Gagik Tsarukian elected chairman of Nat’l Olympic Committee

GAGIK TSARUKIAN ELECTED CHAIRMAN OF NATIONAL OLYMPIC COMMITTEE

ArmenPress
Nov 23 2004

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 23, ARMENPRESS: The special session of Armenian
National Olympic Committee elected on Monday Gagik Tsarukian, a
prominent businessman and the chairman of Multi Group Concern as a
new president. The newly elected chairman pledged to do everything
to avoid the repetition of Athens fiasco.

Gagik Tsarukian was the deputy of the former chairman of the Olympic
committee and has been funding the committee for several years now.

Followed by the election which passed unanimously, the newly elected
chairman said that up to date he had been only providing finances
to the committee and had no responsibility on him which is not the
case now. Pledging to continue financing the development of sports in
Armenia, Tsarukian said that he is going to recruit the best athletes
and coaches.

The newly elected head of the Olympic committee underscored financial
aspects in sports and vowed to continue investing money in it.

“I will do it as long as it is needed. If I am involved in such
a difficult task, I should get out of it with the final victory,”
Tsarukian said.

Turkish journey: End of the road

Turkish journey: End of the road

BBC News
Nov 22 2004

The BBC’s Istanbul correspondent Jonny Dymond is exploring Turkish
life across the vast country as it lobbies the European Union to open
membership talks.

He sent the last in a series of reports from the town of Kars, near
the Armenian border.

I woke up in my hotel in Kars – an establishment unlikely to make the
Best Hotels in Eastern Turkey guide – to find news from England on
the television.

The town of Kars lies near Turkey’s border with Armenia

A correspondent in London was explaining to a presenter, who appeared
to be doing her best to restrain her incredulity, that the British
government had announced plans to ban smoking in public spaces.

The words of the correspondent, who was on a telephone line, were
illustrated by file footage of people smoking in London.

Many of them were sitting outside, and a disproportionate number were
blonde, gaily enjoying a cigarette whilst sipping mineral water or
having a glass of wine. London life looked suspiciously like a
Mediterranean holiday.

Rarely had I felt so far from home. Kars is very, very cold. No one
is sitting outside. And, this being Turkey, everyone smokes. In case
you are wondering, there are precious few blondes knocking about
either.

Click here to see Jonny Dymond’s route across Turkey
Kars has attracted a little more attention than usual in the past
couple of years because Turkey’s most internationally famous
novelist, Orhan Pamuk, used it as the setting for his latest novel,
Snow.

A question of identity

In the book, Kars – a forgotten city in the country’s north-west
corner on the border with Armenia – plays host to Islamist
terrorists, Kurdish nationalists and secular Republicans.

Over the space of three days, in which the city is cut off from the
outside world by snow, they pronounce, denounce, launch a coup and
generally shed some light on that ridiculously complicated question
of Turkey’s identity.

I freely admit that Snow had drawn me to Kars. I ran into a French
journalist on my final night there. I asked her why she had come.
“The closed Armenian border, of course,” she said. Ah yes. That too.

The money left Kars in the 1960s, drawn west

The city was once part of the Russian empire and, immediately after
World War I, became an independent republic – the South East
Caucasian Republic. It happily gave itself up to the Turkish Republic
when that came along in 1923.

It was also, a while ago now, rich. It was a trading city, and the
houses of Russian and Armenian merchants can still be seen, their
fine construction and exterior decoration incongruous amongst the
drab concrete buildings that now dominate the city.

Many of these houses were pulled down in the 1960s – the government
either not interested in the history of the town, or only too happy
for it to be eradicated.

Glorious past

The current owner of Huryurt (“Free Land”), one of three local
papers, fondly remembers a time when balls and concerts were a
regular event in the city.

In one corner of the newspaper’s office sits a 150-year-old printing
press that until last year had been used to crank out the 400 copies
that the paper prints every day.

Erol Huryurt showed me one of the earliest papers, framed on the
wall. “This evening” went the headline. The short article was a call
to a dance to be held in the city centre.

“All the night will be full of surprises. So we would advise you not
to miss it”.

Newspaper owner Erol Huryurt

But the money left Kars in the 1960s, drawn west. Kars was cut off,
its airport closed, its trade to the east ended by the presence of
the Soviet Union.

And now, with the border to Armenia shut once again, the life of the
city is still draining away.

The shops are shabby, the goods careworn before purchase. Into the
chill air chimneys puff smoke that in the evening hangs in the cold
deserted streets. Groups of men stand idly on the roadside, looking
lost and defeated.

Unemployment is something around 50%.

The mayor is doing his best. When we talked he showed me picture
after picture of the cultural festivals he had arranged.

He has high hopes of a film festival to be held in January – a
curiosity this, a film festival in a city that currently has no
cinema. It’s all good clean fun.

But you have to wonder how many Slovak dance troupes and Circassian
marching bands a town can take until it cries out “No more!”

Facing east

Kars hopes for the best from Europe, but its eyes are still firmly to
the east. In the early 1990s, when the Soviet Union collapsed, a wave
of Turkophilia swept Turkey – it was to lead a new Turkic Union of
the east, it would resume its rightful place as the pre-eminent
regional power.

The dream died pretty quickly when it became clear that the old
Turkic states had more in common with Moscow than they did with each
other, but it lives to some degree in Kars.

Today Kars lives in the shadow of its past

Erol’s son Erdil does not go misty-eyed over the balls and dances of
the past. Over lunch in what seemed to be Kars’ only decent
restaurant, he talks of an unlikely future when the city might become
the capital of the Caucasus.

The mayor’s brother, Alican, joined us.

Alican, a businessman, was not so interested in wild talk of leading
the Caucasus. Instead he, and nearly everyone in Kars, just wants the
border with Armenia reopened, so trade can restart, and life can
return to the dying city.

As with so many changes in Turkey, all eyes are on Europe to do
something to sort out the problem.

I drove out to Ani, once a city of 100,000 that was said to have
rivalled Constantinople in its glory, now a place of wonder where you
can stumble for hours amongst the stunning remains of ruined 10th-
and 11th-Century churches and mosques.

>>From inside the first ever mosque to be built in Turkey I peered down
at the river that separates the country from Armenia, and at the
ruined bridge which once carried travellers on the Silk Road on their
way West.

I had reached the end – the end of Turkey, and the end of the long
haul from West to East.

It was a fitting finale to the journey: Turkey’s eastern border,
perhaps to be Europe’s new eastern frontier, ancient churches and
mosques rising like tombstones out of the long wild grass.

ANKARA: Demonstrations staged in Turkish cities against US militaryo

Demonstrations staged in Turkish cities against US military operations in Iraq

Anatolia news agency
19 Nov 04

Ankara, 19 November: Nongovernmental organizations have staged protests
against the US military operations in the Iraqi town of Al-Fallujah.

The Intellectual Hearths Kayseri Branch protested against the
occupation of Iraq at the Surp Kirkor Lusovoric Armenian Church in
Kayseri. Kayseri Intellectual Hearths Chairman Kemal Tekden issued
a statement there saying that the bullying carried out by the United
States against the civilian people in Iraq in the name of freedom and
democracy had turned into violence and barbarity in Al-Fallujah. Tekden
said that the killing of a wounded Iraqi in a mosque by American
soldiers would go down in history as the “most shameful episode in
the history of mankind”.

Noting that at no time in the history of the world had the holy
sites of any great and civilized state been violated Tekden said:
“Holy sites like mosques, churches and synagogues are inviolable
places. Even the primitive Aborigines respected holy sites. The
Ottoman State never showed the slightest disrespect to the holy sites
on the three continents it ruled over, which is why it is recalled as
a great state. Respect for holy sites is part of the glory of being
a great state. We invite the United States to stop being a powerful
and bullying state and become a state that respects humanity and
human rights.” [Passage omitted].

Adana

In a press statement issued by a group that had gathered outside the
Adana Sabanci Centre Mosque to protest the operations in Iraq it was
stated: “By pointing out that Muslim lands are being occupied one by
one the objections to bullying will grow with each passing day and
the voices will grow louder.”

Those in the group then held funeral prayers for the dead in
Al-Fallujah before dispersing.

Administrators of the Adana branch of the Human Rights Association
and a group of members held a protest in Inonu Park where they stated
that many civilians had died in the US army operation mounted in
Al-Fallujah. They said: “What is being killed is not just the people
of Iraq but all of mankind. Yet, the whole world is watching what is
going on as if it were a movie.” They called on workers and artisans
not to sell US goods and for the citizens to boycott them.

Bursa

Speaking at a press conference staged by the Confederation of
Turkish Public Sector Labour Unions (Kamu-Sen) Bursa Representation
the Provincial Representative Ramazan Karakoc said: “We strongly and
with hatred condemn this violence and wish that this bloody occupation
would end as soon as possible.”

Karakoc said that the US occupation of Iraq had gone on for a year
and a half and that during this time US President George W Bush was
“no better than” the Saddam regime.

Asserting that over 100,000 Iraqis had been murdered in Iraq
in one and a half years, Karakoc said: “What the US soldiers,
who exhibited monstrosity in murdering injured people in mosques,
did is no coincidence. The US authorities’ explanations are not
convincing. The real aim is to strike fear into the world.”

Izmir

Chairman of the Izmir Bar Association Nevzat Erdemir in a written
statement asked for an end to the inhumane and illegal coalition
forces’ attacks against the people of Iraq.

Erdemir said that for the UN and all of mankind and the world states
to remain silent and do nothing was “a huge disgrace to mankind” and
that those carrying out crimes against humanity ought to be brought
to justice.

Konya

The group that had set off from Sanliurfa on 22 October aiming to
get the headscarf ban lifted today arrived in Konya. After issuing a
statement in front of the Mevlana Museum they took part in a funeral
prayer for the dead of Al-Fallujah at the Serafettin Mosque.

Following the funeral prayer an anti-US protest was held. During the
protest anti-US slogans were chanted, and a US flag was doused in
gasoline and burn.

Trabzon

Ahmet Kilic, Trabzon provincial representative for Turk-Is [The
Confederation of Turkish Labour Unions], spoke at a press conference
held by the Trabzon Journalists Association on behalf of the Labour
Platform Trabzon Component. Asserting that the United States was
ignoring international law he said: “The United States and its allies
attacked Iraq before the eyes of the whole world ignoring international
law and international institutions. With these attacks they have
committed a crime against peace according to international law.”

Ahmet Kilic called on the Turkish government and public opinion to be
more aware of what was going on in Iraq and to act with more reaction.

Elazig

Elazig representatives of the Anadolu Youth Magazine together with
members of the Islamic Education and Solidarity Foundation held a
funeral prayer for the dead in Al-Fallujah.

After the funeral prayer, held at the Izzetpasa Mosque, Muhammet
Bakir issued a statement on behalf of the group at the mosque. He
said that the United States was murdering people regardless of women
and children in the Al-Fallujah operation, and that this situation
was an affront to humanity and to Islam.

The group later walked to PTT Square chanting slogans on the way. After
holding a prayer for the dead the group silently left the square.

In the footsteps of the prophets

In the footsteps of the prophets
By Nick Wyke

The Times, UK
Nov 20 2004

Our correspondent follows the pilgrims discovering a part of the Holy
Land rich in biblical sites

THE wealth of biblical sites in the Muslim kingdom of Jordan is
attracting growing numbers of Christian pilgrims who are deterred by
the violent conflict from visiting Israel.

Even a recent visit by the pop star Madonna to kabbalist sites in
Israel failed to boost the country’s tourism, and a wider picture
shows that pilgrimages – once the lifeblood of its tourist industry –
have slumped. Compared to the relatively peaceful few years before
the intifada – the Palestinian grassroots uprising of September 2000 –
American and British tour groups are staying away.

This makes neighbouring Jordan seem an increasingly popular
alternative. Its three most important biblical sites are: Bethany,
where Christ is said to have been baptised by John the Baptist;
Mount Nebo, from which Moses is said to have seen the Promised Land;
and Machaerus, the hilltop village where John the Baptist was beheaded
by Herod Antipas, the successor to Herod the Great.

Jordan is also where Jacob wrestled with the angel of God, Job suffered
and was rewarded for his faith, and Elijah ascended to heaven. These
stories are critical not only to the development of Christianity, but
in the evolution of the monotheistic religions of Judaism and Islam.

“In the past the Christian market has been an optional add-on to
tours of Israel, but now it is holding its own,” says David Symes,
sales and marketing manager of the Jordan Tourism Board in London.

Two years ago Symes joined a pioneering interfaith pilgrimage,
organised by Saga Holidays, that brought British Christians and Muslims
together on a tour of the sites of prophets in Jordan. Each day’s
coach trip would begin with a reading from the Bible and one from
the Koran. “Given what was going on in the world post-9/11, you had
to pinch yourself to believe this was really happening,” says Symes.

Although the tours are no longer run, they reflect a certain
peacefulness and potential for interfaith dialogue in Jordan that is
not always possible elsewhere in the Middle East. This is one of the
factors that makes a trip there, whether as a pilgrim or otherwise,
so fascinating.

“You set out to see Christian sites and deepen your relationship with
God and the Bible and you do that, but you also get to learn so much
about the Muslim world,” says the Rev Rupert Lazar, of West Croydon
Baptist Church, one of a group of Baptist leaders that recently
toured Jordan.

“To witness the behaviour and values of practising Muslims first-hand
was enlightening. To hear how Christians and Muslims live in peace
with respect for each other was heartening, when back home we just
hear that they are at loggerheads,” says Mr Lazar.

A good starting point to any pilgrimage in Jordan is the Byzantine-era
mosaic map at St George’s church in Madaba, the most important
Christian centre in Jordan. The original map contained more than
two million pieces and showed all the biblical sites from Lebanon to
Egypt. Only one third of the whole now survives – identifying Karak,
home to a crusaders’ castle, and Lot’s cave and monastery in Jordan.

One of the most significant finds of recent times is the baptism site
at Bethany, which has just opened a visitors’ centre. About ten years
ago the Jordanian Antiquities Ministry received news that shepherds had
unearthed ancient pots and coins in the military zone at the northern
end of the Dead Sea. After scrutinising the finds and the Bible the
ministry believed this to be the site where Jesus was baptised by
John and anointed by God. Landmines were cleared and excavations began.

Proof, the Jordanians argue, is based on biblical references (John 1,
28, for example), archaeological finds – the remains of three churches
and baptism pools – and journals of pilgrims from the 4th century AD.

“It’s the lowest point on Earth but the closest to Heaven,” says
Rustain Mkhjian, an Armenian Christian responsible for the restoration
of the site.

The sage-green river flanked with bulrushes conjures a scene from a
children’s Bible. It is so close to the West Bank that you can see
Israeli army lookout posts, and a message on my mobile phone reads:
“Welcome to Israel”. Russians are baptised here in bikinis and fill
bottles with river water to take home.

“When Christians pray here, I can feel how touched they are,” says
Kamel al-Jaysui, a Jordanian tour guide.

India ready to train Armenian military – envoy

Mediamax news agency, Yerevan, in Russian
17 Nov 04

India ready to train Armenian military – envoy

Yerevan, 17 November: India is ready to provide quotas for the
participation of Armenian servicemen in different training programmes
of Indian military-education institutions.

Indian ambassador Deepak Vohra made this proposal at a meeting with
Armenian Defence Minister Serzh Sarkisyan today, the press service of
the Armenian Defence Ministry has told Mediamax news agency.

The sides also discussed prospects for cooperation between the
Armenian and Indian Defence Ministries in 2005.

31% students say fighting against Univ. corruption doomed to failure

ArmenPress
Nov 16 2004

32 PERCENT OF STUDENTS SAYS FIGHTING AGAINST UNIVERSITY CORRUPTION
DOOMED TO FAILURE

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 16, ARMENPRESS: Nikol Aghbalian student
organization and the Armenian Youth Forum unveiled today the findings
of a survey they conducted between January and September this year
among students of 11 state-run universities to disclose the students’
perception of university corruption. Another goal pursued by the
survey organizers was to learn one of the main reasons behind
university corruption and what the students thought about fighting
against it.
Some 18 percent of respondents said the corruption resulted from
very low salaries of their professors, 17 percent said bribes are
paid by male students who want to dodge their compulsory military
service and 16 percent said corruption flourishes because corrupted
professors enjoy university managers protection.
Twenty-two percent of students believe the majority of bribes is
paid during entrance and post-graduate examinations. Yet another 20
percent believe that university corruption can be fought against
given the support of university managers, state officials and
students themselves.
Forty-three percent said they were ready to join any
anti-corruption initiative, while 32 percent believe that any such
initiative is doomed to failure.
Between 2000-2004 only five professors were dismissed on charges
of corruption.

BAKU: Armenian rep in Azerbaijan “to lay foundation” for energycoope

Armenian rep in Azerbaijan “to lay foundation” for energy cooperation

Space TV, Baku
13 Nov 04

[Presenter] Armenia has already approached Azerbaijan to cooperate
in the energy sector, Levon Vartanyan, chief of department at the
Armenian Energy Ministry, has said in Baku.

[Correspondent, over Vartanyan’s video] Levon Vartanyan has said
that Armenia is always ready for cooperation with Azerbaijan in the
energy sector and this issue is being debated at the government level
in Armenia.

[Vartanyan, shown speaking in Russian with Azeri voice-over] At present
we are ready [for cooperation]. We know that the Naxcivan Autonomous
Republic has certain problems with the supply of electricity. We are
ready for cooperation with the Azerbaijani Republic on this issue. We
would like the restoration of relations that had once existed.

[Correspondent] A quote from Vartanyan: The current political situation
between our countries is unstable. However, this situation may change
at any moment. Therefore, power engineers should maintain cooperation,
whereas politicians should tackle problems, Levon Vartanyan said. Asked
about the proposals in his portfolio, Vartanyan said that he was in
Baku to lay the foundation for future cooperation. Let us first lay
the foundation for cooperation and then discuss specific proposals,
he said.

The Armenian representative said that they would like to supply
Naxcivan with Armenian electricity on a barter basis, on the basis
of contracts for the sale and purchase.

Sulhiya Sirinova, Fuad Atakisiyev for Space.

Armenian cleric warns against religious sects

ARMENIAN CLERIC WARNS AGAINST RELIGIOUS SECTS

ArmenPress
Nov 12 2004

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 12, ARMENPRESS: A senior Armenian cleric chided
the authorities for neglecting the penetration of alien ideologies
and especially of various religious sects into Armenian schools.
Bishop Sepuh Chuljian, who heads the Gugark Dioceses of the Armenian
Church, told Armenpress that religious sects are especially active
in schools in the regions, masked as charity organizations.

The bishop said the government must pay more attention to schools
since the children are more prone to the sects’ covert proselytizing.
He explained the drive of many Armenians towards the sects by their
social problems. Another part, according to him, joins the sects since
“they are protesters at the bottom of their heart.”

“The Armenian Church must fight for every Armenian to bring him or her
back to their true faith,” he said, adding also that the Evangelical
Armenian Church does not promote the spiritual unity of Armenians,
deluding, as a matter of fact, Armenians, claiming that its teachings
do not differ from those of the traditional Church.

Gazprom says interested in Georgia’s pipeline privatization

Gazprom says interested in Georgia’s pipeline privatization

Prime-Tass English-language Business Newswire, Russia
November 11, 2004

MOSCOW, Nov 11 (Prime-Tass) — Russia’s natural gas monopoly Gazprom
was interested in taking part in the privatization of Georgia’s
pipeline and gas distributing companies, Sergei Kuznets, an official
with Gazprom told an industry conference Thursday.

He said that the Georgian government was currently preparing a list
of assets subject to privatization and Gazprom planned to take part
in the privatization, if the terms were acceptable to it.

“It is important for Gazprom because the gas pipeline links Russia
with Armenia,” he said.

Furthermore, Gazprom may participate in the construction of a gas
pipeline from Iran to Armenia, he said, adding that this project
envisages supplying gas from Iran to Armenian power stations in return
for Armenian electric power supplied to Iran. End

Asian children’s film festival from Nov. 14

ASIAN CHILDREN’S FILM FESTIVAL FROM NOVEMBER 14

The Hindu, India
November 10, 2004

Our Staff Reporter

The second annual Asian Children’s Film Festival will get underway
in the twin cities here on November 14, featuring about 80 children’s
films from more than 10 countries in the continent.

The week-long festival being organised by the Children’s Film Society,
Andhra Pradesh (CFSAP) in association with the Andhra Pradesh State
Film, Television and Theatre Development Corporation (APFTTDC) has
entries from Iran, China, Japan, South Korea, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka,
Armenia, Israel, Syria apart from the host nation, according to the
festival director, M. Veda Kumar, in a statement here on Tuesday.

While the main venue for the festival is the Hari Hara Kala Bhavan
in Secunderabad, there would be screenings at the Jawaharlal
Nehru Technological University, Masab Tank, Potti Sriramulu Telugu
University, Nampally, and the Ravindra Bharathi mini-theatre from
November 16 to 19.

<subheadline> Morning show

</subheadline>

In addition to these, there would be a special morning show at 9 a.m.
in nine theatres in the twin cities and eight in the neighbouring
Ranga Reddy district for the convenience of schoolchildren.

He said interested school managements could contact the CFS office
at Street no. 11, Himayatnagar, the APFTTDC office at A.C. Guards
or the respective Deputy Educational officers of their zones for
delegate cards and participation. Further details can be had on
27635669 or 9246579395.