Women Hold Meet To Seek Religious Harmony

WOMEN HOLD MEET TO SEEK RELIGIOUS HARMONY

Gulf Times
March 6 2008
Qatar

NEW DELHI: Several hundred women leaders from around the globe will
gather in India to launch a movement to stem violent religious conflict
in the world, organisers said yesterday.

Around 450 women "many of them religious figures in their countries"
will hold a five-day summit beginning today in the fort city of Jaipur
in Rajasthan.

"There is a lot of religious conflict in the world, but very few
women are involved in building religious harmony,"~] said Dena
Merriam of the New York-based Global Peace Initiative of Women,
which has organised the event.

The gathering will discuss ways to resolve conflict and problems
by emphasising "feminine qualities"~] of compassion and community
building, the non-profit organisation said.

Many women who will be present at the summit come from conflict zones.

"Ihave seen nothing but conflict in my life,"~] said Teny
Pirri-Simonian, a church leader, whose parents fled to Lebanon during
the 1915-17 massacre of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire.

Many others from Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel and Pakistan said they
hope to share their experiences and promote inter-faith harmony.

"As a Palestinian woman, I can bring a healing touch to others as
well," said Laila Atshal, a psychologist from the West Bank city
of Ramallah.

The summit will coincide with the annual International Women’s Day
on Saturday.

Participants said they will launch the first World Council of Women
Spiritual Leaders at the end of the summit.

Ter-Petrosian Accuses Armenian Authorities Of Riots

TER-PETROSIAN ACCUSES ARMENIAN AUTHORITIES OF RIOTS

Interfax News Agency
Russia & CIS
March 3, 2008
Russia

Former candidate for the Armenian presidency Levon Ter-Petrosian has
accused the authorities, which cracked down on a demonstration in
Yerevan on March 1, of unjustified cruelty.

"The violence that the authorities used yesterday [March 1] to crack
down on the demonstration is slaughter," Ter-Petrosian told journalists
on Sunday.

"I was the only one who can have taken control of the situation,
people demanded my presence; however, the authorities denied this to
me," Ter-Petrosian said commenting on dramatic events that prompted
the introduction of the state of emergency.

"The authorities began to storm peaceful protesters, and resistance
was offered in return," he said.

Provocateurs, who opened gunfire, were among the crowd, he said.

"Then, teammates of oligarchs, the satellites of the authorities, came.

They organized the riots, whose aftermath the authorities showed
to the world, in order to say that the opposition used violence,"
Ter-Petrosian said.

"Thus, they had a reason to introduce the state of emergency," he said.

Ter-Petrosian regretted that people were killed in riots. "I regret
about victims, not only among my supporters, but also police and
collateral damage," Ter-Petrosian said, noting that he hopes to come up
with official condolences to the relatives and friends of those killed.

"They are all victims of the regime," Ter-Petrosian said.

It was reported earlier that police cracked down on a rally of Ter-
Petrosian’s supporters on Liberty square on March 1. This prompted
riots near the Yerevan City Hall. Mass riots stopped only after the
Armenian president signed a decree introducing the state of emergency
in the Armenian capital.

Army Maintains Stability During Emergency Rule In Yerevan – Armenian

ARMY MAINTAINS STABILITY DURING EMERGENCY RULE IN YEREVAN – ARMENIAN CHIEF OF STAFF

Interfax News Agency
Russia & CIS
March 4, 2008
Russia

Armenian Chief of the General Staff, Col. Gen. Seiran Oganian has
said that today the army and law enforcement bodies maintain public
stability.

"Our task is also to establish in those 20 days of the emergency
rule in Yerevan a stability that will last after the lifting of the
emergency," he told a press conference in Yerevan on Tuesday.

Currently, the situation in Yerevan remains stable and is totally
controlled both by the Army and law enforcement bodies, he said.

There have been no incidents with the army since troops entered the
capital city, Oganian also said.

"The army will not shoot, it will only respond if it is being shot at,"
the general said.

U.S. Zeal For Iran’s Non-Muslims Faulted

U.S. ZEAL FOR IRAN’S NON-MUSLIMS FAULTED
by Thomas Erdbrink and Karin Brulliard

The Washington Post
March 1, 2008 Saturday

Minorities’ Exodus Worries Leaders Of Fading Faiths

For decades the United States has funded an effort intended to help
Christians, Zoroastrians and Jews escape persecution in Iran. Now
some of their leaders are questioning American motives as sects that
have endured here for thousands of years dwindle rapidly as a result
of the migration.

Since the late 1980s, the U.S. government has made it easier for
certain foreigners fleeing religious oppression overseas, such as in
the former Soviet Union or Indochina, to immigrate to America.

But leaders of Iran’s non-Muslim religious minority groups say their
communities are not mistreated by the Iranian government, whose actions
are overseen by Shiite Muslim clerics. Instead, some Christian and
Zoroastrian leaders say, their members are leaving mainly to take
advantage of the program’s offer of a streamlined path to legal
residence in the United States for a fee of $3,000.

"Christians and Zoroastrians leave because of unemployment,
the bad economy, but these problems affect all Iranians," said
Yonathan Betkolia, an Assyrian Christian leader and member of Iran’s
parliament who holds the United States responsible for his community’s
decline. "They give all those green cards to our people.

Their only goal is to propagate the idea that Iran is mistreating
its minorities."

The program is coordinated by the New York-based Hebrew Immigrant
Aid Society, or HIAS, which traditionally has helped resettle Jews in
the United States. It received about $3.4 million in U.S. government
funding last year to help non-Muslim minorities leave Iran.

There are no reliable numbers on the sizes of those communities in
Iran, a predominantly Shiite country of 65 million to 70 million that
is also home to Muslim ethnic minorities, including Kurds, Arabs and
Baluchis. According to a census taken in 1976, there were 420,000
non-Muslims in a population of nearly 34 million. Many non-Muslims
fled the country after the 1979 Islamic revolution.

Despite the Iranian government’s bellicose approach to Israel, Jews
here say they can practice their religion freely. More than 25,000
Jews remain in Iran, community leaders say, making it the largest
Jewish population in the Middle East outside Israel.

The State Department says 2,842 Jews have left Iran for the United
States under the program in the past decade, compared with more than
18,000 members of other non-Muslim minority groups. More than 10,000
Iranians are waiting now to travel to Vienna, where HIAS facilitates
their passage to the United States as refugees, according to a former
U.S. official familiar with the program.

"The migration is a big, big problem for all non-Muslim minorities in
Iran," said Kurosh Niknam, a parliament member representing Iran’s
Zoroastrians, adherents of the pre-Islamic national faith that he
estimates has shrunk by half since the 1979 revolution. "I wish
everybody would come back to Iran, but I guess they won’t. It looks
like there will be no Zoroastrians left in this country in 30 years."

HIAS was selected early this decade by the State Department to be
the sole agency for processing Iranian minorities from Vienna, where
it operates what it calls an "overseas processing entity." In 2004,
Congress passed a law that made it easier for religious minorities
from Iran to qualify as refugees.

U.S. funding for HIAS’s work on behalf of Iranians has almost tripled,
from $1.24 million in 2002 to $3.46 million in 2007, because of an
increase in applications. The United States, which is at odds with Iran
over its nuclear ambitions and role in the war in Iraq, classifies
Iran as one of eight "countries of particular concern" because of
what the State Department calls severe violations of religious freedom.

This designation "provides the substantive basis for running a refugee
program for Iranian religious minorities," said Gideon Aronoff, chief
executive of HIAS. "It speaks for itself that there are people who feel
there is a need for this type of program to provide them with safety."

One Armenian Christian businessman in Tehran, who spoke on condition
of anonymity so as not to jeopardize his family’s persecution-based
application for legal U.S. residence, struggled to come up with
a list of reasons to leave Iran. For more than a decade, he said,
he had been looking for reasons to stay.

"One, our Iranian passports are useless; we need visas for every
country. Two, the Iranian economy is destroyed. Three, my daughters
are forced to wear the Islamic head scarf," he said. The 2005 election
of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the businessman continued, had
increased the sense of uncertainty. "There are foreign threats,
there might be a war. We feel pressure every day."

Sitting in his dining room, he took another sip of cognac, which
like all other alcoholic drinks is illegal for Muslims to consume
in Iran, and smiled wearily. "I guess our reasons for migrating are
no different from other Iranians who want to go. But as Christians,
it’s so much easier for us to leave Iran."

Betkolia, the Assyrian Christian parliament member, said he and his
co-religionists were "freer in Iran than our Muslim brothers." The
politician sat in his large office in the Assyrian club in Tehran.

"We can drink, our boys and girls can mingle in our clubs freely and
we can dance and sing," he said. "Muslims are not allowed to do those
things in here."

Members of the Bahai faith, however, face arrest and other forms
of persecution, according to U.S. and other officials. Followers
of Bahaism, which was founded in 19th-century Persia and emphasizes
religious unity and racial equality, are not allowed to practice their
religion or study at universities. The government regards the faith
as heretical, while Christians, Jews and Zoroastrians are respected
as being members of traditional monotheistic religions.

In the Church of Prophet Joseph, one of the last 10 remaining Christian
churches in Tehran, small events reminded Chaldean Catholic Archbishop
Ramzi Garmo, 63, of the continuing exodus.

An older clergyman entered the archbishop’s office. "Two more papers,
bishop," the man said.

"Two more departures," Garmo concluded. He stamped the forms with
his pastoral seal. "These papers prove that these youths are Assyrian
Chaldean," he explained. "With this they can prove they are Christian
during their interviews with HIAS in Vienna," Garmo said.

"Last Christmas my church was half-empty, while some years ago even
the courtyard would have been full," said Garmo, who is originally
from Mosul, Iraq. He started preaching in Iran more than 31 years ago,
when his diocese included 30,000 people. Now there are 3,000.

"People don’t realize they leave for a country where men can get
married to men, abortions are legal and divorces are easy," the
archbishop said. "Being a Christian in America is much harder than
being a Christian in Iran, believe me."

He glanced around the room, adorned with crosses and a portrait
of Pope Benedict XVI, and fell silent. "But I should put myself in
my congregation’s place," he continued. "If an Iranian family can’t
afford to pay rent, is unemployed and is fearful of a war with America,
who am I to forbid them from leaving?"

Betkolia explained that two laws are problematic for members of
minority religions in Iran. When a single family member converts to
Islam, the Muslim is entitled to inherit all the family’s property. A
second law prescribes that a Muslim who kills a non-Muslim cannot
receive the death penalty.

"These rules date back to 70 years ago," Betkolia said, explaining
that a similarly discriminatory statute on blood money was changed six
years ago. "Those other laws are being reformed, but step by step,"
Betkolia said.

The former U.S. official familiar with HIAS said persecution of
non-Muslims continues. "The fact is that this regime treats religious
minorities very poorly. It has acted viciously toward some of them,"
the former official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because
of the sensitivity of the program. "For Christians and others, it’s a
lower grade of persecution. They’re treated like third-class citizens,
day in and day out. If you are not a Shiite, you’re going to face
severe discrimination," he said.

"Maybe people grow accustomed to it and may learn to live with it,"
the former official said. "But to say they’re living an okay life
and they’re just economic refugees is ridiculous."

The recent increase in applicants has caused a significant backlog,
he said. "If the Iranians wanted to, they could stop cooperating and
create trouble for the program."

But according to some Iranian authorities, that would not happen.

"There is no way that the Iranian government would block members of
religious minorities from leaving. This would cause an international
outcry," said Mohammad Ali Abtahi, a former vice president and a
Shiite cleric.

"If HIAS would open its doors for Muslims, lots of Iranians would
leave for America. I guess the same would happen in Pakistan or Saudi
Arabia," Abtahi said. "I am sad people of other faiths leave Iran.

But for that to change, big problems which affect all Iranians need
to be tackled."

Violent Armenian Election Protest Ends

VIOLENT ARMENIAN ELECTION PROTEST ENDS

United Press International
March 2 2008

YEREVAN, Armenia, March 2 (UPI) — Yerevan was reported calm Sunday
after post-presidential election clashes in the Armenian capital
between protesters and riot police left nine dead.

Demonstrators clogged the streets for 11 days over allegations of
election fraud and vote rigging in the country’s Feb. 19 elections.

Opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian asked his followers to leave
the protest Sunday in an effort to stop the violence, CNN reported.

"We will avoid any public meeting and marches, and we will concentrate
on the constitutional court where we are expecting the case to be heard
and discussed (Tuesday)," opposition spokesman Arman Musinyan said.

Ter-Petrosian reportedly promised he would move forward with election
protests peacefully within the legal system.

Former Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisyan defeated opposition presidential
candidate Levon Ter-Petrosyan by a 2-to-1 margin, but protesters said
the vote was rigged in Sarkisyan’s favor, RIA Novosti said.

Oppositionists set up barricades at French Embassy in Yerevan

Oppositionists set up barricades at French Embassy in Yerevan

PanARMENIAN.Net
01.03.2008 18:01 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Participants of the opposition rallies started
setting upbarricades at the French Embassy in Yerevan.

Impeachment bloc leader Nikol Pashinyan called to construct defense
positions to block the way for armored personnel carriers and water
cannons. "It’s a convenient place, since the authorities will not
dare to use force near the diplomatic missions of France and Italy,"
he said.

He told to place barricades with the help of garbage cans, part benches
and everything they can find. Presently, they are dismantling a new
building opposite to the Embassy, Novosti Armenia reports.

The protesters demand to return Levon Ter-Petrosyan, who is presently
in his residence surrounded by law enforcers

8 policemen receive gunshot wounds as a result of a clash between po

8 policemen receive gunshot wounds as a result of a clash between police and demonstrators in the center of Yerevan

2008-03-01 22:45:00

ArmInfo. The Police of Armenia urge people to show restraint and
good sense.

The press service of the Police reports that in the last few hours
the people gathering near the Municipality of Yerevan have gone out
of control.

They have burnt several cars, including police cars, have broken kiosks
and shops. 8 policemen have received gunshot wounds as a result of
the clashes.

To remind, after being driven out of the Liberty Square today
morning the protesters moved to the territory near the Municipality
of Yerevan. One more clash between them and the police took place
two hours ago.

‘Palestinians subjects of holocaust’

‘Palestinians subjects of holocaust’

press tv
Sat, 01 Mar 2008 22:28:17

Hamas political leader Khalid Mashaal
Hamas political leader Khalid Mashaal says Palestinians have been the
subject of a holocaust since Israel came into being in 1948.

"Israel is using the Holocaust as a cover to do what it wants," Mashaal said
on Saturday.

He said that the Zionist regime is ‘using the Holocaust’ as a pretext to
justify its atrocities against the Palestinians.

The Hamas political leader condemned Israel’s air and overland raids which
killed 49 Palestinians in the coastal strip and injured more than 150 people
only on Saturday.

A majority of those killed are civilians, according to Palestinian Health
Ministry officials.

He also took a swipe at the international community for their failure in
putting an end to the Israeli cruelties, describing ‘those who keep quite as
accomplices to Israeli crimes’.

"If the world cannot end the occupation… then it is our right to defend
ourselves," he said. "When the battle is imposed on us, the only thing left
is resistance," he said.

Mashaal also said Palestinian Authority Chief Mahmoud Abbas provides the
Israeli regime with ‘a cover, voluntarily or involuntarily’, to carry out
its assault on Gaza.

Police crack down on opposition rally in Yerevan

Police crack down on opposition rally in Yerevan

ITAR-TASS, Russia
March 1 2008

01.03.2008, 07.04

YEREVAN, March 1 (Itar-Tass) – Police have cracked down on the rally
by opposition protesters in the centre of Yerevan.

The unauthorised round-the-clock rally was called by oppositional
forces that refuse to recognise the outcome of the February 19
presidential election.

According to police officials the demonstrators number 6,500.

At dawn police surrounded the Opera Square where opposition protesters
gathered for their rally. According to witnesses, the protesters have
been given an opportunity to go away along the Severny Avenue.

At present, the square is surrounded by policy. Several dozens of
tens have been demolished that the protesters built at the square.

The area around the Opera Square is encircled by road policy and it
does not allow transport to approach the site of the events.

Earlier in the week, policy and city authorities called on protesters
to stop unauthorised rallies and marches, and sit-down protest
actions. The protest actions, which were organised by first Armenian
President Levon Ter-Petrosyan and his supporters, took place on
February 19. They insist Ter-Petrosyan and not Prime Minister Serzh
Sarkisyan won the elections. But according to the latest results,
Ter-Petrosyan took the second place.

At the same time, police stressed that it "will take decisive measures
in compliance with law in order to protect constitutional order and
security in the country". Sarkisyan who was elected Armenia’s president
confirmed that the authorities "will be tolerant until one is trying
to abuse this tolerance and this could lead to bad consequences".

The situation is normal in Yerevan. Neither the authorities nor the
opposition made any statements.