OSCE MG Co-Chairs Know Nothing About Fate Of Appeal Of Armenian Side

OSCE MG CO-CHAIRS KNOW NOTHING ABOUT FATE OF APPEAL OF ARMENIAN
SIDE ON CONDUCTING OSCE MISSION IN ARMENIAN TERRITORIES CONTROLLED
BY AZERBAIJAN

YEREVAN, JULY 15. ARMINFO. The OSCE MG co-chairs on Nagorno Karabakh
conflict settlement know nothing about the further fate of Armenian
party’s appeal on conducting the OSCE mission in Armenian territories
controlled by Azerbaijan.

Answering a question about Armenian party’s appeal’s fate at today’s
press-conference, the OSCE MG Russian co-chair Yury Merzlyakov noted
that co-chairs know that there was the proper appeal from Armenian
party there. “We have seen it and we were given an opportunity to
be acquainted with it”, concretized Merzlyakov adding that they were
not informed about further steps. At the same time, he reminded about
a consensus principle acting in the OSCE according to which if even
one party opposes, the offer is deviated.

To remind, in winter 2005 the same mission was conducted in territories
controlled by NKR upon the request of Azeri party.

Aram I denounces Beirut terrorist act

Aram I denounces Beirut terrorist act

13.07.2005 15:21

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – Cilicia Catholicos Aram I had a telephone
conversation with Lebanon’s President Emil Lahud immediately after the
July 12 terrorist act occurred near the Antelias Catholicosate in
Beirut.

The catholicos vigorously condemned the gloomy act aimed at
destabilizing the country. Meanwhile, he welcomed the position of all
the sides to consolidate and express a united stance.

The bomb that had exploded not far from where the catholicosate is
situated had shuttered some of the windows of the building.

Patriarch Signs Book of Condolence at British Consulate

Lraper Church Bulletin 11/07/2005
Contact: Deacon Vagharshag Seropyan
Armenian Patriarchate
TR-34130 Kumkapi, Istanbul
T: +90 (212) 517-0970, 517-0971
F: +90 (212) 516-4833, 458-1365
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
[email protected]
<;

THE PATRIARCH SIGNS BOOK OF CONDOLENCE

Condolence Books for the victims of the 7 July terrorist attacks in
London were opened from 10am to 2pm on Monday 11 July and Tuesday 12
July at the British Embassy in Ankara, the British Consulate-General in
Istanbul, and the British Consulate in Izmir.

His Beatitude Mesrob II, Armenian Patriarch of Istanbul and All Turkey,
visited, on 11 July 2005, the British Consulate General in Galatasaray,
Istanbul, where he was greeted at the gate by the Locum Tenens of the
Consul General. His Beatitude then signed the Condolence Book for the
victims, praying for the repose of their souls.

http://www.lraper.org/&gt
www.lraper.org

BAKU: OSCE MG co-chairs meet head of Azerbaijan community of NK

AzerTag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
July 11 2005

OSCE MG CO-CHAIRS MEET HEAD OF AZERBAIJAN COMMUNITY OF NAGORNO
KARABAKH
[July 11, 2005, 21:13:39]

On 11 July, the OSCE MG co-chairs now visiting Baku have met with the
head of the Azerbaijan community of Nagorno Karabakh, head of the
Shusha Executive power Nizami Bahmanov.

After the meeting, speaking to the journalists, Mr. Bahmanov told
that the meeting passed in constructive atmosphere and discussed were
concrete questions. As is stated, mainly focused was the process of
Prague negotiations, including liberation of territories, return of
refugees to their homelands and restoration of the
Agdam-Khankendi-Shusha-Lachin-Gorus-Sisyan-Shabuz road and joint use
of it.

The co-chairs have interested in readiness of the Azerbaijani side to
guarantee for safety of the road.

NKR: Building in Rural Areas Requires Attention

BUILDING IN RURAL AREAS REQUIRES ATTENTION

Azat Artsakh – Nagorno Karabakh Republic [NKR]
07 July 05

In the 1980s, the construction projects for the kolkhozes of Mets
Taghlar, Togh, Ukhtadzor, Banadzor in the region of Hadrut were worked
out but were not brought into being for the reasons we know. Moreover,
21 villages of the region were bombed and destroyed during the war. By
a rough estimate over 1530 houses, 22 schools, 10 cultural buildings,
20 maternity wards, 4 nursery schools, 10 communication enterprises,
more than 120 km of telephone cables, 160 km of electricity cables, 33
shops and enterprises providing services, 30 km of water pipeline, 15
artesian wells, 4 water pumping stations and over 110 km of main and
local roads were destroyed in the region of Hadrut. Over a dozen
processing units were destroyed. 2500 people were compelled to leave
their homes. After the armistice in May 1994 the reconstruction of
these villages began. Schools, medical stations, over 1000 houses were
built in the villages of Banadzor, Arakel, Khandzadzor, Arevshat,
Pletants, Tsamdzor, Norashen, Aygestan; 1400 people came back to these
villages. Today the villager owns land and earns his bread, overcoming
the difficulties. At present the first problem of rural areas is
improvement of living conditions. After the war the government began
the reconstruction of the displaced villages. The lack of funds and
the great volume of work were the reasons why the houses lacked basic
amenities, although the settlers did not pay much attention to this,
for the wish to return to their homes was great. In solving the
problem of housing, no attention was paid to the future development of
the community, architecture, amenities. During the privatization of
land the growth of the village was not considered, and no reserve of
land was foreseen for future building, which causes problems in
providing land for building houses in all the parts of the region,
hindering the development of infrastructures and bringing about
additional expenses. Today there is need for founding public compounds
where the club, the mayors office, the maternity ward, the library,
etc. will be located. The village roads need repair. The tender for
reconstruction of rural areas initiated by the NKR prime minister in
2001 produced good results. All the communities of the region
participated in the tender, doing certain projects. The communities of
Mets Taghlar, Togh, Mariamadzor, Tsakuri, Khandzadzor and Jrakus won
the tender and on the means provided from the NKR state budget the
museum of Khudyakov in Mets Taghlar was reconstructed, banquet halls
were built in Togh, Mariamadzor, a broadcasting station was installed
in Khandzadzor, the sources of the villages of Tsakuri and Jrakus were
repaired. This kind of work is, of course, commendable but the
government should consider the development of rural areas in
perspective, controlling the quality of the work, for what is done is
done for centuries.

ED. DAVTIAN.
07-07-2005

Parents irked over military high school recruitment

Posted: July 5, 2005 10:00 PM
Parents irked over military high school recruitment

Kelley Beaucar Vlahos, Fox News

WASHINGTON – A little-known provision in the No Child Left Behind Act
that compels public high schools to open their doors and pupil records
to military recruiters has some parents, students and anti-war groups
up in arms.

“We think most people were unaware of it,” Amy Hagopian, co-president
of the Garfield High School Parent-Teacher-Student Association in
Seattle and an active counter-recruiter in the school, said of the
provision.

Hagopian said parents are just becoming aware of the policy, which
gives recruiters the same access to high school campuses and students’
phone numbers and addresses as colleges and businesses have. Districts
that don’t comply could risk annual federal funding.

According to the law, parents must be notified and can refuse to
release their children’s information. Every school has adopted
different notification policies, some being more effective than
others, school officials said.

“Parents are confused – they are not well-informed,” said Hagopian,the
mother of two teenagers.

Military recruitment issues have been making headlines in recent
weeks, as the Army, Marine Corps and National Guard have announced
shortfalls in their goals this year.

Reports say recruitment pressure is translating into inappropriate
tactics by recruiters to the extent that the Army halted recruiting
for one day in May to refresh staff with proper protocol in dealing
with prospective soldiers.

Paul Rieckoff, an Iraq war veteran and founder of Operation Truth, a
veterans’ advocacy organization, said parents are now reacting to
“major recruiting problems” and bad news coming out of Iraq.

“I think it’s safe to say there is concern and even the beginning of a
movement to combat or to face the recruiters at the high schools,” he
said.”We don’t necessarily endorse that but the critical issue is that
the Army has missed their goals again this year.”

The military has always had access to schools but not all have opened
their doors and records equally. Now, the No Child Left Behind Act
emboldens efforts to gain “access to the best and brightest this
country has to offer,” said Department of Defense spokeswoman
Lt. Col. Ellen Krenke.

“For some of our students, this may be the best opportunity they have
to get a college education,” wrote Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld and former Secretary of Education Rod Paige in an October
2002 letter to school superintendents announcing the new law.

“The support by our nation’s educational institutions on behalf of the
U.S.

Armed Forces is critical to the success of the all-volunteer force,”
they stated.

But some parents and teachers say school is not an appropriate place
for the military’s message, and complain the hard sell has gotten
harder since the Iraq war began and following lackluster recruitment
numbers.

“The recruiters really harangue people, and this is what parents are
trying to avoid,” said Tina Weishaus, president of the Highland Park
Middle School/High School Parent Teacher Organization in New Jersey.

She works with the Central Jersey Coalition Against Endless War, which
has been encouraging counter-recruitment at high schools there, and is
helping to develop better notification for parents who may not know
they can refuse access to their child’s records.

“Personally, I think the whole thing should be struck from No Child
Left Behind,” Weishaus said. “I don’t think the federal government
should be mandating that schools become a recruiting ground for the
war.”

Army spokesman Doug Smith said the Army has not accelerated
recruitment at the schools in the face of missed goals. It is
primarily targeting college students, he said, with the average age of
21 for new Army recruits. In 2002, 12,560 out of the 77,000
enlistments were recruited out of high schools.

Other critics say they have no problem with military recruiters, but
are concerned about students’ privacy.

“Basically, as soon as we found out about it, it sparked a lot of
concern,” said Liz Lipshultz, 17, who was a freshman when the new law
was implemented.

She and other students at Montclair High School in New Jersey mounted
an aggressive campaign and were able to help pass a school board
policy that ensured parents would be made more aware of their options
each September.

According to Montclair school officials, more than 80 percent of the
parents who responded to that campaign asked that their records not be
given to recruiters this year. “It’s important to show that obviously,
peoples’ privacy does matter; people do care about it,” Lipshultz
said.

Sue Maquire, principal of Mt. Anthony High School in Bennington, Vt.,
said the new law “was quite controversial when it came out,” but
parents are pretty much aware now, thanks to letters the school sends
home every year. Most of them refuse access to their child’s records,
she said. But the school remains fair, giving recruiters equal time to
make their pitches to students.

“We just try to do it in a fair way, with no push for or against it,”
said Maquire.

Some say the recruitment issue is not a problem in low-income schools,
where the military option is more attractive to high school
seniors. Terry D’Italia, spokesman for Hartford Public Schools in
Connecticut, said he expects greater resistance in more affluent
districts.

“We are a very poor school system and the military is a really nice
option for our students, who can not only get skills training but
college tuition when they get out,” he said, adding that they allow
peace groups equal access and notify parents as well. “We have heard
little static from it.”

Hagopian, who spends a lot of time in Garfield High School’s
cafeteria, often confronting recruiters, said low-income students have
become fertile recruitment fodder for war. “It’s really the mission of
the PTSA to look out for all of the kids who our in our buildings.”

Bill Cala, superintendent of the Fairport Central School District in
New York, said his school has been found non-compliant with the law
because it doesn’t release the names of students to the military
unless parents specifically give their consent.

He said about 80 out of the 1,600 students in the school consented
this school year, but recruitment among seniors hit 2 percent.

“This really, for us, is a privacy issue and doesn’t have anything to
do with support for the military or for the war,” Cala said.

Armenian nuclear power station increases output in six months

Armenian nuclear power station increases output in six months

Arminfo
6 Jul 05

YEREVAN

The Armenian Nuclear Power Station increased the volume of power
generation by seven per cent in the first six months of 2005 to
1,521,600,000 kWh as compared to 1,421,800,000 kWh in the same period
last year, the general director of the station, Gagik Markosyan, told
Arminfo.

Power supplies to the country’s energy grid increased by eight per
cent to 1,402,000,000 kWh in the reported period as compared to
1,298,000,000 kWh in the same period of last year, he said.

Markosyan said that the nuclear station will be suspended for a
planned preventive repair on 15-20 September 2005.

[Passage omitted: background details on nuclear power station]

Armenia ready to widest possible regional coop without Preconditions

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
July 4 2005

ARMENIA IS READY TO WIDEST POSSIBLE REGIONAL COOPERATION WITHOUT ANY
PRECONDITIONS

YEREVAN, July 4. /ARKA/. Armenia is ready to widest possible regional
cooperation, including with Turkey without any preconditions.
According to RA Government’s Press Service Department, RA Prime
Minister Andranik MArgaryan stated about in the course of the meeting
with the Speaker of Lithuanian Parliament Arthuras Paulauskas.
According to Margaryan, Armenia relies on support by Lithuania
regarding the issue. From the standpoint of perspective goals of
Euro-integration, Margaryan and Paulauskas attached importance to the
issue of regional stability, and Armenia’s more active involvement in
economic programs implemented under the aegis of the EU contributes
to it.
According to the press-release, Margaryan and Paulauskas mentioned
the importance of development and signing some intergovernmental
agreements and exchange of experience in attraction of foreign
investments for stimulation of Armenian-Lithuanian partnership in
various areas of economy. Margaryan mentioned the importance of
strengthening of intergovernmental cooperation at bilateral level as
well as in the frames of numerous international relations. He
expressed hope that Lithuanian Ex-Speaker Vitautas Landsbergis post
as a Deputy Chairman of the European Parliament Commission on
Relations with South Caucasus States will contribute to more
strengthening of the relations of Armenia with European Parliament.
Margaryan also mentioned the importance of launching exposition
devoted to the Armenian Genocide in the Museum for the Victims of
Genocide of Vilnus Center for Genocide Studies. A.H.-0-

OSCE PA Discusses Peaceful Settlement of the NK Conflict

A1plus

| 18:41:44 | 04-07-2005 | Politics |

OSCE PARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY DISCUSSES PEACEFUL SETTLEMENT OF THE NAGORNO
KARABAKH CONFLICT

– There is now a golden opportunity for a peaceful solution of the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict, based on a win-win concept where both Armenia and
Azerbaijan come out better. Armenia and Azerbaijan must intensify the
negotiations on Nagorno Karabakh.

Swedish MP Göran Lennmarker, OSCE Parliamentary Assembly Special
Representative on the Nagorno Karabakh Conflict, today presented his report
to Heads of Delegations to the OSCE PA. The Report spells out his ideas on
how to promote a peaceful settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict within
the ongoing OSCE Minsk Peace-process.

The conflict between the Armenians and Azerbaijanis over the region of
Nagorno Karabakh broke out more than a decade ago, leaving territories
occupied and resulting in displaced people living under miserable conditions
on both sides. Although a ceasefire was established in 1994, the conflict
remains unsolved.

Mr. Lennmarker stresses that “the conflict is not frozen. Several people are
killed along the line-of-contact every year”. He adds: “there is no
alternative to a peaceful solution – in fact there is an urgent need to
solve the conflict in order to end the personal, economic, and social
suffering on both sides of this conflict”.

He suggests basing a solution on experiences from Europe, where democracy
and integration are fundamental components in securing a lasting peace.
Strong European and international institutions stand ready to support
Armenia and Azerbaijan. This is a generous offer and must be seized.

He also stresses the usefulness of the work done by the Parliamentary
Delegations of Armenia and Azerbaijan: “Once a peace agreement has been
finalized by the two Governments, the parliamentary dimension becomes
invaluable in informing the public and in ensuring the implementation. It is
of utmost importance that networks of Members of Parliaments already exist
and stand ready to take on these tasks”.

Mr. Lennmarker was appointed in June 2002 and has since then visited Armenia
and Azerbaijan on numerous occasions, meeting with representatives of all
sections of society including refugees on both sides. He has also met with
international actors, including the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group.

Let us remind you that the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly takes place in
Washington on July 1-5.

Let us also remind you that the Azeri deputy Satar Safarov had also
represented supplementary material titled «Armenian-Azeri Conflict about
Nagorno Karabakh». But the Parliament turned it down with a majority of
votes. With the 19-point convention Safarov, among other things, demanded
«the immediate ousting of the occupying forces from the territory of
Azerbaijan».

Brigadier Leslie Marsh

The Times, UK
July 1 2005

Brigadier Leslie Marsh

May 10, 1918 – June 6, 2005

Royal Marine commander who helped deter an Iraqi threat to the
sovereignty of Kuwait in 1961

IN his military career Leslie Marsh fought in the icy mountains of
Armenia and Korea, the wetlands of northeast Italy, the deserts of
Aden and Kuwait and the jungles of Borneo – a variety remarkable even
for a Royal Marine.

In November 1950, while under US orders north of Pyongyang, the North
Korean capital, he won the MC for his courage, selfless conduct and
outstanding leadership during an action in which his formation,
41 (Independent) Commando, had to drive forward, despite taking
casualties, to support the 7th US Marines who had been encircled
by large numbers of Chinese troops in the mountains of the Chosin
plateau. This was a tipping point in the Korean War, when the sudden
involvement of massive Chinese Communist forces speedily pushed the
UN far to the south to an enclave around Pusan.

During the defence of a convoy between Koto-ri and Hagaru-ri, Marsh
was badly wounded in the thigh, but refused first aid and rallied
his men to beat off the opposition. Several marines suffered from
frostbite. Marsh noted that Chinese soldiers wore jackets that were
white on one side and khaki on the other, in order to camouflage
themselves in snow, but that they made good targets if facing the
wrong
way. A USMC sergeant later wrote: “The boot-necks were the only ones
to make it and join us in a condition and willing to fight some
more.”

Educated at Clifton College, Marsh joined the Royal Marines in 1938,
aged 20. After sea service in the battleship Iron Duke and the
cruiser
Birmingham, he volunteered for commando training and first saw action
in Albania in 1944 in support of Marshal Tito’s partisans; 40
Commando
took the town of Sarande and the island of Corfu before being moved
to
Italy and Operation Roast, a savage infantry battle around the shores
of Lake Comacchio near Ravenna in April 1945. Several army and Royal
Marine commandos overcame mud, flood, minefields and lack of cover
to drive out the Germans and unbalance Field Marshal Kesselring’s
defensive plan. Marsh was badly wounded in the shoulder by a burst
from a German machine pistol.

After duty in a series of training posts, Marsh was appointed in
command of 45 Commando at Aden. In June 1961 the Sheikh of Kuwait
became a fully sovereign ruler against the wishes of Iraq, which
threatened an invasion. First to respond to this threat was 42
Commando, helicoptered ashore from the carrier Bulwark; 45 Commando
was flown from Aden to Kuwait’s incomplete airstrip and, with 42,
took up positions in the desert near the Iraqi border. The marines
learnt to survive at the hottest time of the year in one of the
hottest
parts of the world where unacclimatised troops would have had great
difficulties. Further reinforcements, amounting to 6,000 troops,
tanks
and the fleet carrier Victorious, achieved a timely deterrence. Iraq
did not attack, and Kuwait was soon accepted into the Arab League.

Marsh’s next mission in support of Britain’s postcolonial interests
was to command 3 Commando Brigade in the rank of brigadier in 1963
and 1964 during what became known as “the Confrontation”: the attempt
by President Sukarno of Indonesia to disrupt, by subversion and
infiltra-tion, the inclusion of Sarawak, Brunei and Sabah (formerly
British North Borneo) into the new Federation of Malaysia. Royal
Marines became experts in jungle warfare and the avoidance of
tropical
diseases. They made an important contribution to a campaign which
lasted more than three years and employed the largest Far East fleet
since the Korean war.

Marsh’s final appointment was command of the Commando Training
Centre in Devon. His private interests were in sharp contrast to his
military exploits; they included painting in pastels, ornithology
and an ability, if given the first line, to complete any of A. E.
Housman’s poems from memory.

He was fluent in French and Spanish, and after a second career
working
for the paper manufacturer Wiggins Teape in Basingstoke, he and his
wife Annie moved to the Dordogne where they set up a Michelin-starred
guest house. He is survived by her and his four stepchildren.

Brigadier Leslie Marsh, MC, Royal Marines, was born on May 10, 1918.
He died on June 6, 2005, aged 87.