BAKU: Azerbaijan joins one more UN protocol

AZERBAIJAN JOINS ONE MORE UN PROTOCOL
[September 10, 2004, 14:06:05]

Azer Tag, Azerbaijan State Info Agency
Sept 10 2004

On September 9, Milli Majlis of Azerbaijan Republic held a sitting on
the issues of security and defense. Deputies discussed the draft Law
“On Joining the UN Protocol against the Illicit Manufacturing of and
Trafficking in Firearms, Their Parts and Components and Ammunition,
supplementing the United Nations Convention against Transnational
Organized Crime”.

Deputy Speaker, Chairman of the Commission Ziyafat Asgarov noted that
Azerbaijan joins the Protocol with a special statement and reservation.

The statement says that Azerbaijan Republic does not guarantee
the fulfillment of the Protocol’s requirements in the territories
occupied by Armenia until they are released /the schematic maps of
the territories are enclosed in the document/.

The reservation is that Azerbaijan Republic does not join the item 2
of article 16 of the Protocol saying disputes and conflicts between
the States Parties are resolved through the international court.

Finally, the deputies decided to submit the document to the Milli
Majlis for discussion.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

For Troy man in need, community is real MVP

For Troy man in need, community is real MVP
By: Robert Cristo , The Record 09/10/2004

Troy Record, NY
Sept 10 2004

TROY – A city man has taken the first step toward receiving
a multiple organ transplant and a new lease on life now that his
family’s health insurance plan approved the surgery after denying it
the first time around.

Setrak Nalbandian, 41, is on the path to receiving a life-saving
liver and intestine transplant, thanks in part to an outpouring of
support from friends, family and parishioners of St. Peter Armenian
Apostolic Church in Watervliet, who rallied to get the MVP health
plan to reverse its initial decision to deny the request.

“We couldn’t have done this without all the people who gave us
strength, encouragement and helped us to make this first big step in
my husband’s road to recovery,” said Talin Nalbandian, 36, who lives
on Highland Avenue. “There are no words to express how wonderful
they’ve all been.”

After a nearly 12-week, nerve-wracking wait, Nalbandian, his wife
and their 7-year-old triplets can now take a deep breath knowing he
has a fighting chance to survive.

Over that time, Talin says it has been “frustrating,” because even
with surgeons stressing that her husband needed a double transplant,
MVP’s health professionals didn’t see it that way.

“I think my doctors who are dealing with my husband know better than
people (at MVP) who don’t,” she said. “But I’m just happy now to
finally see some light at the end of the tunnel after all these weeks.”

Talin says she realizes her husband still has to survive a high-risk
operation and a year-long recovery before he’s out of the woods.

“I leave it in God’s hands now and hope that he gives us all the
strength to get through this together,” said Talin, whose two sons
and daughter started classes this week at School 14 in Troy.

Nalbandian is currently resting at an apartment in Indianapolis, Ind.,
and is expecting to receive the transplant at the Indiana University
Medical Center within the next few days.

“He was beginning to give up hope for a while, but now his whole
morale has gone up and he’s very happy,” said his wife, who will
return to her husband’s side in a couple of days.

Up until Nalbandian’s health started to fail nearly four years ago,
he was a baker for Price Chopper who was forced to go on disability
after doctors discovered his dire condition when veins in his
esophagus ruptured.

Talin says her husband is looking forward to returning to normalcy.
“It’s hard to think about the future, because everything is so
day-to-day, but I know he plans on going back to work, doing things
with his kids and living a normal life,” she said. “I know that’s a
lot to aim for but we’re praying for the best.”

Talin also says that even though her children are young, they still
understand that their father is going through a tough time.

“They sense the tension and know their father is sick, but their
grandparents help out and make sure the kids are going on with their
normal lives,” she said.

And if the stress of their personal lives wasn’t enough, Talin also
recently lost her job as a supervisor at a local bank.

“It’s been a roller coaster ride filled with ups and downs for all
of us,” she said.

To help with some of the bills the family will incur in Indianapolis
over the next four months, the St. Peter Armenian Apostolic Church
will hold a fund-raiser beginning at 3 p.m. Saturday.

Parishioners are also selling “faith bracelets” with all proceeds
going to fund Nalbandian’s recovery.

Russia says it knows where “terrorist bases” are

Russia says it knows where “terrorist bases” are
By Sonia Oxley

MOSCOW, Sept 10 (Reuters) – Russia knows exactly where to find
“terrorist bases” in bordering countries and is ready to act alone
against them if its neighbours do not agree to help, Russia’s top
general was quoted as saying on Friday.

General Yuri Baluyevsky did not specify exactly where these bases
were, but his comments were likely to worry neighbouring Georgia,
long suspected by Russia of harbouring rebels.

Earlier this week Baluyevsky threatened pre-emptive strikes on rebel
bases anywhere in the world after more than 300 hostages, half of
them children, died in an attack blamed on Chechen separatists on a
school in the town of Beslan.

“We have definite information about the location of terrorist bases
abroad,” Itar-Tass news agency quoted him as saying.

“If we do not come to an understanding with those neighbouring
countries on whose territories the bases are located to take joint
action, I think we will receive the permission … to take action,”
he said.

Russia, which has two military bases in Georgia, has repeatedly accused
Tbilisi of allowing Chechen rebels — at war with Moscow for a decade
— to operate from the Pankisi Gorge, which borders Chechnya.

Analysts say Armenia, Azerbaijan and the five Central Asian states
are also on Russia’s black list.

Relations between Russia and Georgia worsened this year after Georgian
President Mikhail Saakashvili tried to reassert control over breakaway
regions which seek unity with Russia.

One of them, South Ossetia, wants to join North Ossetia, the Russian
region where the school siege took place.

“The Russian media and certain official circles have already begun
talking as if there are links between South Ossetia and events in
Beslan. The only link is that both Russia and Georgia have a common
enemy — terrorism,” Saakashvili said on television.

(Additional reporting by Niko Mchedlishvili in Tbilisi)

09/10/04 11:38 ET

Bulgarian Top Journalists Parties at 60

Bulgarian Top Journalists Parties at 60

Sofia news—Novinite.com
11 September 2004, Saturday.

Bulgarian top journalist Kevork Kevorkyan invited friends and
associates to a dinner Saturday, to mark his 60th birthday.

Armenian-born Kevorkyan has been working in the state Bulgarian
National Television for 30 years, 25 being dedicated to the legendary
Every Sunday program. The show itself recently celebrated an
anniversary of 25 years on screen.

The professional ideology of Every Sunday is to present “the world
as it is” and to be “the territory of free speech”. The “guru” of the
TV broadcast, Kevork Kevorkyan, tops all sociological researches for
journalistic popularity and public influence.

Iranian president likens occupier countries to “axis of evil”

Iranian president likens occupier countries to “axis of evil”

xinhuanet.com
XINHUA online

2004-09-11 20:12:40

TEHRAN, Sept. 11 (Xinhuanet) — Iranian President Mohammad Khatami
has likened occupier countries to “axis of evil”, a term invented
by the United States to label Iran, the official IRNA news agency
reported on Saturday.

“Countries that prevent others from living in peace in their own
homelands and flagrantly support or commit terrorist acts are the
real ‘axis of evil’,” Khatami was quoted as saying during his visit
to Byelorussia.

“Those who illegally occupy lands belonging to others against
international norms and those who fuel chaos and extremism worldwide
are the main components of the axis of evil,” Khatami said.

“They try to deviate the world public opinion from their own crimes
by trying to find scapegoats,” he added.

In January 2002, US President George W. Bush labelled Iran, the
Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) and Saddam Hussein’s
Iraq as the “axis of evil”.

Khatami cited the Middle East situation and the Iraqi turbulence
as examples.

“All regional countries have a stake in continued peace and security
in a sensitive region like the Middle East. Crises and tensions in
the region only serve the illegitimate interests of the outsiders,”
Khatami said.

“The Iraqi people are now suffering because of the mistakes and
failures of the outsiders, who came to the country on their own
selfish agenda and should bear the cost of their mistakes,” he said.

“However, the current problems in Iraq have shown that the occupation
can no longer continue and the use of force has to come to an end,”
Khatami noted.

Khatami arrived in Minsk, the capital city of Byelorussia, on
Thursday evening for an official visit, which is the second leg of his
three-nation regional tour starting from Wednesday. He has already
visited Armenia and will travel to Tajikistan after conclusion of
Minsk tour. Enditem

www.chinaview.cn

NATO Delegation Due In Armenia On September 13

NATO DELEGATION DUE IN ARMENIA ON SEPTEMBER 13

   YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 10, ARMENPRESS: A NATO delegation comprising members of
the NATO Parliamentary Assembly’s Security and Civic Enlargement Committee
and the Political Commission’s sub-committee is due to Armenia on September 13
for a three-day visit.
   On September 13 NATO officials will meet with parliament chairman Arthur
Baghdasarian and Mher Shahgeldian, who is a chairman of a parliament committee
on defense and national security issues and head of Armenian delegation to
NATO Parliamentary Assembly. A roundtable is planned for the same day with
members of several parliament committees to discuss a variety of issues on
local
reforms, international security and NATO’s role, Armenia’s foreign policy and
defense priorities and Armenia’s contribution to the regional security.
   Another round table will be organized with representatives of
non-governmental organizations on September 14. The same day NATO officials
will meet with
president Kocharian, defense minister Serzh Sarkisian, deputy foreign
minister Tatul Margarian and police chief Hayk Harutunian.
   The delegation will wrap up its visit by yet another round table
discussions on human rights at the parliament premises on September 15 before
leaving
for Georgia in the afternoon.

Newly Appointed Ambassador Of Finland Hands Her Credentials Over ToP

NEWLY APPOINTED AMBASSADOR OF FINLAND HANDS HER CREDENTIALS OVER TO PRESIDENT
KOCHARIAN

   YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 10, ARMENPRESS: The newly appointed ambassador of
Finland to Armenia Ms. Terry Hakkalan, with residence in Helsinki, handed over
her
credentials to president Robert Kocharian today.
   According to president press services, congratulating the diplomat on
taking up the new post, Robert Kocharian said that Armenian underscores
developing
relations with Finland.
   The ambassador said that Finland is interested in stimulating cooperation
with South Caucasian countries, and Armenia in particular, and is watchfully
following the developments in the region. She underscored Armenia’s involvement
in European Union New Neighborhood Project which opens up significant
opportunities for cooperation.
   The president of the republic and the ambassador exchanged ideas on
stimulating bilateral relations. Ms. Terri Hakalla said that Finish business
community is largely interested in Armenia. The sides underscored development
of a
proper legal field and holding a business forum in order to make business links
more active.

Dementieva will play Kuznetsova for women’s U.S. Open title

Sun-Sentinel Com

Dementieva will play Kuznetsova for women’s U.S. Open title

By Charles Bricker
Staff Writer
Posted September 11 2004

NEW YORK — This would be the final run, the final stretch and the
final futile wave of the racket by Jennifer Capriati, the last Yank
in the tank at the U.S. Open.

Elena Dementieva’s backhand, smoothly struck to the left corner on the
second match point, sped through a brisk wind past America’s hard-luck
queen of tennis, then probably sent half of Russia into euphoria
while simultaneously shipping CBS Sports deeper into depression.

With Lindsay Davenport gimping out against Svetlana Kuznetsova earlier
on this bright and breezy Friday, and with Capriati sent home once
again one day early, the Open is without an American in the final
for the first time since 1988.

The words of former USTA President Harry Marmion, uttered in 1997
when he inaugurated a multimillion-dollar program to revitalize the
junior tennis program, came echoing out of the past:

“I’m not looking forward to the day, four or five years from now,
when we have an Armenian and a Lithuanian in the U.S. Open final,”
Marmion said.

Well, it’s two Russians in the women’s championship match and just
about anyone but an American on the men’s side, and, of all the
surviving suspects, no one deserves this more than Dementieva, who
has fought through an injury to her left leg and the horrors of one of
the worst serves in tennis to reach her second major final of the year.

Dementieva defeated Capriati 6-0, 2-6, 7-6 (5) after the powerfully
built smaller Kuznetsova took advantage of Davenport’s groin injury
to win 1-6, 6-2, 6-4. Capriati had lost the first nine points and
seven games before she seemed to get back in control, but faded late
in the final set.

The men play their semifinals today with one Swiss (Roger Federer),
one Brit (Tim Henman), one Aussie (Lleyton Hewitt) and one surprising
Swede (Joachim Johansson). That’s great for international relations,
but it’s not going to pump up the television ratings today and Sunday.

Dementieva, whose strong lower body is a big key to her destructive
ground strokes, can be edgy on court. But this time, she vowed, she
won’t go into the Open final with the nerves that doomed her against
countrywoman Anastasia Myskina at the French Open.

“At the end of the game today, I was so tired it was no place for
nerves,” she said. “I was always thinking about every point. I wasn’t
nervous at all. Why should I? It’s been a great tournament for me
so far.

“It was not easy to play against this crowd. They were laughing at
my serve, so I was kind of relaxed a little. I was into the game all
the time.”

She hit 67 doubles faults at the French, at one point in the final
screaming, “I hate my serve.” This time, Capriati hated her serve,
even when Dementieva puffed it in at 59 or 63 mph because the slower
the ball, the more it wiggled and dived in the wind.

“You’re off-balance basically all the time,” said Capriati, who never
considered coming in, chipping the serve back down the middle and
racing to the net behind her returns.

“I mean, it’s not my game to chip and charge,” she explained. “It’s
kind of difficult on the forehand, kind of the way she was hitting it,
to do that.”

In fact, Capriati’s second serve was much more vulnerable. In the
decisive set, Dementieva won 10 of the 11 second serve points on
return while Capriati was able to score on 13 of 19.

But it was Dementieva’s persistence in coming to net that made the
difference. She was at net 11 times in the first two sets, 33 in the
final set, and she converted 23 of those points.

“It was very difficult to play with the wind today, so I as trying
to stay close to the ball and go to the net was the only way I could
win this match,” she said. “Especially from one side, when you play
against the wind. There is no other choice to win the point. You have
to go to the net.”

If Capriati had done the same, this match might have turned out
differently. After she broke Dementieva to go up 2-1 in the third,
she made a few sweeping gestures with her hands, as if to say, “Yes,
like that. Get to the net!” But she never tried to force the play
off Dementieva’s weak second serves.

Davenport was equally despondent after her defeat. She had won 22
matches in a row coming into this semifinal and somehow tweaked her
left groin or hip flexor in an easy morning warmup. It was fine while
she slashed through the first set.

But after being broken at 2-1 in the second set after holding 33 games
in a row dating back to the second round, Davenport’s body language
changed. “Somewhere along the line, I believe around 4-2, my leg got
worse. I knew I was at a disadvantage and it was an uphill battle.”

She was retaped after the second set and was up 4-3 in the third,
but she could no longer run and was depending on hitting winning
serves. Playing smartly, Kuznetsova broke her with a backhand winner,
then ran out the match at love with a 103 mph ace.

A few hours later, the last American could have pulled down the
flag. Maybe the famed Russian Tea Room will reopen this weekend.

Copyright © 2004, South Florida Sun-Sentinel

Airplane brings 5 Beslan victims to Moscow

Airplane brings 5 Beslan victims to Moscow

ITAR-TASS News Agency  
September 11, 2004 Saturday

MOSCOW

An airplane of the Emergencies Ministry brought five Beslan victims to
Moscow. The transport airplane Il-76 landed in the airport Domodedovo
at 17.05 Moscow time on Saturday, a spokesman for the information
department of the Emergencies Ministry told Itar-Tass. Ambulances
brought former hostages to hospitals from the airport. There are adults
and children among those brought by this special flight to Moscow.

At present 109 people are undergoing treatment in Moscow hospitals.
Humanitarian aid from all around the world is coming to Beslan
every day, he emphasized. As much as 40 tonnes of medicines,
foodstuffs and clothes from Kyrgyzstan were supplied to the city on
Saturday. Airplanes from Ukraine and Poland are expected, a source
in the North Ossetian Emergencies Ministry told Itar-Tass.

After the tragic events in Beslan more than 200 tonnes of humanitarian
aid were delivered from Moscow, St. Petersburg, Mineralnye Vody,
Italy, the United States, France, Norway, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Greece,
Austria, Germany, Bulgaria, Poland, Finaland and Kyrgyzstan. “These
are medicines, expensive medical equipment, bandages, syringes,
mobile medical stations, donor blood and ambulances,” he pointed out.

[Armenian Diocese] Armenians asked to help genocide victims in Sudan

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

September 10, 2004
___________________

WORLD BEGINS TO RECOGNIZE GENOCIDE IN SUDAN

Yesterday (9/9), America’s secretary of state, Colin Powell, labeled as
“genocide” the ongoing violence and murder in the Darfur region of
Sudan. Powell’s remarks are the first time any international official
has directly accused another nation of perpetrating a current “genocide”
under the definition found in the United Nations Genocide Convention of
1948.

Speaking to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Powell said the
United States had been investigating the current state of terror in
Sudan, where the Arab Islamist government in Khartoum, through the
Janjaweed, an Arab militia it controls, has terrorized three African
tribes in the nation’s western Darfur province. The American team found
a pattern of planned violence and organized, horrific atrocities.

“[T]he evidence leads us to the conclusion that genocide has occurred
and may still be occurring in Darfur. We believe the evidence
corroborates the specific intent of the perpetrators to destroy ‘a group
in whole or in part’. This intent may be inferred from their deliberate
conduct.”

While applying unilateral economic sanctions against Sudan, America is
calling for the United Nations to get involved, and is calling for a
vote in the Security Council on a resolution supporting international
sanctions and the involvement of troops from the African Union, among
other measures.

While calling for sanctions against Sudan’s national government, the
American government and non-governmental organizations are providing
most of the humanitarian aid which is keeping Darfur’s 1.5 million
refugees alive.

(Source: National Review Online, 9/10/04)
* * *

ARMENIAN CHURCH SENDS AID TO REFUGEES

Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese of the Armenian
Church of America (Eastern), has asked parishes to hold a special
collection this Sunday (9/12) that will be used to send aid to the
victims and refuges of the genocide in Sudan.

The donations will provide aid through Church World Service, the
international aid arm of the National Council of Churches (NCC), to
which the Armenian Church belongs. Working to draw attention to the
ongoing suffering in the Darfur region, Bishop Vicken Aykazian, diocesan
legate, has spoken to NCC leaders about the lasting effects genocide can
have on a people.

Many of you have already donated to the relief effort online. We thank
you for standing up to help those in desperate need. If you haven’t
yet, please give either through your parish this Sunday or on-line,
through our safe and secure Internet server.

To read the Primate’s directive on the Sudanese genocide and for
information on how to give online, visit our website today:
;selmonth=8&sel
year=2004

(Source: Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern), 9/10/04)
# # #

http://www.armeniandiocese.org/news/index3.php?newsid=459&amp
www.armenianchurch.org