BAKU: Ceasefire breaches by Armenia persist

CEASEFIRE BREACHES BY ARMENIA PERSIST

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Sept 1 2005

Baku, August 31, AssA-Irada
The monitoring by OSCE and other international organizations on the
Armenia-Azerbaijan frontline aimed at preventing ceasefire violations
have turned out fruitless. Armenians have stepped up activity in
their positions close to the frontline over the past several months
and continue breaching ceasefire in different areas. In August alone,
one Azeri warrant officer was taken captive by Armenia, another one
died on the frontline, and 2 military men stepped on a landmine,
with one dying on the spot and the other receiving serious injuries.

Armenian armed forces have violated ceasefire over 20 times over the
past month.

They shot at the Azerbaijani positions 8 times in the occupied
Aghdam district, 11 times in Terter, once in Fuzuli and three times
in Khojavand district. The villages located close to the frontline
were repeatedly subjected to shooting as well.

Armenian forces also opened fire from cannons and armored vehicles
in Aghdam. Armenian military men have started large-scale military
training in the district, Azeri experts say.*

BAKU: US Senator Recognizes ‘Genocide Of Armenians’

US SENATOR RECOGNIZES ‘GENOCIDE OF ARMENIANS’

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Sept 1 2005

Baku, August 31, AssA-Irada US Senator Barack Obama visiting Azerbaijan
has acknowledged the so-called ‘genocide of Armenians’.

“I believe the letter sent by the Senators to President George Bush
to recognize the genocide of Armenians reflects historic facts”,
said Obama, who co-signed the appeal.

The Senator told a news briefing in Baku that the document indicates
that thousands of innocent Armenians were killed in the mentioned
developments. “By signing the letter, I also defended the interests
of the State of Illinois I represent. Killing civilians anywhere in
the world should not be allowed.”

Asked whether he is aware of the horrible massacre of Azerbaijanis
by Armenian thugs in Khojali, the Senator simply replied that he is
informed of the problems in the region that have persisted for many
years, reiterating that he opposes the killings of civilians.*

The RA NA Speaker Congratulates RA President On His Birthday

THE RA NA SPEAKER CONGRATULATES THE RA PRESIDENT ON HIS BIRTHDAY

ARKA News Agency
Aug 31 2005

YEREVAN, August 31. /ARKA/. The RA NA Speaker Arthur Baghdasaryan
congratulated the RA President Robert Kocharyan on the 51st anniversary
of his birthday. According to the RA NA press release: “Birthdays
usually become a reason for summarizing and evaluating work done
for the last year and determining the future plans. I am sure that
the following years will be successful for you”, the message of the
Speaker says. A.H.

BAKU: People Of US Thankful To Azerbaijan For Participation InFighti

PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES THANKFUL TO AZERBAIJAN FOR PARTICIPATION IN FIGHTING GLOBAL TERRORISM

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
Aug 31 2005

On 31 August, the delegation led by chairman of US Senate Foreign
Relations Committee Richard Lugar held a news conference on results
of the visit at the Hyatt Regency-Nakhchivan Hotel of Baku.

Informing on his impressions during the visit, Senator Lugar said in
the Baku meetings discussed were issues of the US-Azerbaijan relations,
settlement of the Armenia-Azerbaijan, Nagorno Karabakh conflict,
the upcoming November parliament elections and the US assistance to
Azerbaijan in connection with protection of borders. He also noted his
meeting with President Ilham Aliyev was success and that he conveyed
gratitude of the American people to Azerbaijan for support in fighting
global terrorism.

Speaking of his positive impressions on the Republic, Senator Barak
Obama said they were deeply interested in Azerbaijan as an independent
country with rich natural resources.

Expressing confidence for the free and fair elections in November,
Mr. Lugar said as we were told in the meetings, in general, there
has been no problem in registration of candidates for elections.

Noting that in the fiscal year the United States will increase
financial assistance to Azerbaijan, Mr. Lugar stressed it would be
possible in the frame of “Reduction of cooperative threat” joint
program which will serve strengthening of the borders of Azerbaijan.

The American senator answered numerous questions of journalists
interested them.

RA NA Speaker Baghdasaryan’s Congratulatory Message On Occasion Of D

RA NA SPEAKER ARTUR BAGHDASARYAN’S CONGRATULATORY MESSAGE ON THE OCCASION OF THE DAY OF KNOWLEDGE

National Assembly of RA (press release), Armenia
Aug 31 2005

RA NA Speaker Artur Baghdasaryan sent a congratulatory message to
the teachers, students and pupils of the Republic, on the occasion
of the Day of Knowledge.

“Every September 1st all the higher educational institutions and
secondary schools open their hospitable doors for thousands of students
and pupils. By the promotion of the skilled and experienced teachers an
opportunity of mastering knowledge is given, with which a new way will
be opened for every pupil according to their ability and diligence.

The National Assembly of the Republic of Armenia, as a legislative body
of the country implements and is implementing legislative amendments,
having the goal of making the educational system of Armenia in
compliance with the European standards for providing the Armenian
schoolchild and student with the opportunities to find his/her place
in the modern world. The adoption and ratification of the laws and
conventions relating to the educational and scientific sphere have
priority in the parliament. I am sure that the competitive education
will give the opportunity for all those who, regardless of their
social condition, have chosen the science as a way of life.

Assuring the state’s attention towards the problems of the education,
saying a word of gratitude to all the teachers I congratulate you on
the occasion of the Day of Knowledge and wish good luck.”

BAKU: Norway Attaches Great Importance To Holding TransparentElectio

NORWAY ATTACHES GREAT IMPORTANCE TO HOLDING TRANSPARENT ELECTIONS IN AZERBAIJAN – REPORT

Baku Today, Azerbaijan
Sept 1 2005

01/09/2005 09:32

The official Oslo attaches great significance to issues related to
holding fair and transparent elections in Azerbaijan, the Norway’s
state secretary Kim Trovik stated on August 31 in Baku, Trend reports.

Kim Trovik noted, the purpose of the visit is development of the
Azerbaijani-Norwegian cooperation, discussion of regional issues, in
particular, the Nagorno-Karabakh problem settlement and implementation
of regional projects. He reminded, the Norwegian “Statoil” is one
of the largest investors into the oil and gas sector of Azerbaijan,
voicing the hope, that bilateral economic relations will develop also
in future.

As for the Norway’s stance on the forthcoming parliamentary elections
in Azerbaijan, Trovik noted, the official Oslo attaches great
significance to issues, related to holding parliamentary elections
in conformity with the international standards.

Commenting on the position of the Norwegian government on the
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, the Minister noted,
“Norway supports the efforts of the OSCE Minsk group and stands for
continuation of peace talks”.

“The official Oslo is rather optimistic and hopes, the meetings of
Presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia will bring positive results in
the end,” the Minister said.

“Holding democratic elections is one of the commitments assumed by
Baku for the Council of Europe and other international organizations.
Undoubtedly, results of the voting are the sovereign choice of the
people of Azerbaijan. However, we stand for all candidates to create
equal conditions,” Trovik said, reminding, 6 short-term and 3 long-term
observers will be involved in the monitoring of the elections.

Touching upon the issue of implementation of the project for
supporting the South Caucasus states, performed by the Norwegian
government together with UNDP, the diplomat noted, that within the
project Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia will be allocated totally 10
million of USD till the end of 2007.

“One third of this amount will be given to Azerbaijan,” Trovik added.

“For today, the government of Norway elaborates a number of new joint
projects in regard to Azerbaijan,” the state secretary said, noting
that joint cooperation presupposes implementation of programs in the
development of democratic institution, energy projects, as well as
measures on support of refugees and internally displaced persons.

Storied Name Faces Feisty Rival In N.Y.’s District Attorney Race

STORIED NAME FACES FEISTY RIVAL IN N.Y.’S DISTRICT ATTORNEY RACE
By E.J. KESSLER

Forward
Sept 1 2005

A surprise endorsement has injected a sudden dose of suspense into
a feisty campaign that could spell the end of one of New York City’s
most storied political careers.

The race pits challenger Leslie Crocker Snyder, 63, a tough-on-crime
former state judge and prosecutor, against incumbent Robert Morgenthau,
86, Manhattan’s longtime district attorney and heir to a Jewish
political dynasty that stretches to the beginning of the 20th century.

Until this week, political insiders were predicting that Morgenthau,
despite his advanced age, would coast to victory against Snyder in
the September 13 Democratic primary. Then, on Tuesday, The New York
Times – which can make or break a candidate in Manhattan – endorsed
Snyder, blowing the race wide open.

“Now, she’s got a real shot,” said New York political consultant
Jerry Skurnik. “I would still bet on him, but now it’s a real race.”

Running for his ninth term, Morgenthau surely qualifies as the
“institution” and “icon” he often is dubbed in the press. The district
attorney, an intimate of President Kennedy, hasn’t faced a challenger
since 1985. He has held his position since 1974 and successfully
prosecuted some of the highest-profile crimes in the nation.

Snyder is a bigfoot in her own right. She was the first woman to
work in the district attorney’s office on murders and sex crimes.
Appointed to the bench by then-Mayor Ed Koch in 1983, she made her
reputation as a tough-as-nails jurist who threw the book at the
mayhem creators of notorious drug gangs such as the Young Talented
Children and the Natural Born Killers. She was so identified with
stiff sentences that one gang named a brand of heroin – “25 to Life”
– after her and adorned its packages with her likeness. (She proudly
appropriated the moniker for the title of her 2002 memoir.) Her
dangerous work took a toll on her family life: For many years, her
children needed police protection.

In Jewish terms, the Morgenthau-Snyder rivalry represents something
of a battle for ethnic succession, even if it is one taking place at
a time when such considerations have lost much of their significance.

A scion of an august German-Jewish New York family, Morgenthau ranks
as American Jewish royalty. His father, Henry Jr., was President
Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s treasury secretary, the only secretary to
serve through all four of FDR’s terms and only the second Jew ever
to serve in a presidential Cabinet. He was a pivotal figure in the
Holocaust rescue debate, the man who pressured Roosevelt to set up the
War Refugee Board and the Nuremberg Tribunals. He served as national
chairman of the United Jewish Appeal during the critical postwar years,
when concentration camp survivors needed to be cared for and Zionists
in Palestine were fighting to establish a Jewish state.

Morgenthau’s grandfather, Henry Sr., was a founder of the American
Jewish Joint Distribution Committee and the American Jewish
Committee. He served as President Woodrow Wilson’s ambassador to
Turkey during World War I, and he played a pivotal role in rescuing
the Zionist settlements from destruction when the Turks decided in
1915 to eliminate their non-Muslim minorities in Armenia and Palestine.

Morgenthau himself has played a role in Jewish philanthropy locally,
spearheading, along with longtime pal and political ally Koch, the
creation of the Museum of Jewish Heritage in Manhattan’s Battery
Park. The prosecutor can point to long friendships with such Israeli
figures as Prime Minister Ariel Sharon and the late Peter Malkin,
the Mossad agent who kidnapped Adolph Eichmann. In an interview
last week, prompted by the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza, he waxed
on about a trip in the late 1970s to Yamit in the Sinai ?- before it
was returned to Egypt.

Snyder’s family, by contrast, came from Eastern Europe; her father
grew up on Manhattan’s West End Avenue and changed his name from
Krakower, according to New York magazine. He was a professor of French
Enlightenment philosophy and literature, schooling ?is daughter in
European manners and the good life. She freely acknowledges she has
almost no Jewish background or involvement.

A media-savvy talking head who cuts a glamorous figure, Snyder advises
the television show “Law & Order,” and has provided on-air analysis of
the O.J. Simpson and Scott Peterson murder trials, among others. She
appeared for an interview at her lower Manhattan campaign office on
a muggy day last week looking impeccably crisp.

Snyder painted Morgenthau as too old, saying that his office has
grown “stale” and “out of touch” with the latest prosecutorial
methodologies. The eight-term incumbent, she said, “is the opposite
of a reformer.”

Snyder faulted Morgenthau for what she described as a lack of focus
on domestic violence cases, hogging white-collar criminal cases that
could be prosecuted better by federal authorities and a paucity of
minority attorneys in top positions in his office – all criticisms
he parries with an array of arguments and statistics.

In her interview with the Forward, Snyder added a new twist that
seems designed to appeal to Jewish voters – who can constitute up
to a quarter of the Democratic electorate in Manhattan. She said
that Morgenthau “has blown several opportunities to do a lot more
about terrorism.”

For example, she criticized the way Morgenthau’s office handled
the prosecution of El-Sayyid Nosair for allegedly assassinating
former Jewish Defense League leader Rabbi Meir Kahane. Nossair was
acquitted of murder in 1991 but remains in prison on terrorism and
weapons charges.

“Morgenthau decided that he, alone, deserved jurisdiction of the
case, seized the 16 boxes of evidence, never bothered to have them
translated, prosecuted the case as a straight murder instead of a
conspiracy,” Snyder said. “When those boxes were translated… three
years later, they contained all sorts of exhortations to topple tall
buildings, maps of the World Trade Center, how to build bombs.”

ìhile Snyder said that “in retrospect, it’d be too easy to say
that maybe the [first World Trade Center] bombing could have been
prevented,” she blasted Morgenthau for what she said was his lack of
cooperation with federal prosecutors.

She continued, stating that four years after the September 11, 2001,
attacks, “Morgenthau still has not instituted an anti-terrorism
bureau. I would do that immediately.”

Morgenthau vigorously defended his record on terrorism prosecutions,
and his decision to prosecute some cases that might have come under
the jurisdiction of federal authorities.

“The federal government often will not prosecute cases for political
reasons,” he said. “We don’t have that problem.”

He described two cases involving unlicensed money transmitters and
legitimate New York banks that were laundering money for Middle Eastern
terrorists, including some who were operating out of the South American
Tri-Border Area. “Those are things the federal government I don’t think
was aware of and certainly wasn’t going to do anything about,” he said.

“I don’t aspire to prosecute Bin Laden and his top henchmen, but
terrorism requires money,” he said. “What we’re doing is trying to
cut off the money supply…. We’re not taking [these prosecutions]
away from the federal government. We’re doing it because it needs to
be done.”

Morgenthau, who sat for an hour-and-a-half interview last week with
the Forward in his office in the grungy Art Deco pile that is the New
York County Criminal Court, looks his age. He’s hard of hearing, and
his trim physique and birdlike features display the depredations of
gravity. But as most reports – and the Times editorial that boosted
his challenger – have noted, he’s as sharp and energetic as ever,
still able to show off the encyclopedic command of facts and figures
that impressed the presidents and dignitaries whose photos line his
office’s walls.

In the interview with the Forward, he brushed off the age question.
“I’m working as hard now as when I came, and I’m a lot smarter,”
he said.

He took aim at Snyder for her support of the death penalty – a
liability in liberal Manhattan. Morgenthau staunchly opposes capital
punishment as a “feel-good statute” that does nothing to reduce
crime. Noting that in her memoir, Snyder wrote that she personally
wanted to give the lethal injection in one case, he said, “Is that
the kind of D.A. with good judgment?”

Snyder allowed that the remark was “intemperate,” but said she
was merely responding “as a mother, a citizen and a judge” to the
heinousness of the crime in question: a rape and murder.

While backed by some leading lights, such as former United States
Attorney for the Southern District Mary Jo White, Snyder seemingly had
gained little traction. She provoked the ire of at least one newspaper
editorial board recently when it became public that starting in the
1990s, she steered $1.1 million in court fees for outside legal work
to the law firm she subsequently joined, Kasowitz, Benson, Torres &
Friedman. While she claimed that the fees were appropriate, critics
said the awarding of the fees showed favoritism.

On the other side, Morgenthau has been endorsed by a host of officials,
including New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, who called him
the gold standard of prosecutors. The 500 attorneys in Morgenthau’s
office constitute a veritable machine, and a good part of the New
York legal establishment either has worked for him or does not want to
cross him. For all these reasons, one defense attorney, who declined
to speak on the record, called Morgenthau “the most powerful man in
New York State.”

Not to mention, crime in Manhattan has dropped precipitously during
his tenure.

Observers said that Morgenthau, who hitherto has avoided debating
Snyder, would likely have to do so and “go negative” against his
opponent, following the decision by the Times to endorse her.

“We believe that there is a limit to how long any manager can stay
at one job and continue to administer with vigor and openness to new
ideas,” the Times declared in its endorsement of Snyder. “Three decades
is more than enough time for any executive to accomplish his or her
mission…. With due respect for the incumbent’s legendary tenure,
it is time for a change.”

The endorsement surprised many political observers following the race.

“Ten years ago, the idea that Robert Morgenthau wouldn’t get The Times
endorsement would be ridiculous,” said Hank Sheinkopf, a veteran
Democratic political consultant. “The outcome [of the election]
will be an indication of the cultural shifts in this city.”

–Boundary_(ID_wyIh8MsH/jhRNqTprm7UpA)–

Persecution In Turkey Described As Worsening Despite New Law

PERSECUTION IN TURKEY DESCRIBED AS WORSENING DESPITE NEW LAW
By Peter Lamprecht

Baptist Press News, TN
Aug 31, 2005

ISTANBUL, Turkey (BP)–Bektas Erdogan never expected his Christian
faith of 11 years to jeopardize his career as a fashion designer
in Turkey.

Hired five months ago by a designer jeans company in the Beyazit
district of Istanbul, Erdogan was assured by his Muslim employer that
he would be evaluated on the basis of his work, not his religion.

After his first collection sold successfully in Russia, Erdogan thought
the phone call he received from his employer — asking him to come to
work on a Sunday afternoon — boded well. Maybe there was a surprise
company dinner.

But that evening at the shop, his employer angrily accused him of
“missionary work” and “brainwashing,” according to an Aug. 30 report
by Compass Direct news service.

The employer, with the help of two employees and a relative, beat
Erdogan for two hours, Compass reported; the men repeatedly struck
the designer’s head and face with their fists and the butt of a
pistol. Three times Erdogan’s employer attempted to shoot him, but
the gun failed to fire, Compass reported.

“He really wanted to kill me. It wasn’t just to scare me,” Erdogan
told Compass, recounting that he prayed for help and meditated on Bible
verses while his attackers threatened to murder him and hide his body.

The two co-workers released the 32-year-old Erdogan with a swollen
and bloody face around 9 p.m., warning that they would kill him
later. Since then, he has received three anonymous phone calls
threatening his life, Compass reported.

Erdogan told Compass he did not report the Aug. 7 incident to police,
fearing that his employer’s ties with local officials might make
him the target of further aggression. He also felt that once the
authorities learned he is a Christian, they would be unwilling to help.

Erdogan told Compass he believes that his employer’s anger stemmed
from shop employees’ interest in Christianity. During his last three
months at the job, Erdogan said, “Almost every meal [at work] became
a question-and-answer session about my religion.”

Erdogan is not the only victim of what Compass described as an
increasingly overt, anti-Christian sentiment within Turkish society.
On the same day that Erdogan was attacked, according to Compass,
Istanbul police beat two Protestant converts in their early 20s and
told them they could not be both Turks and Christians.

Umit and Murat-Can, who asked to have their last names withheld,
were on their way to one of Istanbul’s 25 Turkish-speaking Protestant
churches on Aug. 7 when they saw American David Byle and his 3-year-old
daughter surrounded by a small crowd of police and civilians.

Byle had been exercising the legal right to distribute Christian tracts
on Istiklal Caddesi, one of Istanbul’s main pedestrian thoroughfares,
when two plainclothes policemen accosted him. According to Compass,
one of the officers grabbed Byle’s chin and shouted at him for
distributing literature, quickly drawing a crowd of police and
passersby.

When the two Christians tried to intervene on behalf of Byle, whom they
recognized as a member of a local church, a scuffle broke out between
Umit and one of the plainclothes policemen. According to Murat-Can,
about 15 policemen forced Umit to the ground, where they kicked and hit
him before handcuffing him and carrying him inside a nearby building.

“That’s when I first realized they were police,” said Umit, whose
plainclothes attacker never identified himself as an officer. The
officer continued to beat Umit for three minutes before taking him to a
local police station with Murat-Can, who had followed the group inside.

“They never showed us any ID or read us our rights,” Murat-Can told
Compass as he described the following hour in the police station.
After finding 100 Christian tracts in Murat-Can’s backpack, police
accused the youths of being “missionaries” bent on “dividing Turkey.”
Although finally releasing them without filing any formal report,
they told the young men they could not be both Turks and Christians.

In another incident in July in Eskisehir, 120 miles southeast of
Istanbul, three strangers in a park assaulted Protestant Salih
Kurtbas. According to Compass, they attacked him from behind at 6
p.m. as he waited for an anonymous caller who had asked to meet and
discuss Christianity.

Shortly after arriving home with a bloody nose, split lip, black
eyes and a swollen ear, he received an irate phone call from his
attackers. Compass reported that they accused him of missionary
activity and threatened to kill anyone associated with a local U.S.
businessman whom they claimed was spreading Christian propaganda.

According to Compass, Eskisehir evangelicals have faced constant
delays in obtaining legal permission to start the city’s first
Protestant church. “We applied to the governor and haven’t received
an answer, and the city government has said that the building
is not up to earthquake safety standards,” Kurtbas told Compass.
“Everything’s kind of gone downhill.”

Kurtbas didn’t even think of going to the police after the attack,
explaining, “If they found out that I was a Christian, nothing good
would have come of it.” Umit also wanted to avoid further problems
with authorities, fearing that legal proceedings might hurt his
brother’s chances of entering the police academy.

“These sort of attacks are not shocking for me,” admitted Orhan
Kemal Cengiz, legal consultant for Turkey’s Alliance of Protestant
Churches. “I was expecting them … but [Christians] should take this
very seriously.”

With European Union membership talks looming Oct. 3, Turkey is
attempting to improve its human rights image. A package of legal
reforms passed in June reasserted freedom of religion, instituting a
three-year prison sentence for anyone obstructing the expression of
religious beliefs. But the EU has remained skeptical, challenging
officially 99-percent-Muslim Turkey to implement these religious
freedoms among its non-Muslim minority communities. Fewer than 100,000
citizens follow the ancient Christian traditions of the Armenian,
Greek and Syrian Othodox churches, which remain exclusively ethnic
congregations.

By contrast, the emerging community of an estimated 3,500 Turkish
Protestants challenges the centuries-old perception that to be a Turk
is to be a Muslim.

Over the last 10 months, violence against Protestant Christians in
Turkey has become publicly visible, prompting former U.S. Ambassador
to Turkey Eric Edelman to make formal inquiries with Ankara officials
in April and again in June regarding 10 incidents.

“Turkey is not aware of the gravity of the problem,” Cengiz, of the
Protestant alliance, said. “Some officials have good intentions, but
I have a strong suspicion that they don’t really grasp the freedom
of religion issues.”

While most Turkish Protestants remain reluctant to open court cases
for fear of further persecution, others feel that the church can gain
from aggressive legal action without undermining its message of love.

“I’m a big fan of opening a court case,” Isa Karatas, the Protestant
alliance’s spokesman, told Compass. “When we look at things from a
Christian perspective, of course we need to be forgiving. But this
is not an obstacle for us to pursue our rights.”

Cengiz, the alliance’s legal consultant, also advises that abuse
victims go to court to protect themselves. “If you do not file a
case against the police, you may find yourself before a court or
even in jail, in spite of the fact that you are the victim of police
misconduct,” Cengiz said. Turkish law enforcers often sue abuse
victims preemptively, Cengiz said, in order to shield officers from
legal prosecution.

Turkish Protestant church leaders have opened seven libel cases
this year against three TV stations to combat accusations aired
nationally. Statements on the television programs claimed that local
Christians spy for foreign governments that pay Turks to change
their religion.

In the face of anti-Christian rhetoric from some government officials
and the latest attacks against Protestants, many Turkish Christians
admit that they are not expecting either the government or society
to change overnight.

“There is a segment of the government that supports anti-Christian
sentiment, but along with this section is a larger segment that
opposes it,” Karatas told Compass. He said that if Christians who
suffered persecution for their faith “would open court cases now,
I believe they would receive support from the government.”

“In theory we have a free environment,” Umit told Compass 10 days
after being beaten by the police. “I don’t think that there is a
problem with the state. But the Turkish people have not yet understood
democracy. They still see the state as a father. They don’t know that
it’s meant to serve us. Therefore, when people working for the state
say something bad about Christians, the people believe it.”

Despite ongoing death threats, Erdogan has no plans to leave the
country. When asked how he felt about losing his job, enduring
a severe beating and being threatened with death — all in one
evening — he smiled. Even if his situation doesn’t improve, he said,
“God tells me to rejoice, because He can bring glory to His name.”
–30– Peter Lamprecht is a writer for Compass Direct, a news service
based in Santa Ana, Calif., focusing on Christians worldwide who are
persecuted for their faith. Used by permission.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.sbcbaptistpress.org/bpnews.asp?ID=21498

Update On Canadian Ecumenical Visit To Armenia

UPDATE ON CANADIAN ECUMENICAL VISIT TO ARMENIA

Anglican Church of Canada (press release), Canada
30 Aug 2005 by Press Office

August 31, 2005 — Since its arrival in Armenia, Aug. 24, a Canadian
ecumenical delegation has visited many historic sites in the Mother
See of Holy Etchmiadzin, which is the pre-eminent centre of authority
in the worldwide Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church. The delegation
met His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All
Armenians. Discussions focused on the current status of ecumenical
life, the relationship of the Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church
and sister churches as well as the difficulties and challenges that
churches are facing in the world today.

The delegation’s week-long visit (Aug. 24 – Sep. 1) coincided with
the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

The following report is courtesy of the press office of the Armenian
Church of Canada:

Canadian Church Leaders in the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin

The long awaited visit of Canada’s Church leaders to the Mother See
of Holy Etchmiadzin is a clear expression of the close cooperation
and the ecumenical spirit that exists between the Diocese of the
Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church in Canada and various Christian
denominations and sister churches.

On Thursday, August 25 2005, Abp. Andrew Hutchison, Primate of the
Anglican National Church in Canada; Abp. Brendan O’Brien, President
of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops; Abp. Sotirios, Greek
Orthodox Metropolitan of Canada and Dr. Richard Schneider, President of
the Canadian Council of Churches, accompanied by Deacon Hagop Arslanian
arrived in Armenia at Zvartnots International Airport. The ecumenical
delegation was received by His Grace Bishop Bagrat Galstanian,
Primate of the Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church, Diocese of Canada.

After a brief rest in the visitors residence of the Mother See, the
representative of sister churches toured the historic museum of the
Cathedral, and the Monasteries of St. Gayane and St. Hripsime. In
Hripsime, Archbishop O’Brien said a prayer before the tomb of
the saint. Bishop Bagrat extensively talked about the historical
backgrounds and foundation of the Mother Cathedral, the museum and
the monasteries. Thursday afternoon, the delegation had a meeting
with the WCC (World Council of Churches) “Armenia Round Table”
office. Dr. Karen Nazarian made a brief presentation of the projects
and activities of the Department. The mission of the WCC Armenia
Round Table was highly appreciated by the Canadian Church Leaders.

Afterwards, an informative meeting was held at Shoghakat TV Company.

The guests were received by Mrs. Manya Ghazarian, Executive Director
of the TV station.

On Friday, August 26, 2005 the delegation was received by His Holiness
Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians. His
Holiness greeted the guests and expressed his joy at receiving a high
ranking delegation from sister churches in Canada. Discussions were
focused on the current status of ecumenical life, the relationship of
the Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church and sister Churches as well
as the difficulties and challenges that churches are facing in the
world today. In the afternoon, the guests visited the Matenadaran
(Depository of Ancient Manuscripts) and were received by Mr. Sen
Arevshatian, Director. Mr. Arevshatian talked about the importance
of the Matenadaran in the history of the Armenian people and praised
the role of the Church and the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin in
preserving this national institution.

Since this visit of Canadian Church Leaders coincided with the 90th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the delegation laid a wreath
at the Tsitsernakaberd Memorial to the Armenian Genocide, praying
for the repose of the souls of the 1.5 million victims. Mr. Lavrenti
Barseghian, Director of the Genocide Museum received the guests and
gave them a tour through the museum. Afterwards, the guests visited the
newly constructed Saint Gregory the Illuminator Cathedral of Yerevan.

On Saturday, August 27, 2005 the guests held a successful meeting with
the president of the National Assembly (parliament) of the Republic
of Armenia, His Excellency Artur Baghdasaryan. Mr. Baghdasaryan
presented the constitutional reforms that the government and the
state of Armenia are aiming to achieve.

He highlighted the importance of the Church in the life of the
Armenian people and in the process of realizing the constitutional
reforms. Prior to the meeting with Mr. Baghdasaryan, the delegation
visited with Honorary Consul of Canada in Armenia, Mr. Artashes Emin.

The next visit was to the Vaskenian Theological Academy at Lake Sevan
where the Dean of the Academy, Rev. Fr Mkrtich Proshian received the
high-ranking dignitaries.

They also visited the Church of the Holy Apostles up at the top of
the hill surrounding the Vaskenian Academy. By the invitation of the
Very Rev. Fr. Sasoon Zumroukhdian, the guests visited the mayor of the
city of Dilijan, Mr. Jora Sahakian. In the evening, an informative
meeting was held between the Brotherhood of the Mother See of Holy
Etchmiadzin and the members of the Ecumenical delegation.

On Sunday, August 28, 2005 the ecumenical delegation held a brief
meeting with His Holiness Karekin II Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos
of All Armenians. Following the meeting they participated in the
procession of the Clergy into the Mother Cathedral, presided by His
Holiness the Catholicos. Rev. Fr. Ghoukas Zakaryan celebrated the
Divine Liturgy. During the Liturgy each member of the delegation
addressed the faithful in attendance, and expressed their gratitude
to His Holiness Karekin II Catholicos of All Armenians and praised
the people of Armenia for their hope, faith and steadfastness in our
Lord Jesus Christ. On Sunday afternoon, the delegation visited the
Saint Mesrop Mashtots Church in Oshakan, Diocese of Aragatsotsn. They
were received by Very Rev. Fr. Torgom Tonikian, the Locum Tenens,
and greeted by Sunday School children of the church. They attended the
Evening Vespers led by His Grace Bishop Bagrat Galstanian. Following
the church service, they each prayed on the tomb of Saint Mesrop
Mashtots.

On Monday, August 29, 2005, the delegation met with the Minister of
Foreign Affairs for the Republic of Armenia, Mr. Vartan Oskanian. The
meeting was very informative and touched upon regional issues of
concern, including the peaceful settlement Nagorno Karabagh conflict,
Armenian-Turkish relations, and constitutional reforms for the RA,
as well as the current status of international diplomatic relations,
specifically with regards to Canada. In the afternoon, the delegation
visited the National Academy of Sciences. They were greeted by
President Fadey Sargisian who introduced the work and scholarly
activities of the Academy to the guests. The same day, Bishop Bagrat
led the high-ranking clergymen to the Monastery of Geghard and were
met by the abbot of the monastery, Rev. Fr. Ghevond Ghevondian. He
provided the guests with an extensive historical review of the complex
and hosted them to an afternoon lunch.

On Tuesday, August 30, 2005, the Primates of the Canadian Churches
visited the Monastery of Khor Virap and offered their solemn prayers
while inside the deep pit dungeon of Saint Gregory the Illuminator,
following which the group visited the Monastery of Noravank in the
southern region of Armenia. Accompanying the delegation to Noravank
were the Canadian-Armenian benefactors of the complex, Mr. Dickran
and Mrs. Diana Hadjetian from Montreal.

http://www.anglican.ca/news/news.php?newsItem=2005-08-31_armenia.news

Excellent mark to Serge Sargsian

EXCELLENT MARK TO SERGE SARGSYAN

A1+

| 19:12:20 | 31-08-2005 | Official |

Secretary of the Security Council attached to the RA President,
Defense Minister Serge Sargsyan and his delegation returned from the
Russian Federation on August 30.

The delegation had left for the Astrakhan region to observe the final
phase of the military trainings “Military Cooperation-2005” in which
the Armenian detachment of 42 soldiers also took part.

According to the report of Vladimir Mikhaylov, chief commander of
the RF Air Forces, the military actions of the Armenian Armed Forces
detachment were marked as “excellent”.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress