Baku Opposition Newspaper Editor Sentenced To 8,5 Years In Prison

BAKU OPPOSITION NEWSPAPER EDITOR SENTENCED TO 8,5 YEARS IN PRISON

PanARMENIAN.Net
30.10.2007 16:04 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ An Azeri court has sentenced Eynulla Fatullayev,
the editor of Real Azerbaijan and Gundelik Azerbaijan newspapers,
to 8 years and 6 months in prison, said Isahan Ashurov, the lawyer
of the convicted.

The journalist was accused under articles 214.1 (terrorism threat),
283.2.2 (incitement of national, racial and religious hatred) and
213.2.2 (tax evasion) of the Azeri Penal Code.

April 20, 2007, Fatullayev was given a 2.5-year sentence, which was
upheld by the Court of Appeals and the Supreme Court.

His lawyer described the sentence as "illegal and unjust."

"This sentence is directly connected with the journalist activities
of my client. A complaint has been already sent to the European Court
of Human Rights," Ashurov said, Day.az reports.

AHI And ANCA Issue Joint Statement On Senate Resolution Regarding U.

AHI AND ANCA ISSUE JOINT STATEMENT ON SENATE RESOLUTION REGARDING U.S.-TURKEY RELATIONS

Hellenic News of America, PA
Oct 30 2007

WASHINGTON, DC – Executive Director Nick Larigakis issued a joint
statement today with Aram Hamparian Executive Director for the
Armenian National Committee, to members of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee regarding the introduction by Senators Gordon Smith (R-OR)
and Robert Byrd (D-WV) of S.Res. 358 regarding U.S.-Turkey relations.

The statement says:

The resolution introduced by Senators Smith and Byrd neither
serves U.S. interests nor advances American values by sugarcoating
Turkey�s record or by ignoring serious tensions in the
U.S.-Turkey bilateral relationship.

Any legislation that the Congress considers on this issue should
clearly and prominently address Turkey�s threats to invade
and destabilize northern Iraq, its immoral and heavy-handed threats
against the recognition of the Armenian Genocide, military occupation
of Cyprus, continued airspace violations of Greek-sovereign airspace
over the Aegean, blockade of Armenia, mistreatment of the Kurds,
and restrictions on the religious freedom of the Ecumenical Patriarch
and other Christian leaders.

Below is a copy of S.Res. 358 regarding U.S.-Turkish relations.

SENATE RESOLUTION 358-EXPRESSING THE IMPORTANCE OF FRIENDSHIP AND
COOPERATION BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND TURKEY

S.Res. 358

Mr. SMITH (for himself and Mr. Byrd) submitted the following
resolution; which was referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations:

Whereas the United States and Turkey share common ideals and a clear
vision for the 21st century, in which freedom and democracy are the
foundation of peace, prosperity, and security;

Whereas Turkey is a strong example of a predominantly Muslim country
with a true representative democratic government; Whereas for more
than 50 years a strategic partnership has existed between the United
States and Turkey, both bilaterally and through the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization, which has been of enormous political, economic,
cultural, and strategic benefit to both countries;

Whereas the Government of Turkey has demonstrated its opposition to
terrorism throughout the world, and has called for the international
community to unite against this threat;

Whereas Turkey maintains an important bilateral relationship with
Israel and seeks to play a constructive role in Middle East peace
negotiations;

Whereas Operation Enduring Freedom entered its 6th year on October 7th,
2007; Whereas Turkey commanded the International Security Assistance
Force in Afghanistan twice, from July 2002 to January 2003, and from
February 2005 to August 2005;

Whereas Turkey has provided humanitarian and medical assistance in
Afghanistan and in Iraq; Whereas the Government of Turkey has made
its base in Incirlik available for United States missions in Iraq
and Afghanistan;

Whereas Secretary of Defense Robert Gates credits United States air
bases in Turkey with handling 70 percent of all air cargo deployed
into Iraq;

Whereas 95 percent of the Mine-Resistant Ambush-Protective vehicles
(MRAPs) deployed into Iraq transit through air bases in Turkey;

Whereas MRAPs protect coalition forces from improvised explosive
devices and roadside bombs; Whereas the people of Turkey have been
victims of terrorist attacks by Al-Qaeda on November 15, 2003, and
November 20, 2003;

Whereas the United States supports Turkey’s bid for membership in
the European Union; and Whereas the Secretary of State has listed
the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, which has taken up arms against Turkey
since its founding, as a Foreign Terrorist Organization in accordance
with section 219 of the Immigration and Nationality Act, as amended:
Now, therefore, be it

Resolved, That the Senate-

1. reiterates its strong support for the strategic alliance between the
United States and Turkey; 2. urges Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan
of Turkey to communicate the continuing support of the Senate and of
the people of the United States to the people of Turkey; 3. condemns
the violent attacks conducted by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party over
the last 2 decades; 4. urges Kurdish leaders in Iraq to deny safe
harbor for terrorists and to recognize bilateral agreements between
Iraq and Turkey for cooperation against terrorism; 5. encourages the
Government of Turkey and the Government of Iraq to continue to work
together to end the threat of terrorism; and 6. thanks Prime Minister
Erdogan and the people and Government of Turkey for-

(A)assuming command of the International Security Assistance Force in
Kabul, Afghanistan from July 2002 to January 2003, and from February
2005 to August 2005;

(B) providing humanitarian and medical assistance in Afghanistan and
in Irag;

(C) their willingness to contribute to international peace, stability,
and prosperity, especially in the greater Middle East region; and

(D) their continued discussions with officials in the United States
and Iraq regarding constructive stabilization efforts in northern Iraq.

ewsid=7580&lang=US

http://www.hellenicnews.com/readnews.html?n

ANTELIAS: The Women’s Bible Study Sessions Begin in Antelias

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version: nian.htm

THE WOMEN’S BIBLE STUDY
SESSIONS BEGIN IN ANTELIAS

At the end of a short summer break, the Armenian Women’s Bible Study
sessions began on October 30. The sessions, organized by the Catholicosate
of Cilicia’s Christian Education Department under the direct sponsorship of
His Holiness Aram I, will convene every Tuesday in the Saint Gregory the
Illuminator Cathedral in Antelias.

The Director of the Christian Education Department, Rev. Torkom Donoyan,
delivered the opening remarks, underlining the importance of Christian
Education in the lives of Christians. In addition to presentations about
saints and their teachings, this lecture series also offers moments of
spiritual contemplation to Armenian women who participate in all the events
organized by the department in large numbers. The meetings also tackle moral
issues, providing guidance in everyday human interaction.

##
View the photo here:
tos/Photos54.htm#4
*****
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the
jurisdiction and the Christian Education activities in both the
Catholicosate and the dioceses, you may refer to the web page of the
Catholicosate, The Cilician
Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is located in
Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Arme
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/doc/Pho
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org

Sunchild First Regional Environmental Festival Manages To Fulfil Its

SUNCHILD FIRST REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL FESTIVAL MANAGES TO FULFIL ITS MAIN MISSION

Noyan Tapan
Oct 30, 2007

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 30, NOYAN TAPAN. The Sunchild first regional
environmental festival consisting of two stages, dedicated to Armenia’s
and whole Caucasian region’s environmental problems was completed
with a prize distribution.

Many environmental events, including rubbish disposal, tree planting,
photo and painting exhibitions, shows and competitions of environmental
films, seminars were held during the two stages of the festival held in
April and October, organized by the RA Charity Fund of Conservation of
Wildlife and Cultural Values. Ruben Khachatrian, festival’s Chairman,
assured that Sunchild was able to solve festival’s main mission,
it created a wide field of dialogue and cooperation among regional
countries.

The festival’s head said that after seeing 16 films presented for the
competition, the representatives of three commissions decided that
this year there will be no nomination The Best Film on Wildlife and
the prize fund is transferred to the next year festival’s fund.

In the main nomination, The Best Regional Film, the prize
was given to director Martin Marecek’s film "Source" (Czech
Republic-Azerbaijan). The prize in the nomination The Best
Environmental Film was given to Director Nikolay Davtian for his film
"Shikahogh" and the jury’s special prize was given to the Iranian film
"The Old Man from the South."

Besides, the authors of all five films shot within the framework of
the program "VivaCell and Children for Nature" were given diplomas.

No Ground To Speak About Breakthrough In Karabakh Peace Efforts, Spo

NO GROUND TO SPEAK ABOUT BREAKTHROUGH IN KARABAKH PEACE EFFORTS, SPOKESMAN SAYS

ARMENPRESS
Oct 29 2007

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 29, ARMENPRESS: A spokesman for Armenian foreign
ministry said today there is no ground to speak about a breakthrough
in the efforts to find a solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Vladimir Karapetian, who is also head of the foreign ministry’s
department for public affairs, told Armenpress minister Vartan Oskanian
met on October 27 in Yerevan the cochairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group
who revisited Yerevan after a trip to Azerbaijan.

He said the peace brokers from Russia, USA and France have stepped
up their efforts through a shuttle diplomacy to help the sides to
narrow their differences on a framework agreement.

"The process goes on and we expect the cochairmen to pay another
visit to the region soon," he said.

Karapetian’s remarks come after the US cochairman, Mathew Bryza, was
quoted by Azerbaijani newspapers as saying last week that Azerbaijan
and Armenia could sign a framework agreement next year to resolve
their dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh.

"There is a possibility that prior to presidential elections in
Armenia, which will take place in the spring of next year, some kind
of a framework agreement on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict could be
signed by the heads of Azerbaijan and Armenia," Matthew Bryza, who is
also a deputy assistant U.S. secretary of state, was quoted as saying.

Bryza said Armenian President Robert Kocharian had told the Minsk Group
chairmen during their meeting last Thursday in Yerevan that signing
such a "gentlemanly agreement" prior to the country’s presidential
ballot was possible.

Asked to comment on these reports Vladimir Karapetian said the
president of Armenia had denied it already considering it ‘a result
of a wrong translation."

Boxing: Ali Defeated By Javakhyan In World Boxing Championships

ALI DEFEATED BY JAVAKHYAN IN WORLD BOXING CHAMPIONSHIPS

WTHI, IN
Associated Press
Oct 29 2007

CHICAGO (AP) – Brooklyn lightweight Sadam Ali was eliminated from
the World Boxing Championships after he fell today to Armenia’s
Hrachik Javakhyan.

Javakhyan outscored Ali early, then protected his lead by moving
around the ring and effectively countering Ali’s attacks.

Ali successfully adjusted his style to keep the match close, but
Javakhyan managed the fight well and won by a score of 20-16.

Ali’s loss was a low point on an otherwise successful day for the
U.S. team. Light flyweight Luis Yanez and welterweight Demetrius
Andrade both advanced in the tournament.

Both fighters are one victory away from qualifying for the Beijing
Olympics.

Pelosi Is Chasing Away Another Important Ally

PELOSI IS CHASING AWAY ANOTHER IMPORTANT ALLY
By Morgan Liddick

Summit Daily News, CO
Oct 30 2007

Was it ignorance, stupidity or malice? Much as I favor the first two,
I have to choose the last. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi has a
staff to save her from foolishness, which I suppose is good news. They
cannot, however, save us from the effects of treachery, particularly
when undertaken in service of the politics of vengeance. More’s the
pity: We are all made less secure by her stunt of a House Resolution
condemning Turkey for the Armenian "genocide" of the First World
War. To begin with, Speaker Pelosi’s concern about genocide seems
curiously spotty. When she introduced her anti-Turkish resolution,
she said it was important because, "Genocide still exists, and we saw
it in Rwanda; we see it now in Darfur." But she has been in Congress
since 1987. Rwanda happened in 1994 – and she said nothing. Darfur is
happening now. Where is her resolution condemning that genocide? As
to the resolution itself: If Nancy Pelosi was a private citizen, she
might be more easily forgiven. The politics and history of national
minorities in the late Ottoman Empire is very murky, and the Armenians
have been far more effective than the Turks at getting their views on
the subject before a public sensitized to genocide by our experience
with the 20th century. But she is not a private citizen. She should
have known better. She should have known that in 1890, a group of
Armenian nationalists formed the Dashnaktsutsyun terrorist organization
in Tbilisi, Georgia. Working with the secret police of Tsarist Russia
and others, their goal was the violent overthrow of Ottoman authority
throughout what is now eastern Turkey. For 25 years, they pursued
this course through assassinations, bombings, military-style assaults
and the occasional seizure of towns. Van, in eastern Anatolia, was
the largest. Their support among Armenians, particularly in the East,
grew strong. Ms. Pelosi should have been reminded that when the Russian
Army invaded the Ottoman Empire in 1915, thousands of Armenians joined
them in their campaign; many more provided support.

This was open revolt in time of war; in other words, treason. She
should also have been apprised of conditions in the Kurdish and Arab
south of the collapsing Empire (into which many Armenians were forcibly
relocated), the chaos and lack of central control, and the ethnic
tensions which made murder of outsiders common. Or perhaps she was
told all this, and simply decided to ignore it. After all, there is
fact, and there are politics – and Ms. Pelosi is a politician with a
lot of Armenians in her district, a visceral hatred of the President,
an appetite for defeat in Iraq, and apparently, a reckless disregard
for our national interests, alliances and longtime international
friendships. Which brings us to the real purpose of Speaker Pelosi’s
resolution on genocide: to drive a wedge between the United States
and our ally, Turkey. Should we care? We should, because Turkey has
been a U.S. ally for 50 years. It is a NATO member and in the dark
days of the Cold War it did yeoman work for the West, at considerable
risk and cost. Although overwhelmingly Muslim, it is a tolerant and
relatively democratic country, and a large and stable place in a sea
of uncertainty. Although reluctant at first for reasons that are made
clear by the Speaker’s attack, it is an important associate in our
efforts in Iraq. That is why Nancy Pelosi chose to target it. The
Speaker’s resolution, together with Senator Joseph Biden’s companion
piece calling for Iraq to be split into three ethnic enclaves, suggests
what could be a new Democrat strategy to oppose the Iraq war: a push
for policies so toxic that none of our allies can possibly regard us as
reliable, let alone sane, partners in any international endeavors. The
repercussions are already clear.

No doubt encouraged by the Biden resolution’s promise of autonomy,
attacks against Turkey from northern Iraq mounted by the Kurdish
PKK terrorist organization have escalated. Turkey may eventually
respond militarily, which will create merry hell for all parties in
Iraq, including us. Mission accomplished, Senator. Speaker Pelosi’
resolution, which she promises to bring to the House floor, will
further estrange Turkey, which has already recalled its ambassador for
"consultations". Turkish President Gul and Prime Minister Erdogan
have also lodged strong protests. Eventually this large, friendly
Muslim democracy may go its own way, having decided that the United
States is not worth trusting – and we will have lost an influential
and strategic ally. Mission accomplished, Madame Speaker.

Taken together, these actions show clearly why the Founders left
foreign policy to the Executive Branch. Childishly focused on revenge,
ruled by emotion and consumed by the search for partisan advantage,
this Congress is not ready for prime time.

/COLUMNS/71029006

http://www.summitdaily.com/article/20071029

Unearthing Egypt’s Greatest Temple

UNEARTHING EGYPT’S GREATEST TEMPLE
Andrew Lawler

Smithsonian
Oct 29 2007

Archaeologists are finally grasping the true grandeur of the monument
built 3,400 years ago by Pharaoh Amenhotep III

"Heya hup!" Deep in a muddy pit, a dozen workers wrestle with Egypt’s
fearsome lion goddess, struggling to raise her into the sunlight
for the first time in more than 3,000 years. She is Sekhmet-"the one
who is powerful"-the embodiment of the fiery eye of the sun god Ra,
but now she is caked in dirt and bound by thick rope. As the workers
heave her out of the pit and onto a wooden track, the sand shifts and
the six-foot-tall granite statue threatens to topple. A half-dozen
men in ankle-length robes grab the taut ropes, again shout the Arabic
equivalent of "heave, ho!" and steady her just in time. Within the
hour, the seated Sekhmet is once again imperious: her breath creates
the desert wind, her anger feeds on disease and war, and her power
protects mighty pharaohs. Or did.

This long-buried statue is one of 730-one for every day and night
of the year-that guarded a vast collection of gates, colonnades,
courts and halls built by the great Egyptian king Amenhotep III,
who reigned over Egypt for 38 years in the 14th century B.C., at the
height of peace and prosperity. In its day, "The House of Millions
of Years" was the largest and most impressive temple complex in the
world. But it was no match for earthquakes, fires, floods or Amenhotep
III’s successors, who scavenged stone blocks and statues for their
own temples. Much of the site, near the Valley of the Kings along
the west bank of the Nile River, is covered with sugar cane. Hourig
Sourouzian, an Armenian archaeologist, is directing the effort to
rescue the long-neglected site and its many statues. "They didn’t
deserve this treatment!" she says as a worker hoses off the mud
and salt coating a Sekhmet lined up with a dozen similar statues
in the bright sun. Egyptologists had long assumed that all that
remained of the temple complex were the imposing Colossi of Memnon,
two seated statues of Amenhotep III at the entrance to his temple,
and some stones and fragments of statuary. Sourouzian had been working
at a neighboring temple, Merentptah, from which she would visit the
Amenhotep complex. "I was always interested in the fragmented statuary
of the site and dreamed about seeing them reconstructed instead of
lying in vegetation, water and junk," she recalls. Then, in 1996,
a brush fire swept over the area, charring the stones and fragments
and making them more vulnerable to cracking and erosion.

When Sourouzian and her husband, German archaeologist Rainier
Stadelmann, surveyed the damage, she says, "It was terrible and
depressing, and we swore to take action." First, she convinced the
World Monuments Fund in 1998 to designate the temple one of the world’s
"100 Most Endangered Sites" and fund the initial conservation area
of the shattered fragments aboveground. During the course of that
effort, Sourouzian began to suspect that there was more to be found
underground. By 2000, however, the money had run out, and she and
Stadelmann reluctantly began to wrap up their work. But a wealthy
French woman who had attended a lecture by Sourouzian in Paris agreed
to fund a more ambitious excavation. Within a year, the team began
to uncover their first statues, and the archaeologists realized
that many treasures still lay beneath the dirt. Born in Baghdad to
parents of Armenian descent, Sourouzian grew up in Beirut and studied
art history at the Sorbonne in Paris. Sent to Karnak by the Louvre,
she became one of the leading authorities on Egyptian royal statuary.

"She’s probably the best Egyptian art historian of our time," says
Betsy Bryan, an Egyptologist at Johns Hopkins University. Now, along
with Stadelmann, who once headed the German Archaeological Institute
in Cairo, Sourouzian orchestrates a team of two dozen specialists
from around the world-including French, Swiss, German, Spanish and
Japanese researchers-and as many as 400 local workers. What began
modestly has become one of the most ambitious projects Egypt has
seen in decades, bringing to light a triumph of engineering and art
that once dwarfed even the massive Karnak and Luxor temples across
the Nile. Amenhotep III called the complex "a fortress of eternity
out of good white sandstone-worked with gold throughout. Its floors
were purified with silver, all of its doorways were of electrum,"
an alloy of gold and silver. The recently liberated Sekhmet statue is
one of 72 of the goddess that Sourouzian and her team have discovered.

They’ve also found two huge statues of Amenhotep III, each flanked by
a smaller one of Queen Tye and a menagerie of sacred animals, including
an alabaster hippopotamus. The project is giving Egyptologists a fresh
look at the mysterious temple culture that dominated ancient life
here, in which hordes of priests conducted rituals, made offerings
and administered the intricate rites designed to ensure the eternal
well-being of the dead pharaoh. Once brightly painted in blues,
reds, greens, yellows and whites, the 50-foot colossi in front of
the massive first gate, or pylon, loomed over the Nile Valley’s flat
farmland, facing the brown river that then flowed just a few hundred
yards away. While the rest of the complex collapsed and crumbled,
the stately statues remained. Cracks caused by an earthquake in 27
B.C. made one of the statues produce an odd tone when the morning
sun struck it. A contemporary named Pausanias described the sound in
his Guide to Greece as "very like the twang of a broken lyre-string
or a broken harp-string." The site quickly became one of the ancient
world’s biggest tourist attractions; even the Roman emperor Hadrian
came to hear it in A.D. 130. Alas, it was inadvertently silenced
during restoration work in A.D. 199. On a hot morning, visiting
American archaeologists and art conservators spill out of a crowded
van. Sourouzian leads them into a storeroom the length of a railroad
car, and the visitors marvel at the Sekhmets, a giant head of the
pharaoh, and bits and pieces of unidentified faces in neat rows-fresh
finds from Sourouzian’s team. "She’s Isis reassembling Osiris," says
the University of Chicago archaeologist Ray Johnson, of Sourouzian,
likening her to the goddess who recovers dismembered pieces of her
lover and restores him to life. Few building sprees in history
can match that of Amenhotep III, and few pharaohs’ lives are so
well documented-even his birth is commemorated in stone reliefs at
Luxor. He came to the throne before his teens, at the death of his
warrior father Thutmose IV. His grandfather and father had expelled
Mesopotamian invaders known as the Mitanni. The young pharaoh quelled
an uprising in Nubia at the southern fringe of his empire-chopping off
the right hands of 312 enemies-but turned to diplomacy for the rest of
his reign. His principal wife, Tye, was from a noble Egyptian family,
but Amenhotep III’s harem grew to include princesses from great powers
such as Babylon and Mitanni-a common method of cementing alliances
in the ancient world, but unusual for Egypt, whose rulers tended
to disdain foreigners. He also maintained regular correspondence
with other kings. Letters written in Mesopotamian cuneiform found at
Amarna, the capital built by his son Akhenaten, reveal a canny leader
who preferred words to weapons. The peace that Amenhotep III worked
hard to preserve brought a boom in international trade, with partners
from throughout the Mediterranean, across Western Asia and deep
into Africa-thanks in part to Egypt’s many gold mines. "Gold in your
country is dirt; one simply gathers it up," wrote an obviously envious
Assyrian king. The pharaoh used his wealth to transform the nation into
an imperial showplace. He ordered temples built from the Nile Delta
in the north to Nubia 800 miles to the south. Under his patronage,
artists experimented with new styles of sculpture and reliefs carved
into temple walls. Traditional rudimentary forms became elegant and
sophisticated, and the carvings reveal more attention to craft and
detail. It was "probably the highest-quality art Egypt ever made," says
Johns Hopkins’ Betsy Bryan. "The man had taste!" Amenhotep III reserved
the greatest works for his hometown, Thebes, today’s Luxor. During
most of the so-called New Kingdom, which lasted from 1570 B.C. to 1070
B.C., pharaohs resided at Memphis, a cosmopolitan city near today’s
Cairo. But as Amenhotep III grew older, he spent more and more time
in Thebes, turning it into one vast religious center spanning both
sides of the Nile. Large additions were made to the Karnak and Luxor
temples on the Nile’s east bank, both of which had begun as small
Middle Kingdom sanctuaries. Across the river, Amenhotep III built
a huge harbor and an adjacent palace with colorfully painted walls,
as well as his extensive funerary temple. It was this great temple,
rather than his hidden tomb in the Valley of the Kings, that Amenhotep
III counted on to ensure his soul’s journey to the afterlife-and, no
doubt, inspire awe among the living. Stretching seven football fields
in length from the colossi at the main entrance, which faced east to
the Nile, to sacred altars pointing toward the Valley of the Kings
in the west, the complex covered an area nearly the size of Vatican
City. In its day, it was the largest and one of the most ornate
religious structures in the world, filled with hundreds of statues,
stone reliefs and inscriptions set among colonnaded plazas. Colorful
royal banners flapped from cedar poles shimmering in gold leaf and
secured on red granite pedestals at pylons, or massive gateways,
that led into innumerable sanctuaries. Such an awesome sight is
hard to envision today. In addition to an earthquake a century or
so after Amenhotep III’s death that toppled its columns and walls,
successive pharaohs raided it for their own temples. Ramses II took two
seated colossi in the 13th century B.C., and the site was still being
scavenged a thousand years later. The earthquake in 27 B.C. toppled
much of what remained. Nineteenth-century treasure hunters carted off
what they could find from the rubble-sphinxes to embellish the Neva
River embankment in St. Petersburg, royal statues to London’s British
Museum and a head of the pharaoh to the Louvre in Paris. Excavations
from the 1950s through the 1970s revealed little more than scattered
stone fragments and artifacts. Today’s most insidious threat is the
slow rising of groundwater. In the past, the Nile flooded annually,
replenishing fields along the river before retreating to within its
banks. (Some scholars, though not Sourouzian, believe Amenhotep
III’s temple was designed to allow the holy Nile floodwaters to
wash through the gates and plazas.) Since the Aswan High Dam was
completed in 1970, the Nile waters no longer surge over its banks
(and the river is two miles from the temple site), but sugar cane
farmers irrigate year-round, turning the desert into soggy soil. The
water carries salts that eat away at stone, particularly more porous
varieties such as limestone and sandstone. On a spring morning,
the huge field, bordered by sugar cane and the road to the Valley of
the Kings, resembles a busy construction site. At the spot where a
pylon once stood behind the Colossi of Memnon, researchers sit under
tarps, patiently sorting and photographing fragments from one of two
smaller colossi that fell in antiquity. The head of one of them alone
weighs 25 tons, and nearly 200 workers and a winch were required to
pull the broken statue out of the mud. Sourouzian hopes to re-erect
those statues-each torso weighs 450 tons-once the ground dries and
a secure foundation can be built. Nearby, an alabaster statue of a
crocodile and two more statues of Amenhotep III, also in alabaster,
wait to be cleaned. Remains of massive sandstone columns are in
rows of three and four. The columns formed the edges of the great
peristyle hall, or sun court, and once stood on crude blocks and
gravel. "Obviously, they were cutting corners here and there," says
Theodore Gayer-Anderson, a British archaeologist on the team. "They
weren’t the ideal builders." The stubs of the columns are fragile, and
to coax out salt, which is corrosive, Gayer-Anderson coats them in a
poultice of deionized water, cellulose powder and mineral powder. Each
wrapping must be changed every two days. "It’s impossible to eliminate
the salt," he says. "But you can cleanse the skin to a stable level." A
few yards away, a seven-ton torso of Amenhotep III dangles below
an iron tepee, as workers prepare to marry it to a base covered in
protective scaffolding. The statue’s head was found a century ago and
is now in the British Museum. The museum has promised to send a cast
of the head to be placed on the torso next spring. An Egyptian foreman
barks at the workers as the torso is raised into place, while a Spanish
archaeologist paces across some beams. "I’m not nervous-that wouldn’t
help," he announces. This is the first of five 25-foot-high statues
of Amenhotep III that the team intends to re-erect. The statues once
stood between the columns. On the north side of the peristyle hall,
the statues are made from quartzite from near today’s Cairo and they
wear the chair-shaped crown of lower Egypt (that is, northern Egypt,
which lies downstream along the Nile). On the south side, the images
are made from Aswan’s red granite and wear the white conical headpiece
of upper Egypt. In addition to the statues of the pharaoh, which were
in fragments, an alabaster hippopotamus surfaced, minus head and tail,
along with six standing statues of Sekhmet, beautifully preserved,
each holding a papyrus bundle in one hand and an ankh-the symbol of
life-in the other. The excavation is only in its initial phases and
could take two decades or more. To the west of the peristyle hall was
a hypostyle hall, a vast interior space that once had a roof supported
by massive columns. It no doubt holds more statues and artifacts. "You
would need years and millions of dollars to excavate," says Sourouzian,
looking with a touch of longing over the bare ground. "What’s more
urgent is to save the statues, preserve the last remains of the
temple and present it with dignity."

Andrew Lawler has written about Alexandria, Petra and a newfound tomb
in the Valley of the Kings for Smithsonian.

y-archaeology/egyptiantemple-200711.html

http://www.smithsonianmag.com/histor

Laying Memory’s Ghosts To Rest

LAYING MEMORY’S GHOSTS TO REST

FT
October 28 2007 20:36

Sunday’s beatification by the Vatican of 498 "martyrs" killed by
anti-clerical militias during the Spanish republic and 1936-39 civil
war has resurrected many ghosts at a time when history and memory
have returned to haunt Spain.

Three decades on from the internationally lauded transition to
democracy from Franco’s dictatorship, Spain’s political tribes,
at least, are far from reconciled.

The Socialist government of José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero has
en­raged the rightwing opposition Popular party and Catholic hierarchy
by introducing a law on "historical memory". This aims to overcome
the negotiated amnesia of the post-Franco pact, whereby the crimes of
the civil war and its vengeful Francoist victors would be forgotten
(and the evidence destroyed).

While politically expedient at the time, that denied decent burial to
thousands of defeated Republicans, whose remains are being excavated
all over Spain; about 500 mass graves have been found in Andalusia
alone.

There are obvious risks in excavating the pain of the past. Yet the
selective memory preferred by the Catholic Church and the right is
not the answer. Countries and peoples need a shared narrative of their
past, even when that means settling painful accounts with history.

The Kaczynski twins in Poland dismayed their European allies by
exhuming the skeletons of Nazism and Stalinism. But the real problem
was that they did this in a vengeful spirit, antagonising Poland’s
friends and monopolising their country’s tragic history for partisan
ends.

Postwar Europe’s record of remembering – with the notorious exception
of Germany – is patchy at best. Indeed, one of the reasons the
European Union so disastrously failed to manage the break-up of
Yugoslavia was that it had so successfully forgotten its own past –
including of mass ethnic cleansing.

Turkey is in a similar bind over Armenia. Attempts by France, and
now the US Congress, to characterise the first world war massacres
of Armenians by the Ottoman Turks as genocide have outraged the
government and the Kemalist establishment, and inflamed public opinion.

In calmer circumstances, Turkish politicians and intellectuals will
acknowledge the need to come to terms with this blood-soaked chapter
in their history – and that Turkey has no hope of ever entering the
EU without such a reckoning.

But today’s Turks have no knowledge of these horrific events, which
have been airbrushed from history, leaving them without the means to
make a judgment. There is always a price for suppressing memory.

–Boundary_(ID_y6TIER5e0irhB5vaICpiMQ)–

Armavia Armenian Air Company To Set Joint Information Space On Custo

ARMAVIA ARMENIAN AIR COMPANY TO SET JOINT INFORMATION SPACE ON CUSTOMER SERVICE, SECURITY OF FLIGHTS

ARKA News Agency
Oct 26 2007
Armenia

YEREVAN, October 26. /ARKA/. Armavia Armenian air company intends to
set a joint information space on customer service and security of
flights, the Chief of IT Department of the company Levon Ghazarian
reported. "Armavia" air company, the Meteorological Service of Armenia
and "ArmAeroNavigation" CJSC today use separate information networks,
but it is time to set a united information space," he told journalists
Friday. According to Ghazarian, the management of "Armavia" considered
it necessary to apply advanced developments available in the field
of information technologies to achieve high level of management
efficiency. The company’s representative pointed out that Armavia
invites specialists of the respective field, particularly employees of
air carriers, air-meteorological organizations, ArmAeroNavigation and
the Civil Aviation Department of Armenia, for cooperation. Armavia air
company is the leader on Armenia’s aviation market and the national
carrier of Armenia. The company was founded in 1996; the founders are
"Aviafin" Co. Ltd.

and "Mika Armenia Trading" Co. Ltd. Today the company offers the
most extensive network of routes to the cities of Russia and CIS,
Near East and Europe. Armavia operates more than 70 regular flights
in 22 directions to 10 countries. The fleet of the air company has
four A320 airplanes, one Boing 737-300 and also holds Soviet-make
airplanes on lease.