Green for his co-sponsorship of H.Res.316, the Armenian Genocide
resolution. During the meeting, attendees informed the Congressman
about the current concerns of the Armenian American community.

The Texas Armenian American community expressed their concern regarding
the firing of US Ambassador to Armenia, John Marshall Evans and the
current Ambassador-designate, Richard Hoagland. Congressman Green was
very interested to learn about the situation and what the response
had been from his colleagues in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Meeting attendees also informed the Congressman about the importance
of H.R.3361, which prevents the United States from financing a railway
in the southern Caucasus region that excludes Armenia, and H.R.3103,
the Open Railways Act, which calls on the Republic of Turkey to end
its blockade of Armenia. Hovsepian emphasized the need to maintain
military aid parity between Armenia and Azerbaijan – especially in
light of continued war rhetoric issued by Azeri President, Ilham
Aliyev and other members of the Azeri government.

Rep. Green expressed his appreciation for the opportunity to meet with
the Armenian American community in Houston. After the meeting, he was
presented with a copy of Peter Balakian’s book, "The Burning Tigris".

Congressman Al Green represents Texas’ 9th district which includes
the southwest metropolitan portion of the City of Houston and the
City of Missouri City in Fort Bend County. His district is home to
a significant number of Armenian Americans.

Editor’s Note: Photo included (left to right): Ani Frankian, Vatche
Hovsepian, Congressman Al Green, and Ellen Hovsepian.

www.anctexas.org