Cinema days’ festival celebrates Middle East filmmaking

‘Cinema days’ festival celebrates Middle East filmmaking
Event provides overview of Arab film production in last 2 years

By Jim Quilty

Daily Star staff
Tuesday, September 14, 2004

BEIRUT: It is autumn. This is when cinephiles hereabouts – fatted on
a summer of Hollywood blockbusters and wretched Egyptian comedies –
ask themselves: “What is the state of Middle Eastern cinema?” And they
receive a sort of answer in the panoply of film festivals that adorn
Beirut at this time of year – August’s Ne a Beirut, October’s Middle
East Film Festival and, wedged between the two, Ayam Beirut Cinemaiyya.

This is Beirut’s third “Cinema Days,” a bi-yearly event assembled
by the squad of 20-somethings who are Beirut Development and Cinema
(Beirut DC) – the five-year-old cultural co-operative whose politics
tend to be as progressive and independent-minded as the films they
promote.

The organizers conceive of Ayam Beirut Cinemaiyya as a noncompetitive
festival whose mission is to provide an overview of the Arab film
produced over the past two years and a meeting place for the region’s
filmmakers, local and expatriate. Over 10 days, the festival will
screen over 100 films – 13 features, 40 documentaries, 45 shorts,
and a smattering of experimental and student films.

The opening film will be “Bab al-Shams” (Door of the Sun), Egyptian
director Yousri Nasrallah’s much-anticipated adaptation of the novel
of the same title. Written by Lebanon’s Elias Khoury, the book is
a poetic tour de force focusing upon the experiences of a circle
of refugees fleeing from Palestine to Lebanon. The evening of the
festival premier, a special open-air screening of “Bab al-Shams”
is planned for Sabra-Shatilla.

“Bab al-Shams” comes to Beirut on the heels of its world premier at
Cannes. Cannes was also host to “Our Music,” by French auteur Jean-Luc
Godard. Set in Sarajevo and addressing the Israeli-Palestine crisis,
Godard’s film represents a sort of return to the region after 30
years – when his “Here and Elsewhere” was first released.

As in years past, Palestine is a central leitmotif of this festival,
with over 20 films on the subject, directed by Palestinian, Arab and
foreign filmmakers. These include “Soraida – A Woman From Palestine,”
by Tahani Rashed; “Writers on the Borders” by Samir Abdullah; “Ijtiah”
by Nizar Hassan; “Like Twenty Impossibilities” by Anne-Marie Jacir;
“In the Ninth Month” by Ali Nassar and “Private Investigation” by
Oula Tabari.

The 2004 edition of the Ayam Cinemaiyya also has a number of films
that are neither new nor Arab. There is a special section of foreign
films on the Arab World. In addition to the Godard piece, there is
Frederic Laffont’s “1001 Nights,” a personal diary shot in Palestine,
and “2000 Terrorists,” a documentary about four of the plaintiffs in
the Belgian court case against Israeli Premier Ariel Sharon, by Peter
Speetjens and Hanro Smitsman. There are also a pair of “guest films”
– “Abouna,” by Chad’s Mohammed Saleh Haroun, and “Vodka Lemon,” a
film set in Armenia by Iraqi Kurd Hinner Selim. The film selection
is rounded out by a retrospective from Arab documentarians.

Beyond the films themselves, there will be a pair of roundtable
discussions. One will be a debate about cinema representations of
Palestine called “Palestine: Champ ou Contre-Champ?” featuring Samir
Qassir, Elias Khoury, Omar Amiralay and a filmed contribution by
Jean-Luc Godard himself. The second debate, on “identity” in the Arab
cinema today, features the input of filmmakers from around the region.

The festival also will hold a workshop in animation, painting and
drawing, conducted by award-winning Serbian animator Vuk Jevremovic,
and a Beirut DC production called “5X5: Lebanese productions on
35mm.” A video installation called “Body,” by Catherine Cattaruzza and
Vatche Boulghourjian, will be on display in the Cinema Estral in Hamra.

Beirut DC’s Elaine Raheb says she and her colleagues viewed over
300 films before settling on the festival’s 130 pieces: “We tried to
select quality films that were representative of what’s happening in
the region’s cinema.”

Presumably this puts them in a unique position to assess “the present
state of Arabic cinema.”

“The documentary is the genre that’s shaping the identity of the
Arabic cinema right now,” she says, “It’s freer.”

This is no surprise, really, given the fact that outside Egypt,
there is no Arab film industry to speak of. Without the financial and
technical infrastructure enjoyed by European and U.S. filmmakers,
it is much more difficult for Arab directors to participate in the
culture of high-quality independent feature film seen there.

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“When we say films we’ve chosen are ‘independent,'” says Beirut DC’s
Hania Mroue, “we mean films that have been made relatively free of
the constraints of distributors and producers.”

Some of these films were indeed produced largely or completely on
the director’s own steam, like “Klephty” by Egypt’s Mohammad Khan
and Mahmoud Hojeij’s “The Silent Majority,” a Lebanese experimental
film about a fellow who wakes up one day to find he’s turned into
a dog. Elie Khalife’s comic short feature “Van Express,” follows a
pair of young entrepreneurs who, frustrated that they are legally
barred from flogging coffee on Beirut’s Corniche, find more success
when they use their van in a different trade.

“Some of our films were made under the influence of producers, of
course,” adds Raheb, pointing out several that were either European
co-productions or else were commissioned by television networks in
the region.

“But even in these cases, you feel that the directors are making a
very personal statement with their work. They may address subjects
like ‘terrorism,’ ‘Islam’ or ‘the Palestine conflict’ but they have a
singular point of view that makes them different from most television
documentaries.”

Examples of such independently minded commissioned pieces include
“Children of the Cedars” by Dimitri Khodr, (commissioned by New
TV). Bassem Fayad’s “Road Beyond Sunset” and Jad Abi Khalil’s “His
Majesty, Mr. President,” both inspired by events in Iraq, were
commissioned by the Al-Arabiyya network.

“These films all reflect a changed attitude among television
programmers,” says Raheb, “especially at Al-Arabiyya. We hope it
continues.”

Other festival films represent a compromise between the creative and
commercial imperative. “Best Times,” by the young Egyptian director
Hala Khalil, is part of a new trend in Egyptian feature film –
begun by Hani Khalifa’s “Sahar al-Layali” – which has seen Egyptian
producers turn to young filmmakers to produce something besides
infantile comedies.

“Egyptian film producers realise now that there are younger
filmmakers who have scripts that speak to the younger generation,”
says Raheb. “They approached Khalil to make a film and she already
had her own script. She wanted to make a film from her own point of
view and it has been a commercial success without being commercial.”

Among the several European co-productions are a pair of uniquely
intimate documentaries – Malek Bensmail’s Franco-Algerian “Alienations”
is about the patients in an Algerian mental hospital, while Mohammed
Zran’s Franco-Tunisian-Moroccan “The Song of the Millennium” is about
people on the edge of Tunisian society when the world officially
entered the 21st century.

Among these co-productions, too, are a number of films about women,
“Women Beyond Borders,” by Lebanese documentary veteran Jean Chamoun,
“When Women Sing,” by Mustafa Hasnaoui, and Hala Galal’s “Women Chat.”

“It’s a film about two generations of women oppressing women,” says
Raheb. “Not the sort of thing you find on the market or on television.”

These films may reflect the European producers’ concerns with certain
issues – namely Palestine, Iraq, women, and Islam – but Raheb is
cautious about suggesting that Arab directors are simply playing to
European tastes to get funding. “Filmmakers in this region are in a
crisis now. They see the Western media representing the people of the
Middle East as heroes, victims or terrorists and it is impossible to
ignore. If they take up these topics themselves it’s because they’re
trying to position themselves relative to these issues. They’re in
crisis, but trying to find a solution.”

The Ayam Beirut al-Cinemaiyya Arab film festival runs from Sept. 15-26
at Cinema Sofil, Achrafieh. For more information contact: +961 1
293212 or +961 3 192587 or email [email protected]
From: Baghdasarian

Racist Assaults on the Rise After Terror Attacks

Racist Assaults on the Rise After Terror Attacks
By Anatoly Medetsky

The Moscow Times
Monday, September 13, 2004. Page 1.

Staff Writer The recent terrorist attacks caused a spike in assaults
on dark-skinned people from the Caucasus region and elsewhere last
week, human rights activists said.

Decorated former test pilot Magomed Tolboyev said Friday that he was
assaulted by police officers during a document check near the Vykhino
metro station. The officers said he had a Chechen-sounding last name,
he said.

In Yekaterinburg, gangs of young people attacked three Armenian and
Azeri cafes, killing one person and injuring two, police said.

Authorities have blamed the downing of two planes, the explosion
near a Moscow metro station and the Beslan school siege on Chechen,
Ingush and Arab fighters and suicide bombers.

Dark-skinned people have in recent years increasingly been the targets
of racially motivated attacks — attacks that police usually write
off as hooliganism. But the increase over the past week can only be
attributed to the terror attacks, said Alexander Brod, director of
the Moscow Bureau for Human Rights.

“Anti-Caucasian sentiments always get stronger after terrorist
acts,” Brod said. “People blame everyone in the Caucasus. This is
the stereotype in people’s minds.

“Unfortunately, the authorities don’t do a good job explaining that
terrorism doesn’t have a nationality,” he said.

Tolboyev, an assistant to State Duma Deputy Viktor Semyonov and a
native of Dagestan, said two police sergeants stopped him to check
his papers Thursday near Vykhino in Moscow’s southern outskirts.

He showed them his Duma ID and told them that he had been decorated
with the title Hero of Russia, which he received for his participation
in the Soviet space shuttle program, Interfax reported.

The officers took the ID. When Tolboyev attempted to get it back,
one of the officers went behind him, put his arm around his neck and
began to strangle him, Tolboyev said.

“My throat still aches, and I haven’t been able to swallow for two
days,” he said, Interfax reported.

Asked by telephone Friday why the officers had confronted him, Tolboyev
said, “I don’t know. Maybe they didn’t like something about me.”

Moscow police chief Vladimir Pronin confirmed Sunday that police
had stopped Tolboyev to check his documents. But he said a police
investigation found that Tolboyev had been treated properly considering
his “disobedience, aggression and abuse.” He did not elaborate.

Tolboyev said he was stopped as he was returning from the North
Ossetian administration’s office in Moscow, where he had expressed
his condolences over the school siege.

He said he finally got back his ID.

In the Urals, a group of young people broke furniture in the Azeri
Kaspy cafe in Yekaterinburg on Thursday night and then hurled in
Molotov cocktails, according to news reports. A 52-year-old relative
of the cafe’s owner died in the fire, which gutted the building.

That same night, about 20 young people armed with sticks and chains
broke into an Armenian cafe, Oasis Plus, and beat the Armenian staff,
wounding four. Two were hospitalized with skull and brain injuries,
news reports said.

Attackers tossed Molotov cocktails in another Armenian cafe, the
Shartash, on Thursday night, but the staff was able to douse the
flames before anyone was injured.

In a fourth attack Thursday, unidentified men set fire to the U Davida,
an Armenian cafe in Verkhnyaya Pyshma, a village near Yekaterinburg,
police said. Cafe staff quickly put out the fire.

Yekaterinburg police said they have detained two suspects but dismissed
any possible racial motive in the attacks, calling them hooliganism.

“They are in no way related to Beslan or any ethnic issues,” said
Valery Gorelykh, spokesman for the Sverdlovsk regional police, which
includes the city of Yekaterinburg.

Mikhail Matevosyan, deputy chairman of the regional Armenian
association Ani-Armenia, said he has no doubt that the cafe attacks
were connected to the recent terrorist attacks.

Whenever Chechen rebels score a victory over federal troops in Chechnya
or commit terrorist attacks, groups of young people begin targeting
Caucasus natives, he said.

“They probably think, ‘You hit us there, and we’ll hit you here,'”
he said by telephone from Yekaterinburg.

He ruled out a Armenian-Azeri turf war as a possible reason for
the attacks.

Elsewhere, four young men with close-cropped hair beat to death a North
Korean citizen in Vladivostok the weekend after the school siege ended,
Noviye Izvestia reported. Unidentified assailants painted a swastika
on the gate of a Jewish cemetery in Irkutsk on the night of Sept. 6-7,
the Moscow Bureau for Human Rights said.
From: Baghdasarian

Aliyev against Armenian officers arriving in Baku for exercises

Aliyev against Armenian officers arriving in Baku for exercises
By Sevindzh Abdullayeva, Viktor Shulman

ITAR-TASS News Agency  
September 11, 2004 Saturday

BARDA, Azerbaijan — Ilham Aliyev opposes Armenian officers arriving
in Azerbaijan for participation in the planned NATO field exercises
to be held in accordance with the Partnership for Peace programme.

“I do not want Armenian servicemen to arrive in Baku, and Azerbaijan
will take necessary measures for it,” the president told reporters
on Saturday.

Aliyev noted the exercises in Baku, which will be held from September
14 to 26, were organised by NATO and Azerbaijan did not invite
servicemen from other countries, including Armenia, to the exercises.

According to reports from Yerevan, a delegation of five officers of
the Armenian Armed Forces will participate in the planned exercises in
Baku, and the defence minister’s press secretary Seiran Shakhsuvaryan
confirmed this.

The stand is unchanging. As planned, the delegation will come for
the exercises, the press secretary said, noting that there were no
refusal from the organiser – NATO – or changes in the programme.
From: Baghdasarian

Armenian officers to take part in NATO drill in Baku

Armenian officers to take part in NATO drill in Baku
By Tigran Liloyan

ITAR-TASS News Agency
September 10, 2004 Friday

YEREVAN, September 10 — Five officers of the Armenian Armed Forces
will take part in the Cooperative Best Effort 2004 exercises in
Azerbaijan on September 14-26 under the NATO Partnership for Peace
program, press secretary of the Armenian defense minister Col. Seiran
Shakhsuvaryan told Itar-Tass on Friday.

“Our position is invariable. We will take part in the drill,” he
said. He noted that the exercises organizer – NATO – has not made any
changes in the program. “In addition, Yerevan does not have official
information about refusal of the Azerbaijani embassy in Tbilisi to
grant entry visas for the Armenian servicemen going to the drill in
Baku,” he said.

Armenian Deputy Defense Minister Yuri Khachaturov said that Baku
protests against the participation of Armenian servicemen in the
exercises are formal.

“If Armenian officers are given permission to visit Baku, Azerbaijan
will have to provide for their security,” he said.

Meanwhile, Azerbaijani Defense Minister Safar Abiyev said that
Armenia should abstain from participation in the Cooperative Best
Effort 2004 exercises.

“Baku is perplexed with the insistent wish of Armenia, which
occupied some of Azerbaijani lands, to take part in the exercises,”
Abiyev said. “Armenia does not recognize territorial integrity of
Azerbaijan. There are no diplomatic relations between our countries.
Is the participation of Armenian officers in the exercises in Baku
expedient?”

He said the Azerbaijani public objects to the visit of Armenian
servicemen.

“The insistence of Armenia may build up bilateral tension shortly
before the CIS summit in Astana,” where Azerbaijani President Ilham
Aliyev and Armenian President Robert Kocharyan are expected to meet
with the Russian mediation, he said.

The news of Armenian servicemen’s visit agitated the Azerbaijani
public. A number of opposition parties, public and non-governmental
organizations will hold protests the day before the drill and on
the drill’s opening day. The Baku City Hall has authorized some of
the protests.
From: Baghdasarian

Shedding light on the dark side – Diamanda Galas

Shedding light on the dark side
By SCOTT D. LEWIS

Oregonian, OR
Sept 10 2004

On paper, Diamanda Galas is impressive: A 31/2-octave vocal range,
fluent in multiple languages, pianist, composer, published poet. On
her 15 records, Galas is stunning as she channels the souls of the
suffering and transforms forgotten songs with a voice that’s as
precise and dangerous as a knife. Live, she’s unbelievable. Tall,
gaunt and embodying anyone’s coolest vampire fetish, Galas delivers
her music and her missives with unflinching intent and purpose, never
failing to leave her audience transfixed and transformed.

She is a visionary, a true artist and a performer with no equal.

Galas recently released two live double albums. “DEFIXIONES: Will &
Testament” is a harrowing and staggering work dedicated “to the
forgotten and erased of the Armenian, Assyrian and Greek genocides
that occurred in Asia Minor, Pontos and Thrace between 1914 and
1923.” “La Serpenta Canta” is notably lighter, yet equally as
engaging with Galas interpreting many American classics in her
singular gothic-jazz, devil-blues manner.

Galas will perform two separate shows based on these recent releases
Friday (“DEFIXIONES”) and Sunday (“Serpenta”) at the Newmark Theatre
as part of PICA’s Time-Based Art Festival.

Speaking from New York, Galas, who is as personable as can be
offstage, took some time to ponder art, commerce, the dark side and
just how tough Kristy Edmunds really is.

Q: What is your definition of art?

A: Something that should be able to predict the future rather than
simply regurgitate the newspapers. A lot of people who would like to
be artists think that the best way to do that is to be modern and to
be timely, so they read lots of newspapers in the attempt to do that.
But the only way you can be “modern” is to do your work so, so much
that it naturally evolves of its own accord.

Q: What’s your job as an artist? Does it come with responsibilities?

A: The only responsibility I have is to do a good job. To be
professional in my work. If I want to do a certain piece and I have
ideas for it, then I need to work those ideas out to completion —
that’s my job.

Q: Certainly there is commerce involved.

A: Certainly, but a lot of that has to do with making sure that
people know that you are performing. Fortunately, at the moment with
online, we are able to do that without depending on hard copy,
magazines and venues that are only interested in commercial music.

Q: Do you consider your work dark?

A: You and I would have to say, that by the standards of most “art,”
out there, yes, what I do is “dark.”

Q: Why is it important to have such dark art?

A: If I am trying to continue to exist in the word, then it’s
important for me to see art that has something to do with my
existence. If everything lay outside of my existence, then I’m going
to feel so isolated that I may not want to live much longer. A person
who has no communication with the world which is also not interested
in communication with him or her is in a very bad position.

Q: What happens to art in politically repressive times?

A: Can you imagine how many women in those countries where they are
forced to wear the shador are even able to think about doing art?
That’s quite an impossible concept. I will say that it’s also a
pretty impossible thing for most people to create art in complete
poverty. I think that there is a naive idealism concerning artists’
suffering that needs to go. That needs to leave. Artists need money.

Q: How does art benefit the society at large?

A: If you create something that makes you feel alive, you may not
have to do something that’s going to make you feel dead. If you have
no hope and you have nothing that makes you believe that you can
leave an impression upon the world, well then why should you want to
do anything but sleep in a trash bin or something. People need to
feel that they are making a contribution.

Q: Where should your albums be filed at a record store?

A: (laughs) At one store in Berkeley they were filed under “Operatic,
Vampiric, Lysergic, Hippie, Sicko . . .” they had about seven
different category names and there were a few of us in there. That
was fine with me.

Q: Will you get to see much of the TBA festival?

A: I don’t know. Fortunately, I will be able to see Kristy (Edmunds,
PICA’s artistic director). She is one of . . . she is the bravest
presenter in America. She is. She is the bravest and most ferocious
presenter in America. I love her; she’s a dear friend.

Diamanda Galas performs “DEFIXIONES: Will & Testament” at 9 p.m.
Friday, and “La Serpenta Canta” at 9 p.m. Sunday, Newmark Theatre,
1111 S.W. Broadway; $15 PICA members, $20 general. TBA pass holders
must reserve in advance at 503-242-1419. Mature audiences.

From: Baghdasarian

www.diamandagalas.com

Pogrom contre des restaurants caucasiens =?UNKNOWN?B?4A==?=Ekaterinb

Pogrom contre des restaurants caucasiens à Ekaterinbourg/ un mort, deux blessés

Tageblatt, Luxembourg
Sept 9 2004

Plusieurs restaurants caucasiens ont été saccagés et leurs
propriétaires roués de coups dans une série d’attaques qui ont fait
un mort et deux blessés dans la nuit de mercredi à jeudi à
Ekaterinbourg (Oural), une semaine après la prise d’otages de Beslan,
ont rapporté les médias.
Selon la chaîne de télévision NTV, qui a montré des images d’un
établissement en feu et celles d’un homme ensanglanté de type
caucasien, cinq restaurants appartenant à des Azerbaïdjanais et à des
Arméniens ont été attaqués et incendiés successivement par un groupe
d’une dizaine de jeunes hommes armés de battes de base ball, de
chaînes de bicyclette et de cocktails Molotov.

Le mort est un employé de l’un des établissements, selon la même
source.

Le quotidien en ligne Gazeta.ru parle de trois restaurants attaqués
dans la ville par un groupe de 15 à 20 jeunes à l’apparence de
skinheads. Un seul des établissements aurait brûlé.

Selon cette source, la victime a péri dans cet incendie alors que
l’attaque contre un autre établissement a fait deux blessés
grièvement atteints, qui ont été hospitalisés.

Gazeta.ru indique qu’un autre établissement a été attaqué la même
nuit dans une localité proche d’Ekaterinbourg, Verkhnaïa Pychma, avec
des cocktails Molotov, mais n’a pas pris feu.

Les autorités locales ont souligné qu’il fallait attendre les
conclusions de l’enquête pour déterminer s’il s’agissait d’attaques
liées à la haine raciale, ou de règlements de compte criminels.

Un représentant des autorités de la ville, Konstantin Poudov, a
reconnu implicitement sur la chaîne de télévision NTV la probabilité
d’attaques liées à la prise d’otages de Beslan (Caucase russe), dont
les auteurs comprenaient, selon la presse russe, une bonne part de
Tchétchènes et d’Ingouches (Caucase du Nord).

»Compte-tenu des derniers événements dans le pays, nous allons tout
faire pour qu’il n’y ait pas de manifestations de haine raciale à
Ekaterinbourg», a déclaré ce responsable sur NTV en commentant le
saccage des restaurants.
From: Baghdasarian

BAKU: Azeri authorities sanction anti-Armenian protest

Azeri authorities sanction anti-Armenian protest

ANS TV, Baku
9 Sep 04

The Baku executive authorities have replied in the affirmative to the
request of the United People’s Front of Azerbaijan Party to hold a
protest against the arrival of Armenian servicemen who are planning
to visit Azerbaijan to participate in exercises to be held in Baku
within the framework of NATO’s Partnership for Peace programme [on
13-26 September].

However, minor changes have been made. The Baku authorities gave
permission to the party to hold the protest not outside the Nariman
Narimanov cinema as requested, but near the Xatai underground station
outside the Xatai culture centre. The sanctioned protest, which is
expected to be attended by thousands of people, is to start at 1200
[0700 gmt] on 12 September.

The party’s chairman, MP Qudrat Hasanquliyev, has told ANS that a
group of MPs will not join the Milli Maclis [parliament] session
tomorrow in protest against the Armenian servicemen’s expected
visit to Baku. These are Qudrat Hasanquliyev, Alimammad Nuriyev,
Rufat Agalarov and Mais Safarli. Talks are under way with other MPs,
and the list is likely to expand.
From: Baghdasarian

Suisse-Turquie La visite de Micheline Calmy-Rey devrait avoir lieu”r

Schweizerische Depeschenagentur AG (SDA)
SDA – Service de base francais
1 septembre 2004

Suisse-Turquie La visite de Micheline Calmy-Rey devrait avoir lieu
“rapidement”

Berne/Ankara (ats) La querelle sur l’Arménie dépassée, la visite de
Micheline Calmy-Rey en Turquie devrait avoir lieu “le plus rapidement
possible”, a indiqué mercredi un porte-parole du ministère turc des
affaires étrangères. A Berne, on fait savoir que les discussions sont
en cours.

Interrogé par l’ats, un porte-parole du Département fédéral des
affaires étrangères (DFAE) n’a pas souhaité donner plus de précisions
sur les discussions en cours entre Berne et Ankara. Il a simplement
rappelé que le chef du gouvernement turc, Recep Tayyip Erdogan avait
renouvelé l’invitation lors de sa venue en Suisse en janvier dernier,
au Forum de Davos.

Cette invitation a été réitérée officiellement mardi par le chef de
la diplomatie turque, Abdullah Gül, lors d’une rencontre avec la
délégation de la Commission de politique extérieure du Conseil des
Etats (CPE-E), en visite actuellement en Turquie.

Le déplacement de la cheffe du DFAE avait été annulé en septembre
dernier par Ankara. Les autorités turques protestaient ainsi contre
la décision du Grand conseil vaudois de reconnaître le massacre des
Arméniens par l’Empire ottoman en 1915 comme étant “un génocide”. Les
relations entre les deux pays avaient par la suite connu un
refroidissement.
From: Baghdasarian

His Holiness Karekin II Departs for Pontifical Visit to the Diocese

PRESS RELEASE
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Information Services
Address: Vagharshapat, Republic of Armenia
Contact: Rev. Fr. Ktrij Devejian
Tel: (374 1) 517 163
Fax: (374 1) 517 301
E-Mail: [email protected]
September 7, 2004

His Holiness Karekin II Departs for Pontifical Visit to the Diocese of
Gougark

On the morning of September 6, His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme
Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, departed from the Mother See
of Holy Etchmiadzin for a Pontifical Visit to the Diocese of Gougark
in northeast Armenia. During the three-day trip, His Holiness will
visit a number of cities, towns and villages of the Tavush Region to
meet with the faithful, preside during church services and give his
pontifical blessing.

The Catholicos of All Armenians is accompanied by His Grace Bishop
Navasard Kjoyan, Vicar General of the Araratian Pontifical Diocese;
His Grace Bishop Sion Adamian, Primate of the Diocese of Armavir;
and Rev. Fr. Tiran Petrosian, Staff-bearer to His Holiness.

##
From: Baghdasarian

BAKU: Azeri group appeals to NATO over Armenians’ participation inSe

Azeri group appeals to NATO over Armenians’ participation in September exercises

ANS TV, Baku
6 Sep 04

[Presenter Qanira Atasova] A complaint will be lodged with the
[Azerbaijani] Court of Appeal today against the guilty verdict for
the members of the Karabakh Liberation Organization [KLO] who were
arrested for protesting against Armenian servicemen’s visit to Baku. In
order to avoid confrontation between the authorities and the public
during the next visit of Armenian officers, the KLO has appealed to
NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer.

[Correspondent Rasad Mammadov, over video of protesting people] The
KLO said in a statement to the NATO secretary-general that the NATO
leadership should take into account and respect the national interests
of the Azerbaijani Republic and the will of its people. Saying that
the participation of Armenian officers in the military exercises
within the framework of NATO’s Partnership for Peace programme in
Baku in mid-September is inadmissible, the KLO members reminded the
secretary-general of what Armenians had committed in our country.

The statement signed by KLO deputy chairman Samil Mehdi also says that
six members of the KLO were arrested and sentenced to a total of 24
years in prison for protesting against Armenians’ participation in
a preparatory workshop for the mentioned exercises on 22 June. The
statement says that this event, which has shaken the Azerbaijani
public, questions the appropriateness of cooperation with NATO. We
demand that the NATO leadership refuse to invite Armenian war criminals
to Baku. If it is not possible, the September exercises should be
organized in another country in a bid to avoid undesirable incidents
and confrontation between the Azerbaijani public and the authorities,
end of quote.

The KLO states that the visit of Armenians to Azerbaijan is
inadmissible until Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and sovereignty
are restored and should be prevented by all means. The responsibility
for all possible developments falls on the Azerbaijani authorities
and the NATO leadership.
From: Baghdasarian