Armenia’s President For Destroying Wall Of Misunderstanding

ARMENIA’S PRESIDENT FOR DESTROYING WALL OF MISUNDERSTANDING

ARKA
April 9, 2008

YEREVAN, April 9. /ARKA/. Armenia’s President Robert Kocharyan has
called for destroying the wall of misunderstanding between different
sections of Armenia’s population.

"We must not disunite and set barriers between different sections of
the population, ignore one another’s problems, or be unapproachable
for one another," Sargsyan stated at the inauguration ceremony.

Sargsyan also addressed the supporters of the other presidential
candidates.

"You had the right not to vote for me, but I have no right not to be
you President. Even if there is a wall of misunderstanding between us,
I call for destroying it," Sargsyan said.

He called for reforms, stating that "everyone must start reforming
himself."

The inauguration ceremony for Armenia’s new president has been held
at the Opera House of Yerevan today.

Serge Sargsyan won the February 19 presidential election by receiving
52.82% of votes. The European and CIS observers recognized the
elections as held in conformity with international standards of
democracy.

Town Council Of Rhode Island Does Not Permit Armenian Flag To Fly Ov

TOWN COUNCIL OF RHODE ISLAND DOES NOT PERMIT ARMENIAN FLAG TO FLY OVER TOWN HALL

Noyan Tapan
April 8, 2008

RHODE ISLAND, APRIL 8, ARMENIANS TODAY – NOYAN TAPAN. The Town
Council of Rhode Island denied the Armenian National Committee of
Rhode Island’s request to fly the Armenian flag at Town Hall, citing
the Jamestown Flag Policy adopted by the Town Council on May 29,
2001 as the reason for the decision. It should be mentioned that the
Armenian National Committee has decided to fly the Armenian flag over
different cities of the Unites States of America on the occasion of
the 93-rd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

Parliament Speaker Receives Serbian Ambassador

PARLIAMENT SPEAKER RECEIVES SERBIAN AMBASSADOR

ARMENPRESS
April 8, 2008

YEREVAN, APRIL 8, ARMENPRESS: Parliament speaker Tigran Torosian
received today Serbia’s ambassador to Armenia, Liliana Bacevic. The
ambassador has arrived here to attend the April 9 inauguration ceremony
of president-elect Serzh Sarkisian.

The parliament press office quoted Torosian as saying that he as
pleased that the ambassador of the friendly Serbian nation came to
Armenia to participate in an event, which ‘is important for Armenia."

Torosian also said that actually very little was done since their
previous meeting in terms of giving a push to bilateral ties. He said
in this sense Armenia expects the 2008 visit to Armenia by Serbian
president to give a serious boost to advancing bilateral relations.

Torosian also referred to Serbia’s voting for an Azerbaijani-drafted
resolution at the UN that demanded an immediate pullout of Armenian
troops from regions around Nagorno-Karabakh, saying that was a
‘surprise’ move from the friendly Serbia.

Torosian also spoke about Kosovo and Nagorno-Karabakh conflicts.

Ambassador Liliana Bacevic who has arrived here for the second time,
was quoted as saying that it is a great honor for her to participate
in the presidential inauguration. She then spoke about the difficulties
her country is going through because of Kosovo.

At the end of the meeting Torosian wished success to the people
of Serbia.

NATO And EU Representatives To Attend Serge Sargsyan’s Inauguration

NATO AND EU REPRESENTATIVES TO ATTEND SERGE SARGSYAN’S INAUGURATION

armradio.am
08.04.2008 11:18

Jean-Francois Bureau, NATO Assistant Secretary General for Public
Diplomacy, will be present at the inauguration ceremony of RA
President-Elect Serge Sargsyan due on April 9, Mediamax reports.

The Special Representative of the European Union for the South Caucasus
Peter Semenby will also attend the inauguration ceremony.

Waking the dead

Deccan Herald, India
April 6 2008

Waking the dead

Aditi Bhaduri

An anguished book, but the author has fallen into the very trap she
cautions against, essentialising and stereotyping.

`The whole carnage was orchestrated by these people in power. When
the president and prime minister are the masterminds behind the
entire carnage, who is going to come to your aid? Why would the
police stop the criminals? They were told to supervise the murders,
the rioting, the looting…

`The government won’t do a damn thing but my curse will finish all
these people’s lives. Is the Gandhi family prospering right now? If
they want to give us justice, ok. If not, my Waheguru is there. Here
is 1.25 lakhs, here take this money and shut up – that is what they
say. What am I to do with this money; set it alight?’
Kuldeep Kaur’s cry reaches us from the abyss of the 1984 Sikh pogrom
in the capital which claimed the life of at least 3,000 Sikhs.
Twenty-four years later, the families of these Sikhs still await
justice. Justice, which continues to elude women like Kuldeep, women
who were brutalised and traumatised, widowed, raped, orphaned in
November 1984. At a time when voices from distant lands are coming
back to haunt the nation because `there are ghosts that don’t want to
be laid to rest’, this book is not just timely, it is prophetic.

Renowned Israeli Leftist Yossi Sarid had said that `… an orphaned
genocide is the father of the next genocide’. He was referring to the
Armenian genocide, which, allowed to fade into history with impunity,
is considered to have engendered the Jewish Holocaust. Grewal’s book
is a grim reminder that denial of justice to the Sikhs for their
trauma in 1984 has spawned the communal violence that followed later
in other parts of the country, violence where the state is clearly
implicated.

The book is a rivetting, terrifying account of the Punjab horror of
the 70s and 80s which culminated in the death of Indira Gandhi by her
Sikh bodyguards and the massacre of 3,000 Sikhs in Delhi in 1984.

Domino effect

Grewal comprehensively recounts how what began as an innocuous but
shoddily drafted resolution demanding greater autonomy for Punjab and
equity for Punjabis in general and Sikhs in particular soon
boomeranged into a terrifying nightmare not just for Punjab but for
the entire nation.

Personal ambitions, abortion of justice, suspension of Constitutional
rights, political power and myopia, deliberate use of religion and
communal politics, all insidiously merged to become the `Punjab
crisis’. It was, as the author writes, all `about jockeying for
political power, controlling economic power, and aggrandising
personal power’.
But revisiting the Punjab crisis is not the main merit of this book,
in which gaps remain. Tavleen Singh, a Sikh herself and no admirer of
the Congress, has in her columns recorded that Sikh youth crossed
over the border into Pakistan to undergo arms training, in camps
established for this purpose, to fight the Indian state for the
creation of Khalistan. Grewal, strangely, misses out on this aspect
of the Punjab problem even as she goes into details on Congress and
Akali politics and mentions the support rendered to the `Khalistan’
movement by diasporic Sikhs.

There seems to be an attempt to construct historical fissures and
cleavages between communities, constructs which serves no community’s
cause. While Sikhs are definitely a community distinct from Hindus,
Sikhism has much in common with Hinduism and in 1947 the Sikhs did
throw in their lot with Hindu dominated India.
Rather, the book is a valuable testimony to the fact that 23 years
and nine commissions later, the victims of 1984 are still awaiting
justice. It records the continued trauma of members of the Sikh
community because `The pathos is first in the act of the violence and
then in living with the consequences of violence.’

The year 1984 left behind `3000 brutal murders, orphaned 4000
children, widowed thousands of women, displaced 50,000 people’ – all
Sikhs. Grewal amplifies the experiences of these Sikhs and the
dangers inherent in the continued denial of justice to those whose
lives had been fractured by the violence of 1984. (The Prime
Minister’s apology is a little too late). For these `chaurasiyas’ –
the nomenclature for these victim-survivors of 1984 – the `pain
refuses to leave because justice continues to elude them.’

The account is a gendered one, because the large-scale violence, `a
consequence of strategic planning’ saw the `focussed selection of
Sikh males, regardless of age.’ Left behind were the Sikh women, for
some of whom `the violence was done twice over, first to their body
through rape, and then the loss of male family members.’ Most of them
have been herded into Tilak Vihar (the widows’ colony) in the
outskirts of Delhi. The author privileges them because, `it is these
women who have borne most deeply the wounds of November 1984.’

And then there are the orphans. Left to themselves – their fathers
dead and their mothers having to take up work outside the home to
earn a living – focus-less, loafing, many took to drugs while still
others took to crime. Some struggled through shattered childhoods to
find jobs to live with dignity. It is remarkable then that these
children have not grown up to become militants and harbour no
feelings of revenge. Any visitor to Punjab today finds it difficult
to believe that this is the same place where such violence and terror
had reigned.

Yet Betrayed by the State is an angry and anguished book. Jyoti
Grewal seems to be falling into that very trap that she is cautioning
others against – essentialising and stereotyping – this time the Hindu
majority. She does warn against generalising though as many voices
from the majority community were raised and are still raised against
the Sikh pogrom of 1984 – some of which the book records.

Neither the Congress Party ruling then nor the mobs that unleashed
the violence speak for all Hindus. And the 1984 pogrom was followed
by a reign of terror in the Punjab let loose by those demanding
Khalistan, a terror amply reciprocated by the Punjab police.

The murders of busloads of Hindus, the blowing up of the
transatlantic aeroplane deserve more than one line dismissals. Pain
cannot and should not be hierarchized. This perhaps is the central
message of the book with all its inclusions and omissions; as `The
stench of the diseased body politic refuses to go away…’ A long
lost cry of those betrayed, Betrayed By The State is a jolt to the
collective conscience of the nation.

Betrayed By The State: The Anti-Sikh Pogrom of 1984
By Jyoti Grewal
Penguin Books India – 2007
Pp. 223
Rs. 275/-

s2008040561216.asp

http://www.deccanherald.com/Content/Apr62008/book

Armenia-EU Trade And Economic Cooperation Discussed In Yerevan

ARMENIA-EU TRADE AND ECONOMIC COOPERATION DISCUSSED IN YEREVAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
03.04.2008 14:54 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On April 2, 2008 the 7th regular of the EC-Armenia
Subcommittee on Trade, Economic and Related Legal Issues was held in
Yerevan, reported the press office of the Delegation of the European
Commission to Armenia.

The co-chairman from the Armenian side was Deputy Minister of Trade
and Economic Development Mr. Vahe Danielyan, and the European side was
represented by Mr. Andres-Maldonado, Head of Unit, Southern Caucasus
and Central Asia Unit (RELEX).

Representatives from Armenian ministries, H.E. Raul de Luzenberger,
Ambassador, Head of the EC Delegation to Armenia, other members
of the Delegation and representatives from the European Commission
participated in the meeting.

During the meeting the following topics were discussed – implementation
of Partnership and Cooperation Agreement signed between RA and EU
and issues related to the implementation of the ENP Action Plan,
including Armenia’s economic development since the previous meeting,
and improvement of the investment and business climate.

The parties also discussed possible options for further strengthening
bilateral trade relations, including the state of play of the
EU feasibility study on the possible creation of a Free Trade Area
between the RA and the EU, the possible granting of Market Economy
Status by the EU to Armenia, and possibilities for Armenia to benefit
more from the European Union’s Generalized System of Preferences and
to perhaps gain access to the EU’s enhanced Generalised System of
Preferences known as GSP+.

NATO Summit Kicks Of In Bucharest

NATO SUMMIT KICKS OF IN BUCHAREST

PanARMENIAN.Net
02.04.2008 12:57 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The biggest-ever summit of NATO leaders gets
underway today in the suitably imposing setting of Romania’s Parliament
building. NATO enlargement is on the agenda, along with the alliance’s
role in Afghanistan, aspirant states, NATO concept, cybernetic and
energy security.

Armenia’s delegation led by Prime Minister and President-elect Serzh
Sargsyan includes Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, RA Ambassador to
NATO Samvel Lazarian and other officials.

It’s notable that Mr Sargsyan is scheduled to meet with the OSCE
Minsk Group co-chairs.

Azerbaijan’s Discontent With OSCE MG Not Novelty

AZERBAIJAN’S DISCONTENT WITH OSCE MG NOT NOVELTY

PanARMENIAN.Net
01.04.2008 15:27 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Azerbaijan’s discontent with the OSCE Minsk Group’s
activities is not a novelty, Director of the Caucasus Media Institute
Alexander Iskandaryan told a PanARMENIAN.Net.

The talks record a long history and discontent accumulates, according
to him.

"Adoption of Azerbaijan’s resolution on Karabakh in the UN GA has
two causes. First, it’s the faults in the UN system. Second, it’s
unstable internal situation in Armenia. However, adoption of the
resolution was not an attempt to replace the OSCE MG," he said.

"The further developments in the Karabakh process depend on what will
happen in Armenia during next two months. The settlement process and
the conflict itself are different things. The conflict depends on the
balance of forces, which includes the military might, economy, policy
and level of lobbying within various international structures. The
main balance, however, is Nagorno Karabakh which is controlled by
Armenian forces.

ANCA ER Executive Director To Take Part In Genocide Education Awaren

ANCA ER EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR TO TAKE PART IN GENOCIDE EDUCATION AWARENESS PANEL IN NEW YORK CITY

armradio.am
01.04.2008 12:13

On April 7, 2008, at New York University Law School Armenian National
Committee of America Eastern Region (ANCA-ER) Executive Director Karine
Birazian will be participating on a panel organized by Miracle Corners
of the World (MCW) and Jacqueline’s Human Rights Corner for an event
entitled "’Never Again?’: Implications and Actions around the World."

"It is such an honor to participate with Miracle Corners of the World
on this upcoming panel which will also mark the 14th Anniversary
of the Rwandan Genocide," commented Birazian. "Having recently met
with the organizer of the event, Rwandan Genocide survivor Jacqueline
Murekatete, it was moving to hear her story and the ongoing need for
genocide education awareness."

The event is expected to bring together genocide survivors from around
the world and world-renowned genocide prevention educators and voices
to examine the crime and reality of genocide in the 20th and 21st
centuries. They will discuss how the phrase "Never Again" has yet to
be fully implemented by the international community, and share how
individuals can work together to create a world without genocide.

Gyumri Suburb Turns Into Dump

GYUMRI SUBURB TURNS INTO DUMP

A1+
31 March, 2008

Residents of one of Gyumri suburbs, located on 124 Gyumri-Armavir
highway have been protesting against turning their neighborhood into
a dump. Since the fall of 2007 debris and domestic rubbish have been
deposited next to their homes, which led the commoners to controversies
with trash-van drivers.

The district is located on the entrance to the city and may arouse
negative conclusions of the whole city.

Residents of the neighborhood claim they have seen tourists taken
aback when passing by the area. They say residents of neighboring
villages started to consider the site as a dump, throwing rubbish
there on entering or leaving the city.

Faded flower wreaths taken from the nearby cemetery can be seen on
the edge of the road. Trash heaps also attract dogs which became a
threat to local residents.

Press secretary of the City Hall told Tsaig that special areas are
being reserved as dumps. He added that he will inquire the Gyumri
Communal and Environment Department to eliminate rubbish from the
residential area.