Basayev interview proves double-standards policy – Roshal

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
July 29, 2005 Friday 10:36 AM Eastern Time

Basayev interview proves double-standards policy – Roshal

By Andrei Golubkov

MOSCOW

An interview of Chechen terrorist Shamil Basayev with the U.S.-based
ABC television company “proves the policy of double standards on
Russia,” head of the Moscow Children’s Surgery and Traumatology
Institute Prof. Leonid Roshal said on Friday.

Roshal is an expert of the World Health Organization (WHO) and the
Chairman of the International Committee on Pediatric Disaster
Medicine of the World Association for Disaster and Emergency Medicine
(WADEM).

This January he received the European of the Year title for the
promotion of humanitarian values.

Roshal is known in Russia for holding negotiations with terrorists
who seized a Moscow theatre and a secondary school in Beslan, and
rescuing people in earthquakes and other catastrophes in Armenia, the
United States, Egypt, Japan and Afghanistan.

He said he got an impression of Basayev after the events in
Budennovsk, the Moscow theatre and Beslan. “Terrorism means murder of
innocent people,” Roshal said.

A self-respecting journalist should never have any contacts with a
person announced terrorist by the international public, he said.

THE CSTO & NATO: Allies or enemies?

Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
July 29, 2005, Friday

THE CSTO AND NATO: ALLIES OR ENEMIES?

SOURCE: Voenno-Promyshlennyi Kurier, No. 27, July 2005, p. 2
by Gennady Pulin

A year ago, a document on the main areas of cooperation between the
CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) and NATO was
adopted at a meeting of the CSTO collective security council in
Astana. That document outlined directions and mechanisms for
cooperation between the two organizations in regional and
international security. For example, it spoke about taking joint
measures in combating terrorism, drug trafficking and WMD
proliferation.

Recently Nikolai Bordyuzha announced, “They (NATO) have simply
ignored us (CSTO).” The General Secretary of CSTO added, “I am
convinced that this has been a deliberate step and it is not
beneficial for them to cooperate in the format “organization with
organization.”

Bordyuzha also stressed that the CSTO frequently proposed cooperation
to NATO but did not receive a response to its proposals. According to
him, NATO recently announced its interests in Central Asia and in the
East. He also said, “In such format it is easier for them to
counteract to certain integration in the framework of the CSTO.”

We see that the General Secretary of the CSTO takes NATO as a rival
on one geopolitical field. What do the leaders of NATO think about a
possibility of military and military political cooperation with the
CSTO?

In June 2005, NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer met with
Vladimir Putin in Moscow and announced that the parties agreed to
strengthen interaction including interaction of NATO and CSTO.
Military attache of France in Tajikistan Stefan Samaran considers the
opposition of NATO to the CSTO wrong from the very start. According
to him, “It is not necessary to take NATO as an enemy of the member
states of the CSTO.” The French diplomat believes that these notions
are relics of the past inherited since the time of the “cold war.”

At any rate, these are mere words. What about the deeds? Alexander
Nikitin, Director of the Russian Center for Political and
International Studies, says that in the near future it is impossible
to expect that NATO will make a political “package” decision on
cooperation with the CSTO. Nonetheless, the expert believes that the
fact that NATO does not try to demonstrate its alienation from the
CSTO too obviously is positive.

Nikitin said, “This is confirmed by the agreement of the headquarters
of NATO to organize a presentation briefing of the CSTO in Moscow for
100 senior NATO officers from 26 countries in June.”

He added, “Although there is no decision of Brussels ‘to make
friends’ with the CSTO, the policy of involvement of NATO into the
practical projects joint with the CSTO like visiting of the exercises
and coordination of the border issues regarding the Tajik-Afghan
border where the zones of responsibility of both organizations touch
each other is a correct way.”

Nobody doubts that this is a correct way. However, Russia and CSTO
believe that certain deeds and results are also important for them in
friendship with NATO and there are no such deeds and results. For
four years the numerous coalition forces of NATO have been trying to
enforce order and “sow” democracy in Afghanistan: the government has
been elected and parliamentary elections are upcoming. It would seem
that peace is enforced there with assistance of NATO but along with
this the drug flow from Afghanistan to the CIS countries and Europe
has grown tremendously. There are facts showing that
terrorists-citizens of Afghanistan have participated in the events in
Adnizhan.

The CSTO proposed NATO to control and to cooperate in combating of
drug trafficking but received silence in response. Meanwhile, NATO
plans to increase its military contingent in Afghanistan to 10,000
servicemen to ensure security of elections in the country. What about
terrorists and drug trafficking? Who will do this?

Meanwhile, US and NATO officials do not hide their plans regarding
Central Asia. On his visit to Kabul, General Richard Mayers from the
US Joint Chiefs of Staff, announced that decision of the US to deploy
full-sized bases in Afghanistan “is partially caused by the wish to
hinder Iran and to monitor its military forces.” It was also
partially caused by the intention to create as many military objects
as possible in the vicinity of the Middle East being very important
for the US because of the huge oil reserves of the region. The US and
NATO have similar goals in the Central Asian republics of the CIS.

Thus, probably it is not worth while for the CSTO to try to make
friends with NATO but it is necessary to build its own security
system proceeding from interests of the countries-allies of Russia?

Answering this question, Colonel-General Leonid Ivashov, Vice
President of the Geopolitical Academy and former chief of the main
international military cooperation department of the Defense
Ministry, said that it is necessary to maintain contacts with NATO.
He added, “Cooperation between the organizations is quite possible.
But this should not be cooperation for the sake of cooperation. There
should be cooperation for the sake of achievement of some goals in
the issues of security and protection of our interests.” Ivashov also
points out how the CSTO should act to strengthen its positions in the
CIS and around the world.

Ivashov proposed, “It seems to me that first of all it is necessary
to organize interaction with the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.
It is necessary to build zones of collective security, for example,
with Iran in the South Caucasus or in the Caucasus-Caspian region
(CSTO-Iran). Now the CSTO can establish contacts with Turkey and this
will be more productive than interaction with such large organization
as NATO which will never have consensus towards the CSTO. On the
contrary, in such bilateral or multilateral form it is possible. ”

According to Ivashov, “It is necessary to declare our certain goals
pursued by the organization and to avoid this empty rhetoric imposed
on us by the West. It imposed on us combating of terrorism,
migration, drug trafficking and WMD non-proliferation. This is not
what is needed because the organization is not capable of this. Let
the relevant structures do this.”

Incidentally, the CSTO itself outlined these very tasks in the
document adopted a year ago. Probably it is really necessary to
revise the integration goals and tasks outlined there? How? Ivashov
answers this question too, “The main thing is that it is necessary to
announce that in accordance with article 4 of the treaty of May 15,
1992, the main task of the CSTO is joint collective defense of our
countries from aggression of other countries, protection of our
political space from outside interference and so on. It is necessary
to state this clearly and harshly to make them understand for what
our organization is striving. In this case direction of possible
cooperation will be determined.”

Many military experts agree with the opinion of Leonid Ivashov. Along
with this, they also say that there is no need to create a problem
because NATO is not going to maintain active contacts with the CSTO.
Colonel Vladimir Popov from the Military Sciences Academy said,
“Russia is the leader in the post-Soviet zone. That is why it should
determine its long-term strategy with regard to interaction not with
NATO but primarily with the allies in the CIS. Policy should be clear
and understandable at this point. How can we counteract to challenges
and threats in cooperation? Which joint forces we need to have there?
– These questions should be the main issues for us.”

Lieutenant General Yury Netkachev, veteran of the “hot spots” of the
CIS, commented, “Joint military capacities of the CSTO are only just
being created. In the South it is represented by the military group
in Armenia, in the West by the united defense space of Russia and
Belarus and collective rapid response forces operate in Central Asia.
If all this potential is compared on the scale of the Eurasian
continent with the potential of NATO, the inferiority is obvious.
NATO has almost three times as many tanks, armored personnel carriers
and artillery than CSTO member states, and about twice as many
airplanes and helicopters. However, this is no reason to crawl to
NATO. Russia together with allies maintains operational and strategic
superiority over NATO in all vitally important regions of the
post-Soviet space. The task is to build up these groups and to do our
best to prevent similar attempts by NATO. Then the interests of
Russia and the CSTO will be protected.”

Thus, it is becoming quite obvious that cooperation between the CSTO
and NATO is not a priority for Russia and its allies. Along with
this, creation of collective defense in the CIS requires much effort
and resources. In any case, CSTO member states will need to undertake
the spending required to ensure security and to counter possible
threats (overt and covert), including those emanating from NATO.

Translated by Pavel Pushkin

Glendale: Crafting a killer plot

Published April 18, 2005
Crafting a killer plot
Actors gather at Glendale home to rehearse a film that is an
alternative rendering of John F. Kennedy’s assassination.

By Rima Shah, News-Press and Leader

It’s never a pretty scene when the hit man hired to kill your wife
fumbles the job, and the wife finds out.

That’s what happened Sunday afternoon in a spacious Glendale home. The
curses flying around the dining table were, therefore, no surprise.

But, thankfully, no real murder contract actually existed. The fiery
accusations and unmentionable curses were read from a script, as a
group of young filmmakers got together to rehearse for an independent
movie set to film in July.

The film, “The Machiavelli Hangman,” an alternative rendering of John
F. Kennedy’s assassination, is the brainchild of Shervin Youssefian, a
local filmmaker and the writer and director of the movie.

“The movie recreates the Kennedy assassination and connects it to one
of our characters, who is an assassin,” Youssefian said.

Youssefian wrote and made films as a child, and then moved on to
directing commercials and such short films as “Color Blind” and “Past
Present.”

“I started out getting awards as a kid for drawing and painting,” he
said.

He went on to start entertaining his teachers and classmates with his
movies and graduated from the University of Northridge’s film school.

The movie will leave the audience surprised, he said.

“We always show the story from the perspective of so many characters,”
he said. “People sit on the roller coaster; they know where it is
going, but the actual experience cannot be recreated. It is absolutely
different from what people think is going on in the world.”

The 20- to 30-member cast, which does not include the lead actors and
the crew, will start filming in June or July at local locations in the
area, said Harutiun Gendovian, the film’s producer.

Locations include the house they were rehearsing at, a mortuary, an
alley and an abandoned cabin, he said.

“It’s a combination of many films, yet it is not a repetition of these
films,” he said. “It’s very captivating. Every small character has so
much character in it.”

In the house, actors walked around holding bound copies of the script
and posed for individual and group still shots.

One of them was Bruce Nachsin, who plays George, one of the lead
characters.

“George is one of the main luckless figures in the movie,” Nachsin
said. “I have the least amount of luck in all the characters. He
starts off as relatively powerless in a situation he can’t control,
and he goes through events well beyond anything he could have hoped to
encounter.”

There is more to the film than observing how its characters
develop. It is also an attempt to bring together the Armenian
community.

Youssefian and the rest of the film’s crew launched a website,
www.armenian fimmaker.com, to ask the community to donate a dollar
each for the funding of the film.

The film is more of an attempt to generate support in the community
than a purely financial effort, he said.

“We want to see how supportive the community is of the effort,”
Youssefian said.

The website attracted Joseph Simaie, a Glendale-resident and dentist.

Simaie was so impressed with their effort that he offered his house,
where the crew rehearsed Sunday, as a location and became a
collaborator in the project.

“I think that the Armenian community has to get together from the
ground level,” Simaie said. “I’ve seen a lot of efforts, but theirs
was genuine. Art and movies are a way through which people can get
together, enjoy and have a conversation with your family.”

http://www.glendalenewspress.com/news/v-headlines_include/story/9867p-13686c.html

PKK Kidnaps Governor in Bingol

PKK KIDNAPS GOVERNOR IN BINGOL

AZG Armenian Daily #141, 30/07/2005

Neighbors

Milliyet informed that the members of PKK kidnapped Hashim Akyurek,
governor of Yayladere town of Bingol province, representative of
Justice and Prosperity Party. According to the newspaper, PKK
kidnapped Akyurek when he was returning to his native town after
visiting village of Calekag.

By Hakob Chakrian

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

‘Shushi’ Ensemble From NY Contributes To Preserving Armenian Culture

‘SHUSHI’ ENSEMBLE FROM NEW YORK CONTRIBUTES TO PRESERVING ARMENIAN
CULTURAL VALUES IN USA

AZG Armenian Daily #141, 30/07/2005

Culture

Last week, “Shushi” dance ensemble from New York performed concerts
both in Stepanakert and in Yerevan. Seda Paskalian, prominent dancing
star, founded this dancing group at St. Vartan Armenian church in new
York in 1993. At present, the dance ensemble includes 80 young
dancers. The overwhelming majority of the ensemble are the US-born
Armenians living in New Jersey.

“Shushi” visited Armenia for the first time in 2001. The ensemble gave
two concerts during its second visit to motherland. The first one was
held at Gabriel Sundukian Academic Theatre in Yerevan, on July 18. And
the second concert of “Shushi” took place in Stepanakert, on July
18. The second concert was dedicated to the participants of Karabakh
liberation war.

The ensemble performed Armenian folk dances both in Yerevan and in
Stepanakert. Vanoush Khanamirian, great master of Armenian folk dance,
and other prominent representatives of Armenian publicity, as well as
many art lovers were present at the concert in Yerevan. While in
Stepanakert, many high-ranking officials, including Ashot Ghulian,
chairman of NKR Parliament, Kamo Atian, NKR culture and education
minister, as well as Baroness Caroline Cox, deputy chairwoman of the
House of Lords of Great Britain, were present at the concert. 600
soldiers of NKR Army also highly estimated the art of the dancers.

Baroness Caroline Cox ascended the stage and presented a bunch of
flowers to Seda Paskalian, congratulating her for the concert. It’s
noteworthy that the leading dances of the concert were performed by
Gayane Hambardzumian, 16-year-old young talented dancer. She graduated
from the school founded by St. Gregory the Illuminator church of New
York.

In response to the question put by Azg, Seda Paskalian said that she
is satisfied with the concerts held in Yerevan and Stepanakert. We
also emphasized the importance of having such dance ensemble in
Diaspora.

By Hakob Chakrian

Massaging The Chancellor’s Spine

MASSAGING THE CHANCELLOR’S SPINE

AZG Armenian Daily #141, 30/07/2005

Armenian Genocide

Fleeing from guilt: Germans, Turks and the genocide of the Armenians

Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung (Feuilleton), 20.06.2005

Just as the commemorations of the sixtieth anniversary of liberation
have been symbolically drawn to a close with the opening of the
“Memorial for the murdered Jews of Europe” in Berlin, the remembrance
of a quite different genocide is unexpectedly raising some general
questions regarding forms of remembrance in Germany. The genocide in
question is that of the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in 1915/16,
for which 2005 marks the ninetieth anniversary. It is tightly
interwoven with the history of Europe and in particular that of
Germany, for before the very eyes of the European public, this
systematic genocide, committed in the shadow of the First World War,
marked a turning point in twentieth century history: With this
genocide, it became apparent that the extermination of a whole
population group is not only conceivable, but is also realizable.

Public discussion was triggered last year by the removal of the
genocide of the Armenians from the main school syllabus in the
Federal state of Brandenburg – and this through the intervention of
the diplomatic representation of Turkey in Germany. In April, the
Bundestag addressed this genocide for the first time, with a
cross-party agreement that Turkey, which to this very day continues
to emphatically refute the facts of the genocide, should be asked to
finally face up to this issue. Specific mention was also made in the
discussion to Germany’s own share of the responsibility ` for as an
ally of the Ottoman Empire in the First World War, Germany was
informed early on about the extent and goal of the deportation
measures. At the same time, the discussion also implied a way out,
with the setting up of a Turkish-Armenian commission of historians to
devote itself to this question. And yet the Brandenburg schoolbook
affair had only just demonstrated that Germany’s responsibility does
not lie in initiating a reconciliation between Turks and Armenians `
irrespective of the fact that such a reconciliation would lend
legitimacy to the German endorsement of Turkey’s entry into the EU `
but rather in bringing an end to its own tolerance of the denial.

Finally, a Bundestag motion carried by all parties was accepted in
which a rhetoric of obeisance towards the victims was
exerted. However, this rhetoric was only tacit, as the motion was
passed without any previous debate in which regret, lament and the
call to recognise the act could have been articulated. Nevertheless,
the resolution of this motion, supported as it was by all parties,
still incited unrest on the part of the Turks. With a sea of Turkish
flags yesterday in Berlin, the stance of Turkish politics, as rigid as
they are resolute, was expressed. The Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan
accused Chancellor Schröder of “spinelessness” and having
“false and ugly politics”. He himself, on the other hand, claimed to
have politics “full of backbone”, open to seeing a country’s work on
its own perception of history as superfluous.

What is notable in this very context, however, is also the consensus
of academics and intellectuals in Germany, who ` with few exceptions `
kept the issue grandly cloaked in secrecy. How can this silence be
explained? Is there, quite simply, no need for intellectual discourse
if “way back there in Turkey the peoples are striking at each other”?
Are we to think of the extermination of the Armenians as an event on
the periphery, an Asian act that does not belong to the history of
Germany, Europe and the civilised world? Or could it be, perhaps, that
the refusal to engage in a discussion of this genocide, which is
challenged by the culture of remembrance in Germany, has something to
do precisely with the specific forms of this remembrance ` and its
goals?

Nowadays, remembrance is preferably brought into play when the
question is no longer of a specific inheritance, but rather of what
history, experience and identity have in common, and indeed of the
common ground of globalising societies. As a foundation of such a
remembrance, designed to create identity, the “experiences of the
totalitarian regime of the twentieth century” and the Holocaust are
defined, as laid down in a joint article in May 2003 by Jürgen
Habermas and Jacques Derrida on the future of Europe (F.A.Z. of the
31st May 2003). The focus in this regard is no longer first and
foremost on the National Socialist policy of violence, but rather on
the status of the Holocaust as a shared symbol for the whole of
Europe. The goal is the constitution of a consensus memory, whose
task is to lead to a humanisation: In a formula of the Holocaust
based on a policy of remembrance that can be universally followed,
the aim is for all experiences of violence to be put aside and future
acts of violence to be prevented.

But what does such a universalisation of the Holocaust actually mean?
What does it mean for the future of remembrance, what does it mean for
the remembrance of other experiences of violence, and above all: what
does it entail for the remembrance of the Holocaust itself? Is there
not a danger that in the process of universalisation, the remembrance
of the Holocaust will be removed from its own direct context, from its
underlying experience, and thus ultimately drained? For with this
universalisation, a remembrance that is preserved through a dynamic,
living process of reconstruction is replaced by a formulated
commemoration.

Memory is always a narration founded on experiences, both direct and
indirect. Memories are orientations, and they are always associated
with identifications. Memory is always tied to its
bearers. Commemoration, by contrast, follows settings of history and
identity, it should not first and foremost preserve, but rather
integrate and harmonise under shared universal values. Memory as a
whole cannot be universal – and a remembrance can only be universal
when it is free of memories, when it removes itself from those
experiences that are preserved in the narrations.

A generic, universal commemoration of the Holocaust, detached from the
experiences of the victims and from those of the perpetrators and the
following generations, would therefore have to be free from any
experience and any ability to experience. As a universalised
singularity, congealed to an abstract commemorative emblem for
collective violence, this formula of Holocaust would refer solely to a
moral imperative. In the vanishing point of this commemorative
formula, which has surely also been cemented in the Berlin monument,
one no longer finds the victims ` nor even the perpetrators ` but
rather the act alone. Thus the universalisation of a Holocaust free of
victims and perpetrators could ultimately prove to be an empty
formula, which is, however, well suited for the – intended? `
overcoming of the memory of the Holocaust itself.

It is this remembrance policy, urging as it does a homogeneity of the
contents of memory, that is today being destroyed by other
experiences of persecutions, collective violence and
extermination. And these experiences appear all the more disturbing
the more closely they are linked with the contents of the official
German remembrance itself. The intensive focus on the Holocaust and
the exemplary way in which German came to terms with its own history
has changed the view of Germany with lasting effect, and this surely
applies both for Germany’s own self-image and for the perception of
Germany held by others. The fact that the Federal Republic so
explicitly placed itself into a position of historical responsibility
has contributed to the emergence of a different Germany and has
recently also legitimised a new role and a new strength for Germany
in international politics. Now, with the genocide of the Armenians
forcing its way into the field of discussion, the challenge is on for
Germans to once again unearth its ` finally laid to rest ` history,
putting pressure, too, on current politics.

Perhaps the German intellectual community’s reticence to discuss the
place of the genocide of the Armenians in the European or global
culture of remembrance can also be explained by a fear that the
painstaking efforts to prove that Germany has faced up to its past may
not be sufficient – and that one might once again be faced with the
task of having to confront German guilt.

Up to now, it has been possible to use the word “guilty” without
actually meaning it, because politics had ritualised and
institutionalised an admission of guilt that acted as a basis of
legitimisation of a post-war Germany. After the building of the
memorial in Berlin, the hope was that it would be possible to use the
word “guilty” in the comfort of finally no longer belonging to the
historical and generational cycle of responsibility for that history;
that the concern was now with a passing, concluded history, in the
remembrance of which the Germans could finally include themselves (as
victims).

Now, though, Germany is confronted with the fact that once again a
right of remembrance is being called for. And this new demand shows
that remembrance can no longer be pushed away as a subjective,
interest-fuelled notion, but rather that the question of the place of
remembrance becomes a legitimate one directed at the current
constructs of society.

For the question of remembrance is linked with the knowledge contents
of our present-day, global society, questions of concepts of
community, minorities and tolerance. Thus the remembrance of the
genocide of the Armenians also represents a challenge for current
politics. Of course, a considerable issue here is also the stance that
Germany takes regarding the integration of Turkey into the European
Union.

Can the Federal Republic really support the admittance of a Turkey
that assumes an attitude towards its own history that is
diametrically opposed to facing up to violence and crime, even though
this has become mandatory in Germany and now also Europe in the
remembrance of the Holocaust? A policy under the postulate of linking
one’s own interests with an action for a “future of Turkey” like that
pursued from the 1890s by Wilhelmine Germany ` and in so doing
neglecting or perceiving as a mere disturbance other population
groups in Turkey, in the past the Armenians and Aramaeans, today the
Kurds ` appears to be continuing in the present day. Today, too, we
are only bargaining for a future where the calls of the Armenians for
a recognition of their history is sacrificed for the interests and
the future of the Europeanised nation states. An intellectual
discussion on the remembrance of the genocide of the Armenians would
call for a reappraisal of the policy towards Turkey, a policy that
finally takes into account a perspective of Europe that has been
developed against the background of the experience of the Holocaust
and the obligation of remembrance. Thus the appeal to allow this
remembrance shows that remembering does not call for an
identification with the victims, but rather to accept the victim as a
victim: as a witness of persecution as well as a voice of the right
to one’s own accepted position, an accepted political place in the
world.

Meaning and workability of a European and then global culture of
remembrance will ultimately be gauged according to whether a plurality
of remembrances is allowed – indeed whether one is prepared to base
this remembrance on the plural nature of memories. The way in which
the Armenian experience is dealt with will therefore also be a
touchstone for whether the discussions on remembrance, recollection
and commemoration have been more than an academic exercise, more than
a virtuoso piece of rhetoric on the politics of remembrance.

BY Mihran Dabag, Director of the Institute for Diaspora and Genocide
Research at the Ruhr University of Bochum (translated by Sarah Mannion

Cultural Genocide Lectures

I-Newswire.com (press release)
July 29 2005

Cultural Genocide Lectures

Simon Maghakyan, the author of `The First Christian Civilization’s
Cultural Genocide’ photo-collection, will be available for delivering
presentations on Cultural Genocide of the Armenian Heritage starting
this fall.

(I-Newswire) – Simon Maghakyan, the author of `The First Christian
Civilization’s Cultural Genocide’ photo-collection, will be available
for delivering presentations on Cultural Genocide of the Armenian
Heritage starting this fall.

Maghakyan, a student in Colorado, has been studying the state of the
Armenian cultural monuments in Turkey for the last few years. He has
collected hundreds of photographs from various sources that testify
to the attempted destruction of the Armenian monuments in the
Republic of Turkey. Maghakyan is also the author of more than
three-dozen Armenian-related articles that have been published in the
USA, Armenia, Russia, Iran, Greece, etc.

Maghakyan has given speeches during various human rights awareness
events and has been called `a vibrant speaker’ by Colorado’s local
papers. He was paid tribute to by the Colorado Congressman Tom
Tancredo in the House of the Representatives for his continuous
academic success and for his genuine service to Colorado’s community.
During 2004-2005, Maghakyan served as the president of Phi Theta
Kappa International Honor Society’s Sigma Phi chapter.

The Cultural Genocide of the Armenian Heritage is a result of the
denialist policy of the Turkish government. Between 1915 ( the year
the Armenian Genocide started ) and now, more than 2000 Armenian
churches and cathedrals of eastern Turkey have been ruined, converted
to mosques and desecrated. As Henry Morgenthau, America’s Ambassador
to the Ottoman Empire at the time of the Armenian Genocide, has
stated, `the killing of the Armenian people was accomplished by the
systematic destruction of churches, schools, libraries, treasures of
arts and cultural monuments in an attempt to eliminate all traces of
a noble civilization with a history of more than 3000 years.’

Lecture requests can be made through

www.CulturalGenocide.cjb.net.

Apostles successor’s bones discovered in Iran

Persian Journal, Iran
July 29 2005

Apostles successor’s bones discovered in Iran
Jul 29, 2005

Shahriar Adl, the director of the team documenting three Iranian
churches for registration on UNESCO’s World Heritage List, said that
they have discovered the bones of one of the successors of the
Apostles of Jesus in one of the ceilings of the St. Stephanus Church,
which is located near Marand in East Azarbaijan.

Some historical sources, such as the travelogue of Frenchmen Jean
Baptiste Tavernier (1605-1689), some photos kept at Tehran’s Golestan
Palace, and the photos taken by Ali Khan Vali, the governor of
northern Azarbaijan during the reign of the Qajar king Nasser ad’Din
Shah and kept in the Adl family archives, indicate that the bones of
Saint Stephanus (Saint Stephen), who acted as a direct successor to
Saint Peter, Saint Matthew, and the Prophet Daniel, are being kept in
the St. Stephanus Church.

“The East Azarbaijan Cultural Heritage and Tourism Department sent a
letter to the Prelacy of Iran after the team discovered the bones,
asking their representative to attend the process of gathering the
bones from the site last Sunday,” Adl said.

The team has also discovered several pieces of board from the boxes
containing the bones, yellow and beige clothes, seeds of frankincense
and some pieces of wax, and ocher beside the bones.

The bones have been examined by a team of anthropologists of the
Cultural Heritage and Tourism Organization (CHTO).

“The bones have been damaged because of the bad condition of the
place. Thus, we could only determine that they are the bones of a
single body but the individual bones can not be distinguished,” said
team member Farzad Foruzanfar.

The complete skeleton belongs to a man about 50 years old with a
strong body, he added.

The bones have been transferred to the Prelacy of Azarbaijan in
Tabriz because restoration work is currently underway in the church,
but they will be returned after the renovation is complete.

“The bones will be returned to be kept in a specific place during a
special religious ceremony,” East Azarbaijan Cultural Heritage and
Tourism Department Director Ali-Akbar Taqizadeh said.

Hayk Ajimian, an Armenian scholar and historian, recorded that the
church was originally built in the ninth century CE, but repeated
earthquakes in Azarbaijan severely damaged the original structure.
The church was renovated during the reign of the Safavid king Shah
Abbas (1588-1629).

The general structure of the St. Stephanus Church mostly resembles
Armenian and Georgian architecture and the inside of the building is
adorned with beautiful paintings by Honatanian, a renowned Armenian
artist.

The CHTO plans to submit an application to UNESCO to register the St.
Stephanus Church as well as the St. Thaddeus and Zorzor churches in
West Azarbajian on the World Heritage List.

Three Turks Detained in London

THREE TURKS DETAINED IN LONDON

AZG Armenian Daily #141, 30/07/2005

Terrorism

The English police have detained three Turks in London. They are
suspected to have participated in the terrorist acts of July 7 and 21
in the British capital. The police haven’t announced the full names of
the arrested yet. They just know that Islam is from Samsun, Ibrahim
from Kahramanmash and Hidayet from Bingol. All the three arrested are
Turkish citizens.

Islam has been living in England for eight years, while the other two
arrived in Britain two months ago. Milliyet newspaper informed that
the arrested are being questioned according to the laws on the
struggle against terrorism.

By Hakob Chakrian

Hospital of Akhalkalak Can Lose its Doctors

HOSPITAL OF AKHALKALAK CAN LOSE ITS DOCTORS

AZG Armenian Daily #141, 30/07/2005

Concern

The staff of regional hospital of Akhalkalak, Georgia, has to take
exams of Georgian language till January 1 of 2006, A-Info agency
informs. This means that the hospital may well remain without
doctors. Most of the doctors and employees are Armenians and, as all
other residents of Akhalkalak, do not know Georgian. According to the
Georgian law, citizens who don’t know the official language of the
country cannot be appointed to state positions.