BAKU: Azerbaijan says reserving right to free its occupied territori

Azerbaijan says reserving right to free its occupied territories

11.09.2004, 13.10

BARDA, Azerbaijan, September 11 (Itar-Tass) – Azerbaijani government
envisions an increase of defense spending in 2005, President Ilham
Aliyev said Saturday during a meeting with Azerbaijani refugees in
the Barda district that borders the much-troubled region of Nagorny
Karabakh.

â^À^ÜThis increase will strengthen our Armed Forces and will make
it one of the guarantors of settling the Karabakh conflict,â^À^Ý
Aliiyev said.

That conflict in the mostly Armenian-populated Karabakh enclave
has been going on since 1988 along a pattern similar to most ethnic
conflicts on the territory of the former USSR.

Karabakhâ^À^Ùs Armenians are trying to win independence from
Azerbaijan. In the early 1990â^À^Ùs, the tensions between the sides
took the form of open armed hostilities.

Efforts to settle the conflict have been made for years, but they
have produced small results so far.

Aliyev reiterated that Azeirbaijan is seeking a peaceful solution to
the conflict.

â^À^ÜAs long as there is hope for that [peace settlement], weâ^À^Ùll
continue the talks, but if they prove ineffective, the Azerbaijanis
will free the occupied territories by any means,â^À^Ý he said. â^À^ÜWe
have all the prerequisites for it â^À^Ó the patriotic spirit,
mobilization of our people, and the persistently growing economic
potentialâ^À^Ý.

As he addressed a meeting with public representatives in Barda on the
same day, Aliyev said: â^À^ÜThe people of Azerbaijan must be prepared
to liberate its occupied lands by forceâ^À^Ý.

â^À^ÜThere is no possibility of making compromises in what concerns
Azerbaijanâ^À^Ùs territorial integrity,â^À^Ý he said.

ARKA News Agency – 09/10/2004

ARKA News Agency
Sept 10 2004

Vice President of Argentina receives invitation to pay official visit
in Armenia

Presentation of national program on realization of agreement on
partnership and cooperation between RA and European Communities to
take place in Yerevan on Sep 13

French physician of Armenian origin Roger Balian receives diploma of
foreign member of Armenian Academy of Sciences

Joint delegation of two Committees of NATO Parliamentary Assembly to
arrive in Yerevan on September 13-15

Newly appointed Ambassador of Finland to Armenia presents her
credentials to the RA President

Armenia Expo 2004 4th commercial and industrial exposition forum
opens today in Yerevan

Vigen Chitechyan relieved of his post of a Coordinator of the mission
of Armenia in NATO

RA President has a working meeting with the leaders of the parties of
the political coalition

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VICE PRESIDENT OF ARGENTINA RECEIVES INVITATION TO PAY OFFICIAL VISIT
IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, September 10. /ARKA/. Vice President of Argentina Daniel
Sioli received invitation to pay official visit in Armenia, RA MFA
told ARKA. During the meeting with RA Ambassador to Argentina Ara
Ayvazian, the parties discussed present level of Armenian-Argentinean
relations and development perspectives. The parties agreed to take
business steps towards establishment of interparliament links. The
parties discussed human rights protection and prevention of crimes
against humanity. The Ambassador highly estimated the principal
position of Argentina in mentioned spheres. L.D. –0—

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PRESENTATION OF NATIONAL PROGRAM ON REALIZATION OF AGREEMENT ON
PARTNERSHIP AND COOPERATION BETWEEN RA AND EUROPEAN COMMUNITIES TO
TAKE PLACE IN YEREVAN ON SEP 13

YEREVAN, September 10. /ARKA/. Presentation of national program on
realization of agreement on partnership and cooperation between RA
and European Communities will take place in Yerevan on Sep 13, RA
Ministry of Finance and Economy told ARKA. The Presentation will
demonstrate guide-books “Administration and Legislation: EU and
Armenia”, “Terminological Directory of EU” and ADAMS computer
program.
Presentation is organized by RA Ministry of Finance and Economy and
AEPLAC (Armenian-European Policy and Legal Advice Centre). L.D. –0—

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FRENCH PHYSICIAN OF ARMENIAN ORIGIN ROGER BALIAN RECEIVES DIPLOMA OF
FOREIGN MEMBER OF ARMENIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCES

YEREVAN, September 10. /ARKA/. French physician of Armenian origin
Roger Balian received diploma of foreign member of Armenian Academy
of Sciences, AAS press office told ARKA. According to the AAS
President Fadey Sargsian, “election of Roger Balian as a foreign
member is a big honor for us and in the future it will allow
strengthening of friendship between Armenian and French scientists”.
Balian is an author of several fundamental works, namely his
monographs on statistic physics “From microphysics to macrophysics.
Methods and Application” is well known among scientists. Balian is
elected the member of several European academies and scientific
centers. L.D. –0—

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JOINT DELEGATION OF TWO COMMITTEES OF NATO PARLIAMENTARY ASSEMBLY TO
ARRIVE IN YEREVAN ON SEPTEMBER 13-15

YEREVAN, September 10. /ARKA/. Joint delegation of two Committees of
NATO Parliamentary Assembly – Committee on the Civil Dimension of
Security and Sub-Committee of Political Committee to arrive in
Yerevan on September 13-15. As Armenian Parliament’s Public Relations
Department told ARKA, on September 13 the Delegation members plan
meeting Speaker of the Armenian Parliament Arthur Baghdasaryan and
the Head of Standing Committee on Defense, National Security and
Internal Affairs, Head of Associative Delegation of Armenia to
Parliamentary Assembly of NATO Mher Shahgeldyan. The same day there
will be held a “round table” attended by members of the mentioned
Committee of the Armenian Parliament, during which issues related to
issues of local reforms, international security and NATO’s role,
foreign policy and security priorities as well as Armenia’s
contribution into regional security. Also in building of Greek
Embassy in Yerevan, the Delegation members will meet with NATO
nations Ambassadors accredited in Armenia.
As it is mentioned in the press release, on September 14 the NATO
Delegation members will hold a “round table” with NGO representatives
as well as will meet Armenian President Robert Kocharian, Armenian
Defense Minister Serge Sargsian, Deputy Armenian Foreign Minister
Tatul Margaryan and Armenian Internal Affairs Minister Hayk
Harutyunyan. T.M. –0-

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NEWLY APPOINTED AMBASSADOR OF FINLAND TO ARMENIA PRESENTS HER
CREDENTIALS TO THE RA PRESIDENT

YEREVAN, September 10. /ARKA/. The newly appointed Extraordinary and
Plenipotentiary Ambassador of Finland to Armenia Teri Hakkala
(residence in Helsinki), presented her credentials to Robert
Kocharian, the RA President today. According to the Press Service
Department of RA President, during the meeting, Robert Kocharian
stated that Armenia attaches importance to relations with Finland. In
her turn Teri Hakkala mentioned the interest of her country in
development of cooperation with countries of South Caucasus and
Armenia in particular. The Ambassador noted that Finland “closely
watches the processes taking place in the region”. She attached great
importance to inclusion of Armenia in Wider Europe/New Neighbors
European Union initiative which will open real opportunities for
cooperation. She also mentioned that Finnish businessmen are very
interested in Armenia. According to the press release, the sides
emphasized the significance of establishment of a corresponding
agreement-legal base and conduct of joint business-forums for the
development of business relations between the two countries. L.V.—0–

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ARMENIA EXPO 2004 4TH COMMERCIAL AND INDUSTRIAL EXPOSITION FORUM
OPENS TODAY IN YEREVAN

YEREVAN, September, 10. /ARKA/. Armenia Expo 2004 universal regional
commercial and industrial exposition forum opened today in Yerevan.
As Arsen Kazaryan, the Head of the Union for Manufacturers and
Businessmen (Employers) of Armenia, the exposition has become a
traditional arrangement of regular character where the enterprises
present their achievements in industry, trade and services. He
mentioned that the expositions are useful from the point of view of
both internal cooperation and external economic partnerships. He also
said that the current exposition is larger in number of participating
countries and companies, in particular, this year 170 companies
participate in the exposition, against 125 in 2003, at that the
number of participating countries has grown by 25% and makes 15. “We
can also mention the growth of interest on the part of foreign
investors towards Armenia, also the expositions are the main way to
present Armenia’s production”, said Kazaryan.
6 branch expositions are presented at the expo-forum – Industrial
Armenia EXPO, Construct EXPO, Trans EXPO, Polygraphy Publishing
Advertising EXPO, EXPO Food&Drinks and “Comp-EXPO”. The overall
exhibition area makes 1,1 thou sq. m. , which is by 22% larger than
the territory provided in 2003. Besides Armenia and NKR, the
expo-forum included representatives of the USA, Russia, Belarus,
Japan, Czech Republic, Germany, Syria and Iran.
The forum is organized by LOGOS Expo Center with the assistance of
the RA Ministry of Foreign Affairs, RA Ministry of Trade and Economic
Development, the Union of Manufacturers and Businessmen of Armenia
and Armenian Development Agency. The forum will last till September
13.
Armenia Expo 2003 3rd regional universal commercial and industrial
expo-forum was held in Yerevan on September 12-15. L.V.–0–

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VIGEN CHITECHYAN RELIEVED OF HIS POST OF A COORDINATOR OF THE MISSION
OF ARMENIA IN NATO

YEREVAN, September 10. /ARKA/. Vigen Chitechyan was relieved of his
post of a Coordinator of the mission of Armenia in North-Atlantic
Treaty Organization (NATO). According to the RA President’s Press
Service Department, the decree was signed by the President of Armenia
Robert Kocharyan. By another decree Samuel Lazarian is appointed to
the same position. A.H.—0–

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RA PRESIDENT HAS A WORKING MEETING WITH THE LEADERS OF THE PARTIES OF
THE POLITICAL COALITION

YEREVAN, September 10. /ARKA/. RA President Robert Kocharyan had a
working meeting with the leaders of the parties of the political
coalition. According to the RA President’s Press Service Department,
issues connected with the constitutional reforms and the forthcoming
session of the RA NA were discussed during the meeting. A.H.–0–

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ARKA News Agency – 09/09/2004

ARKA News Agency
Sept 9 2004

Accoiding to new report prepared by WB Group “Doing Business in 2005”
Armenia became one of the leaders on the ease of registering property

Center for Public Dialogue and Initiatives to conduct interregional
action against terrorism in Armenia on Sep 11

Armenia and Armenians played important role in opening of new
horizons and ways of development for iran – Iranian President

The President of Iran is granted Honorary Doctor’s Degree of Yerevan
State University

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ACCOIDING TO NEW REPORT PREPARED BY WB GROUP “DOING BUSINESS IN 2005”
ARMENIA BECAME ONE OF THE LEADERS ON THE EASE OF REGISTERING PROPERTY

YEREVAN, September 9. /ARKA/. According to new report prepared by WB
Group “Doing Business in 2005” following countries’ reforms, several
ECA countries entered the top 10 lists on specific areas of business
regulation, for example: Lithuania and Armenia on the ease of
registering property; Albania, Slovakia, and Latvia on legal rights
of borrowers and lenders; and the Czech Republic and Slovakia on
protecting investors. However, Serbia and Montenegro, Slovenia, and
Poland now rank worse on the time required to enforce contracts.
Of the 58 countries that reformed business regulation or strengthened
the protection of property rights in the last year, 16 were in ECA.
EU entrants reformed the most; Central Asian economies reformed the
least. Latvia and Armenia established public credit registries, and
Bulgaria established a private credit bureau to facilitate lending.
The top 20 economies in terms of ease of doing business are New
Zealand, United States, Singapore, Hong Kong/China, Australia,
Norway, United Kingdom, Canada, Sweden, Japan, Switzerland, Denmark,
Netherlands, Finland, Ireland, Belgium, Lithuania, Slovakia,
Botswana, and Thailand. L.D. –0–

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CENTER FOR PUBLIC DIALOGUE AND INITIATIVES TO CONDUCT INTERREGIONAL
ACTION AGAINST TERRORISM IN ARMENIA ON SEP 11

YEREVAN, September 9. /ARKA/. Center for Public Dialogue and
Initiatives will conduct interregional action against terrorism in
Armenia on Sep 11, the Center told ARKA. The action will be conducted
in 8 regions of Armenia (Yerevan, Aragatsotn, Armavir, Gegharkunik,
Kotayk, Shirak, Syunik, Lori) with participation of students.
Press release said that the organizers of the activity condemn cruel
crime committed by the terrorists on Sep 1, 2004 in Beslan and Sep
11, 2001 in USA. L.D. –0–

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ARMENIA AND ARMENIANS PLAYED IMPORTANT ROLE IN OPENING OF NEW
HORIZONS AND WAYS OF DEVELOPMENT FOR IRAN – IRANIAN PRESIDENT

YEREVAN, September 9. /ARKA/. Armenia and Armenians played important
role in opening of new horizons and ways of development for IRAN,
Iranian President Mohammad Hatami stated today in Yerevan State
University. According to him, creation and development of new
educational, scientific and industrial institutions in Iran owe to
important steps of Armenia. “Lots of new branches of science and
technology are imported in Iran by Armenian specialists and first
steps in editors activity of Iranian press were supported by Armenian
intelligence”, Hatami stressed. This history is a good heritage for
today’s and future cooperation. He also said that “Iranians are
confident in frankness, sincerity, benevolence and pride of Armenian
people”. L.D. –0–

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THE PRESIDENT OF IRAN IS GRANTED HONORARY DOCTOR’S DEGREE OF YEREVAN
STATE UNIVERSITY

YEREVAN, September 9. /ARKA/. The President of Iran Mohammad Khatami
is granted Honorary Doctor’s Degree of Yerevan State University
(YSU). As Radik Martirosyan, the Rector of YSU stated when awarding
the diploma of an Honorary Doctor to Khatami, the President of the
Islamic state was granted the degree for his active public, political
and scientific work. Besides, Martirosyan awarded Khatami the best
reward of YSU – the medal of YSU. A.H.–0–

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Cradle of civilisation

Cradle of civilisation

The Independent – United Kingdom
Sep 11, 2004

Tony Wheeler

The Paykan car swerved in to the roadside. A portly gentleman levered
himself out from the driver’s seat and steamed towards me, like
the Titanic on a pressing engagement with an iceberg. I was in Iran
and I was about to be kidnapped. “I am a guide, I speak English,”
announced Ahmad Pourseyedi as he grabbed my arm. “Come, we will go
to the Fin Gardens.”

There was no arguing. The fact that I had only arrived in Kashan half
an hour earlier and was on my way to dinner merely enabled me to put
off the inevitable for 12 hours. The next morning I belonged to Ahmad,
in fact I had become part of his family. At each of the beautiful
traditional homes for which Kashan will, one day, be justifiably
famous, the ticket- seller was expected, no, commanded, to offer me
the family discount.

It was a typically Iranian encounter. I cannot remember the last
country I visited where there was such an overwhelming urge to make
you feel welcome, to roll out the Persian carpet, to include you in
the family gathering.

So this is what life is like on the Axis of Evil. I had driven through
Iran 32 years earlier, during the Shah’s reign, when Iran was firmly
part of Washington’s Axis of Good. “That was a golden era,” said
Mohamad, the tourist guide I’d encountered at the stunning restaurant
in the old Hammam- e Vakil in Shiraz, when I told him about my trip
in the 1970s. “There were problems, but we had so much more freedom
in those days.”

Not quite, I thought, thinking of the dreaded Savak, the Shah’s secret
police who were every bit as fearsome as Iran’s religious police
are today. “After every revolution there are winners and losers,”
mused Mansoor, back in the capital. “The Shah thought Iran ended at
Tehran. He neglected the country and the villages. People outside
Tehran are much better off now. Look out on the street,” he indicated,
pointing at the tumultuous traffic that boiled all around us. “You
see plenty of women driving, don’t you? That wouldn’t have happened
in the Shah’s era.”

I’d started my short tour of Iran aboard a new Iran Air Airbus which
zipped me south to Shiraz. The ticket for the London-Paris segment
of the journey cost pounds 15. When the poet Omar Khayyam wrote,
“a loaf of bread, a jug of wine and thou”, he was probably dreaming
about a jug of Shiraz. Sadly, although Shiraz, that dark peppery
red, is popular worldwide, you won’t find any Shiraz in Shiraz
today. Or anywhere else in the strictly teetotal Islamic Republic
of Iran. Fortunately I had sampled some Shiraz Shiraz way back on my
first visit, in the back of a VW Kombi van at a campsite in Isfahan.

Iran’s favourite wine may be off the list, but Omar Khayyam was never
Iran’s favourite poet in the first place. His popularity in the West –
all that “moving finger moving on” verse – is in part due to Edward
FitzGerald, who put a lot of effort into translating and promoting
him. Back home, his reputation rests on his mastery of mathematics
rather than his prowess with prose.

Saidi and Hafez, both of whom are buried in Shiraz, are the big
names in a country where poetry is still important. Hafez’s tomb
stands in a beautiful garden and features a popular tea house where
you can sit around, puff on a qalyan (water pipe), sip chay (tea)
and quote the master. Much of life takes place around a teapot. I
trace my 30-year love-affair with the drink straight back to my first
visit to Turkey and Iran in the 1970s. Tea had always been a stewed,
milked and sugared affair until I discovered it could come in tiny
glasses and, while sugar was on offer, it wasn’t essential.

Shiraz has a fine old fort, some interesting mosques and mausoleums
and the Bagh-e Eram (“Garden of Paradise”). But the real attraction
is 30 miles away, where the ancient ruins of Persepolis perch on a
plateau below a cliff face. Darius I (the Great) started building
his showpiece city in 512 BC. Its glory days ended in 330BC when
Alexander the Great invaded Persia, sacked the city and burnt it down.

Historians are uncertain whether the demolition of Persepolis was
the unfortunate result of a drunken party that got out of hand, or
deliberate revenge for the destruction of Athens 150 years earlier
by Xerxes, Darius I’s successor. Today things move faster: it took
less than two years from the attack on the Twin Towers to the trashing
of Baghdad. Alexander may have been slower in exacting revenge, but
he was also somewhat more organised than the modern-day invaders of
the Middle East. He cleared Persepolis before it was burnt – signs at
the site note that emptying its treasury took 3,000 camels and mules
to cart off the “12,000 talents” of silver. It’s the bas-reliefs
that really tell the Persepolis story, and the impressive Apadana
Stairway has the best of them. The 23 subject nations who turned up
to show their respects march in bas-relief line with gifts such as
a lioness and two cubs (from the Elamite delegation), a humped bull
(from the Gandarians of the Kabul Valley, the people who carved out
the Bamiyan buddhas), bags of gold (from the Indians of the Sind; even
then gold was important in India) and a giraffe and elephant tusks
(from the Ethiopians).

I’d intended to take a bus the 275 miles to Yazd the next day, but
Hassan, my Persepolis taxi driver, had been such a friendly guide that
I decided to splurge pounds 35 for air-conditioned comfort in the 40C
heat. We cruised off with his Chris de Burgh tape providing a wholly
inappropriate soundtrack and his nine-year-old daughter along for the
ride. Yazd’s Zoroastrian fire temple and towers of silence (where,
once upon a time, vultures would pick over dead bodies) provide a
reminder of this Islamic republic’s religious past. Yazd is also
a centre for underground irrigation channels known as qanat. The
city’s water channels may be hidden from view, but examples of
its other traditional architectural features are very evident. Any
worthwhile old home is topped by what looks like a cross between a
stylish chimney and a lookout tower. These badgirs (“wind towers”)
are cunningly designed to catch the breeze and funnel it down over a
pool of water in the house, providing a surprisingly effective form
of natural air conditioning. From Yazd I took a bus – air-conditioned,
comfortable and cheap (less than pounds 1.50) – for the 200-mile trip
to Isfahan. This city alone could justify any trip to Iran. It’s hard
to decide whether the prime attraction is the magnificent sweep of the
Emam Khomeini Square, with its perimeter of shopping arcades and its
breathtaking blue-tiled mosques, or the gentle curve of the Zayandeh
River with its multi-arched bridges and fringe of parks. I wandered
down one side of the river, pausing at a teahouse built into the Chubi
bridge. I then stopped for tea again just downriver from the Si-o-Seh
(“Bridge of 33 Arches”). Finally I walked back to the main square for
yet more tea, this time in a shop perched beside the bazaar entrance
gate at the north end of the square.

By the time I reached the south end, heading towards the restaurant
I’d chosen for dinner, the sun was down and the floodlit blue tiles
of the huge Emam Mosque had an eye-catching glow. A carpet dealer
intercepted me and after a short sales pitch switched to tour guide,
suggesting I should have another look at the mosque. “If you have
seen it in daylight you will find it quite different now that night
has fallen,” he says.

Unfortunately, a guard stops me. “It’s prayer time,” he says. “You
cannot go in.” Immediately an animated discussion started up with the
men sitting around him. Within minutes he relents. “They all say you
must see the mosque by night,” he explains. “If you keep over to one
side you will not disturb anybody. Go ahead.”

The next morning there are the shaking minarets to quake at, an
amazing pigeon house sited in the middle of a roundabout, and the
extravagant frescoes of the Vank Cathedral to admire before I head
off to Kashan. The cathedral is one of a group of Armenian churches
in the affluent Jolfa area, with its elegant cafes and glossy shops.

En route to Kashan there’s another diversion, this time to Abyaneh. The
old village’s twisting lanes and mud architecture has brought it
Unesco recognition, but as yet few tourists. If it were in France
or Spain every other house would be a cafe or craft shop. Here
there’s a solitary counter selling a handful of souvenirs. Between
the village and Kashan I had a brief encounter with that other Iran,
the one that features in the press much more often than beautiful
hotels and friendly people. “It’s a nuclear research centre,” my
guide explains as we pass anti-aircraft gun emplacements beside the
road and half-buried buildings.

Ahmad, my Kashan kidnapper, drops me off at the bus station after
checking what time my lift departs Tehran. I’d even been round to
his house where his wife brought us lunch while we took a break
during the midday heat. I’d enjoyed cruising around Kashan in his
Paykan car, “arrow” in Persian. Thirty years ago, in what seems like
a previous lifetime, I was a young engineer with the Rootes Group
car manufacturers in Coventry. I worked on the old Hillman Hunter,
a project known in-house as “Arrow”. They’re still the most popular
vehicles in Iran.

SURVIVAL KIT

GETTING THERE

British Airways (0870 850 9850; ) and Iran Air (020-7493
8618; ) fly to Tehran from Heathrow; Mahan Airlines
(0121 554 1555; ) flies from Birmingham. Fares
are around pounds 390.

STAYING THERE

In Tehran, the Atlas Hotel (00 98 21 88 00 408) has double rooms from
315,000 Iranian rials (pounds 20). Hotels are cheaper in other cities;
in Yazd you can stay in a restored traditional courtyard house for
around 160,000 Iranian rials (pounds 10).

RED TAPE

British passport holders require a visa to visit Iran as a tourist. The
Embassy of Iran (0906 302 0600; ) provides
these for pounds 54. Applications (both online and through the post)
take around one month to process. Before you can apply for a visa,
you must first have authorisation from an agent, details of which are
provided by the Embassy or Travcour (020-7223 5295; ),
the visa and passport service. For this you must send two passport
photos, a photocopy of your passport and details of your itinerary.

www.ba.com
www.iranair.co.uk
www.mahanairlines.com
www.iran-embassy.org.uk
www.travcour.com

ANC News: Schwarzenegger Passes Bill On Armenian Genocide InsuranceC

************************************************** ****************************
Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region
104 North Belmont Street, Suite 200
Glendale, CA 91206

Phone: 818.500.1918 Fax: 818.246.7353
Email: [email protected]_
Website: _www.anca.org_
******************************************************************************

PRESS RELEASE +++ PRESS RELEASE

For Immediate Release: Friday, September 10, 2004

Contact: Armen Carapetian
(818) 500-1918

ANCA Praises Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger For Signing Into Law
Poochigian Bill on Armenian Genocide Heirs

Los Angeles, CA – The Armenian National Committee of America
â^À^Ó Western Region (ANCA-WR) praised California Governor Arnold
Schwarzenegger for signing into law Senate Bill 1689, which will exempt
Armenian Genocide life insurance settlements from state taxation
and other calculations related to income. SB 1689 was authored by
California State Senator Chuck Poochigian.

â^À^ÜSenator Poochigianâ^À^Ùs bill addresses an injustice that New
York Life insurance committed against its policy holders who were
massacred by the Turkish authorities,â^À^Ý commented ANCA-WR Executive
Director Ardashes Kassakhian.

â^À^ÜThe road to justice for the victims of the Armenian Genocide
has been long and arduous. The passage of SB 1689 is an important
step in this process,â^À^Ý added Kassakhian.

The exemptions in this bill, which will now become law, are similar
to exemptions provided to recipients of the Holocaust. This bill
was crafted due to longstanding insurance policy claims by survivors
and descendants of the Armenian Genocide. From the period of 1915 to
1923, Armenians were subjected to a systematic genocide perpetrated
by the Turkish Ottoman Empire. The Armenian Genocide is currently
and actively denied by the Republic of Turkey and their lobbyists
operating in the U.S. Congress.

Prior to 1915, the New York Life Insurance Company wrote thousands
of life insurance policies to Armenians living on historic Armenian
lands in the Ottoman Empire. New York Life had refused to pay out
many of the claims until a settlement was reached last year as a
result of a class action lawsuit. SB 1689 allows the victims and
their descendants to collect their settlements without being subject
to taxation by the State of California.

SB 1689 was introduced by Senator Poochigian on February 20, 2004 and
was subsequently referred to the committee on Revenue and Tax. The
bill was passed by a unanimous 11-0 vote in committee followed by a
37-0 vote by the entire State Senate. SB 1689 secured strong support
in the California State Assembly.
It was then sent to the Governor Schwarzenegger on September 2,
2004 and
quickly signed into law on September 10th.

The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) is the largest
and most influential Armenian American grassroots political
organization. Working in coordination with a network of offices,
chapters, and supporters throughout the United States and affiliated
organizations around the world, the ANCA actively
advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad
range of issues.

####

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly – 09/10/2004

RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
_________________________________________ ____________________
RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly
Vol. 4, No. 35, 10 September 2004

A Weekly Review of News and Analysis of Russian Domestic Politics

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HEADLINES:
* ORGANIZING SPONTANEITY
* THE KREMLIN’S REACTION: STAY THE COURSE
* THE KREMLIN AFTER BESLAN
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KREMLIN/WHITE HOUSE

ORGANIZING SPONTANEITY

By Julie A. Corwin

If the “Kursk” submarine disaster of August 2000 caused a
short-term dip in President Vladimir Putin’s popularity, it’s
not difficult to imagine that the trio of terrorists acts in the past
three weeks might also erode — if only temporarily — the 70
percent-plus approval ratings of Russia’s commander in chief.
After all, Putin came to power promising to “rub out” Chechen
terrorists in the outhouse. Now, he — rather than they — appears to
be on the run.
Although Putin’s popularity may suffer, it’s not
clear that any other politician or party will benefit. The response
to the events from Russia’s weakened political parties has
largely been confined to the issuing of public statements. It was the
Kremlin and regional authorities, after all, and not the political
opposition, who organized the nationwide “protest” against terrorism
held on 7 September. Writing in “Izvestiya” the same day, commentator
Aleksandr Arkhangelskii noted that while formally the trade unions
organized the gathering of more than 100,000 people in central Moscow
to express support of the people of Beslan, it was “understood” that
they were simply stand-ins for the authorities.
Similarly in other cities, regional youth organizations were
nominally listed as the organizers for protests, when in fact it was
regional officials who were arranging the events, frequently by
resorting to “traditional organizational methods,” “Nezavisimaya
gazeta” reported on 8 September. And, if “Vedomosti’s” reporting
on 8 September is correct, deputy presidential-administration head
Vladislav Surkov deserves the real credit, since he reportedly
orchestrated the series of antiterrorist rallies on the
president’s orders. Surkov is widely credited for overseeing
Unified Russia’s victory in the December 2003 State Duma
election.
Writing in “Izvestiya,” Arkhangelskii asked, “Why does our
opposition prefer to tearfully complain about the Kremlin, but does
not summon the people even when they would follow?” He continued,
“Yes, the authorities would not allow meetings with antigovernment
slogans…[but] what if [we] were simply silent, standing shoulder to
shoulder, elbow to elbow, demonstrating to ourselves and to our hated
enemy and that [we] are not afraid? And, afterwards having revived
their trust and rallied potential voters, the opposition could
organize an antigovernment meeting under less dramatic
circumstances.”
Arkhangelskii answers his own question by pointing to the
personal shortcomings of individual liberal politicians. While those
may be contributing factors, another possibility is that the law on
public demonstrations and street rallies is already having its
intended effect. According to the new law, relevant authorities must
be notified no more than 15 days and no less than 10 days before an
event, which means that the organizers of the 7 September rally
against terrorism should have applied for permission sometime between
22 and 27 August — before the seizure of the school in Beslan even
began, “Kommersant-Daily” noted on 8 September. However,
mayoral-administration officials denied that any regulations had been
violated in order for the event to be held, and Moscow trade-union
leader Mikhail Nagaitsev told the daily that the meeting was
originally going to be held just to commemorate the 25 August
collision of the two airplanes that resulted in 90 deaths. However,
the Club for Heroes of the Soviet Union, which was another one of the
formal organizers of the event, told the daily that it learned of the
meeting only on 6 September.
The political opposition not only lacks the assurance that
legal officials will look the other way when it comes to completing
the necessary paperwork on time to hold a demonstration, they also
lack the “administrative resources” necessary to ensure a good
turnout. According to gazeta.ru on 7 September, railway workers,
medical-establishment employees, and students at higher educational
institutions were all “tasked” with attending the 7 September protest
against terror. According to “Kommersant-Daily” on 8 September, the
police helpfully rearranged protesters so that persons bearing the
same signs wouldn’t be standing next to one another.
The irony is that all the arm-twisting and heavy-handed
organizing may not have been completely necessary. “Vedomosti”
reported that some people came to the rally in Moscow simply because
they couldn’t stay home and watch TV. And “Nezavisimaya gazeta”
noted that many residents of St. Petersburg of their own accord
burned candles in their windows in memory of the victims of Beslan.
At the demonstration, everyone cried, even men, especially when two
large screens showed fresh news from Beslan.
Pollsters will soon measure how and whether Putin’s
popularity has been affected by Beslan. A longer-lasting effect of
the recent wave of terrorism than a movement up or down in
Putin’s approval rating may be a further expansion of the state
on the pretext of preventing new terrorist acts. Sverdlovsk Governor
Eduard Rossel, a recent convert to the cause of the Unified Russia
party, suggested at a press conference in Yekaterinburg on 6
September that like Americans, Russians are ready to give up part of
their rights for greater safety, “Novyi region” reported on 6
September. Rossel said: “We are ready to limit our rights in the name
of the security of our children. Today we say: less political
intrigues, more security. Society is ready to grant the president
additional powers in the struggle against terrorism.” And with
additional powers and an even stronger state, President Putin may
find public opinion less and less relevant.

WAR ON TERROR

THE KREMLIN’S REACTION: STAY THE COURSE

By Robert Coalson

Nearly a week after the horrifying denouement of the hostage
crisis at a school in North Ossetia, the Russian government seems to
have formulated its response, a reaction that is characterized by
bolstering the mechanisms the administration of President Vladimir
Putin has installed over the last five years, rather than by any
perceptible change of course. Putin and other officials have,
predictably, ruled out any softening of the government’s policies
in Chechnya, going so far as to deny that there is any connection
between the situation in the breakaway republic and the Beslan
hostage crisis. “Just imagine that people who shoot children in the
back came to power anywhere on our planet,” Putin told Western
journalists and experts during a Kremlin meeting on 7 September,
Russian media reported. “Just ask yourself that and you will have no
more questions about our policy in Chechnya.”
He pledged that the Kremlin will proceed with its policy of
installing a new administration in Chechnya. “We will strengthen law
enforcement by staffing the police with Chechens and gradually
withdraw our troops to barracks, and leave as small a contingent
there as we feel necessary, just like the United States does in
California and Texas,” Putin said. On 9 September, the government
announced a $10 million reward for Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov
and for radical field commander Shamil Basaev, formally assigning the
two men equal culpability for the Beslan events and seeming to
destroy any remaining hope that the government might choose to
consider Maskhadov an acceptable partner in the search for a
political solution in the republic.
Having ruled out a change of course in this area, the Putin
administration has focused on containing the public and political
reaction to the events, which have been widely viewed as a failure of
the administration in the very area — security — that it came to
power promising to prioritize. The administration cannot help but be
stung by comparisons between the latest series of terrorist attacks
— in which well over 400 people have been killed, including the 90
who died when two civilian airliners were blown up on 24 August —
with the fall of 1999, when more than 200 people were killed in a
series of apartment-building bombings in several Russian cities and
Chechen militants launched a major incursion into neighboring
Daghestan. Putin was elected in large part because of his tough talk
in response to those events and widespread public insecurity.
Now, of course, the administration is doing everything it can
to make the claim that the latest incidents are not a continuation of
this violence, but the launching of a new war against Russia by
unspecified outside forces that are backed by other unspecified
outside forces. The administration so far has been more proactive in
responding to the potential for a political crisis created by the
Beslan events than in responding to that attack itself.
Measures have been taken to keep the public focused on the
tragedy of the events and on the need for ever greater unity, themes
that Putin stressed during his 4 September speech to the country.
“This is not a challenge to the president, parliament, or
government,” Putin said. “It is a challenge to all of Russia, to our
entire people.” He called on people to show their “responsibility as
citizens” and said Russia is stronger than the terrorists because of
“our sense of solidarity.” The wave of government-orchestrated public
demonstrations against terrorism in Moscow, St. Petersburg, and other
cities was the most visible of these efforts, with the administration
marshalling its control of national television and of the
quasi-independent Federation of Trade Unions to bring out good
crowds. Only a few voices, such as that of Free Russia leader Irina
Khakamada, could be heard pointing out that a spontaneous
demonstration would have been more satisfying.
On the political level, the Kremlin-linked leftist
“opposition” party Motherland has called for the resignation of the
government in response to Beslan, a move that takes some of the
pressure off of Putin. If truly independent forces in the Duma such
as the Communist Party insist on forcing a discussion of the
terrorist attacks, Motherland and Unified Russia will easily be able
to make sure the spotlight remains on the cabinet and not on the
administration. Although such a turn of events is highly unlikely,
even the resignations of some cabinet members would not be perceived
as a personal defeat for Putin, since the current government has been
widely billed as a “technical government” intended to implement and
take the heat for painful reforms such as the recently adopted
social-benefits bill.
Perhaps the most telling example of how the government used
the tools at its disposal to protect itself is how deftly the
security forces were apparently able to deal with journalistic
threats to the regime, as opposed to their less-stellar protection of
civilians from terrorists. “Novaya gazeta” reporter Anna
Politkovskaya and RFE/RL correspondent Andrei Babitskii, both of whom
have long been considered by the Kremlin to be sympathetic to the
Chechen cause, were both intercepted well before they got anywhere
near Beslan and entirely prevented from reporting on the crisis.
Babitskii was arrested on trumped-up charges in a Moscow airport,
while Politkovskaya was apparently poisoned on a flight to
Rostov-na-Donu, spending the rest of the crisis in a local hospital.
In these cases, the security organs, the police, and the courts seem
to have worked in close coordination to prevent any damage to the
Kremlin’s image or version of reality.
The Kremlin’s response to Beslan is predictable, given
the instruments of management that it has strengthened and cultivated
over the past five years. Other instruments — independent political
parties, judiciary, mass media, and public organizations — might
have produced a significant change in political course, or perhaps
even a significant crisis of stability. Instead, the
administration’s control of the security organs, law enforcement,
the mass media, public debate, and the political process predetermine
that its focus will be on managing the perception of the crisis first
of all. And the more the foundations of that system are shaken by the
events, the more the administration will bolster its control over
those instruments, ensuring a policy that amounts to nothing more
than “more of the same.”
Of course, the security situation in Chechnya and the North
Caucasus in general will have to be addressed. But that response will
not take into consideration calls for a real political process there
to replace the sham of stage-managed referendums and elections and
the facade of local administrations that is fully controlled by the
Kremlin. It will not take into consideration calls for an end to
human rights violations by federal forces in Chechnya: when asked
about this during his 7 September meeting with Western journalists,
Putin compared them to the events at Iraq’s Abu Ghurayb prison,
saying, “In war there are ugly processes that have their own logic.”
It will not take into consideration the widely perceived need to root
out the corruption that has almost certainly played a role in every
major terrorist incident Russia has faced in recent years.
Instead, the Kremlin will most likely rely on its control of
society, of information, and of the political process to cover up an
intensification of the military policies it has pursued in Chechnya
for most of the post-Soviet period. The information blockade of the
republic will be redoubled and the seemingly endless “antiterrorism
operation” there will continue. But these policies are not without
their risks. “There is fear if no one knows the truth,” Khakamada
told “The Moscow Times” on 8 September. “If people don’t
understand, it makes it easier for terrorists to buy people off. If
we are slaves, it is easier for them to recruit. The more things are
pushed underground, the better it is for the terrorists.”

THE KREMLIN AFTER BESLAN

By Victor Yasmann

President Vladimir Putin on 4 September appeared in a
nationally televised address in the wake of the bloodiest terrorism
incident in modern Russian history. He linked the takeover of a
school in Beslan and the deaths of hundreds of schoolchildren,
parents, and teachers to a series of other terrorist incidents that
have rocked the country since 24 August, including the 24 August
downing of two jet airliners and the 31 August suicide bombing
outside a Moscow subway station. In all, more than 400 people were
killed in less than 10 days.
“What we are dealing with are not isolated acts intended to
frighten us, not isolated terrorist attacks,” Putin said, according
to the text posted on the presidential website
(). “What we are facing is the direct
intervention of international terrorism directed against Russia.” He
added that the entire country is now engaged in “a total, cruel, and
full-scale war.”
Putin admitted that the country has been victimized by
terrorism because of its weakness. “We showed ourselves to be weak,”
he said. “And the weak get beaten.” He went on to say that this
weakness was a result of the collapse of the Soviet Union — an event
about which Putin expressed some regret — as well as Russia’s
inadequate defenses and pervasive corruption in the justice and
law-enforcement systems.
Putin also made several far-reaching statements that seem to
be a notable departure from his general policy of deferring to the
West and speaking of the need for cooperation with the United States
in combating international terrorism. For the first time in several
years, Putin said that Russia faces threats “both from the east and
the west.” Without specifically mentioning Chechnya or his own
policies in the Caucasus, Putin seemed to place the blame for the
increased terrorist activity in Russia on unspecified outside forces
that are threatened by Russia’s nuclear-power status. “Some would
like to tear from us a juicy chunk,” Putin said. “Others help them.
They help, reasoning that Russia still remains one of the world’s
major nuclear powers, and as such still represents a threat to them.
And so they reason that this threat should be removed. Terrorism, of
course, is just an instrument to achieve these aims.” Because
Russia’s nuclear arsenal is targeted primarily at the United
States, Putin seemed to be referring directly to that country.
However, does this really reflect the way Putin thinks? As a
former intelligence officer and a well-informed political leader, he
knows that the West has little reason to worry that Russia’s
nuclear weapons would be used in the current international
environment. The West is concerned, of course, that Russia’s
nuclear arsenal could be a tempting target for international
terrorists who are actively striving to acquire weapons of mass
destruction. These concerns are increased by the weak and corrupt
law-enforcement system that Putin describes.
It would seem, then, that Putin’s statements about
external forces working against Russia through terrorists were
addressed to his domestic audience, in an effort to avoid political
responsibility for the failure of his policies in Chechnya and the
Caucasus. He also undoubtedly wishes to avoid forcing his beloved
state-security organs to be accountable for this stark failure to
protect Russian citizens. The externalization of culpability is often
a defense of those in weak positions.
Effective Politics Foundation head and Kremlin insider Gleb
Pavlovskii told RTR on 6 September that during the Beslan siege the
present political system demonstrated its uselessness because no
political parties or politicians raised their voices against “the
lies that overflowed the whole country.”
Another Kremlin insider, National Strategy Institute head
Stanislav Belkovskii, told RFE/RL on 7 September that the Kremlin
administration was seized by panic and dismay during the crisis, as
reflected by numerous conflicting statements from Russian officials
during this time.
The Beslan crisis has highlighted the failure of the
Kremlin’s policies in Chechnya, despite the concerted efforts of
the Kremlin to deflect such considerations. Belkovskii noted that the
Kremlin’s policy in the region relies on pro-Moscow figures like
Ingush President Murat Zyazikov and Chechen leader Alu Alkhanov,
figures who all but disappeared from public view during the crisis.
The country’s political parties — on both ends of the
political spectrum — have only slowly been aroused from their
lethargy and begun to criticize Putin’s claims of external forces
behind the wave of terror. In a statement posted on its website
() on 7 September, the Communist Party said, “The
roots of the tragedy can be found not in ‘international
terrorism,’ which is a convenient smokescreen for the drama, but
inside the country.”
The Communist Party statement called for the resignation of
the entire Russian leadership. “The Putin regime directs all its
efforts toward the struggle with the [political] opposition, the
suppression of the independent mass media, with producing the
‘required results’ in elections, and the construction of a
vertical of power that proved helpless during this crisis,” the
statement said. “Law enforcement has been transformed into an
instrument for carrying out the authorities’ political orders.”
Yabloko leader Grigorii Yavlinskii on 7 September also called
for the resignation of the heads of the security organs and for the
creation of an independent commission to investigate the terrorist
attacks, grani.ru reported. The Motherland party similarly called for
the resignation of the government and for disbanding the Duma, which
it dismissed as “a rubber stamp,” the website reported.
Clearly, as the period of mourning recedes, many Russians are
seeing the real face of the country’s leadership in a whole new
light.

POLITICAL CALENDAR

8 September: Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmad Qurei will visit Russia

10-11 September: President Putin will visit Germany

12 September: Federation Council Chairman Sergei Mironov will
visit North Korea

13-14 September: Fourth annual meeting of the Russian Jewish Congress

14 September: British Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex, will
visit Petrozavodsk

14-17 September: Third annual Baikal Economic Forum will take place

15 September: Summit of CIS presidents will take place in
Astana, Kazakhstan

15 September: Russia will play supervisory role at OPEC
meeting in Vienna

15-18 September: The third International Conference of Mayors
of World Cities will be held in Moscow

15 September: Supreme Court will render a final decision on
when to hold gubernatorial elections in Samara Oblast

20 September: The State Duma’s fall session will begin

20-23 September: South Korean President Roh Moo Hyun to visit
Russia

21 September: U.S. pianist Van Cliburn will perform a concert
in Moscow in memory of the victims of the Beslan tragedy

26 September: State Duma will consider draft 2005 budget in
its first reading

29 September: Auction for the government’s stake in LUKoil will be
held

October: President Putin will visit China

October: International forum of the Organization of the
Islamic Conference will be held in Moscow

1 October: Deadline for population to select a management
company to handle their pension monies, according to
“Kommersant-Daily” on 3 September

1 October: Date by which the government will decide whether
to sell a controlling stake in Aeroflot, according to Economic
Development and Trade Minister German Gref

7 October: President Putin’s birthday

10 October: Mayoral elections scheduled for Magadan

23-26 October: Second anniversary of the Moscow theater
hostage crisis

25 October: First anniversary of former Yukos head Mikhail
Khodorkovskii’s arrest at an airport in Novosibirsk

31 October: Presidential election in Ukraine

November: Gubernatorial election in Pskov and Kurgan oblasts

14 November: Mayoral election will take place in Blagoveshchensk

20 November: Sixth anniversary of the killing of State Duma
Deputy Galina Starovoitova

22 November: President Putin to visit Brazil

December: A draft law on toll roads will be submitted to the
government, according to the Federal Highways Agency’s
Construction Department on 6 April

December: Gubernatorial elections in Vladimir, Bryansk, Kamchatka,
Ulyanovsk, and Volgograd oblasts; Khabarovsk Krai; and
Ust-Ordynskii Autonomous Okrug

December: Presidential elections in Marii-El and Khakasia republics

5 December: By-elections for State Duma seats will be held in
two single-mandate districts in Ulyanovsk and Moscow

5 December: Gubernatorial election will be held in Astrakhan Oblast

29 December: State Duma’s fall session will come to a close

1 February 2005: Former President Boris Yeltsin’s 74th birthday

March 2005: Gubernatorial election in Saratov Oblast.

*********************************************************
Copyright (c) 2004. RFE/RL, Inc. All rights reserved.

The “RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly” is prepared by Julie A. Corwin
on the basis of a variety of sources. It is distributed every
Wednesday.

Direct comments to Julie A. Corwin at [email protected].
For information on reprints, see:

Back issues are online at

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.kremlin.ru
http://www.kprf.ru
http://www.rferl.org/about/content/request.asp
http://www.rferl.org/reports/rpw/

Melkonian Alumni: Founders’ nephew joins Melkonian campaign

PRESS RELEASE/NEWS REVIEW

MELKONIAN ALUMNI CYPRUS

Contact: Masis der Parthogh

P.O. Box 16077, CY 2085
Nicosia, Cyprus.
Tel. +-357 22 678666
Fax. +-357 22 678664
Email: [email protected]

Founders’ nephew joins Melkonian campaign

Cyprus Weekly – Friday, September 10, 2004

THE worldwide campaign to save the Melkonian School in Nicosia took
a new turn this week as Jack R. Melkonian, a nephew of the founders,
joined the campaign at a crucial meeting in London with delegates of
the alumni and friends.

The London meeting decided to take joint action to challenge and
prevent a decision if the US-based central board of the AGBU (Armenian
General Benevolent Union) to close down the Melkonian next year.

Taking part in the meeting were alumni representatives from Cyprus,
the UK, the USA, Canada and Lebanon, while Jack Melkonian represented
the family of the brothers who founded the shool 80 years ago.

An announcement by the alumni said: “It was a most interesting meeting,
Mr Melkonian is fully in agreement with the joint strategic and legal
action to be taken, on the advice of legal counsel presented by law
experts in Cyprus and overseas.”

The meeting expressed its gratitude to the government of Cyprus for
its support and the warm hospitality it continues to provide the
Melkonian Educational Institute and the welfare and education of the
Armenian community.

F18News: Turkmenistan – Baptists raided and Jehovah’s Witnesses reje

FORUM 18 NEWS SERVICE, Oslo, Norway

The right to believe, to worship and witness
The right to change one’s belief or religion
The right to join together and express one’s belief

=================================================

Friday 10 September 2004
TURKMENISTAN: BAPTISTS RAIDED AND JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES REJECT PRESIDENTIAL
PORTRAITS

In the third known set of raids on religious communities in August, police
interrogated and threatened members of a Baptist church in the western town
of Balkanabad, warning Nikolai Matsenko that any further unregistered
services in his home will lead to fines. Meanwhile a Jehovah’s Witness
elder told Forum 18 News Service from the capital Ashgabad that if his
faith gets registration, it will reject official demands made of other
faiths to hang the country’s flag and a portrait of the president where it
worships. “These are unacceptable demands,” he declared. Forum 18
has been unable to get confirmation of a 5 September report that President
Saparmurat Niyazov ordered the registration procedure for religious
organisations to be tightened up once more.

TURKMENISTAN: BAPTISTS RAIDED AND JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES REJECT PRESIDENTIAL
PORTRAITS

By Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service

As an unconfirmed report says President Saparmurat Niyazov has ordered
rules on registering religious communities to be tightened up once again,
Forum 18 News Service has learnt that police launched another major
crackdown on a Baptist congregation in the western town of Balkanabad
(formerly Nebit-Dag) in late August, threatening church members that if
they meet for worship again they will be fined. Meanwhile, a Jehovah’s
Witness elder has told Forum 18 from the capital Ashgabad that although his
community is planning to lodge a registration application, it will not
accept official demands made of other faiths to hang the country’s flag in
places of worship and a portrait of the president. “These are
unacceptable demands,” the elder, who preferred not to be named, told
Forum 18 on 10 September. “The constitution is clear: religion and the
state are separate. Plus as Jehovah’s Witnesses we do not get involved in
politics.”

An officer of the criminal investigation department arrived at the
Balkanabad home of Nikolai Matsenko in the afternoon of 20 August, Baptists
in Turkmenistan told Forum 18 on 28 August. After questioning him about the
church’s activity, the officer warned him that if any further services take
place in his flat he will be fined. Later that evening, another police
officer arrived at Matsenko’s home, presenting himself as the new local
policeman and declaring that he had come to get to know him.

At 11 pm the following evening, a group of people knocked on Matsenko’s
door. One of them introduced himself as the local policeman (although this
was not the same man as the officer who had arrived the previous day).
“They insistently demanded that he open the door and let them into the
flat,” the Baptists told Forum 18. “But as it was night, brother
Nikolai didn’t open the door. Threatening dire consequences, they
left.”

The Baptists reported that police visited several other church members in
the town, including new converts, at the end of August. One young man was
forcibly dragged from his home to the police station. “All were asked
exactly the same questions about the internal life of the church,” the
Baptists complained.

The Balkanabad Baptist congregation belongs to a Baptist network of
churches that refuse to register on principle in any of the former Soviet
republics where they operate, regarding such registration as unacceptable
state interference. Matsenko was among a large group of church members in
Balkanabad given heavy fines at the beginning of the year for participation
in the church (see F18News 9 January 2004
).

August saw several other raids on religious communities. The secret police
raided a Baptist home on 4 August in Abadan (formerly Bezmein) near
Ashgabad, where a prayer and Bible reading service was underway (see
F18News 9 August 2004 ).
Three days later police raided the home of an Adventist family in the
eastern city of Turkmenabad [Chärjew], even though no religious
meeting was in progress (see F18News 11 August 2004
).

The Ashgabad Jehovah’s Witness elder told Forum 18 that their communities
still cannot meet in large numbers. “Everything is continuing as
before,” he declared. “We can only meet in small groups, maybe
five or at most six people.” He confirmed that the two Jehovah’s
Witness prisoners, Mansur Masharipov and Vepa Tuvakov, both arrested in May
and sentenced to a year and a half in prison, have not been freed (see
F18News 25 June 2004 ).

There appears to have been little progress on registering religious
communities. So far this year, only the Adventists, one group of Baptists,
the Baha’is and the Hare Krishna community are known to have received
registration. Many others who have applied or sought information on how to
apply languish without registration. As Turkmenistan’s religious law
specifically prohibits unregistered religious activity, failure to gain
registration can have serious consequences.

The exiled human rights group the Turkmenistan Helsinki Initiative reported
on 7 September that some ethnic Kurds – about 6,000 of whom live
mainly in Ashgabad and other southern regions of the country along the
border with Iran – are unable to practice their faith freely. Most
are of Sunni Muslim background, and can therefore worship in
government-approved mosques. “However, there are also Shia Kurds and
even Christians who often face problems regarding freedom of religion with
the local special services,” the group reported.

Particularly affected are Kurds who belong to the Yezidi faith, a uniquely
Kurdish ancient faith. Seiran Amanov, a resident of Bikrov near Ashgabad,
told the Turkmenistan Helsinki Initiative that his religious affiliation
has meant that he has been repeatedly interrogated by the secret police and
has been accused of belonging to a “dangerous Islamic sect”.
“As Seiran states, this happens despite the fact that everybody knows
two religious movements of the Kurds: Yezidism and Aliallahism.”

The Jehovah’s Witnesses and Yezidis are among many faiths in Turkmenistan
that do not have registration, including Pentecostals and other Evangelical
Christians, Catholics, the Armenian Apostolic Church, Lutherans, Shia
Muslims and Jews.

However, even registration appears to be of little help in being able to
function. Adventist pastor Pavel Fedotov complained in early August that
his church is unable to rent anywhere to hold services (see F18News 11
August 2004 ). Baptist
and Hare Krishna leaders have made similar complaints to Forum 18 that
registration has not helped their communities function openly.

One Baha’i leader in Ashgabad told the Turkmenistan Helsinki Initiative
that despite the group’s new registration the authorities have made life
for the community very difficult, banning it from renting places for
meetings. A secret government order bans registered religious and civic
groups from opening accounts at any of Ashgabad’s banks, while the new
registration rules require a bank account for all financial transactions,
the group reported on 15 August.

A local Baha’i reported that mainly old people who have a long association
with the faith keep in contact with the community. “This can partly be
explained by the fact that special services have conducted meetings with
many Baha’i followers and threatened them with dismissal from work,”
the Baha’i told the Turkmenistan Helsinki Initiative. “So registration
by itself does not guarantee that we can profess our faith openly. I think
this easing of registration restrictions has merely a declaratory
character.”

The German-based Central Asian Press Agency reported on 5 September that
President Niyazov had issued an instruction to the Adalat Ministry at a
conference of law-enforcement officers that it should tighten up “the
rules for registering religious sects and non-governmental
organisations”, as well as to work closely with the National Security
Ministry “to stamp out any illegal actions”. Forum 18 has been
unable to confirm that Niyazov issued such an instruction from any other
source.

On 10 September Forum 18 was unable to reach Maifa Sarieva, who has headed
the department at the Adalat (Fairness or Justice) Ministry which registers
religious communities for the past two months. No other ministry officials
could tell Forum 18 whether the president had given such an order for the
registration rules to be tightened up, what was holding up the registration
of religious organisations and why religious communities that have
registration cannot in practice function openly.

Meanwhile, the state-run media has insisted that the decision to remove
from office the head of the country’s largest religious group, the Sunni
Muslims, came from the muftiate. Kakageldi Vepaev, who had been appointed
chief mufti by President Niyazov in January 2003, was sacked on 24 August
for “serious shortcomings in his work”, according to the
state-run media, as well as deficiencies in his private life. Appointed as
his successor was 27-year-old Rovshen Allaberdiev, former chief imam of the
Lebap region and former chairman of the government’s Gengeshi (Council) for
Religious Affairs at the Lebap regional administration.

The previous chief mufti Nasrullah ibn Ibadullah, sacked by Niyazov in
January 2003, remains in prison.

The Sunni Muslim community is the most tightly-controlled faith in
Turkmenistan. No leaders or imams can be appointed without government
approval, granted through the Gengeshi. Allaberdiev’s close links with the
state are clear from his previous double appointment as regional chief imam
and government religious affairs official. On being sacked as chief mufti,
Vepaev presumably also lost his job as one of the Gengeshi’s deputy
chairmen. As a Gengeshi official, he had personally taken part in raids on
religious services by minority faiths.

For more background, see Forum 18’s Turkmenistan religious freedom survey
at

A printer-friendly map of Turkmenistan is available at
s/index.html?Parent=asia&Rootmap=turkme
(END)

© Forum 18 News Service. All rights reserved.

You may reproduce or quote this article provided that credit is given to
F18News

Past and current Forum 18 information can be found at

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From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.forum18.org/
http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=225
http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=390
http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=392
http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=349
http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=392
http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=296
http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpeditions/atla
http://www.forum18.org/
http://www.forum18.org/

Antelias Mourns the Passing of Archbishop Vartan Demirdjian

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Antelias Mourns the Passing of Archbishop Vartan Demirdjian

Antelias, Lebanon – His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of Cilicia, members of
the Brotherhood of Cilicia, announce with deepest sadness the passing of His
Eminence Archbishop Vartan Demirdjian. Archbishop Vartan died suddenly in
Antelias, Lebanon, on Thursday, September 9. He was 65 years old.

The Extreme Unction and Burial services will take place on Saturday,
September 11, 2004, at 11 a.m. at St. Gregory the Illuminator Cathedral in
Antelias. Interment will follow in the Mausoleum of the Holy See of Cilicia.

His Holiness Aram I will preside over the services.

Archbishop Demirdjian, a member of the Cilician Brotherhood, was born in
Lebanon in 1939. He was ordained a celibate priest in 1957 and was
consecrated a Bishop in 1977. He has served the Armenian Church in various
capacities including several years of service in Iran and Greece, as a
teacher at the Cilician See’s Theological Seminary, and Director of the
Printing House. At the time of his death he was the Librarian at the
Catholicosate’s Library.

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View printable pictures here:

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The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Pictures16.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Pictures17.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

Armenian constitutional reforms to amend relations between branches

Armenian constitutional reforms to amend relations between branches of power

Mediamax news agency
10 Sep 04

Yerevan, 10 September: The new packet of Armenian constitutional
reforms envisages amendments to relations between the president,
the government and the parliament, Armen Arutyunyan, the Armenian
president’s representative on constitutional reforms, said today,
Mediamax reports.

He pointed out that the changes to the constitution will not have a
revolutionary nature.

“We just want to make the constitution more effective,” Armen
Arutyunyan said.