3 Armenian historical monastery complexes included in UNESCO list

Three Armenian historical monastery complexes included in list of
UNESCO World Heritage

2008-07-10 10:29:00

ArmInfo. The 32nd meeting of UNESCO World Heritage Committee in Quebec
(Canada) included three Armenian monastery complexes of St. Stepan
(Stepanos), St. Faddey (Tadevos) and chapel Dzor-Dzor in the World
Heritage List. The Islamic Republic of Iran submitted the complexes for
the list, which is a bright evidence of cooperation in the sphere of
culture, the Armenian Foreign Ministry Department for Information and
Press told ArmInfo.

Under the UNESCO World Heritage Convention to Protect world cultural
heritage, 851 objects of common importance have been included in the
above list.

"Armavia"s Pretentious Programs

"ARMAVIA"S PRETENTIOUS PROGRAMS
Naira Khachatryan

Hayots Ashkhar Daily
Published on July 08, 2008
Armenia

Negotiations with "Bowing" and "AIRBUS"

In the near future "Armavia" air-company is planning to open
Yerevan-Los-Angeles flight without landing. The air-company is holding
negotiations with "Bowing" to purchase planes for this purpose.

Yesterday owner of "Armavia" Michael Baghdasarov met with the
Commercial Regional Director of "Bowing" Sergey Leshchinsky. Before
the negotiations Michael Baghdasarov informed the journalists that
recently he has hold similar negotiations with "AIRBUS".

"The final meeting will be in London on July 14. I think they will
show us the planes there. As you know the flight is inter-continental,
it will be difficult for transatlantic and our company to open this
flight. That is why the choice of the plane is very difficult for us."

According to Baghdasarov the company is starting a dynamic development
– high-quality flights. Though it is not very easy due to the increase
of fuel prices. "At the moment many air-companies simply went bankrupt,
but "Armavia" is trying to overcome all the difficulties."

The company has closed all the non-beneficial flights.

"As you know recently the number of our flights has 5 times increased,
but at the moment we have to close two of them. One of them is
Yerevan-Minsk, later we will announce about the second one. It will
be the third flight to Dubai. Other cuttings are also possible."

But together with the before mentioned obligatory steps the director
of the company is doing his best to provide a wide variety of flights
for his clients. Yerevan- Marcel -Yerevan flight testifies to this. It
is a very good opportunity for the Armenian community living in the
South of France to have direct contact with their motherland and a
result of the right business activity for "Armavia".

Thus the company will continue to extend its activity and the owner of
"Armavia" insured that he is not going to sell the company.

"Those rumors are baseless. As for the rumors about cement factory,
they are grounded. The latter will be sold and the money will serve
for the development of "Armavia", to make it powerful."

Touching upon the purchase of the new airport M. Baghdasarov
underscored that the conversation is about buying and not renting,
because "AIRBUS" and "Bowing" usually sell their airplanes. "So we
are going to buy two CRJ planes from London and in general from now
on we are going to buy the planes."

The concrete conditions of the purchase of planes from "AIRBUS" and
"Bowing" are at clarification stage. "We don’t have final agreement
neither with "AIRBUS" nor with "Bowing". I hope those companies will
propose favorable conditions. Anyway we will choose the best option."

It was evident from M. Baghdasarov’s speech that "Armavia" has got a
pretentious development program. "In future we will have more planes,
, because Armenia is becoming a transiting country. The latter can
connect North with South and West with East."

The representative of "Bowing" who arrived in Armenia by "Armavia"’s
plane was impressed by the high level of the company. S Leshchinsky
said: "We are pleasantly surprised not only at the technical comfort
but also the service that meets the demands of the international
standards."

As regards the mutual cooperation and negotiations, he says the company
is able to open an inter-continental flight without landing. "The
only thing that we must do is to chose the right equipments. In my
view it is too early to speak about the choice of the plane’s type
and cooperation. But the first meeting showed that actually it is
possible."

Medvedev Supports Direct Armenian-Azerbaijani Negotiations

MEDVEDEV SUPPORTS DIRECT ARMENIAN-AZERBAIJANI NEGOTIATIONS

Interfax News Agency
July 3 2008
Russia

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev welcomed progress in the Karabakh
settlement process and promised support to the participants in the
direct negotiations.

"Certain progress has been made," Medvedev said after talks with
Azeri President Ilham Aliyev in Baku on Thursday.

"Moscow supports the resumption of direct negotiations between the
Azeri and Armenian presidents, which took place in St. Petersburg on
June 6," he said.

"Russia will continue to assist the search for a mutually acceptable
compromise" in the Karabakh settlement process, Medvedev said.

Armenia Invites Turkish President In Football Diplomacy

ARMENIA INVITES TURKISH PRESIDENT IN FOOTBALL DIPLOMACY

Agence France Presse — English
July 5, 2008 Saturday 10:32 AM GMT

Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian has invited Turkish President
Abdullah Gul to watch a football match in Yerevan, a spokesman said
Saturday, despite a diplomatic freeze between the two countries.

"The president has invited Turkish President Abdullah Gul Enhanced
Coverage LinkingAbdullah Gul -Search using: Biographies Plus News
News, Most Recent 60 Days to visit Armenia on September 6 to watch the
World Cup qualifying match between Armenia and Turkey," Sarkisian’s
spokesman, Samvel Farmanyan, told AFP.

There are currently no diplomatic ties between Turkey and Armenia
because of disputes over the massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turks
in the early 20th century and over Turkey’s support for Azerbaijan,
Armenia’s arch-foe.

Backed by Armenia, ethnic-Armenian forces took control of the
Azerbaijani province of Nagorny Karabakh during a war in the early
1990s that killed thousands and forced nearly a million people on
both sides to flee their homes.

There have been recent calls to reopen the border between ex-Soviet
Armenia and Turkey to help growing trade ties between the two, which
are currently conducted through third countries such as Georgia.

Member Of Sasun Mikayelian’s Support Group Brought To Police From No

MEMBER OF SASUN MIKAYELIAN’S SUPPORT GROUP BROUGHT TO POLICE FROM NORTHERN
AVENUE

NOYAN TAPAN

Ju ly 7

At about 15:00, July 7, a brawl started between two girls who appeared
in Northern Avenue and the participants of the action of protest,
radical opposition supporters, who are on sit-down strike for the third
day in Northern Avenue. As a result, policemen in civil clothes brought
to the police station an oppositionist, a resident of the village
of Vanatur, who had come to Northern Avenue as a member of arrested
Sasun Mikayelian’s support group. As Noyan Tapan correspondent was
informed by the members of the Special Regiment youth organization,
the girls very obviously instigators.

It should be mentioned that nearly sixty people, the majority of
which were women, spent the July 7 night in Northern Avenue. In the
previous nights their number reached 90. They organized the action
without tents, in the open air and spend the nights near the walls
of Avenue’s elite buildings, on mattresses spread on the ground.

It should be mentioned that the demands of the sit-down strike
announced until August 1 are to release those arrested on the March
1 case, to stop prosecutions and pressures to opposition supporters,
to quickly call for liability those really guilty of the March 1
events, in the person of former President Robert Kocharian. Besides,
the opposition demands dismissing until August 1 Deputy Prime Minister
Armen Gevorgian, Head of President’s Administration Hovik Abrahamian,
Prosecutor General Aghvan Hovsepian, Head of the National Security
Service Gorik Hakobian, and Chairman of Council of the Public TV and
Radio Company Alexan Haroutiunian.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=115349

Teens raise funds to help children in Armenia

PRESS OFFICE
Fund for Armenian Relief (FAR)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Tel: (212) 889-5150; Fax: (212) 889-4849
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

July 7, 2008
______________

Teens raise funds to help children in Armenia

WHITE PLAINS YOUTH RAISE MONEY TO HELP FAR’S PROGRAM FOR HOMLESS CHILDREN

When members of the Armenian Church Youth Organization of America
(ACYOA) Jrs. chapter at the St. Gregory the Enlightener Church of
White Plains, NY, began planning their recent car wash fundraiser,
they weren’t quite sure where the money should end up.

The chapter’s advisor, Nectar Munro, decided to ask the parish priest,
Fr. Krikor Kasparian, his opinion on what the 17 young ACYOA Jrs.
members should support with their donation.

"Nectar discussed it with me and said that it would be wonderful if
this money was sent somewhere worthwhile," Fr. Kasparian said. "I
told her that there are homeless children in Yerevan and there is a
project FAR [the Fund for Armenian Relief] sponsors to help them, so
why not send the money to them. We thought that would be wonderful."

The group raised about $300 through the carwash, and sent it all to
FAR for its Yerevan Homeless Children’s Center, which works
proactively to keep at-risk children in in-tact, loving, functional
homes and out of institutionalized care.

"Our kids in ACYOA Jrs. are guided by a principal of serving, of
making the organization worthwhile by five activities," Fr. Kasparian
said. "They have sports, social events, spiritual activities,
service, and educational experiences. They thought this donation was
in keeping with the goals of the local chapter to serve."

Fr. Kasparian said while the money raised could have gone to other
less-pressing needs in the parish community, he was glad the ACYOA
Jrs. members decided to help others in Armenia.

"For them to know that instead of appropriating the money for anything
else here, where we may have less need, but rather to send it to
Armenia where the need is greater, that makes me proud," he said.

And the ACYOA Jrs. are not the only group at St. Gregory the
Enlightener making Fr. Kasparian proud. This past Mother’s Day, the
seventh and eighth grade Sunday School class, taught by Edward Dorian
Jr., sold breakfast to the community and sold plants. They raised
about $450, and again decided to send the money to the homeless youth
of Armenia through FAR.

"The children thought it would be wonderful to send to children around
their age, preferably the homeless children in Armenia," Fr. Kasparian
said. "They learn in Sunday School the importance of serving and
outreach and extending themselves to people who are needier than they
are. This donation is their education put into action."

Fr. Kasparian noted that the donations reflect the teachings of the
church to serve others.

"It makes me feel great," Fr. Kasparian said of the two donations.
"What they’re learning in Sunday School and as members of ACYOA Jrs.
is not just theoretical knowledge. It can be translated into action.
However humble and small this might be, it is the fruits of their
labor and the love share with people in Armenia."

"They also do this because, in a sense, they realize it is setting an
example to other children," he added. "So they are witnessing to
their faith in a very tangible way. I think that’s a mature
attitude."

OTHERS HELPING

While the children of White Plains were busy washing cars and selling
flowers, they were not the only young people helping their peers in
Armenia.

Julia Masotti, a junior at Kellenberg Memorial High School in
Uniondale, NY, on Long Island, is half Armenian. She recently started
an organization called Kids Helping Kids, which aimed to turn youthful
volunteer activities into action to make life easier for children.
Her group raised $400 by selling used books, and they decided to
donate the money to FAR to buy school supplies for children in
Armenia.

"I hope I can make a difference in the life of children," she said.

By providing hope and opportunity to the next generation of Armenians,
FAR aims to empower them to build Armenia’s future. FAR’s programs
for youth include its Homeless Children’s Center and the development
of an modern foster care system for Armenia.

FAR also works with the Women’s Guild of the Diocese of the Armenian
Church of America (Eastern), by handling the logistics of its Children
of Armenia Sponsorship Program (CASP), through which donors around the
globe provide structured, direct financial support to orphans in
Armenia.

Other FAR programs that directly aid children include the renovation
and operation of several schools throughout the nation, college
scholarships, choirs, arts training programs, summer camps, and the
Gyumri IT Center which is training the next generation of computer
specialists in the northern, earthquake devastated region.

For more information on FAR or to send donations, contact us at 630
Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016; telephone (212) 889-5150; fax (212)
889-4849;¨web ; e-mail [email protected].

www.farusa.org
www.farusa.org

Board Members Resign to Protest Chair’s Ousting

This is a multi-part message in MIME format.

ent/article/2008/07/04/AR2008070402408.html

Board Members Resign to Protest Chair’s Ousting
Leader in Georgetown-Based Agency Encouraged Scholars to Research Mass
Killing of Armenians

By Susan Kinzie
Washington Post Staff Writer
Saturday, July 5, 2008; B05

The issue that has roiled U.S.-Turkish relations in recent months — how
to characterize the mass killing of Armenians in 1915 — has set off a
dispute over politics and academic freedom at an institute housed at
Georgetown University.

Several board members of the Institute of Turkish Studies have resigned
this summer, protesting the ouster of a board chairman who wrote that
scholars should research, rather than avoid, what he characterized as an
Armenian genocide.

Within weeks of writing about the matter in late 2006, Binghamton
University professor Donald Quataert resigned from the board of
governors, saying the Turkish ambassador to the United States told him
he had angered some political leaders in Ankara and that they had
threatened to revoke the institute’s funding.

After a prominent association of Middle Eastern scholars learned about
it, they wrote a letter in May to the institute, the Turkish prime
minister and other leaders asking that Quataert be reinstated and money
for the institute be put in an irrevocable trust to avoid political
influence.

The ambassador of the Republic of Turkey, H.E. Nabi Sensoy, denied that
he had any role in Quataert’s resignation. In a written statement, he
said that claims that he urged Quataert to leave are unfounded and
misleading.

The dispute shows the tensions between money and scholarship, and the
impact language can have on historical understanding.

Hundreds of thousands of Armenians were killed when the Ottoman Empire
collapsed after World War I. Armenians and Turks bitterly disagree over
whether it was a campaign of genocide, or a civil war in which many
Turks were also killed.

In the fall, when Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.)
championed a bill that would characterize the events of 1915 to 1917 as
genocide, the Bush administration fought it and several former defense
secretaries warned that Turkish leaders would limit U.S. access to a
military base needed for the war in Iraq.

The Turkish studies institute, founded in 1983, is independent from
Georgetown University, but Executive Director David Cuthell teaches a
course there in exchange for space on campus.

Julie Green Bataille, a university spokeswoman, wrote in an e-mail, "we
will review this matter consistent with the importance of academic
freedom and the fact that the institute is independently funded and
governed."

The institute’s funding, a $3 million grant, is entirely from Turkey.

A few years ago, Quataert said, members of the board checked on what
they thought was an irrevocable blind trust "and to our surprise it
turned out to be a gift that could be revoked by the Turkish
government."

Quataert, a professor of history, said the institute has funded good
scholarship without political influence. The selection of which studies
to support is done by a committee of academics on the associate board,
he said, and approved by the board, which includes business and
political leaders. Never once, he said, did he think a grant application
was judged on anything other than its academic merits.

He also noted that during his time there, no one applied for grants that
would have been controversial in Turkey. Asked if any of the research
characterized the events as genocide, Cuthell said, "My gut is no. It’s
that third rail."

Roger Smith, professor emeritus of government at the College of William
and Mary, questioned whether the nonprofit institute deserves its
tax-exempt status if there is political influence — and whether it is
an undeclared lobbying arm for the Turkish government.

Cuthell said none of the institute’s critics ever bothered to check the
truth of Quataert’s account with the institute: It does not lobby,
Cuthell said, and "the allegations of academic freedom simply don’t hold
up."

The controversy began quietly in late 2006 with a review of historian
Donald Bloxham’s book, "The Great Game of Genocide." Quataert wrote that
the slaughter of Armenians has been the elephant in the room of Ottoman
studies. Despite his belief that the term "genocide" had become a
distraction, he said the events met the United Nations definition of the
word.

He sent a letter of resignation to members of the institute in December
2006, and one board member resigned.

But in the fall, around the same time that Congress was debating the
Armenian question, Quataert was asked to speak at a conference about
what had happened at the institute. He told members of the Middle
Eastern Studies Association that the ambassador told him he must issue a
retraction of his book review or step down — or put funding for the
institute in jeopardy.

His colleagues were shocked, said Laurie Brand, director of the school
of international relations at the University of Southern California.

Ambassador Sensoy, who is honorary chairman of the institute’s board,
said in a statement this week, "Neither the Turkish Government nor I
have ever placed any pressure upon the ITS, for such interference would
have violated the principle of the academic freedom, which we uphold the
most. The Turkish Government and I will be the first to defend ITS from
any such pressure."

Since the May 27 letter from the scholars association was sent, several
associate and full members of the board have left. Marcie Patton, Resat
Kasaba and Kemal Silay resigned; Fatma Muge Gocek said she would resign,
and Birol Yesilada said his primary reason for stepping down at this
time is his health, but that he is concerned about the conflicting
accounts of what had happened. "It’s a very difficult line that scholars
walk," Patton said, "especially post-9/11, especially because of the
Iraq war."

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/cont

Air Fee To Be Incorporated In Airfare In Armenia

AIR FEE TO BE INCORPORATED IN AIRFARE IN ARMENIA

July 3
ARKA

The 10,000 Drams’ air fee collected from air passengers leaving
Armenia in the country’s airports will be incorporated in airfare.

The respective law is expected to be passed by the country’s
parliaments by the end of this year, Armenian Minister of Finance
Tigran Davtian said.

Yet, the air ticket price will remain unchanged as the final cost is
formed based on offer and demand, not on the prime cost, he said. This
practice is used in many countries, the Minister said.

The incorporated air fee will be transferred to tour operators – to
the corresponding air company; the latter, in its turn, will transfer
it to concessionaires and then to the state budget, he said adding
that air fees paid to the state budget total $20-30mln every year. -0–

Most Important Instrument Of Fighting Corruption Is Publicity, Tigra

MOST IMPORTANT INSTRUMENT OF FIGHTING CORRUPTION IS PUBLICITY, TIGRAN SARGSIAN CONSIDERS

NOYAN TAPAN

Ju ly 2

The first Anti-corruption conference was held on July 2 in Yerevan. It
discussed Armenia’s international anti-corruption commitments within
the framework of the UN Anti-corruption Convention, Eastern Europe and
Central Asia Anti-corruption Network of the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development, and Council of Europe’s Group of States
Against Corruption (GRECO). The role of anti-corruption strategy in
securing fulfilment of these commitments was also discussed.

U.S. Charge d’Affaires Joseph Pennington said that the conference gives
the government, the private sector, and the civil society an arena for
fighting corruption jointly. According to him, the U.S. government
welcomes the important steps taken by the RA government by assuming
various important international commitments.

RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsian said that the government will work
out an anti-corruption program by the end of the year. According to
him, that program is important for Armenia not only in the respect
of fulfilment of international commitments, but also in the respect
of the deep conviction that "it is a serious public evil."

In Prime Minister’s opinion, the most important instrument of
fighting corruption is publicity. "The public should feel that
our actions and programs give real results," he said. According
to T. Sargsian, it is important that wide layers of society, NGOs,
opposition representatives take part in elaboration, implementation,
and control of these programs.

Answering journalists’ questions, the Prime Minister said that all
bases nourishing corruption in Armenia are just in the sphere of tax
and customs administration. "We have made these spheres our targets
and if we have quality improvements in the above mentioned spheres
in the coming three years, we can be sure that we will live in a
different society in the respect of quality in the coming five years,"
T. Sargsian said.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=115149

Armenia Calls For Establishment Of Diplomatic Relations With Turkey

ARMENIA CALLS FOR ESTABLISHMENT OF DIPLOMATIC RELATIONS WITH TURKEY

Public Television of Armenia
June 26 2008

President Serzh Sargsyan’s position on Armenian-Turkish relations
have not changed, the press-secretary of the country’s president
said today, commenting on the latest speeches Serzh Sargsyan has
made in Moscow. Samvel Farmanyan said that [Sargsyan’s position is]
clear and leaves no room for ambiguity.

He went to explain: Turkey has suggested establishing a commission of
experts to study historical facts about the [Armenian] genocide. We
are not against any study, even that of apparent facts and widely
accepted realities. A study does not mean questioning the authenticity
of facts. However, the establishment of such a commission would
be logical only after establishing diplomatic relations between our
countries and opening the borders. Otherwise, it can become a tool for
prolonging and misusing the existing problems for years. End of quote.