Proposal To Repeal Article 301

PROPOSAL TO REPEAL ARTICLE 301

Lragir, Armenia
Aug 16 2007

The supporters of Jirair Sefilyan and Vardan Malkhasyan held a
public debate on August 16 and proposed a legislative change. A few
days ago Sefilyan and Malkhasyan were sentenced to 1.5 and 2 years
respectively. Jirair Sefilyan was convicted for keeping illegal
ammunition, and Malkhasyan was convicted for calls for a violent
coup. However, Sefilyan had also been arrested on a charge of calls
for a coup. Vahan Aroyan was also sentenced to 18 months for keeping
illegal weapon.

During the debate at the Congress Hotel on August 16 in which
Sefilyan’s combatants and proponents participated, including the
members of the Initiative for the Defense of the Liberated Territories
and the members of the Kura-Arax Foundation, as well as political and
human rights activists, opinions on the case of Sefilyan and Malkhasyan
and the trial were voiced. The participants believed that all this is
due to fear from the government. The participants are hopeful that
at least the Court of Appeal will pass a fair ruling and will not
convict the former azatamartiks on a charge which was not proved,
thereby saving the reputation of the judicial system.

Armen Aghayan also stated that if in December 2006 and January and
February 2007 some political forced which used to cooperate closely
with Sefilyan had expressed a clear stance on this case, the case
might have been dismissed before it would get to the court. "I mean
the references from the armed forces according to which the weapon
found with Sefilyan was illegal. It is a barefaced lie which would be
easily revealed at the court of law but the lie remained in official
documents for months, decisions on arrest were made on their basis,
etc.," Armen Aghayan says.

The organizers of the debate released a statement which describes the
investigation, the trial and the decision of the court. In addition,
legal, political and moral evaluations were given that the heroes of
the liberation war in Karabakh Sefilyan, Malkhasyan and Aroyan were,
in fact, victims of prosecution. Therefore, in order to prevent the
government from applying the notorious Article 301 of the Crime Code
the organizers of the debate propose defining it as unconstitutional.

This is the article under which Sefilyan and Malkhasyan were charged
and arrested, i.e. calls for a violent coup. Armen Aghayan says
the article, in fact, shortens the freedom of speech and enables
the government to accuse any oppositionist if there is political
expediency. Therefore, they propose defining the article as
unconstitutional and report this issue to the Constitutional Court.

The authors of the initiative call on the civil society and the
political forces to join them. If the article is not considered
as unconstitutional and is not repealed, the initiators propose at
least specifying to which calls the article is applicable to prevent
arbitrary application of the article.

In answer to this proposal the human rights defender Vardan Harutiunyan
noticed that even if this article did not exist, the government would
find another article in the crime code to apply against the opposition
because now arbitrariness and illegality is the reality in Armenia.

Chess: Anand, Aronian In Chess960 Final

ANAND, ARONIAN IN CHESS960 FINAL

Malaysia Sun, Malaysia
(IANS)
Aug 17 2007

World No.1 Viswanathan Anand of India and Lev Aronian of Armenia will
contest the final of the Chess960 World Championships here.

Anand won two games against Rustam Kasimdzhanov of Uzebkistan and
Etienne Bacrot of France to finish second in the four-man semi-finals
to qualify for the finals of the Chess960 World Rapid.

Aronian, with whom Anand drew on both days, was the topper with 4.5
points in six games, while the Indian finished with four.

Anand had drawn all three games on the first day, while Aronian won
two and drew one, against his final opponent. Both remained unbeaten
in the semi-finals.

On the second day the Chess960 in Mainz, Anand played with white pieces
against the former world champion Uzbek grandmaster Kasimdzhanov.

Anand opened with e4 and in a game, where the back row is placed
randomly, Kasimdzhanov was very cautious. The Indian used his superior
craftsmanship to steer the game in his favour and won the game after
21 moves.

It was Anand’s first-ever win in Chess960 format championship.

In the game against Bacrot, Anand converted a messy game into a superb
ending. Playing with white, Anand played e4 again.

The Chennai-born Anand played quickly and showed he had come to terms
with the format very quickly. He attacked the French player and won
in 35 moves to enter into the final.

Anand and Aronian drew the final game.

‘With Kasimdzhanov it all happened straight out of the opening. He
almost could not avoid the loss of a piece and that was quite
unexpected,’ said Anand.

‘After that I knew my chances for qualifying in to the finals improved
dramatically because he was my main rival. Beating Bacrot was a bonus.’

The Indian added: ‘My game with Bacrot was very messy and I thought
I was worse I should not have allowed his Bishop on ‘b’ file. It made
me very uncomfortable in the whole game.’

Defending champion Aronian tried hard to gain an upper hand over his
opponent Bacrot, but in the endgame agreed for a draw.

In the second game Aronian defeated Kasimdzhanov while Kasimdzhanov
lost to Bacrot.

Rich Cultural Heritage Of Armenia Has A Worthy Place In World Art Hi

RICH CULTURAL HERITAGE OF ARMENIA HAS A WORTHY PLACE IN WORLD ART HISTORY: PROFESSOR OF BOSTON UNIVERSITY

arminfo
2007-08-14 22:05:00

The rich cultural heritage of Armenia has a worthy place in the world
art history, Professor Lucy Ter-Manuelian, the head of the Armenian
art and architecture department of the Taft University (Boston, USA),
said in Yerevan, Tuesday.

She noted that nowadays much attention should be paid to the great
role that Armenia played in the world art. In this connection,
L.Ter-Manuelian emphasized the significance of extending the
information field, as this will open new opportunities for the
propaganda of Armenian art all over the world.

To note, this is not the first visit of Professor Ter-Manuelian
to Armenia.

Due to her assistance, the Flora Family Foundation allocated funds
for reconstruction of 5 churches in Sisian, Gyumri, and Oshakan. In
early 90s of the 20th century she took part in creation of the film
‘The Lost Monuments of the Christian Epoch’, which was shown on 58
TV channels in the United States. According to L.Ter- Manuelian, her
love for Armenia has a 30 year old history: she came to the country
under a student exchange program in 1977. The cultural heritage of
the republic made such a great impression on her that her future
thesis was dedicated to the analysis of the artistic value of Geghard
monastery’s high relieves. The copy of the thesis is in Matenadaran,
the Institute of Ancient Manuscripts.

Armenian Population To Reduce By 200thnd By 2025

ARMENIAN POPULATION TO REDUCE BY 200THND BY 2025

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Aug 14 2007

YEREVAN, August 14. /ARKA/. Armenian population is to reduce by 200thnd
by 2025, World Bank says in its report on demographic situation in
former soviet republics.

According to the report, former soviet republics will face grave
demographic problems – their population will reduce and become older.

By 2025, former USSR republics will lose a considerable part of
their population (2000 and 2025 were compared): Russia – 17.3mln
(12% of population), Ukraine 11.8mln (24%), Belarus 1.4mln (14%),
Georgia 0.8mln (17%), Lithuania 0.4mln (11%), Latvia, Moldova and
Kazakhstan 0.3mln each (13.7% and 2%) and Estonia 0.1mln (9%).

The report says that Uzbekistan’s population will grow 9.3mln,
Tajikistan’s 2.6mln, Turkmenistan’s 1.6mln, Azerbaijan’s 1.5mln and
Kyrgyzstan 1.3mln by 2025.

The WB specialists think that this is the only region in the world
where the population increasingly becoming older, bad living conditions
and incomplete economic, social and political reforms pose such a
greave threat to local economies and statehood.

The report says that the reduced population will become far older –
in 2025, one in every five residents of this region will be in age
above 65.

ANC-WR Educates Hundreds Of Young Armenian Americans

ANC-WR EDUCATES HUNDREDS OF YOUNG ARMENIAN AMERICANS

armradio.am
10.08.2007 15:55

Nestled at an elevation of over 5,000 feet and just over 77 miles from
downtown Los Angeles, sits the Armenian Youth Federation’s Summer Camp,
a haven for hundreds of Armenian American kids every year. This year
this special camp has partnered with the Armenian National Committee
– Western Region (ANC-WR) to teach campers how America’s democratic
system of government works and the value of Armenian Americans being
actively involved in all levels of government. At each of the week-long
sessions this summer, the ANC-WR has provided a speaker to talk about
issues related to the Armenian Cause.

"Educating young Armenian Americans about how our democracy works is
an ANC-WR priority," remarked ANC-WR Executive Director Andrew Kzirian
after returning from a trip to AYF Summer Camp. "These young Armenian
Americans, many of them AYF members, are intelligent and motivated to
learn more about how they can be involved in the Armenian Cause. "I
am proud that the ANC-WR is giving these kids the tools they need to
be active and engaged in public affairs."

In a series of weekly presentations at AYF Summer Camp, ANC-WR
representatives have touched on both the freedom of speech and assembly
that are guaranteed in the U.S. Constitution and how these rights
relate to the Armenian Cause. The ANC-WR has also emphasized the
need for the youth in our community to "seize the day" in creating
positive change and progress in their respective communities. In one
presentation to the campers, the ANC-WR conducted a mock presidential
election. In this exercise, campers energetically created political
parties, crafted party platforms, heard speeches from the candidates,
and ultimately voted for one of four presidential candidates.

"We think it is natural for AYF Camp Big Pines to partner with the
Armenian National Committee to provide educationals to our campers,
remarked Camp Representative Ara Malakian. "Having the campers learn
more about American democracy is a good thing. We are also pleased that
our kids are learning from the ANC-WR how they can make a positive
difference on key issues, like the Armenian Genocide and building
better and stronger ties between America and Armenia," added Camp
Chairman Aram Madenlian.

Located in the Angeles National Forest near the city of Wrightwood, AYF
Summer Camp is 11.5 acres of beautiful forestland with facilities to
accommodate up to 120 campers each week. The Armenian Youth Federation
Summer Camp was established in 1977 and provides a great atmosphere for
young Armenians between the ages of eight and seventeen to make new
friends, become better acquainted with Armenian history and culture,
and participate in a wide array of athletic activities. Each year,
Armenian youth from all over the United States and Canada make AYF
Summer Camp an integral part of their summer agenda.

In Conviction Of David Hakobian, Everything Will Be Decided At Secon

IN CONVICTION OF DAVID HAKOBIAN, EVERYTHING WILL BE DECIDED AT SECOND STAGE OF FORTHCOMING PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS

Noyan Tapan
Aug 10 2007

YEREVAN, AUGUST 10, NOYAN TAPAN. In the 2008 presidential elections
there will be a struggle between "merely intellectual personalities"
and not between parties. This provision was made by David Hakobian,
the Chairman of the Marxist Party of Armenia, at the press conference,
which was held on August 10. In his conviction, more important for
the Armenian society is the fact of which of the candidates is more
progressive in terms of the protection of national interests.

"The new leader of the country should be the one, who will be the
principle architect and the ideological archimandrite of the new
economic policy, as well as of the new national ideology and concept
paper. He should also stand surely for the biological security of
the nation," the Chairman of the Marxist Party of Armenia said.

Touching upon the issue of the opposition with regard to taking part
in the forthcoming presidential elections with one common candidate,
David Hakobian mentioned that "no party or a group of parties is
entitled to make a future leader incumbent upon the nation." In his
conviction, the more are the candidates for the post of the president,
the greater will be the possibility of holding a second stage, which
is necessary. "Let the opposition unite around the one, whom the
nation will send to the second stage. That will be a non-ambitious
and a non-egoistical unification. Thus, everything will be decided
at the second stage," David Hakobian declared.

Georgia’s Minorities Face University Barrier

Institute for War and Peace Reporting
Georgia’s Minorities Face University Barrier

Most ethnic Armenians going on to higher education end up studying in
other countries.
By Maia Ivelashvili in Akhalkalaki and Gayane Mkrtchian in Yerevan
(CRS No. 405 09-Aug-07)

Hasmik Krmajian, 21, comes from Akhalkalaki, an impoverished region of
southern Georgia where most of the population is Armenian. Yet she
goes to university not in Georgia but in neighbouring Armenia.

Hasmik, who has spent the last four years studying at Yerevan’s
teacher training university, said she would have liked to study back
in Georgia but was unable to do so because she did not know the
Georgian language.

"I was unable to pass the entrance exam in Georgian, which was
compulsory,’ she said. `Besides, I felt there was obvious
discrimination against Armenian candidates.’

Georgian president Mikheil Saakashvili has pledged to try to stem the
outflow of young people from minority backgrounds to colleges and
universities abroad, and to make it easier for them to study in their
own country. That is likely to prove difficult, given that a new
national entrance exam requires a knowledge of Georgian, in which
ethnic minorities are not generally fluent.

There are around 250,000 ethnic Armenians in Georgia, accounting for
about five per cent of the population. Most live in the mountainous
region of Javakheti – or Javakhk, as the Armenians call it.

The country has a slightly larger number of Azerbaijanis – estimated
at around 280,000 – and they encounter similar problems with access to
higher education.

A December 2006 report by the United Nations Association of Georgia as
part of its National Integration and Tolerance in Georgia Programme
found that ethnic minorities felt increasingly estranged from the rest
of society because they lacked facility in the national language. In
the Samtskhe-Javakheti region, three quarters of those polled said
that they did not know Georgian.

In Soviet times, this was not an issue because Russian was commonly
accepted as the lingua franca, and fluency in Georgian was not
compulsory for university entrants.

Following independence in 1991, the Georgian authorities stressed the
importance of the language but put few resources into teaching it to
the minorities.

As a result of recent education reforms, all applicants for higher
education courses have to take three entrance exams covering general
knowledge and ability, Georgian plus a foreign language.

The result is that every summer, thousands of young Armenians apply to
universities in Armenia, or less frequently Russia.

In Javakheti itself, educational opportunities are getting more
limited. This year, the Akhalkalaki branch of Tbilisi State University
was abolished, and the number of people admitted to the university’s
branch in the region’s other main town, Akhaltsikhe, was greatly
reduced.

Grigory Minasian, chairman of the Armenian Youth Centre, said that
because of these changes, the number of Armenians attending university
in Georgia had gone down `significantly’, and he feared many young
people from the community would now miss out on higher education
altogether.

The government has launched programmes worth two million laris, around
1.2 million US dollars, to provide Georgian-language tuition for
would-be students from ethnic minorities.

President Saakashvili said poor knowledge of Georgian should not be an
"insurmountable" obstacle for anyone wishing to enter high education
in his country.

`It is very important that our citizens don’t go and study in other
countries,’ he said. `I would like to stress that it is not they
[minorities] who should be held responsible for not knowing
Georgia. They are begging us to teach them the language. This is
happening because we [the authorities] are badly organised.’

Saakashvili has ordered a `preparation centre’ to start operating in
Tbilisi from September, to teach citizens of Armenian and Azerbaijani
ethnicity Georgian and coach them for the new national exams.

Levan Chikvinidze, who works for Georgia’s National Examination
Centre, confirmed that the number of non-Georgian students in higher
education had declined over the past few years, but said that this
reflected a general fall in numbers.

"Competition is high, and both Armenians and Georgians need to be able
to show their potential equally,’ Chikvinidze told IWPR. `There is one
solution – those who are unable to enter university because of the
language problem should come to Tbilisi in advance. About 100 places
have been reserved for them at preliminary courses there. Grants will
be allocated to those who are admitted. The main thing for them is to
get admitted, and the government will fund their education".

Mikhail Khachatrian, a young Armenian from Akhalkalaki who unusually
speaks fluent Georgian, wants to study law at the Akhaltsikhe branch
of Tbilisi university.

He said the new entrance exams were not difficult and were well within
the capabilities of many of his fellow-Armenians. But he was critical
of state teaching of Georgian, saying he learned the language through
social contacts, not formal courses.

"We are taught very badly at school,’ said Khachatrian. `You can’t
learn Georgian there.’

In the mean time, some 1,500 ethnic Armenian students from Georgia, 95
per cent of them from Javakheti, are currently attending universities
in Armenia. The most popular destination is the teacher training
university in Yerevan. The students often live with relatives or share
rented apartments.

Worryingly for Georgia, few of the students return to Javakheti after
they graduate.

Vahram Sarksian, who is from Javakheti, graduated in geography from
Yerevan State University and is now studying at the Public
Administration Academy there. He said the opportunities at home were
very limited for people like him.

"Not many of those who receive education here go back to Javakhk,’ he
said. `Others find jobs here and remain in Armenia. Some just go to a
third country – Russia.’

Norair Andreyan, an expert at Armenia’s education ministry, said the
Georgian authorities were driving their young people away.

"The Georgian policy is to spread everything that is Georgian,’ he
said. `But Javakhk has its own aims – to preserve its deep-rooted
Armenian culture. If things continue in this way, the very existence
of Armenians there will be difficult."

In both countries, there is widespread agreement that Georgia should
make it a priority to promote higher education in the poor and
isolated Javakheti region. But how this should happen is disputed.

Georgian deputy education minister Bella Tsipuria conceded that the
Georgian language teaching system was not working and said that
Georgia had studied the experience of Latvia and Moldova to employ new
teaching methods.

"Experts in Georgian and in how to teach a second language at school
have been selected,’ Tsipuria told IWPR. `Trainers go to Akhalkalaki
and teach new methods to local teachers, both Georgian and
Armenian. We believe that teachers can improve their teaching if they
are motivated and have good textbooks.’

Yerevan-based ethnographer Hranush Kharatian argued that universities
in Armenia should be allowed to open branches in Javakheti.

"If young people can get an education in Javakhk itself, we will be
able to solve several problems at once – providing high quality
Armenian education for students and keeping them here,’ she said. `It
is an issue of strategic importance."

Mikhail Khachatrian, one of the few university applicants currently
hoping to study in Javakheti, says he is confident that he will get
the marks he needs to pass the Georgian national exam.

But he said his optimism was mixed with sadness, as many of his
friends are leaving home and heading off to study in Armenia.

Maia Ivelashvili is a correspondent with Southern Gates newspaper in
Akhaltsikhe, Georgia. Gayane Mkrtchian is a correspondent with
Armenianow.com in Yerevan, Armenia. Both are members of IWPR’s
EU-funded Cross Caucasus Journalism Network project.

Christians Destroying Each Other As Syria Re-Emerges

CHRISTIANS DESTROYING EACH OTHER AS SYRIA RE-EMERGES

Canberra Times (Australia)
August 7, 2007 Tuesday
Final Edition

When, oh when, will the Lebanese Christians stop destroying each
other by fighting each other?

General Michel Aoun’s Free Democratic Party (colour them bright
orange) stood, along with their pro-Syrian allies, against the
Phalangist candidate Amin Gemayel, former president and father of
the assassinated MP, Pierre, murdered by Syrians? By rival Christians?

You name it last year. For Mr Gemayel, read authority, the power of
the democratically elected parliament, the Government of Lebanon and,
much more to the point, the American-supported Government of Lebanon.

For General Aoun who once claimed to be "liberating" Lebanon from
Syria in a disastrous 1990 war, but who would now like to be Syria’s
president in Lebanon it was a heady moment.

His candidate, Camille Khoury, did not win, but he will reformulate
the politics of Lebanon where "pro- Syrian" may become once more a
respectable political label. The issues are deadly serious, in every
sense of the word.

Pierre Gemayel, son of the putative successful candidate Amin,
was shot to death in his car last November, and so a vote in his
Christian favour there are few Muslims in the beautiful, pine-covered
Metn hills here was a vote against his presumed killers, the Syrian
security services.

Desperate to avoid the language of civil war which all of the
candidates speak in private General Aoun had earlier addressed a
rally in the Beirut suburbs from behind a bulletproof shield, and
abused his opponents as "windmills of lies", adding, spitefully, "I
will not call them sons of snakes, but sons of rumours, and rumours
are like a rootless weed.

"Once you pluck it out, it dies."

If that seemed sinister, try Mr Gemayel’s warning to his opponents
that "the Metn will never be a suburb of Damascus", adding that
Syria’s political allies, especially Ali Qanso, of the Syrian Social
Nationalist Party, supported General Aoun.

The people of these hills where his son lies buried in the family crypt
in Bikfaya knew that the ex-general was "dragging them to a battle
they did not want" and that the electoral battle here was "dancing
over the blood of martyrs". This might seem par for the course in
any other election, but in Lebanon these are incendiary words.

Yet again, the Christians are being divided much, no doubt, to Syria’s
delight and the danger of inter- Christian fighting, which last week
took the form of stonings and beatings in the streets of Beirut,
has been increased.

The sectarian system of voting (courtesy, originally, of the League
of Nations’ French Mandate) meant that the Armenian Tashnak party
is supporting General Aoun, a fact that has outraged the party’s
supporters in the state of Armenia.

What, on Earth, has General Aoun ever done to acknowledge the 1915
genocide of one and a half million Armenians by the Ottoman Turks?

In the end, alas, it all goes back to a simple equation; if the
Lebanese would trust each other as much as they trust in Washington,
Tehran, Tel Aviv, Damascus, London or Paris, they would be safe,
but the sectarian system of politics here ensures that the
de-confessionalisation of Lebanon would destroy the country’s identity.

Thus it lives, in the constant penumbra of civil war.

Jewish Organization Meets Obstacles In Boston On Account Of Negative

JEWISH ORGANIZATION MEETS OBSTACLES IN BOSTON ON ACCOUNT OF NEGATIVE POSITION DISPLAYED TOWARDS ISSUE OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Aug 06 2007

BOSTON, AUGUST 6, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Jewish
Anti-Defamation League (ADL) operating in the United States of America,
which implements the "No to hatred" program in 67 American cities,
meets with some ostacles in Boston, which has an Armenian community
of 8 thousand people. This is written in the American "The Boston
Globe" journal. The reason of all this lies in the fact that the
Anti-Defamation League rejects the fact of the Armenian Genocide,
thus causing anger among the Armenian population. The latters claim
that the ADL should stop the implementation of the "No to hatred"
program or support the ratification of Resolution 106 concerning the
recognition of the Armenian Genocide in Congress.

Abe Foxman, the Director of the ADL, who openly rejects Resolution
106, declared: "The fact of hindering the implementation of the
"No to hatred’ program on account of the negative position of the
league towards the issue of the Armenian Genocide, is nothing but
a fanaticism."

"The Boston Globe" writes that since the Anti-Defamation League is
troubled about human rights, which is displayed by the "No to hatred"
program, this institute is, moreover, obliged to recognize the genocide
realized towards Armenian people during the years of the World War I
and criticise any attempt made by Turkey in the direction of oppressing
the memories of that historical event.

It should also be mentioned that together with the Anti-Defamation
League, the Jewish instituitons of influence operating in the United
States, that is, the Jewish Committee of America, the Committee on
American-Israeli public relations, as well as the "B’nai B’rith",
do not recognize the Armenian Genocide of 1915 either.

Devoted to loving his neighbors

St. George Daily Spectrum, UT
Aug 5 2007

Devoted to loving his neighbors
By BRITTANY DUNCAN
[email protected]

ST. GEORGE – Barton Brooks is a man with very few of his own
possessions, but he has decided to devote his life to helping others
around the world less fortunate than himself.

"He has no money himself and yet he’s out there trying to get people
to help him help people," said Carla Brooks, Barton’s mother.

Barton grew up in St. George and graduated from Dixie High School,
and his family instilled the value of other cultures from a young
age.

His grandmother’s Armenian heritage was a factor in Barton developing
his deep understanding of other cultures.
Barton and his grandmother both loved traveling and both believed in
never judging other country’s traditions.

"My mother always said you need to love everyone," Carla Brooks said.
"We taught that with our children and were very conscious of having
our children raised with a lot of culture."

Barton later attended Dixie College, the University of Utah, and the
Jerusalem Center for Near Eastern Studies. He spent many years
traveling around the world and developed a desire to help all these
places he had grown to love.

It was when Barton was exploring part of Cambodia that he decided to
found his own nonprofit volunteer organization called Global Colors.

"I couldn’t find anyone who could help me accomplish my goals to
fulfill needs in countries around the world," Barton said.

So, Barton sold his 1965 Shelby Cobra replica to cover the expenses
of Global Colors’ first projects. A sacrifice he admits wasn’t easy,
but still worth it. Barton hasn’t let his organization become
detached. All of Global Colors’ projects are handpicked.

"I try to find some little interesting story that’s going on in the
world, with some little local group that’s trying to help their own
people," Barton said. "Then, I try to connect them with people like
Laura Bush, or friends in Hollywood, so the whole country can now see
what this little group is trying to accomplish to help their own
people."

In June of this year, the first lady, Laura Bush, visited Senegal
with Barton and Global Colors to see his collaboration with
Development in Gardening.

"We build vegetable gardens next to hospitals to provide patients
with nutrition," Barton said. "Nutrition is a missing component of
HIV treatment."

Barton believed the project was a perfect match for the first lady.

Laura Bush spent most of the day with Global Colors at the hospital.
She toured the garden as the workers picked vegetables to prepare the
patient’s meals and she later met with HIV patients privately.

Barton’s best friend from childhood, Derek Booth, is a Secret Service
agent for the White House. The first lady’s trip to Senegal was
initiated by Booth’s comment to Laura Bush’s press secretary about
Global Colors.

The first lady has since worked with Global Colors to present
information to the United Nations about the Burmese refugee crisis.

"It was all because Derek wanted to help," Barton said.

Barton attributes Global Colors’ success to the group’s small
infrastructure. People know that Barton or one of his team members is
delivering their money or donated items directly, and there’s no
passing on of the task.

"I really try to connect them with what I’m working on," Barton said.
"If I raise money to give cows to widows in Kenya, I’ll go and
personally give the cow away. Then I’ll come back and show a video
and picture of the woman receiving it to the people who donated."

Barton views people’s contributions as an example of trust. He wants
to make sure the donators know their donations made it to where he
said it would go.

Carla Fox has known Barton and his family ever since she moved to St.
George around 16 years ago. She donated enough money for two cows to
be given to widows in Kenya.

"I just wanted to help him accomplish something that’s been a passion
of his," Fox said. "Whatever Barton decides to do, it’s always a very
good cause."

The contributors to Global Colors believe in Barton. He has led a
life of true sacrifice.

"He would go to the orphanage every Thursday night," Carla Brooks
said. "That was his night out. He would read to the children, play
ball with them, tuck them in and tell them he’d see them next week."

Another friend he’s had since high school, April Hickman, said she
can’t express how much good he does for people. She said he’s a
magnet for orphans.

"He spends a lot of time [in orphanages]," Hickman said. "He just
becomes really close with the kids."

The current projects Barton is devoting his time to are focused on
helping children in hard times.

"We’re building a safe house in Cambodia for children rescued after
being trafficked into the sex trade," Barton said. "We are trying to
remove them from brothels, and then provide a safe place for them to
recover before reintegrating them to normal society."

Many children sold into the sex trade often wind up back in it again,
even after they’ve been rescued just because they have nowhere to go.
Barton hopes the safe house will change the outcome for trafficked
children.

"There are some families on the verge of selling a child because
they’re in such extreme poverty," Barton said. "They can get $700 for
selling a child."

The money a family can make from the sale of a child will support the
rest of their family for almost two years. Global Colors is working
to create jobs for the parents and gathering donations to pay for the
children’s schooling needs.

In a couple of weeks, Barton will be in St. George to visit his
family and to find people interested in contributing to his child and
family program in Cambodia.

"It’s really rewarding to connect people in St. George to people in
Cambodia," Barton said. "That’s really what I want to do, just
connect the world one person at a time."

To learn more about Barton’s organization and how to help with his
current projects, visit

www.globalcolors.org.