Egypt’s Foreign Minister Ahmad Abu al-Gheit Receives Armenia’sAmbass

MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
375010 Telephone: +3741. 544041 ext 202
Fax: +3741. .562543
Email: [email protected]:

PRESS RELEASE
13 November 2004

Egypt’s Foreign Minister Ahmad Abu al-Gheit Receives Armenia’s Ambassador
Rouben Karapetyan

Armenia’s Ambassador to Egypt Rouben Karapetyan handed a copy of
his credentials to Egypt’s Foreign Minister Ahmad Abu al-Gheit on
12 November.

During a discussion that followed the protocol ceremony, Ambassador
briefly introduced his mandate that is primarily aimed at fostering
multi-faceted cooperation between Armenia and Egypt. Foreign Minister
informed on his awareness on the role played by Armenians in the
establishment of Egyptian state.

Minister Ahmad Abu al-Gheit wished Armenia’s Ambassador success in his
new mission and conveyed his country’s readiness to develop cooperate
with Armenia in all areas.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.armeniaforeignministry.am

MFA of Armenia: Armenia Named Among Countries Eligible for Millenniu

MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
375010 Telephone: +3741. 544041 ext 202
Fax: +3741. .562543
Email: [email protected]:

PRESS RELEASE

12 November 2004

Armenia Named Among Countries Eligible for Millennium Challenge Corporation
In The Second Round of Selection

On 10 November, Armenia’s Ambassador to the US Arman Kirakossyan attended a
ceremony hosted by the US Department of State to mark the second round of
selection of countries eligible to apply for Millennium Challenge Account
(MCA) assistance.

As reported earlier, this year’s MCA eligible countries are: Armenia,
Benin, Bolivia, Georgia, Ghana, Honduras, Lesotho, Madagascar, Mali,
Mongolia, Morocco (a new entry), Nicaragua, Senegal, Sri Lanka and Vanuatu.

Attending the ceremony were Colin L. Powell, US Secretary of State and
Chairman of the Millennium Challenge Corporation Board of Directors,
ambassadors of the 16 eligible countries, members of the Board of
Directors, Chief Executive Officer Paul V. Applegarth, senior officials of
the US State Department and Administration, US Congress, NGO and private
sector representatives.

Speaking on the goals of this US initiative, Secretary Powell stated that
out of 68 candidate countries, the US Administration selected the 16 “which
have demonstrated through their policies and practices that they rule
justly, invest in their people, and encourage economic freedom”. The
Secretary also added that selection, in and of itself, does not guarantee
funding; each Millennium Challenge Account country must first develop its
own proposal to promote growth and reduce poverty.

During the meeting, Secretary of State Colin Powell welcomed the ambassadors
of the 16 countries and congratulated on the occasion of their countries’
selection.

www.armeniaforeignministry.am

Soccer: Mutu joins Romania squad travelling to Armenia

Mutu joins Romania squad travelling to Armenia
Sun 14 November, 2004 17:54

Reuters, UK
Nov 14 2004

BUCHAREST, Nov 14 (Reuters) – Romania striker Adrian Mutu, banned
for seven months after testing positive for cocaine, joined up with
their squad on Sunday as they left for Yerevan to face Armenia in a
World Cup qualifier next week.

Mutu, who returned home earlier in the day from Italy, did not
comment on his future nor his decision to train with the national
team following his sacking by Chelsea last month.

This week FIFA allowed him to train with Dinamo Bucharest or any
other club but said he could not play friendlies or official games
during his suspension which expires on May 18, 2005.

Mutu’s team mates welcomed their captain with striker Florin Bratu
saying: “His presence among us is a good news. He’ll back us and
we’ll make him forget for a while his problem”.

Mutu scored decisive goals in Romania’s 2-1 wins in World Cup
qualifying Group One over Finland and Macedonia in August and September
respectively last year.

Romania, who top the group with nine points after four matches,
will play Armenia on Wednesday.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Bolshoi theater ballet finishes its US & Mexico tour

BOLSHOI THEATER BALLET FINISHES ITS U.S. AND MEXICO TOUR

RIA Novosti, Russia
Nov 14 2004

MOSCOW, November 14 (RIA Novosti’s writer Natalia Kurova) The Bolshoi
Theater ballet is finishing its six-week U.S. (Boston and Chicago)
and Mexico tour, the first one in over 30 years. Raymonda ballet is
closing the tour in Chicago on Sunday.

The Bolshoi performed its modern version of Romeo and Juliet as well
as classical Raymonda, Giselle, and Don Quixote ballets.

“Through all the six weeks and over 40 performances, the house was
overcrowded,” director general of the Bolshoi Theater Anatoly Iksanov
told RIA Novosti exclusively, “In Mexico, newspapers wrote it must
have been the Lord himself who had sent the Bolshoi ballet to the
Mexican audience. Of course we are pleased with the result of the
tour, but most of all I am happy about landslide success of the Romeo
and Juliet, a ballet that produced controversial remarks among the
Russian public. On returning back to Russia, we will make a tour of
Russian regions and post-Soviet countries.”

According to Iksanov, on November 21-23 there would be three gala
concerts in Tajik capital Dushanbe; in May the Bolshoi’s ballet
company will perform in Armenian capital Yerevan, while in January
2006, the ballet will move to Rostov-on-Don in southern Russia.

In Moscow, he added, the ballet will begin rehearsing A Midsummer
Night’s Dream with renowned American choreographer John Neumeier.

Putin forges new ties with former republics

Putin forges new ties with former republics
By Steven Lee Myers

Seattle Times
Nov 14 2004

MOSCOW β€” President Vladimir Putin is not subtle.

As the presidential campaign climaxed late last month in Ukraine, a
country once dominated by Russia’s czars and commissars but now free
to choose its own way, Putin went to Kiev for three days of
politicking on behalf of the candidate who promised to strengthen
bonds with Moscow.

That candidate came in a close second to one advocating closer ties
to Europe β€” another way of calling for greater independence from its
big neighbor. On Friday, barely a week ahead of the runoff, Putin was
in Ukraine again.

In the language of international diplomacy this is known as
interfering in another country’s internal affairs. For Putin,
however, it is an increasingly typical feature of what might be
called Russia’s soft imperialism.

>>From the edges of a new Europe to the Caucasus to Central Asia, Putin
is wielding Russia’s considerable resources β€” and his personal clout
β€” to keep those countries in what Russians call the “near abroad”
under the sway, if not outright domination, of the Kremlin.

He has used Russia’s economic levers β€” above all, its oil and gas,
often sold at discounts β€” to bind its neighbors into an ever tighter
dependency. He has countered the U.S. military buildup in Central
Asia after the Sept. 11 attacks with a buildup of Russian forces in
Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan.

Separatist regions abetted

In Moldova and Georgia, Russia has openly abetted separatist regions
by refusing to keep its commitments to withdraw its troops. In
Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia, it has also granted Russian
citizenship to thousands who, technically, are citizens of other
countries, an act that makes them candidates for the special
attention of Kremlin diplomacy.

Putin is not rebuilding the Soviet Union. But he is trying to forge
an economic, social and military facsimile, with Moscow again at the
core, in all but three of its former republics. The notable
exceptions are the Baltic nations, which irrevocably severed the old
chains and now belong to NATO and the European Union.

Elsewhere, despite new national identities that took root after the
Soviet collapse, he appears to be succeeding.

“Russia is on its way to recover the degree of soft power the
U.S.S.R. once enjoyed in its immediate sphere of influence,” Fiona
Hill, an expert with the Brookings Institution, wrote in a recent
study for the Foreign Policy Center in London, referring to the
economic power and cultural influence that once accompanied the far
harder power of the troops and security apparatus that controlled the
Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.

Protecting interests

It is no surprise that Putin, like any leader, would consider it his
right to protect what he sees as the country’s interests in its
extensive back yard, especially now that the United States, the
European Union, China and others are actively pursuing their own
business and strategic interests there.

But some of his policies and pronouncements have revived fears of
Russia’s long shadow. In Poland, a former Soviet satellite, a scandal
has erupted over allegations of bribery and espionage involving a
Russian agent and the country’s largest oil company.

“We are facing a restoration of the Russian empire through economic
means,” Zbigniew Siemiatkowski, the former Polish chief of
intelligence, told a parliamentary inquiry last month.

Indeed, the rebound of Russia’s economy after the financial crisis of
1998 has given Putin new leverage with which to counter the economic
and political incentives the West is offering Ukraine, Georgia,
Armenia, Azerbaijan and the countries of Central Asia to lure them
out of Moscow’s embrace.

Russia has the advantage of proximity and old ties, as well as
linguistic bonds, because Russian remains the language of commerce
and diplomacy throughout the region. Even more important, it has oil
and gas.

As Stephen O’Sullivan, the head of research at the United Financial
Group in Moscow, put it, “Oil and gas is what makes Russia important
to a lot of the world.”

Reclaiming status

Putin, who not long ago called the Soviet collapse a “national
tragedy,” is clearly eager to reclaim for Russia some of its status
as a superpower. And there is more to it than economics. The
perceived losses of the Baltics and, more recently, of Georgia have
been treated in Russia as a blow to national prestige.

That is what has made the outcome of Ukraine’s election so evidently
vital to Putin. Despite gaining independence in 1991, Ukraine retains
deep ties to Russia because it spent centuries under Moscow’s rule.
Many Ukrainians are ethnic Russians.

Now, President Leonid Kuchma’s decision to step down after 10 years
has opened up a fiercely contested fight over the country’s future.
Kuchma himself zigzagged between Russia and the West, but he has
thrown his support to Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovich, who has made
it clear he feels the country’s interests lie to the east.

And that makes Yanukovich the candidate favored by Putin over Victor
Yushchenko, who wants to balance trade with Russia with expanded ties
to Ukraine’s European neighbors.

“This election is not about Yushchenko or Yanukovich or even
Ukraine,” Hryhoriy Nemyria, director of the European Center for
International Studies in Kiev, said in an interview after the first
round of voting. “It’s about Russia.”

He said a victory for Yushchenko in the runoff would amount to a
public humiliation of Putin, at home and abroad.

“The perception would be that Ukraine escaped, like Georgia,” he
said. “It would be like the escape of a little sister from the
family.”

–Boundary_(ID_s1MlzIiNccbi5verwZHLdg)–

Denver: Rally fights family’s pending expulsion

Denver Post, CO
Nov 14 2004

Rally fights family’s pending expulsion

Armenians who settled in Ridgway in 1999 face deportation for invalid
visas

By Allison Sherry
Denver Post Staff Writer

Post / Lyn Alweis

Alyssa Hill, 15, and others attend a Saturday rally outside the U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement center in Aurora to protest plans
to deport an Armenian family. β€œThey are better U.S. citizens than
most U.S. citizens,” said Patrick Edwards, a 19-year-old CU student.

On a bitterly cold river bank in Aurora on Saturday, an eclectic
group of college professors, middle schoolers, parents and Ridgway
townsfolk, poured out of school buses and cars in hopes of keeping a
beloved Armenian family in Colorado.

They carried signs quoting Abraham Lincoln and Dick Cheney. They sang
the national anthem and made speeches. And they cried bitterly for a
family whose imminent fate is deportation back to Armenia.

“If I could trade him my citizenship, I would in a heartbeat,” said
Patrick Edwards, a 19-year-old University of Colorado sophomore and a
friend of Armenian Gevorg Sargsyan. “They are better U.S. citizens
than most U.S. citizens.”

The Sargsyan family settled in the western Colorado town of Ridgway
in 1999, putting their kids into public school and picking up jobs
after leaving Armenia.

But because they have no valid visa, and they’ve nearly exhausted
efforts to stay in the United States, four family members have been
incarcerated in Aurora by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement
officials.

They are set to be deported to Armenia, where they say they’ll face
persecution and perhaps death from the Russian Mafia in a matter of
weeks.

On Saturday, roughly 60 people protested at an immigration processing
facility where Gevorg, Hayk, Meri and Ruben Sargsyan are being held.

The group hoped that a public and very emotional plea will help the
Sargsyans stay in the United States.

“We have come here today to tell them that they (immigration
officials) are not acting in the best interest of the United States,”
said Colin Lacy, a childhood friend of Gevorg Sargsyan. “Locking away
a sophomore at the University of Colorado who finished his freshman
year on the dean’s list is not in the best interest of the United
States.”

Susan Wing, a Ridgway resident who traveled to Aurora with her
husband, agreed.

“They’ve got kids in jail here, and they should be in school,” she
said.

In many ways, family and friends argued on Saturday, the Sargsyans
are a true American success story, with one stroke of horrific luck.

They came to the United States afraid for their lives. The oldest
daughter, Nvart, had married an American named Vaughn Huckfeldt in
Armenia who claimed to be a minister with a home in Colorado.

The Sargsyans say that Huckfeldt conned a number of Armenians into
giving him thousands of dollars when he promised visas for them to
the United States.

When those promises didn’t come true, many Armenians personally
blamed the Sargsyan family because Nvart had married Huckfeldt.

Eventually, Huckfeldt got visas for the Sargsyans, but they were the
wrong type, requiring the family to attend school instead of work.

Post / Lyn Alweis
Nvart Idinyan cries at the protest held for her family. She is
married to an American and trying to get a green card.
When Nvart filed for divorce in Colorado, the Sargsyans say Huckfeldt
reported them for being in the country with the wrong kind of visa.
Thus ensued a six-year battle with immigration officials to stay in
the United States.

Huckfeldt reportedly is out of the country. Attempts to reach him
have been unsuccessful.

Once the family settled in Ridgway, they picked up odd jobs,
cleaning, waiting tables and working on ranches.

Nvart remarried and works at a bank. Her sister Meri is a pianist at
an interdenominational church. The two boys, Gevorg and Hayk, went
through Ridgway High School. Gevorg attended CU. Hayk is a senior at
Ridgway High School and a soccer player.

Ruben, the family’s patriarch, and children Gevorg, Hayk and Meri
were the first family members to be detained.

The mother, Susan Sargsyan, hasn’t exhausted all legal options, and
Nvart is trying to get a green card because she is married to an
American.

Nvart said she has spoken to her two brothers, her sister and her
father on the phone in the detention facility. They’re utterly
despondent and “are losing hope,” she said. “They are doing
horrible.”

Meri is seeing a psychologist in the facility because she is so
upset, Nvart said.

“We hope that helps,” she said, gesturing to the crowd of people. “We
are hoping for a change.”

,1413,36~53~2534183,00.html

–Boundary_(ID_bJBlV6VaDxobA1eMlKOsOg)–

http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0

Denver: Family detained in push by feds

Family detained in push by feds
By Nancy Lofholm, Denver Post Staff Writer

Denver Post, CO
Nov 14 2004

The four Armenians awaiting deportation in a Denver detention facility
are there partly because of a 1 1/2-year-old crackdown on immigration
scofflaws.

A spokeswoman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement said an estimated
350,000 to 400,000 illegal immigrants with deportation orders have
vanished before they could be sent out of the country so immigration
officials are being more aggressive to lower that rate and ease
concern in Congress.

The Sargsyan family is not included in those numbers because the
family members showed up at the appointed time on Oct. 4 in response
to a deportation notice. They were instantly taken into custody.

Virginia Kice, spokeswoman for the immigration enforcement division,
said the fact the family never tried to hide from immigration
authorities makes no difference.

Advertisement

“The noncompliance rate among those not detained is very high, as high
as 80 percent,” Kice said. “That’s a very discouraging statistic and
one we are trying to change.”

The Sargsyans are being held in detention while their attorney
attempts to obtain visas for them under a relatively new law that
gives protection to victims of human trafficking. The Sargsyans
maintain they were victimized by an American con man who married
into the family and used that connection to defraud other Armenians
by promising them visas that he never obtained.

The Sargsyans initially attempted but failed to gain asylum on the
grounds they fear being harmed or killed on their return to Armenia.
The trafficking-victim visas they are now trying to obtain have been
granted in fewer than several hundred cases since they were established
in 2001.

Normally, immigrants with applications for those visas are not detained
and, instead, are given government aid. Kice said the Sargsyans are
being treated differently because they already had final deportation
orders before they applied for the trafficking victim visas.

After Years of Relative Peace, Christians Live in Fear

Los Angeles Times, CA
Nov 14 2004

After Years of Relative Peace, Christians Live in Fear

Church bombings, threats and attacks have driven tens of thousands
to leave Iraq since the fall of Saddam Hussein. Many fear a pogrom.

By Patrick J. McDonnell, Times Staff Writer

BAGHDAD β€” A wave of attacks on churches and Christians viewed as
infidels or collaborators is generating alarm among a Christian
community that has long lived in relative peace alongside Iraq’s
Muslim majority.

Growing antagonism from Islamic extremists and insurgents has driven
tens of thousands of Iraqi Christians from the country in the last 18
months, and many more are planning to emigrate.

“We are crying tears of blood in grief for what is happening in
Iraq,” said Khayri Estayfan Abona, a 44-year-old mechanical engineer
and father of three who was among a number of Christians lined up at
a passport office here. “We are weak and helpless, so we are made
into scapegoats.”

In the northern city of Mosul, home to a large Christian population,
leaflets from self-described mujahedin warned women to cover their
faces and dress conservatively during the Muslim holy month of
Ramadan. Christian students at Mosul University boycotted classes
last month after threats from extremists. Rumors have spread of
expropriation of Christian property. Graffiti have warned Christians
to leave or face death.

“Muslims and Christians have been living together on this land for
more than a millennium, as brothers living in one homeland,” declared
several Christian groups in a public appeal issued last month seeking
support from Muslims. “The blood of Christians mixed with the blood
of Muslims in defending this land.”

Privately, some Christians fear repression and a sanctioned pogrom if
conservative Islamists come to power next year, when Iraq is
scheduled to hold its first democratic elections. Islamic groups long
repressed under Saddam Hussein’s secular regime have moved to the
forefront of Iraqi political life since U.S.-led forces ousted the
dictator. Christians have endeavored to maintain a low profile amid
the turmoil.

Christians are said to have resided in what is now Iraq since the
early days of their religion. Today, Iraq’s diverse Christian
population stands at about 800,000, according to community estimates,
or about 3% of the nation’s population of 25 million.

Although Christians have long been marginalized in Iraq, and suffered
like most Iraqis under totalitarian rule, even Hussein’s Baathist
regime did not systematically persecute them. Christian villages in
the north were emptied as part of Hussein’s “Arabization” campaign,
but that drive was primarily aimed at displacing Muslim Kurds and
creating a new Arab majority in areas close to the lucrative oil
fields.

Many Iraqi Christians did well in business and assorted trades,
particularly the hotel and restaurant sectors. Hussein’s deputy prime
minister, Tariq Aziz, currently in U.S. custody, was perhaps the
best-known Christian in Iraq. Christians here generally are
considered pro- democracy and liberal.

Driving away this generally well-educated and moderate population can
only harm a nation with a dire need for economic advancement and
tolerance, Christian leaders say.

“What worries us is the tyranny of the majority,” said Wathiq Hindo,
a U.S.-educated businessman and prominent Christian whose uncle was
an archbishop of the Syriac Catholic Church.

“Saddam was a dictator, but he was not a religious fanatic. Religious
fanaticism is a threat to us,” said Hindo, who graduated from a
Jesuit high school and college in Baghdad.

Although fanaticism may motivate some of the attacks, others probably
are related to the widespread perception that Iraqi Christians
welcomed the downfall of Hussein and the arrival of the U.S.
military. Insurgents have targeted anyone working with U.S. troops,
be they Muslim or Christian, Arab or Kurd.

Late last month, Christian representatives here estimated that about
7% of their fellow Christians β€” or more than 50,000 people β€” had left
Iraq since Hussein was toppled. A large number headed initially to
Syria, where many have relatives. But the ultimate hope of a great
number of Christians is to immigrate eventually to the United States,
Canada, Australia or other destinations for the Iraqi Christian
diaspora.

One of the largest Iraqi Christian communities in the United States
is in San Diego County. Iraqi immigrants there say they are
increasingly dismayed as they hear of difficulties for Christians in
their homeland. Efforts to get approval from the federal government
to allow fleeing Christians into the U.S. have been unavailing,
community leaders said.

“It’s very bad,” said Jibran Hannaney, a civil engineer. “As much as
I thought the grace of God was coming to our people when Saddam
Hussein was pushed from power, basically it’s been the wrath of the
devil instead. This liberation-turned- occupation has not helped our
people.”

Hannaney said almost all Iraqi Christian families in San Diego County
have relatives and friends who have fled Iraq for Jordan, Syria,
Australia or another country after learning that they could not enter
the United States.

The recent migration is an acceleration of an established trend of
Iraqi Christians seeking opportunities elsewhere. The withering cycle
of warfare and sanctions has prompted as much as half of the nation’s
Christian population to emigrate since the 1980s, community leaders
say.

The great majority of Iraqi Christians are Chaldeans, an Eastern Rite
Catholic group. Other groups β€” Assyrians, Syriacs and Armenians β€”
also have lived here for generations. One sect, the Mandaeans, are
followers of John the Baptist. Some Christians still speak and hold
services in a modern-day form of Aramaic, the language Jesus is said
to have spoken.

A smattering of Protestants and Roman Catholics also have lived in
Iraq since the period of British rule after World War I. In addition,
the fall of Hussein has drawn Protestant missionaries.

Coordinated bombings of at least seven Baghdad churches in the last
four weeks followed attacks on churches in Baghdad and Mosul in
August that left 11 dead and 50 wounded. Some churches have suspended
Sunday services.

Numerous Christian-run liquor stores have been firebombed and forced
to close. Because alcohol is taboo to Muslims, Christians
traditionally have been the only Iraqis licensed to sell it.

“We’ve always been able to do our job and live with our Muslim
neighbors in peace, but now all that is changed,” said Imad Polis
Jajo, whose liquor store in Baghdad was firebombed last summer.

A few days after the bombing, a letter arrived at Jajo’s door. If he
attempted to restart the business, it warned, his 15-year-old son,
Rafeef, would be kidnapped. Jajo is now unemployed and must seek help
from relatives, he said during a recent interview at a near-deserted
Christian social club in central Baghdad. Its gloomy emptiness
attested to the fear that has gripped the Christian community here.

“Even during the time of Saddam we were free to come to our club,”
said Sameer Khouri, the administrative secretary of the facility.
“Now, people are afraid to leave their homes.”

In Mosul, some Christian women have acceded to anonymous demands to
modify their dress in accordance with Islamic code as a means of
self-protection.

“I put on the hijab [head scarf] … to prevent being harmed by these
crazy people,” said Dalia Ishaq, 18, a student at the Fine Arts
Institute for Girls in Mosul. She blamed the excesses on extremists.

“All my friends are Muslim girls,” Ishaq said, “and this threat would
never change my relationship with them.”

Throughout Iraq, Christians interviewed echoed those sentiments,
emphasizing their ties to Muslim neighbors.

“I have so many Muslim friends, and they have never treated me
harshly β€” they are just like my sisters,” said Rana Saeed Jerjees,
25, a teacher in Mosul. “I think there are certain people who want a
civil war to break out in Mosul and all over Iraq. This is all part
of a major plan, and we must never surrender to such schemes.”

Mainstream Muslim clerics and the Iraqi interim government have
repeatedly condemned sectarian attacks on Christians. The nation’s
interim constitution explicitly recognizes religious freedom and the
rights of minorities.

However, many Christians wonder whether the government β€” battered by
an insurgency and needing U.S.-led multinational troops to maintain
some semblance of order β€” can prevent such violence.

One plan under consideration is for Christians to field a slate of
candidates for January’s elections to ensure that they are
represented in the 275-member National Assembly.

Another idea that has met with a cool reception among Christians is
the creation of a kind of Christian safe haven in the plains of
Nineveh province, outside Mosul. Proponents hope to attract
Christians who have left the country, but others fear a kind of rural
ghettoization.

“We don’t want to be refugees in our own homeland,” said Yunadam
Khanna, a Christian representative in Iraq’s interim parliament.
“There is a general crisis in Iraq, and what is happening to the
Christians is part of that crisis.”

*Times staff writer Suhail Ahmed and special correspondent Said Rifai
in Baghdad, special correspondent Roaa Ahmed in Mosul and staff
writer Tony Perry in San Diego contributed to this report.

–Boundary_(ID_IruMllrBnvOEoltu+pUuBg)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Radio Hour Production Seminar in Yerevan

International Journalist’s Network
Nov 14 2004

Radio Hour Production
Nov 19, 2004 – Dec 10, 2004

Seminar

In Yerevan. Organized by Internews-Armenia. For Armenian radio
journalists and producers. The seminar will emphasize practical work
as a key part of the training. The consultant for this seminar will
be Bruce Gellerman of the United States. Gellerman is a veteran radio
journalist and producer who has worked with National Public Radio, 60
Minutes, the BBC, CBS News, Deutsche Welle and the New York Times.
For more information, contact training coordinator David Aslanyan at
[email protected] or telephone +374-1-58-36-20. The
Internews-Armenia Web site:

http://www.internews.am.

BAKU: Debates over NK problem at UN GA shall be based on justice

AzerTag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
Nov 14 2004

DEBATES OVER NAGORNO-KARABAKH PROBLEM AT UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY SHALL BE
BASED ON JUSTICE
[November 13, 2004, 23:37:16]

Speaking at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in
Washington D.C., Chair of the Milli Majlis /Parliament/ Standing
Commission on International and Interparliamentary Relations Samad
Seyidov urged the UN General Assembly to justice while debating over
Nagorno-Karabakh Problem.

He dwelt on democratic reforms implemented in Azerbaijan, economic
development in the country and the current situation of the
Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh. He noted
Azerbaijan had chosen the way of integration into Euroatlantic space
that would bring benefit to both parties.

He also said that Azerbaijan is the shortest way connecting the two
continents and an alternative energy source for Europe who helps the
country to overcome the complex transition period.

Mr. Seyidov pointed out the positive impact of the membership of the
Council of Europe upon democratization process in Azerbaijan noting
that economic growth in the country and improvement of standard of
living are also a result of democratization and transparency of the
society. He recalled that foreign experts including the US’ cite the
activity of the State Oil Fund of Azerbaijan as an example to follow
by other fuel-producing countries.

Describing the unsolved conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan over
Nagorno-Karabakh as the largest obstacle to development of the
region, Mr. Samad Seyidov noted the importance of supremacy of
democratic values in relation to this issue. “We want the
Nagorno-Karabakh problem to be discussed at any level. The initiative
to include the issue in the UN General Assembly’s agenda has been
dictated just by this desire. Not pro-Azerbaijani or pro-Armenian
stance but justice is what the debates shall be based on”, he said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress