BAKU: Armenian Armed Forces Break Ceasefire Agreement In Several Pos

ARMENIAN ARMED FORCES BREAK CEASEFIRE AGREEMENT IN SEVERAL POSITIONS

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
July 28 2007

Azerbaijan, Baku / corr Trend S.Ilhamgizi / The Azerbaijani Security
Ministry reported on 27 July that the Armenian Armed Forces broke
the ceasefire agreement and fired at the Azerbaijani National Armed
Forces from their positions located in the south of the occupied
village of Shikhlar of Agdam District on 27 July from 01:30 to 02:00
hours, as well as from their positions in the southwest part of the
occupied village Chayli of Terter District of Azerbaijan from 04:10
to 05:00 hours.

On 26 July the Armenian Armed Forces fired at Azerbaijani forces
from the positions located in the south part of the occupied
Seysulan village of Terter from 19:45 to 20:15 hours and in south
of Topgaragoyunlu village of Goranboy District the from 22:00 to
22:20 hours.

The Azerbaijani National Armed Forces retaliated and no casualties
were reported

The conflict between the two South-Caucasus countries broke out in
1988 in light of Armenia’s territorial claims to Azerbaijan. Some 20%
of Azerbaijani territories (Nagorno-Karabakh and seven nearby regions)
have been under the occupation of the Armenian Armed Forces since
1992. In May 1994 a ceasefire was signed between the two sides.

The peace talks under the auspices of the OSCE Minsk group presided
over by Russia, France, and United States are still underway.

NKR: The Number Of "Insufficients" Is Considerable

THE NUMBER OF "INSUFFICIENTS" IS CONSIDERABLE
S. Khachatrian

Azat Artsakh Tert, Nagorno Karabakh Republic
July 27 2007

According to the information of July 25, 50 applicants have applied
to the Appeal Commission of the Selection Committee. After going
over again the works of 41 applicants, the points have been remained
invariable, the points of 9 applicants have been raised by 0.5-1.5
points. On July 22-25, 115 applicants of about 680 taken an exam have
been marked insufficient from different subjects. It must be noted
that 9 applicants have gotten "20" points, 8 of those – from russian
dictation, and one – from biology.

‘The Mother of All Churches’

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HOUSES OF WORSHIP

‘The Mother of All Churches’
One site in Jerusalem unites, and divides, Christians.

BY BENJAMIN BALINT

Friday, July 27, 2007 12:01 a.m.

Last month, Pope Benedict XVI addressed what he called "the delicate
situation" in the Middle East. He told a Vatican meeting of the Aid
Agencies for the Oriental Churches that "peace, much awaited and
implored, is unfortunately greatly offended." Although the pope’s
words were meant to refer to strife in Iraq and Israel, they also may
be taken to describe the delicate, oft-broken peace in Christianity’s
own holiest site in the region.

Ever since it was built by the Byzantine Emperor Constantine in 335 on
the hill of Golgotha, where his mother, Helena, claimed to have found
the remains of the True Cross, the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in
Jerusalem’s Old City has enjoyed little peace. The historian Eusebius
records that the original structure, "an extraordinary work," was
crowned by a roof "overlaid throughout with radiant gold." But
Constantine’s marvel was razed by the Persians in 614, reconstructed,
and then destroyed again by Caliph Hakim of Egypt in 1009. Rebuilt by
Crusaders in the 11th and 12th centuries, the building evolved into
the motley collection of shrines, chapels and grottos that greet–and
sometimes disappoint–the visitor today. The critic Edmund Wilson said
it "probably contains more bad taste, certainly more kinds of bad
taste, than any other church in the world."

The architectural mishmash reflects the overlapping theological
resonances of the spots contained under one roof. As Amos Elon notes
in his book "Jerusalem: City of Mirrors," the church marks the site of
"Christ’s alleged prison, Adam’s tomb, the Pillar of Flagellation [to
which Jesus was bound], ‘Mount’ Calvary [the Latin name for the hill
where Jesus was crucified], the Stone of Unction [where his body was
washed in preparation for burial], Christ’s sepulcher and the Center
of the Earth, as well as the site of the resurrected Christ’s meeting
with Mary Magdalene." No wonder Pope John Paul II called it "the
mother of all churches."

In a deeper sense, however, the stylistic dissonance embodies the
rivalry that in Jerusalem not only partitions one faith from another
but also prevents a faith from mending its internal fissures.

In 1757, after Greek Orthodox clergy violently wrested majority
control of the church from the Roman Catholics, the Ottoman rulers of
Jerusalem decreed a status quo for the city’s holy sites. For the
Church of the Holy Sepulcher, this meant that control was split
primarily among the three patriarchates of Jerusalem–the Latin, the
Greek and the Armenian–and secondarily among the churches of Egypt
(Coptic), Syria and Ethiopia. The arrangement, formalized in 1852, has
been enforced by the British, Jordanians and, today, Israel.

But this has not created harmony. Back in 1869, Mark Twain visited and
noticed the denominations chanting, sometimes simultaneously, in their
own languages: "It has been proven conclusively that they can not
worship together around the grave of the Saviour of the World in
peace." And the cease-fire’s fragility persists to this day.

Five years ago, Ethiopians, exiled since 1658 to quarters on the roof,
resented the placement of a Coptic priest’s chair there, and the
ensuing brawl sent 11 monks–seven Ethiopians and four Copts–to the
hospital. A couple of years later, Greek clerics tussled with
Franciscans.

The turf wars also paralyze maintenance. A wooden ladder has rested on
a ledge over the church’s entrance for at least 150 years. The
edicule, braced with scaffolding, is falling apart. The Chapel of
St. Nicodemus, over which both the Armenians and the Syrians claim
ownership, has for that reason never been restored. To prevent
denominational disputes, the very keys to the church have since the
days of Saladin been entrusted to Muslims from the Nuseibeh and Joudeh
families.

Recently, Father Athanasius Macora, negotiator on Holy Sepulcher
issues for the Franciscan Custody of the Holy Land (which represents
Roman Catholics in Israel), showed me several large color-coded maps,
signed and sealed by the heads of the three patriarchates, which
detailed even which sewage lines belong to which rite. Even the repair
of a pipe requires ecumenical negotiation.

The drawings resembled nothing so much as the intricate jumble of
lines that one sees on Jerusalem’s political maps these days. Seeing
them, one is tempted to dismiss the Church of the Holy Sepulcher as a
stage for the absurd and the mundane, and to scoff at the way, like
the city at whose heart it stands, it suffers a discordance of
religious impulses vying for supremacy. But one also wants to yield to
a fascination with a space that, like Jerusalem, finally reveals
itself as a sort of palimpsest, a tangle of inscription upon erasure
upon inscription.

Mr. Balint is a writer based at the Van Leer Institute in Jerusalem.

Copyright © 2007 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

http://www.opinionjournal.com/taste/?id=110010388
http://www.opinionjournal.com/taste/?id=110010

Hundredth Anniversaries Of Viktor Hambardzumian And William Saroyan

HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARIES OF VIKTOR HAMBARDZUMIAN AND WILLIAM SAROYAN INCLUDED IN UNESCO’S HONORARY LIST OF JUBILEES OF 2008-09

Noyan Tapan
Jul 26, 2007

YEREVAN, JULY 26, NOYAN TAPAN. The hundredth anniversaries of
Viktor Hambardzumian, the greatest Armenian astrophysician, and
William Saroyan, a prominent writer of the twentieth century,
have been included in the UNESCO’s honorary list of jubilees of
2008-09. According to the information provided to Noyan Tapan by the
Armenian National Commission of UNESCO, a number of official events
are envisaged to be organized under the patronage of UNESCO during
2008 on this occasion.

ANCA Leo Sarkisian Intern Focus: West SF Valley’s Shant Hagopian

Armenian National Committee – Western Region

104 North Belmont Street, Suite 200

Glendale, California 91206

Phone: 818.500.1918 Fax: 818.246.7353

[email protected]

PRE SS RELEASE
: July 24, 2007

Contact: Haig Hovsepian

Tel: (818) 500-1918

ANCA Leo Sarkisian Intern Focus: West San Fernando Valley’s Shant Hagopian

Washington, DC – Shant Hagopian, a member of the West San Fernando Valley
ANC and a participant in this year’s Leo Sarkisian Internship (LSI) program,
is in Washington this summer supporting the Armenian Cause. Shant was
selected in May of this year to be one of four individuals from California
to serve in the distinguished ANCA "Leo Sarkisian" Internship (LSI) Program.

The ANCA-LSI Program is funded by the Armenian National Committee – Western
Region (ANC-WR). Named after long-time ANC activist Leo Sarkisian, the
program brings together young Armenian Americans from across the United
States and Canada to gain first-hand experience in the American political
system while working on issues of concern to the Armenian American
community.

"Shant Hagopian is a shining example of why the ANC is committed to invest
in the future of the community," commented ANC-WR Chairman Raffi Hamparian.
"Every Armenian American should be proud of Shant and the work he and his
colleagues are doing in the nation’s capital," Hamparian added.

Hagopian is a political science major that will be matriculating at the
University of California, Berkeley this autumn. Aside from his work with
the West San Fernando Valley ANC, he has served as a senator with the
student government at Los Angeles’ Pierce College and interned with
California State Assembly Member Fran Pavley.

During his time in the nation’s capital, Hagopian has already made a
tremendous impact in his efforts. He has played a major role in working with
ANCA staff to build support for the Armenian Genocide Resolution (H. Res.
106). Hagopian, with his fellow interns, has been assigned the task of
working with local communities to obtain cosponsorship support from five
Members of Congress from around the country for H. Res. 106. Hagopian has
also traveled to Capitol Hill to personally honor Members of the
Congressional Human Rights Caucus and recently met with his Congressman,
Representative Henry Waxman (D-CA-30). Hagopian and his fellow interns have
also attended various lectures as part of an eight part seminar series. The
series has featured presentations by 1) ANCA-ER Executive Director Karine
Birazian on community activism as a working professional; 2) the
Representative of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR) in the United States
Vardan Barseghian who provided an overview of the NKR region and the
politics between Armenia, NKR and Azerbaijan, and 3) U.S. Department of
Treasury Senior Economist David Joulfaian presented on the economic status
of Armenia.

Now in its 23rd year, the ANCA LSI Program provides student leaders and
activists an opportunity to participate in an intensive 8-week program
designed to give them the tools necessary to effectively advance issues of
concern to the Armenian American community on the federal, state and local
level. The LSI Program is a competitive and prestigious internship program
and is widely considered to be the best program of its kind for Armenian
American college students.

In addition to Shant Hagopian, the 2007 LSI Program participants from the
Western United States are Alex Der Alexanian, Dzovak Kazandjian, and Chris
Yemenidjian. Joining interns from Canada, Europe and the Eastern United
States, the LSI participants from the Western Region have conducted
significant and groundbreaking activities in just their first week in our
nation’s capital.

The Armenian National Committee of America is the largest and most
influential Armenian American grassroots political organization. Working in
coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout
the United States and affiliated organizations around the world, the ANCA
actively advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad
range of issues.

www.anca.org

BAKU: 14th Anniversary Of Aghdam’s Occupation Commemorated

14TH ANNIVERSARY OF AGHDAM’S OCCUPATION COMMEMORATED

Azeri Press Agency, Azerbaijan
July 23 2007

A commemorative event was held in Azerbaijani Martyrs’ Alley on the
14th anniversary of Aghdam’s occupation by Armenian armed forces,
APA reports.

Representatives of Aghdam Executive Power, war veterans and members
of Garabagh Liberation Organization participated in the event.

They visited the graves of people died for Azerbaijan’s territorial
integrity.

Head of Aghdam Executive power Hasan Sariyev told APA that over 6,000
Aghdam residents became martyrs, 500 became handicapped. He expressed
their confidence that the occupied lands will be liberated by military
way, if necessary "Negotiations are being carried out for the peaceful
solution to the conflict. These negotiations can not last long. We
will liberate our lands if Armenians do not change their position. It
is not worth living, if the lands are not liberated," he said. /APA/

Ashot Abovian And Karen Poladian To Be Appointed Members Of Central

ASHOT ABOVIAN AND KAREN POLADIAN TO BE APPOINTED MEMBERS OF CENTRAL
ELECTORAL COMMISSION FROM COUNCIL OF CHAIRMEN OF RA COURTS

YEREVAN, JULY 20, NOYAN TAPAN. Ashot Abovian, a member of the current
commission, as well as Karen Poladian, the Head of the Summerization
Administration of the Judicial Practice of the Judicial Department,
will be included in the newly-composed Central Electoral Commission,
which will assume its competences from August 6 by the decision
of the Council of the Chairmen of the RA Courts. This information
was provided to a Noyan Tapan correspondent by Alina Yengoyan, the
Spokeswoman of the RA Court of Appeal.

It should be mentioned that the Central Electoral Commission will be
composed of eight members, in difference to the current CEC, which has
nine members. The change of contingent and the bodies composing the
commission is connected with the results of the May 12 parliamentary
elections, as well as with the demand of the Electoral Code. In
particular, the United Working and "National Unity" parties, as well
as the "Ardarutiun" (Justice) Alliance, which did not surpass the 5%
threshold in the latest parliamentarian elections, have been deprived
of the right for having representatives in the Central Electoral
Commission. According to the Electoral Code, the competence for
appointing one member of the "Democratic MP" parliamentarian group
of the National Assembly of the previous convocation has passed to
the Council of the Chairmen of the RA Courts, as a result of which
two judicial servants will be included in the new structure of the
commission instead of the current one.

The RA President and the five parties, which have factions in the
National Assembly: the RPA, the ARF Dashnaktsutiun, the Orinats Yerkir
(Country of Law), the Bargavatch Hayastan (Prosperous Armenia), and,
finally, the Zharangutiun (Heritage) parties, are entitled to appoint
one member each in the Central Electoral Commission. The Bargavatch
Hayastan and Zharangutiun parties will have their representatives in
the CEC for the first time.

EU To Allocate 100 Million Euros For Armenian Reforms

EU TO ALLOCATE 100 MILLION EUROS FOR ARMENIAN REFORMS

PanARMENIAN.Net
20.07.2007 18:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The European Union will assign 100 million euros to
Armenia in the framework of the Armenia-EU Action Plan, RA Minister
of Trade and Economic Development Nerses Yeritsyan said yesterday.

80% of the sum flow into the budget for financing reforms in various
fields. The rest will be spent on technical assistance.

During its session the Armenian government approved the list of events
and priorities for the year of 2007 supposed by Armenia-EU Action
Plan in the framework of the European Neighborhood Policy. The heads
of executive bodies have been ordered to give information to the RA
Ministry of Trade and Economic Development on the realization process
of events once in three months during 10 days.

MEP: Elections In Karabakh No Worse Than In Italy

MEP: ELECTIONS IN KARABAKH NO WORSE THAN IN ITALY

PanARMENIAN.Net
19.07.2007 23:04 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ European Parliament member Giulietto Chiesa arrived
in Karabakh not only as an observer of the presidential elections. "I
am more a politician than an observer. I wanted to speak with the
President and the parliament head and establish political contacts. I
have good impressions. The work is organized well. I have read your
laws and rate them as irreproachable," he said.

When asked what reaction he expects from Azerbaijan, he said, "It’s all
the same for me. I am a free person and can go wherever I wish. I have
come here to learn more about this country. I was a journalist once
and have the idea of the situation. But I would like to know more."

Mr Chiesa said he visited Palestine not long ago. "The level in
Karabakh is quite different. People know for whom and why they
vote. It’s not worse than in Italy," he underscored.

When speaking of the possibility of international recognition of
Karabakh’s independence, he noted that the international community
is not familiarized with the situation in Karabakh. "I think time
is needed for the world to get informed of the Karabakh problem,"
Giulietto Chiesa resumed.

ANKARA: No Answers To Trabzon Riddle On Eve Of Elections

NO ANSWERS TO TRABZON RIDDLE ON EVE OF ELECTIONS
Jasper Mortimer Trabzon

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
July 20 2007

Trabzon is a port city built at the foot of high mountains, covered
in dark green forests and hazelnut plantations, whose natural beauty
and historical sites draw about 1 million tourists a year.

But Trabzonites are tired of journalists coming to their town and
delving into the murders of Father Andrea Santoro and journalist
Hrant Dink, events that now mark the city like two indelible ink
stains on a carpet. They want visitors to appreciate the carpet as a
whole. It is the murders that continue to attract outside attention,
and Trabzonites have a problem in that they cannot find a link between
their city’s culture and the killings.

Motorists driving into Trabzon from the south know which city they have
reached when they pass two factories on either side of the road, both
painted in the light blue and rusty red of the local football team.

A little further, they see a fiberglass statue of a Trabzonspor
player poised on one leg as he prepares to kick the ball across the
road. Once inside the city, the motorists may find themselves driving
down Trabzonspor Boulevard, whose curbstones are that same light blue
and rusty red.

This trumpeting of the team may seem silly to visitors, but
Trabzonites are justifiably proud of producing the only soccer club
outside Ýstanbul that has won the national championship. Turkey
has at least 10 Anatolian cities bigger and richer than Trabzon,
but it is only Trabzonspor that has beaten Ýstanbul’s Galatasaray,
Fenerbahce and Beþiktaþ.

Such is the passion for football in this northeastern city on the
Black Sea coast that the Justice and Development Party (AK Party)
is expected to lose a few votes on Sunday. This is because residents
have not forgotten the pro-Fenerbahce comments Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdoðan made two years ago after a controversial match between
his favorite team and Trabzonspor. But some people in Trabzon have
darker passions. The city produced two of the three sectarian murders
that have brought international opprobrium on Turkey in the past 18
months. While civic leaders were quick to condemn the killings of an
Italian Catholic priest and a prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist,
ugly statements on YouTube and other Web sites revealed a hard core
of approval.

Political pundits predict the most right-wing of Turkey’s mainstream
parties, the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP), will poll second
behind the AK Party in Trabzon on Sunday with 15 to 20 percent of the
vote. In 2002 the MHP polled fourth with 8 percent. While liberals
in Ýstanbul and Ankara may have hoped that after two murders that
shamed the nation Trabzon would turn its back on the MHP, people in
the city feel no such obligation.

"There is no connection at all between the political parties and
these killings," said Ali Ozturk, the editor of the city’s newspaper
Gunebakýþ. He knows that because he lives in a nationalistic district,
and "the party nationalists and the extremists don’t get along."

Trabzonites are tired of journalists coming to their town and delving
into the murders of Father Andrea Santoro and journalist Hrant Dink,
events that now mark the city like two indelible ink stains on a
carpet. They want visitors to appreciate the carpet as a whole: A
port city built at the foot of high mountains, covered in dark green
forests and hazelnut plantations, whose natural beauty and historical
sites draw about 1 million tourists a year.

But it is the murders that continue to attract outside attention,
and Trabzonites have a problem in that they cannot find a link between
their city’s culture and the killings.

"Why did both killers come from Trabzon? That is the question," said
Aydýn Erkaya as he sat shirtless in shorts and sandals outside the
Faroz coffee shop on the coastal road. "We don’t know the answer."

At the city hall, Mayor Volkan Canalioðlu said when he heard that the
second murder originated in Trabzon, "I was very surprised and upset.

I didn’t expect it." As to a reason, "We don’t have an explanation,"
he shrugged.

Trabzonites were shocked by the youth of the killers. It was a
16-year-old boy who walked into Trabzon’s only church, the Roman
Catholic Santa Maria, in February 2006 and shot dead Father Santoro
as he knelt in prayer at a pew.

It was a 17-year-old high-school dropout, O.S. (who cannot be named
as he is underage and currently on trial), who apparently took a bus
from Trabzon to Ýstanbul in January and shot dead Turkish-Armenian
editor and journalist Dink outside his newspaper office. Dink died
lying face down in his blood on the pavement. Four months later Turkey
suffered the third sectarian murder when militants killed two Turks
and a German in a Christian publishing house in Malatya. Unlike the
Trabzon killers, these assailants were adults who attacked in a group.

Trabzon tourism director Mehmet Oncel Koc knew Santoro well. "How
could a Trabzon child kill a priest?" he said to Today’s Zaman. "I
believe there is something strange behind it."

The men playing cards and drinking tea in the Faroz coffee shop have
lots of theories as to who was behind it: the Trabzon mafia or maybe
"derin devlet" — the "deep state," as the invisible hand of Turkey’s
establishment is known.

And the city’s editors have their theories. Gunebakýþ editor Ozturk
said an "unseen power" had selected killers from Trabzon with the
aim of tarnishing the city’s image, because "Trabzon is an important
place."

The managing editor of the local Mavi TV station, Ulaþ Ozdemir, said
that as happened in Malatya before the 1980 coup, "some unknown forces
are trying to turn Trabzon into a center for initiating turmoil … a
breeding ground of hit men."

Ozdemir said Trabzon’s character had been changed by a large influx of
people from other areas. Many natives of Trabzon have left the city,
taking their culture with them. While nationalism has always been
strong in Trabzon, in the past it was not the kind that believed in
attacking one’s opponents. It has now been replaced by a "mindless,
aggressive nationalism that uses force, humiliates and excludes
people".

He blamed this on poor education, high unemployment and a mixture of
backgrounds that leaves young people searching for something.

"In Trabzon there are 13,000 to 14,000 unemployed people. If you look
at what was said about Dink on YouTube after his killing, you can see
that there are people who think it was good that Dink was killed and
they regard O.S. as a hero, like the policemen who had their photos
taken with [the teenager] after they caught him," he said, referring
to the pictures of the police officers who posed with O.S. in front
of a Turkish flag after arresting him on a Trabzon-bound bus in Samsun.

The variety of theories shows how confused the city is, and how
important it is for the authorities to get to the bottom of the
murders.

In the Dink case, O.S. and 17 other alleged adult accomplices are
currently standing trial. The boy who killed Santoro has been sentenced
to nearly 19 years’ imprisonment, but nobody else has been charged
for the crime.

"The boy could not have acted alone," said Mustafa Erguney, a lawyer
in Trabzon. "He did not have enough reason to do it."

Today’s Zaman asked Public Works Minister Faruk Nafiz Ozak if he was
satisfied by the Santoro investigation. The minister, an AK Party
legislator for Trabzon, said he had spoken to the then Interior
Minister Abdulkadir Aksu, who had sent a team of investigators to
Trabzon to pursue the case.

"The interior minister said the boy was a clever, introverted child.

They couldn’t find anything," Ozak said. "Let me add this. I was young
when [President John F.] Kennedy was killed. We still don’t know
who killed him." Ozak was similarly at a loss to explain Trabzon’s
connection to two sectarian murders. "There is no explanation for
it. It is a sociological event," he said.

For some Trabzonites, such answers are not good enough.

Restaurant owner Selahattin Ahiskali pointed out that the alleged
mastermind of Dink’s killing had earlier been involved in the bombing
of a McDonald’s fast-food restaurant. "If the police had investigated
that well enough, then Santoro would not have been killed. If Santoro’s
killing had been pursued well enough, then Dink would not have been
killed," said Ahýskali, a supporter of the Republican People’s Party
(CHP).

At Santa Maria church, a priest’s assistant who was not authorized
to speak to the press would not be drawn on what the church thought
of the Santoro investigation, saying only that the church was leaving
it entirely to the Turkish authorities.

The church has no plaque commemorating Santoro, who had earned respect
in his three years in Trabzon, but visitors can light a candle,
kneel and say a prayer before a photograph of the gray-haired priest,
wearing a white robe with a purple sash. The picture stands at the
foot of a statue of the Virgin Mary in a niche. The Virgin holds the
infant Jesus, who looks at a worshipper with open arms and a friendly
smile, welcoming him.

–Boundary_(ID_XoFjz7/l/MDGj+yisAcxRw)–