Azeri experts may attend psychiatric examination of Armenian officer

Azeri experts may attend psychiatric examination of Armenian officer’s murderer

Noyan Tapan news agency
7 Apr 05

Yerevan, 7 April: It is not ruled out that results of a second
psychiatric examination of Ramil Safarov, murderer of Armenian officer
Gurgen Markaryan, will be known not earlier than at a sitting of the
court on 10 May, lawyer Nazeli Vardanyan, who represents the interests
of the victim, has told Noyan Tapan news agency.

Azerbaijani specialists could take part in the second examination
to be held in Budapest next week only with a permission of Hungarian
medical experts, she said.

Vardanyan recalled that in its time the court had rejected the
Azerbaijani side’s petition to take part in the examination and draw
up a conclusion on its base.

To recap, Ramil Safarov has been recognized mentally sane as a result
of the first psychiatric examination. Experts have been interrogated
in the court. They say that they are ready to defend their conclusion
till the end.

Football Team Of Armenian Journalists To Participate In CIS Second..

Pan Armenian News

FOOTBALL TEAM OF ARMENIAN JOURNALISTS TO PARTICIPATE IN CIS SECOND
INTERNATIONAL MINI FOOTBALL TOURNAMENT

08.04.2005 03:34

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The football team of Armenian journalists with
the patronage of the Armenian President will depart for Odessa to
take part in the CIS Second International Mini Football Tournament
dedicated to the 60-th anniversary of the victory in the Great
Patriotic War, IA Regnum reports. The competitions were initiated
by the Association of the Sports Journalists of the Odessa region
and the Regional Union of Veterans of Afghanistan War. The matches
will be played in the best sports complexes on Odessa. Besides the
Armenian team, teams from Odessa, Brest, Volgograd, Kiev and Saint
Petersburg will take place in the competitions. The winners will be
awarded with cups and diplomas. The main goal of the competition is
to strengthen friendship between nations, respect to the immortal
feat of the homeland defenders. To note, in 2001 the team of Armenian
journalists became the bronze medallist in Moldova; in 2002 in Yerevan
it became the CIS champion.

Saturday Review: Paperbacks: Paperback writer: The best book ideasco

Saturday Review: Paperbacks: Paperback writer: The best book ideas come from an open mind and the British Library, says Gillian Slovo
By GILLIAN SLOVO

The Guardian – United Kingdom;
Apr 09, 2005

Having started my novelist’s life as something of a librariaphobe,
I am now one of the British Library’s most enthusiastic converts. It
works for me: its climate control, padded desks, wide chairs and,
most importantly, its conveyor belt of books that rarely falters.

In fact my criticisms are restricted to the catering. Not just of
the food, but those echoing, scrabbling, ill-lit corridors that pass
as adequate places in which to sit and digest. And there’s a space
problem. At peak times, the hunt for somewhere to rest a plate becomes
particularly frenetic. The only remedy is the very unBritish one of
sharing with a stranger.

Which is how I found myself the other day, having coffee with a
man I didn’t know. It had been a slow day and my mounting stack
of reservations felt increasingly unappealing. Looking for serious
diversion, I asked my table companion his life history.

I had lucked out. His was a fascinating story, particularly his career
trajectory: he was a former elite civil engineer who had become a
successful actor. The caffeine was thick in both of us by the time
he’d told me how he’d made the leap from one such seemingly diverse
career to the other.

Then he returned the compliment by asking me what I was doing in the
library. Looking for an idea for my next novel, I told him; without
much success – or so it felt that day. He asked how I was going
about the search. I muttered something about Armenian genocides,
flu pandemics and Suez crises. It sounded even odder than it had
felt in the reading room. Not, however, to my companion. He nodded,
and then, in an apparent non sequitur, told me that the reason he had
been able to make the transition from engineer to actor was because
he had understood that, no matter what the discipline, the creative
process is similar. Part is knowledge and experience, he said, part
hard work. But the final and most important part is to allow your
subconscious free rein. Which means that you, he concluded, are going
about the search for an idea exactly the right way: the only thing
you’re doing wrong is that you don’t trust that it will work.

Sweet words from a stranger. After he left I continued to sit,
thinking about what he’d said.

“Where do your ideas come from?” That’s the question that always dogs
me when I give talks. Since I am a writer to whom ideas come hard,
I can only answer it in hindsight. Take my last, I say: Ice Road
. A novel set in the Leningrad of the 1930s, it was born out of my
admiration for the film director Sergio Leone.

I’d always loved Leone’s spaghetti westerns, but those opening
frames of Once Upon a Time in the West , with its hard men, their
fawn dusters and the machine soundtrack, made me a lifelong Leone
fan. When I was writing my novel Red Dust , set in a desert town,
I kept in mind Leone’s structure of a seeker-after-justice riding
into town. And then, searching out an idea for the book to follow,
I heard that, before his sudden death, Leone had been planning to
set his next film inside the Leningrad siege.

Leningrad’s heroic defiance of the German encirclement had always
fascinated me. This, along with the Leone connection, was enough
to send me to the library. I became fascinated, not only by the
city’s war-time years, but by the period leading up to the siege;
by the way ordinary people survive tyranny. I read and read, giving
myself permission to follow instinct. Which is how, having taken that
all-important decision to set my novel-to-be entirely within the city
perimeters, I ended up following an intriguing footnote into the
Arctic – many hundreds of miles from Leningrad. Conscious planning
sounded out a warning note, but instinct and, I guess, my subconscious
told me to persist, a decision I was never to regret. And so finally,
out of an age-old admiration for a dead film director, I had found
the book that would keep me occupied for the next few years.

So where do ideas come from? Beats me. But if you happen to catch me
in the library corridor, chatting with a stranger, don’t for a moment
assume I’m not working. I’m actually doing the hardest work I know:
keeping myself open for the onset of the right idea.

Ice Road is published by Virago. To order a copy for pounds 7.99 with
free UK p&p call Guardian book service on 0870 836 0875.

The final farewell: Kings, presidents and 2m faithful give John Paul

The final farewell: Kings, presidents and 2m faithful give John Paul raucous send-off: The final farewell
By JOHN HOOPER IN ST PETER’S SQUARE

The Guardian – United Kingdom
Apr 09, 2005

The final commendation is meant to be the solemn climax of a Requiem
Mass. But as the first cardinals processed towards John Paul II’s
coffin to line up four deep on either side and melodiously solicit
prayers for his soul, they were greeted with a storm of applause.

Then banners were unfurled in several places around St Peter’s Square
demanding the late Pope be made a saint forthwith. Then came chants of
“Viva il Papa” and “John Paul, John Paul”.

Not since the Middle Ages has a pontiff been given such a rumbustious
send-off as Karol Wojtyla received yesterday from his fellow-Poles
and other admirers.

Before the service, the Vatican’s master of ceremonies, Monsignor
Piero Marini, the man who choreographed the whole thing, had said
he was aiming for “noble simplicity and beauty”. In the event, the
beauty was more noticeable than the simplicity.

As for the nobility, it was all but swept out of the square by the
raw emotion of a crowd that was mostly young, mostly Slavic, and
mostly exhausted after three days on the road with little sleep. The
funeral service for the third-longest reigning pontiff in more than
2,000 years was a religious occasion of the first order.

Yet, at times, the mood was more like that at a football match –
or a political rally, for this was also a political event in several
respects.

In terms of church politics, it was a chance to laud the orthodoxy and
conservatism John Paul II represented. One of the broadest banners was
held aloft by members of Communion and Liberation, the movement whose
followers include Rocco Buttiglione, whose views on homosexuality as
sin cost him a place in the European commission.

It was also a reaffirmation of Polish nationalism, as witnessed by the
chants of “Polska, Polska” before the Mass. And it was, of course,
the opportunity for a gathering of world leaders such as has rarely
been seen.

In the second row alone you had George Bush, Jacques Chirac and the
Iranian president, Mohammad Khatami. So you can imagine what the front
row was like. That included 75-year-old Londoner Andrew Bertie. They
do things differently in the Vatican.

Mr Bertie is the grand master of the Sovereign Military and Hospitaller
Order of St John of Jerusalem of Rhodes and of Malta. So he ranks as
a monarch, even though the only territory the order now controls is
a house in the centre of Rome just by the Prada frocks shop.

Hamid Karzai of Afghanistan was in the front row too, but that may
have been because he had a fancy hat. Elaborate headgear was important
yesterday. Without it, you were nothing, which may be why Tony Blair
was put so far back.

Queen Sofia of Spain was hands down winner of the women’s event with a
spectacular, ceremonial mantilla. But the men’s category was closely
contested by ayatollahs in giant black turbans, Armenian bishops in
pointed hoods, central Asian holy men in lambskin caps and Orthodox
metropolitans wearing jewelled mitres topped with golden crosses.

Two along from the Archbishop of Canterbury was a bearded prelate in
cream robes whose hat looked like a vanilla marshmallow. There were
moments when the funeral came perilously close to resembling one of
those inter-galactic councils in the Star Wars films.

Not that a hat wasn’t useful. The weather before the start was hot
enough to have the giant seagulls that are a feature of central Rome
gliding serenely in warm air currents over the basilica. But it grew
steadily colder.

A wind got up as the cardinals arrived in procession. It whipped their
red chasubles into their faces and over their shoulders. It lifted
off the red cap of one to send it cart-wheeling over the “sagrato”,
the area of consecrated ground outside the door of St Peter’s.

When the coffin, made of slightly orangey cypress wood, was carried out
of the basilica, there was a first, prolonged round of applause. Behind
it, where you would expect to find the deceased’s family, came the
members of the papal household including John Paul’s long-serving
secretary, Monsignor Stanislaw Dziwisz, and the five Polish nuns who
looked after him to the agonised end. They were virtually the only
women taking part in an almost all-male event – a reminder of just
how little John Paul’s reign advanced the position of women in the
Catholic church.

The 12 bearers laid the coffin on a fine carpet and a copy of the
gospels was placed on top.

With so many heavyweights on display, security was fastidious. At one
point, an unidentified jet was forced to land by an Italian fighter
plane near Rome. It proved no more harmless than a pick-up for the
Macedonian delegation.

The only unpredictable part of the service was Cardinal Joseph
Ratzinger’s homily. Such was the pent-up emotion by the time he began
that he must have been uncomfortably aware that this was going to be no
ordinary sermon; that he was more in the position of a soapbox orator
facing a restless – and critical – audience. One word of out place,
you felt, and he could easily have been booed and whistled.

There was a storm of applause at the first mention of John Paul II’s
name. The cardinal deftly closed the distance with his listeners by
referring to the late Pope as “Karol” as he outlined his remarkable
life story. How many other pontiffs have worked in a chemicals
factory? How many others were trained in a clandestine seminary?

But the crowd knew all this stuff by heart, and they gradually fell
silent, waiting for the killer sound bite. They got it.

Cardinal Ratzinger reminded them of the Pope’s quixotic, forlorn
attempt to mouth an Easter blessing from the window of his apartment
just 12 days earlier. Pointing up at the window, he said: “We can
be sure that our beloved Pope is standing today at the window of the
house of the Father; that he sees us and blesses us.”

Even some of his fellow-prelates joined in the applause that
followed. It was a stylish performance that showed that the supposedly
austere German theologian is fully able to play to the crowd when
he chooses.

The applause resumed at the final commendation and again when the
leaders of the eastern Catholic churches had asked for the Pope
to be forgiven his sins. After that, it never really stopped. For
nearly 15 minutes, the crowd clapped their dead hero. At one point,
some of the applause came in that staccato 1-2-3 pattern you hear in
stadiums the world over.

The pall bearers genuflected before lifting the coffin for its last
journey to the crypt of St Peter’s for burial. At the top of the
stairs, they turned and raised the head of the casket so that this
most theatrical of popes could face the crowd for one last time. The
applause grew thunderous.

As the pall bearers turned and vanished into the gloom of the great
basilica, many of those who aspire to Karol Wojtyla’s job must have
been left wondering if they really want to follow him; if they really
want to follow that.

The Pope’s wooden coffin, holding the Book of the Gospels and carved
with an M for Mary, at St Peter’s yesterday Photograph: Filippo
Monteforte/AFP

2005 May Become Year Of Meeting All Commitments To CE For Armenia

Pan Armenian News

2005 MAY BECOME YEAR OF MEETING ALL COMMITMENTS TO CE FOR ARMENIA

09.04.2005 04:52

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian President Robert Kocharian has held a
conference with members of the Coordination Commission on measures to
meet Armenia’s commitments to the Council of Europe when being accepted
to the organization. The process of meeting the obligations referring
to election, parties, local self-government, human rights, media and
others was discussed in the course of the meeting. The Commission
members informed that the drafts of the laws, reformed on the basis
of the Venetian Commission proposals are already submitted to the
Venetian Commission. The interlocutors also discussed constitutional
reforms. Robert Kocharian noted the importance of not delaying reforms
of the Constitution of Armenia and the importance of working out the
final bill, based on the most degree of consensus. As the Coordination
Commission members noted, if the draft of constitutional reforms is
again positively evaluated by the Venetian Commission and is put for
a referendum, in 2005 Armenia will meet all commitments assumed at
accession to the CE.

Russia Perceives Armenia As Independent State,Having and Maintaining

Pan Armenian News

RUSSIA PERCEIVES ARMENIA AS INDEPENDENT STATE, HAVING AND MAINTAINING ITS
INTERESTS, ANATOLY DRYUKOV STATED

09.04.2005 03:58

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Russia perceives Armenia as an independent, sovereign
state, having and maintaining its interests, Russian Ambassador to
Armenia Anatoly Dryukov stated in the course of the final press
conference due to the completion of his diplomatic mission in
Armenia. In his words, there are still certain circles, who use the
situation in their own interest and state that Armenia is “a vassal”
of Russia. It is impossible to impose something on any state today
– except for the military way, which, as experience shows, does not
result in the desirable outcomes, the Russian diplomat emphasized. Any
state has an inalienable right to decide its own fate. “The question
whether Armenia will be interested in a Western-leaning development
is its own right and it is normal. It is erroneous continuing
parting Russia from the rest of the world. We are a European family
and dividing us into separate flats is not correct,» the Russian
Ambassador to Armenia noted. Armenia develops relations with the EU,
the US, the NATO, just like Russia develops cooperation with those
structures. There is nothing unnatural in it, the Ambassador summed up.

–Boundary_(ID_hgDgVi2b6mO6BRcIiEqdyw)–

Completing His Mission In Armenia,Russian Ambassador Wished His Succ

Pan Armenian News

COMPLETING HIS MISSION IN ARMENIA, RUSSIAN AMBASSADOR WISHED HIS SUCCESSOR
TO TREAT ARMENIA WITH RESPECT AND LOVE

09.04.2005 03:46

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ New Russian Ambassador to Armenia Nikolay Pavlov
will arrive in Yerevan in the end of April – the beginning of May,
Russian Ambassador to Armenia Anatoly Dryukov stated at the final press
conference due to his completing his diplomatic mission in Armenia. The
diplomat reminded that Russian President Vladimir Putin has already
signed a decree on appointment of the new Ambassador. Answering a
question on his further diplomatic activities, Anatoly Dryukov noted
that Armenia is the endpoint of his 45-year-long career and upon
his return to Moscow he will send in his resignation. “However, I am
not going to lie on the sofa, weed beds or gather Colorado beetles,
I will actively engage in public work,” A. Dryukov added, wishing
his successor to treat Armenia with respect and love. “If it is the
case all the issues will be solved in a proper manner,” the Russian
diplomat accentuated.

EU Neighborhood Policy May Play Significant Role In PeacefulSettleme

Pan Armenian News

EU NEIGHBORHOOD POLICY MAY PLAY SIGNIFICANT ROLE IN PEACEFUL SETTLEMENT OF
KARABAKH PROBLEM, HERMAN DE CROO SUPPOSES

09.04.2005 05:03

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ «The Nagorno Karabakh conflict cannot be solved by means
of arms. Parties should engage in dialogue and cooperation. In case of need
international pressure should be put to solve the problem,» President of the
Chamber of Representatives of Belgium Herman de Croo stated at a meeting
with journalists in Baku, the Yerkir newspaper reported. He noted that the
OSCE and a range of other international organizations continue their efforts
to solve the problem. H. de Croo emphasized that the EU program on
enlargement of Europe is important from the point of view of the Karabakh
settlement. «The new neighborhood policy can play a significant role in the
peaceful solution of the problem,» the President of the Belgian Chamber of
Representatives noted. Answering the question whether Belgium recognizes the
territorial integrity of Azerbaijan in the Karabakh settlement, Herman de
Croo said that as an active EU member the country represented by him
promoted the OSCE Minsk Group efforts. «I think those efforts will lead to
positive outcomes,» H. de Croo noted.

–Boundary_(ID_eYvaHdvrVKPcC7IMemT8VA)–

Events On 90-Th Anniversary Of Armenian Genocide In Ottoman Turkey..

Pan Armenian News

EVENTS ON 90-TH ANNIVERSARY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN OTTOMAN TURKEY CONTINUE
IN POLAND

09.04.2005 04:04

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ April 10 and 17 events on the occasion of the
90-th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey will be
held in Krakow Polish city, Krakow Monastery Archimandrite Tadeush
Isahakian-Zalezsky told PanARMENIAN.Net correspondent. In his words,
the meeting of religious representatives of Poland, as well as the
Armenian Catholics will be held in the Warsaw Old City April 10. As
noted the by Archimandrite, Armenian clergy not only from Poland,
but also Ukraine will be present at the event in St. Mikolaj church in
Krakow April 17. On that day prayers will be read next to the Kharchkar
erected in the churchyard last year. In Isahakian-Zalezsky’s words,
the Association of Armenians of Poland has organized the events.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

CE Justice Ministers To Meet In Armenia In 2006

Pan Armenian News

CE JUSTICE MINISTERS TO MEET IN ARMENIA IN 2006

09.04.2005 05:14

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The recurrent meeting of the Ministers of Justice of the
Council of Europe member states will be held in Armenia in 2006. The
decision on that was made in the course of a meeting of the ministers held
in Helsinki yesterday, Rengum news agency reported. In the course of the
sitting the ministers said they wish to continue struggle against terrorism
and money laundering. The resolution passed specifically says, «during the
struggle against terrorism human rights should be fully observed.» It should
be noted that Armenian Minister of Justice David Harutyunian took part in
the Helsinki meeting.

–Boundary_(ID_azClHA5NiS8O8X4O9A9uIQ)–