"Absurd. 85 Workers In Armenia Take Care Of 100 Pensioners"

"ABSURD. 85 WORKERS IN ARMENIA TAKE CARE OF 100 PENSIONERS"

Panorama.am
18:49 01/05/2008

"Only small business representatives open working places. In opposite
to it the working places are being cut in big business. It means that
small business not only solves economic but social problems. I guess
only in Armenia small business is not under country’s support," Edward
Aghajanov said, today in a press conference with the journalists.

"Our authorities say that they provide support to small and average
business representatives, but they do not point any aspect they do it,"
he said.

Aghajanov talked about the problem of lack of working places and
second the salaries. According to the official data 85 workers takes
care 100 pensioners.

According to the economist it is "absurd, as there is no other country
where the number of pensioners is higher than that of workers."

No Changes Expected In MCC Activity In Armenia

NO CHANGES EXPECTED IN MCC ACTIVITY IN ARMENIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
30.04.2008 15:51 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ No changes are expected in the Millennium Challenge
Corporation activity in Armenia.

Everything proceeds in its normal course. It’s unclear what decision
the Corporation leadership will take, said Ara Hovsepyan, MCA Armenia
Chief Executive Officer.

"$16 million has been already assigned this year. An $11-million
transfer is expected in the near future," he said, IA Regnum reports.

On March 12, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said that the
U.S. government can suspend the MCA in Armenia over imposition of
emergency rule in the republic.

Conjectural Not Structural Adjustment: Turkish U-Turn Policy

CONJECTURAL NOT STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT: TURKISH U-TURN POLICY
By Azad Aslan

Kurdish Globe, Iraq
=4F7D894FE44EAD80319290700E0E4024
April 30 2008

Vehicles of Turkish army are moving near the border with Iraq. PRESS
PHOTO

Without radical democratic reforms and a genuine U-turn policy in
its Kurdish national question, Turkey will remain a serious threat
for the future of south Kurdistan.

While Turkish air force renewed their air attacks against PKK bases in
Iraqi Kurdistan, the top political and military body of the Turkish
establishment, the National Security Council (MGK), gave the green
light for talks with Iraqi Kurds in its last regular monthly meeting
on April 24. For several years, Turkey has refused dialogue with the
Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and has yet to recognize the KRG
as a legal political establishment in Iraq.

MGK released a statement, stating: "Activities in the legislative
field, which constitutes the basis of national consensus in Iraq,
and developments toward restoration of Iraq’s standing in the region
have been assessed; it has been considered that it will be beneficial
to continue consultations with all Iraqi groups and movements."

MGK’s decision is crucial to establish relations between KRG and the
Turkish government, which is run by the AKP (Justice and Development
Party). It is commonly argued that the AKP tends to make contact
with the KRG while the army has refused so far to have any official
relations between Turkey and the KRG. MGK’s decision in that sense
may be seen a U-turn in official Turkish policy toward the KRG. It
is now possible for the AKP to invite KRG Prime Minister Nechirvan
Barzani to Turkey for bilateral talks.

This U-turn in Turkish policy vis-a-vis the KRG should not be
seen a radical political shift within the Turkish establishment
toward the Kurdish national question in general and Iraqi Kurdistan
in particular. It reflects the Turkish adjustment to conjectural
developments both at home and in the region at large. In other words,
such a seemingly positive political attitude of Turkey is temporary
and prone to be altered as possible new political conditions may arise.

Political formation of the Turkish regime since 1923 has been
anti-democratic and totalitarian despite the fact that since the second
half of the 20th century Turkey moved to a multi-party system. At the
root of anti-democratic political formation of the Turkish regime lies
the construction of an artificial Turkish nation upon the ruins of a
multi-ethnic and multi-religious Ottoman Empire. The founders of the
Turkish Republic, Kemalists, were the continuation of the Committee
of Union and Progress (CUP). It would not be wrong to argue that
Kemalists’ post-war vision of Turkish nationalism was clearly rooted
in the ideas and practices of the CUP. The main objective of CUP,
particularly from 1913 when the Ottoman Empire lost 1/3 of its land,
was to secure the Ottoman state and make it 99% Muslim. CUP seized the
opportunity of World War I and eliminated Armenians during the 1915
genocide campaign. The Armenians were the only sizeable non-Muslim
elements remaining within the Ottoman Empire.

With the defeat of the Ottoman Empire and its unavoidable
disintegration, the remaining CUP elements launched defense
movements in Anatolia, and this movement gradually evolved toward
what was called Kemalism. The Kemalist movement, upon the final and
decisive victory over the Greek army, and over Armenian and Kurdish
nationalism, during 1920-22 embarked upon a new Turkish state that
was, as A. Roshwald argued, "built on a legacy of genocide and ethnic
cleansing and propagated by a dictatorial regime with little patience
for the niceties of pluralistic policies." The main tenet of Kemalism
was and still is to make Turkey 99% Turk. Nothing clarifies the
Kemalist notion better than the slogan of one of the oldest daily
Turkish newspapers, Hurriyet, which states "Turkey belongs to the
Turks." Decades of forceful assimilation of Kurds in Turkey had this
objective to evaporate all the non-Turkish ethnic communities within
the Turkish identity.

The intention to repeat such well-known historical facts here is to
explain that formation of Turkish political, economic, and cultural
characteristics based on such anti-democratic principles, and that
it would not be an easy task to reform and democratize the whole
Turkish establishment that established, grew, and evolved throughout
the 20th century with a mentality of exclusive Turkish identity. To
put it another way, to expect Turkish political establishment to
democratize itself on the issue of Kurdish national identity would
be illusionary and misleading.

The current political chaos in Turkey, mainly between the Kemalists
and the AKP, is on the one hand resulting due to struggle of interests
between industrial, financial, and newly growing Anatolian capitalist
groups, and on the other hand resulting due to the resistance of
Kemalist elite (the military/bureaucratic class) to preserve its
political, social, and economic privileges within the Turkish political
and economic system. The Kurdish national question in Turkey is used
and exploited as an object in this struggle of interests.

Kurdish political actors must realize that the ongoing political chaos
in Turkey would not evolve toward a democratic regime. Formation
of exclusive Turkish political identity and an almost century-long
stagnant Kemalist ideology are the two main obstacles in the way
toward radical reforms to democratize Turkey.

Turkey was content with its Kemalist state policy throughout the 20th
century as established status quo in the world between so-called
Socialist and Capitalist blocks had not allowed any serious border
change in the Middle East. However, the fall of the Soviet Union
and collapse of status quo provided new political alterations in
the region. Formation of the KRG as a new political body exactly
had taken place in that period. Existence of the KRG as the only
internationally recognized legal Kurdish political entity represents
a real danger to Turkey as its mere existence destroys ideological
foundation of Kemalist ideology on the issue of the Kurds. "Mountain
Turks," as Turkey categorized the Kurds for so many decades, can no
longer be sustained, solely due to now there are Kurds who exercises
a Parliament, a government, and army of its own. Furthermore, these
Kurdish institutions are recognized by a sovereign state constitution
and by the UN. Since 1991, Turkey has been in deep trouble to
reformulate its stagnant Kurdish policy, and particularly Kemalist
elite find it almost impossible to sustain its anti-Kurdish rhetoric;
even they no longer believe in it.

Here lies the crux of the matter, to explain the ways in which Turkey
may be transformed either toward a democratic country in peace
with its multi-ethnic identities or toward a further militarist,
totalitarian, and dictatorial regime. Despite the myopic official
discourse on the Kurdish question and some constitutional reforms
imposed by the EU, there lacks a tangible indication to suggest that
Turkey is on the course toward a democratic country. There is still
strong resistance by both the Kemalist elite and the AKP and others to
recognize political-national identity of the Kurds. Nothing symbolizes
this more clearly than Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s
harsh reactions against Sezgin Tanrikulu, head of the Lawyer Union
of Diyarbakir, who demanded right to education in native Kurdish
language in those areas where the Kurds constitute a majority.

With this political background of Turkey, it is difficult to
optimistically interpret MGK’s decision to allow relations with
the KRG. In its statement, as mentioned above, MGK refrains to use
the acronym KRG, instead using "all Iraqi groups." Neither is there
any sign to observe of Turkish officials using the term "Kurdistan
Region," but rather referred to the region as "northern Iraq." This
suggests the insistence of Turkish official discourse to reject the
terms of Kurdistan.

The burning question to ask then is why Turkey indirectly moves to
establish relations with the KRG? The answer is not straightforward and
must be analyzed within the framework of interconnected issues. Turkey
realized that it would not be an accomplished short-term policy
to eliminate or diminish the KRG’s position within Iraq. Turkey,
particularly since the fall of Saddam, tried very hard to become
involved in Iraqi affairs and redirect it toward a unitary state
system rather than a federal political system. Post-Saddam Iraq’s
unitary state system was indeed one of the conditions of Turkey in
its negotiations with U.S. pre-war period to open its borders to
U.S. soldiers in order for the U.S. to have a northern front. Using
the PKK threat as pretext, Turkey militarily threatened and finally
attempted to occupy Iraqi Kurdistan but failed in its objective. This
realization forced Turkey to make adjustments in its current policy
toward Kurdistan Region.

To exploit energy sources and have its share in the petroleum and
natural gas sector in Iraqi Kurdistan, Turkey realized the necessity
of having some kind of official relations with the KRG. Prime Minister
Barzani’s recent successful visit to Iraq to resolve outstanding issues
between Baghdad and Erbil convinced Turkey that the KRG position in
Baghdad is getting stronger than otherwise believed as weakening. Iraqi
Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki’s government crackdown on al-Sadr, who
shares the Baathist mentality of a unitary Iraqi state, indicates for
the first time ever the seriousness of the Iraqi central government
to implement the Iraqi Constitution, which includes federalism.

Iraqi Kurds’ strong resistance against the latest Turkish military land
incursion into south Kurdistan convinced the Turkish establishment that
further conflict with the KRG will intensify the link between the Kurds
on both sides of the border. In other words, with its reactionary and
militarist policy, Turkey obliquely consolidates Kurdish nationalism
both in south and north Kurdistan. Despite the official discourse of
KRG and Kurdish leaders, it can easily be observed that southern Kurds
are more sympathetic toward their brethren in north Kurdistan. The
danger for Turkey is that further consolidation of solidarity and
unity between southern and northern Kurds may in mid-term open the
possibility of consolidated and unified Kurdish nationalism. By
semi-recognition of the KRG as the "northern Iraqi administration,"
Turkey hopes on the one hand to foil southern Kurds’ closeness toward
the Kurds in the north and on the other hand to have a free hand to
deal with its own Kurds.

Establishing relations between Turkey and the KRG is also
a U.S. policy, which needs the alliance of both the KRG and
Turkey in its policy in Turkey. Mainstream Turkish commentators
stressed that Turkey is under pressure by the U.S. to recognize
the KRG. Such semi-recognition of the KRG in that sense would ease
Turkish-U.S. relations, which are under strain mainly due to Turkish
policy toward Iraqi Kurds.

Whatever reason(s) push Turkey to make semi-official relations with
the KRG, it would be imperative for the KRG not to jump in and hastily
make official relations with Turkey and capitalize on it. The KRG
must have well-thought and worked-out plans that define parameters
of any official or non-official relations with Turkey. Any official
relations with Turkey without doubt would require some compromises
on the KRG’s part. It is essential for the KRG to have its red lines
on some critical issues that should send strong signals to Ankara and
other capitals that the KRG is not open for negotiations or prepared
to bargain on these red lines issues.

Here are some suggestions to draw parameters of KRG’s relation
with Turkey. Under any context, the KRG should not bargain on the
territory of Kurdistan as a whole. This requires the KRG to continue
its insistence on Kirkuk and other disputed areas of south Kurdistan.

The KRG should refrain itself under any condition from proposing
officially any political solution to the Kurdish national question in
Turkey. In other words, the KRG should not be a partner in dealing with
the Kurdish question in Turkey. The solution to the Kurdish national
question in Turkey primarily depends on the Kurds in the north, and
what kind of political solution that is aspired to ultimately is up
to the Kurds in Turkey.

The question of the PKK presence in Iraqi Kurdistan is a serious
issue and without doubt Turkey would ask the KRG to denounce the
PKK as a terrorist organization and uproot them in territory under
the jurisdiction of the KRG. This issue must be tackled by Kurdistan
Parliament and should not be a topic of negotiation between Turkey
and the KRG.

Iraqi Kurdish leaders should realize that in their relations with
Turkey, the KRG has the upper hand. The KRG has been recognized
by a number of international bodies, and more than 10 embassy
and consulates opened in Erbil including France, Britain, U.S.,
Iran, and Russia. Relations with Baghdad are better now than ever
before. Iran’s attitude toward the KRG is more positive than Turkey. In
that sense, the KRG does not really need an exit route via Turkey
to the world. Turkey, on the other hand, is in serious trouble with
internal crises and the Kurdish national question of Turkey has never
been so internationalized. The current Turkish policy toward the Kurds
has never been under scrutiny by international powers. Under these
circumstances, the KRG can utilize this Turkish move but should not
have any illusion of its outcome.

Without radical democratic reforms and a genuine U-turn policy in
its Kurdish national question, Turkey will remain a serious threat
for the future of south Kurdistan. There are no solid indicators to
expect strong bilateral relations to be developed between the KRG and
Turkey. Rather than emphasizing and wasting energy on establishing
relations with such a difficult "neighbor," the KRG must spend its
energy and resources on further democratization of its institutions,
the betterment of livelihood of its population, and it must invest in
a healthy development of the national identity of the Kurdish nation.

http://www.kurdishglobe.net/displayArticle.jsp?id

Armenia And Iran Interested In Developing Bilateral Relations

ARMENIA AND IRAN INTERESTED IN DEVELOPING BILATERAL RELATIONS

armradio.am
30.04.2008 15:03

President Serzh Sargsyan today received the Ambassador of the Islamic
Republic of Iran to Armenia Seid Ali Saghaian.

The Ambassador said the Iranian leadership attaches great importance
to the further development of relations with Armenia, and the
participation of the personal representative of President Ahmadinejad
in the inauguration ceremony of the Armenian President is another
evidence of Iran’s intentions.

Underlining the strategic importance of the relations between
the two countries, the parties noted with appreciation that the
Armenian-Iranian cooperation is developing due to joint efforts.

Serzh Sargsyan described the bilateral relations as stable and
developing and said that Armenia is resolute to expand the framework
of cooperation.

The President attached special importance to the productive process
of the programs implemented in the field o energy and prioritized
the increase of the volume of commodity turnover, encouragement of
the cooperation between the private sectors.

During the meeting reference was made to regional issues and the
settlement of the Karabakh issue. The interlocutors agreed that the
region is rather complex and the efforts of the countries should be
aimed at ensuring stability and security in the region. According
to Ambassador Saghaian, the Iranian side values Armenia’s restrained
reaction to the periodic militant statements from one of the countries
of the region.

Serzh Sargsyan welcomed the balanced position of Iran in the issue
of the Karabakh conflict settlement. The President once again noted
that Armenia stands for the peaceful resolution of the issue in the
framework of international law and in the context of the right of
peoples to self-determination.

Tariffs Of Fixed-Line Telephone Are Under Consideration

TARIFFS OF FIXED-LINE TELEPHONE ARE UNDER CONSIDERATION

KarabakhOpen
29-04-2008 10:06:08

On Saturday the NKR government and Karabakh Telecom signed a memorandum
on cooperation, after which Prime Minister Ara Harutiunyan answered
the questions of reporters, including on rumors of per-minute payment
bills.

According to the prime minister, digitalization of the fixed-line
telephone network supposes new tariffs. "We have asked some time
to discuss the tariffs offered by the management of the company. We
thought 500 free minutes a month is too little for an average citizen,
however, it turned out that about 90 percent of subscribers use the
fixed-line telephone about that much," said Ara Harutiunyan said,
noting that there is no decision yet.

In answer to the question if the memorandum also involves the new
tariff policy, the prime minister said: "The company offered the
proposal in September when the director of Karabakh-Telecom Ralf
Yirikian met with the new president and said willing to launch
projects." According to the prime minister, at that time the tariffs
were not discussed.

BAKU: Armenian President: "People Of Nagorno Karabakh Have Deserved

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT: "PEOPLE OF NAGORNO KARABAKH HAVE DESERVED THE RIGHT FOR FREE AND INDEPENDENT LIFE"

Today.Az, Azerbaijan
April 29 2008

"People of Nagorno Karabakh have deserved the right for free and
independent life".

The due announcement was made by Armenian President Serzh Sarkissyan.

According to the press service for the President of Armenia,
he made the statement during the discussion of the settlement of
Nagorno Karabakh conflict and periodically voiced "militaristic
announcements of Azerbaijan" with Bulgarian ambassador extraordinary
and plenipotentiary to Armenia Todor Staikov.

"Armenia and Azerbaijan, being members of the Council of Europe, are
bound to settle all disputable issues only peacefully", Sarkissyan
said.

At the same time, he noted that "it is impossible to ignore the
natural right of people of Nagorno Karabakh for self-determination".

2nd Forum On Armenian Tourism Competitiveness And 1st Tourism Career

2nd FORUM ON ARMENIAN TOURISM COMPETITIVENESS AND 1st TOURISM CAREER FAIR TO BE HELD IN EARLY MAY

Noyan Tapan
April 29, 2008

YEREVAN, APRIL 29, NOYAN TAPAN. The second forum on Armenian tourism
competitiveness is scheduled for May 6, and the 2008 Tourism Career
Fair will be held on May 7 in Yerevan, NT correspondent was informed by
Armine Israelian, coordinator of the tourism cluster the USAID-financed
Competitive Armenian Private Sector (CAPS) program.

According to her, the forum participants – heads and experts of
tourism companies, state bodies and assistance-providing foreign
organizations will present last year’s achievements of the tourism
sector and speak about future programs.

A tourism career fair will be held for the first time. During the
event, students of five Armenian higher educational institutions,
which prepare specialists for the tourism sector, will present
their capabilities to the tourist companies, providing them with an
opportunity to find qualified employees.

Discussing the issue of specialist preparation for the sector, CAPS
travel marketing and communication advisor Nadia Pasqual said that
although newly established, these institutions work hard but they
lack teaching staff and literature. According to her information,
Armenian tour operators are not quite willing to create an opportunity
for students to do practical work.

She explained it by the fact that not having received tourism
education, the heads of tour operating companies avoid giving jobs
to those with such education. "Whereas, practical skills are no less
important than theoretical knowledge," she said.

Action Of Protest Organized By American-Based Turks Against Fact Of

ACTION OF PROTEST ORGANIZED BY AMERICAN-BASED TURKS AGAINST FACT OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE FAILS

Noyan Tapan
April 29, 2008

NEW YORK, APRIL 29, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The action of
protest organized by American-based Turks in New York failed because
of indifference shown by the local Turks to the action.

As Turkish press reported, several dozens of Turks participated in the
action organized under the aegis of the Federation of Turkish-American
Unions, on the initiative of the Young Turks Union in Times Square
under the title Struggle Against Lies of Armenian Genocide. The total
number of action participants did not exceed 100.

Abdullah Bezirgan, the Chairman of the Young Turks Union, explained
their failure by the lack of the Armenian bill on their agenda. "We
exerted every effort. However, there was no Armenian bill on the
agenda this year, therefore the Turks passively participated in the
action. I supposed it would be just this way," Bezirgan stated.

Event In Memory Of Genocide Victims Takes Place In Armenian Patriarc

EVENT IN MEMORY OF GENOCIDE VICTIMS TAKES PLACE IN ARMENIAN PATRIARCHATE OF LEBANON

Noyan Tapan
April 28, 2008

BEIRUT, APRIL 28, ARMENIANS TODAY – NOYAN TAPAN. An event in memory
of victims of Armenian Genocide took place in the evening of April
23 in the yard of Lebanon’s Armenian Catholic Patriarchate. A great
number of believers and Armenians took part in the event.

After the ceremony of lighting candles those present watched
documentary video materials on Armenian people’s history and Armenian
Genocide.

Publications in press about the Genocide were also presented.

"Melkonian Must Reopen If We Want Diaspora To Survive", Former PM Te

"MELKONIAN MUST REOPEN IF WE WANT DIASPORA TO SURVIVE", FORMER PM TELLS CONFERENCE

AZG Armenian Daily
26/04/2008

Diaspora

Greeks and Turks more concerned with school’s fate

A leading member of the Armenian Diaspora believes that if the
Melkonian school in Cyprus does not open some time soon, it will
spell disaster for all Armenians around the world.

Speaking at the sixth meeting of the Organising Committee of the
Western Armenian National Council that ended in Nicosia on Sunday,
Anoushavan Danielyan said that he would try to convince the AGBU
in New York to reopen the historic school. He said it would be to
the benefit of present-day Armenia to maintain such a high-calibre
educational centre within the European Union and so close to the
Middle East and Russia.

"I know what it costs to maintain a school for a community, for all
Armenia and Western Armenians. In the Diaspora we must have educational
and financial centres to support the Republic of Armenia in every way,"
Danielyan said.

"If there are 1,200 schools in Armenia, adding one more would simply
bring the total to 1,201, while closing a school in the Diaspora
will be a national loss," the former prime minister of Nakorno
Karapagh said.

Danielyan was commenting on the AGBU decision to reallocate the funds
of the Melkonian Trust in order to open a ‘Melkonian Summer School’
near the capital Yerevan to teach the Armenian language and culture
to 400 Diaspora youths for three months each year.

"It would be better to have a school that enjoys the moral and academic
support of the friendly government of Cyprus and its people, to which
we are all thankful," he added.

But his optimism was countered by some of the six speakers who told
the 40-member central committee meeting held at the Holiday Inn in
Nicosia that the AGBU never wanted to discuss the school’s fate.

"The reason for the closure was neither financial trouble nor falling
academic standards. It was their intention to exploit the valuable
land the school was sitting on," said one panelist.

Ambassador Nicholas Makris, a member of the Council of Europe committee
that drafted the Charter for European Minority Languages, told the
conference that the Melkonian must reopen otherwise the Armenian
community of Cyprus faces extinction. He said that the government
of Cyprus has an obligation to implement the Charter, primarily by
reopening of the school.

"The (CoE) committee will be visiting Cyprus again later this year when
they will have to assess any progress on the efforts to preserve and
safeguard the Armenian language on the island," the former diplomat
said.

Dr. Akabie Nassibian-Ekmekdjian, historian and principal of the
school in the 1980s gave a historical overview, saying that the
Melkonian Education Institute, founded in 1926 as an orphanage for
Genocide survivors, has produced hundreds of scientists, academics,
artists and authors who are among the leading personalities of the
Western Armenian Diaspora. Yeran Kouyoumdjian, editor of a community
newspaper, and Armen Urneshlian, an educator from Lebanon, argued
that the closure of the Melkonian was not for financial reasons and
that it is already having a negative effect on the Armenian Diaspora.

"Schools in the U.S. need tens of Armenian language and history
teachers and we are seeing the last of them," Urneshlian added.

Talat’s surprise

Vartan Tashjian, former headmaster of the Nareg elementary schools,
spoke of his personal experiences and explained how Cypriots in general
were angered by the closure and how they supported the struggle to
save the school.

"In a chance meeting on Ledra Street after the checkpoint opened,
I came face-to-face with (Turkish Cypriot community leader) Mehmet
Ali Talat the day he crossed over to our side," Tashdjian told the
conference delegates.

"I greeted him in Turkish and Talat asked my name.

When I told him I was a school teacher he immediately asked, ‘What
has happened to that school? It’s a shame it closed’ to which I had
to explain that I was not a teacher at the Melkonian. I felt ashamed,"
Tashdjian concluded.

The final speakers of the session included Masis der Parthogh,
journalist and alumni association member, who said that the school’s
closure was planned years in advance with the intention to exploit
the land, and Manouk Yildizian, journalist, who explained the legal
aspects of community and minority rights in Cyprus and gave an overview
of the government’s pledge to support the school, both financially
and academically.

"Have any of the old established schools in England ever closed for
financial reasons? Never, but they are maintained to produce the
future leaders of the country, with the occasional one or two prime
ministers," Yildizian added.

Present among the community members observing the conference was
former AGBU Central Board member Benon Sevan, who said that it was
"unfair" that only one side of the argument was heard and that the
AGBU came under vicious attack from the panelists.

The session’s chairman argued that the AGBU’s positions were very clear
and that the committee members wanted to hear about the prospects of
reopening the historic school.

Dr. Ekmekdjian added that the worldwide Melkonian alumni and friends
had always wanted a dialogue, but it was the AGBU that refused for
years to discuss keeping the school open.

Asked by the panel to elaborate on the fate of the 25,000 books of
the Melkonian library that have supposedly perished and the late 19th
century newspapers and documents that were reportedly burned, Sevan,
who is also a member of the Melkonian Administration Committee,
said he would "come back later with an answer." Last year, the
University of Cyprus had asked Armenian Representative in the House,
Vartkes Mahdessian, to intervene to help save the historic library and
provide a temporary shelter to the books until the school reopened,
but the AGBU refused to discuss the matter.

This was the sixth meeting of the Organising Committee of the Western
Armenian National Council that is expected to reconvene later this
year to discuss several issues related to the Armenian Diaspora, such
as social, community and historic aspects of the Western Armenian
language, history and heritage.