Soccer: Andorra 0 – 3 Armenia: Armenia Avoided Finishing Bottom OfFI

ANDORRA 0 – 3 ARMENIA: ARMENIA AVOIDED FINISHING BOTTOM OF FIFA WORLD CUP GROUP 1

UEFA.com, Switzerland
Oct 12 2005

Armenia avoided finishing bottom of FIFA World Cup qualifying Group
1 as they gained a comfortable victory in Andorra.

Armenia dominate Andorra’s best campaign to date, which had included a
first ever competitive win against F.Y.R. Macedonia, had brought them
five points, and they needed only a draw today to avoid finishing last.

But Armenia, who won the home fixture 2-1, had other ideas and Romik
Khachatryan and Karen Aleksanyan dominated in midfield against a
defensive home formation.

Own goal The visitors were attacking down the wings, and Khachatryan
fired a shot across goal before Valeri Aleksanyan went close following
a corner. With six minutes left in the first half Armenia struck,
Egishe Melikyan crossing from the left and the luckless Óscar Sonejee
turning the ball into his own net.

Lead doubled Before half-time Andorra were down to ten men, Ildefons
Lima dismissed for dissent. With an extra player Armenia tightened
their grip on the game and Ara Hakobyan had a shot saved before his
brother Aram made it 2-0, converting Hamlet Mkhitaryan’s cross on
the half-volley in the 52nd minute.

Victory sealed Ara Hakobyan got on the scoresheet ten minutes later
with a good run and shot from the edge of the area. Armenia did
not add to their lead despite some intricate moves, but ended their
campaign on a high as both countries now look towards the UEFA EURO
2008~Y draw on 27 January 2006.

–Boundary_(ID_6OytvWegL24GoDYFsyEYSg)–

Opposition Bloc Urges ‘No’ Vote In Constitutional Referendum

OPPOSITION BLOC URGES ‘NO’ VOTE IN CONSTITUTIONAL REFERENDUM
By Shakeh Avoyan and Astghik Bedevian

Armenialiberty.org, Armenia
Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Oct 12 2005

Armenia’s largest opposition group ascertained on Wednesday its
strategy in the run-up to next month’s constitutional referendum,
urging supporters to vote against President Robert Kocharian’s
Western-backed package of amendments.

But at least one of nine parties making up the Artarutyun alliance
insisted that a popular boycott is a more effective means of scuttling
the passage of the proposed changes. As a consequence, Artarutyun’s
only implicitly called on Armenians to take part in the referendum
slated for November 27.

“By saying no to the so-called constitutional changes you will say
no to the regime which is responsible for the political terror of
October 27 [1999], which rigged the 1998 and 2003 presidential and
parliamentary elections, and which perpetrated barbaric acts against
peaceful protesters on April 13, 2004,” the bloc said in a statement
issued after a meeting of its ruling board.

Most members of the board were clearly in favor of a “no” vote, but
said they have no problem with their colleagues urging a boycott. “My
personal view is that we should go to the polls and say no so that
the peoples’ votes are not stolen,” said Grigor Harutiunian of the
People’s Party, the biggest Artarutyun force.

The boycott option is preferred by Vazgen Manukian’s National
Democratic Union (AZhM). “Our position is known and will not undergo
any changes,” Manukian said after the meeting.

“Boycott will be expedient only if it is accompanied by active mass
protest actions,” said another member of the Artarutyun board, Albert
Bazeyan. “I support both an active boycott and a ‘no’ vote.”

Manukian and some other prominent oppositionists believe that a low
voter turnout would make it easier for the opposition to expose and
thwart government attempts to rig the referendum. To pass, Kocharian’s
amendments need the backing of at least one third of Armenia’s 2.4
million eligible voters. Opinion polls and anecdotal evidence suggest
that most Armenians remain apathetic about constitutional reform.

A “no” vote is supported not only by the Artarutyun majority but also
the National Unity Party (AMK), the second opposition force represented
in the Armenian parliament. According to Victor Dallakian, a senior
Artarutyun lawmaker, the bloc and the AMK will express their common
position in a statement later this week. The two opposition groups
plan to hold rallies across the country in the coming weeks

The Artarutyun leadership formed an ad hoc body that will coordinate
its pre-referendum campaign and the work of election commission
officials and proxies affiliated with the bloc. The “coordinating
council” will be headed by Dallakian.

Preparations for the referendum were also discussed late on Tuesday
by Armenia’s three governing parties spearheading the “yes” campaign.

Leaders of the Republican Party (HHK), the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation (Dashnaktsutyun) and the Orinats Yerkir Party again failed
to agree on who should manage their joint campaign. The Republicans
insists on its collective leadership, while Dashnaktsutyun is pushing
for a single campaign manager.

Levon Mkrtchian, a Dashnaktsutyun leader, told RFE/RL that the three
parties represented in Kocharian’s government hope to reach agreement
on Thursday. He said they have already agreed on joint financing
of the “yes” campaign. “We will set up a fund to which every party
saying ‘yes’ [to the amendments] will make a contribution,” he said
without elaborating.

Galust Sahakian, the HHK’s parliamentary leader, revealed that the
cash-strapped Armenian government will donate a princely 1.5 billion
drams ($3.4 million) to the campaign. He said much of the money will
be spent on production of TV ads and posters.

Improvement In Favor Of Aggrieved Party Noticed At Court Sitting OnC

IMPROVEMENT IN FAVOR OF AGGRIEVED PARTY NOTICED AT COURT SITTING ON CASE OF ARMENIAN OFFICER’S MURDER IN BUDAPEST

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Oct 11 2005

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 11, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. An improvement in
favor of the aggrieved party was noticed at the September 27 court
sitting on case of Armenian officer’s murder in Budapest. Lawyer
Nazeli Vardanian and representative of RA Defence Ministry Hayk
Demoyan representing the aggrieved party declared it at the October
10 press conference.

The specialists who carried out 2 psychiatrical expertises of
Ramil Safarov were interrogated at the court sitting. The expert who
carried out the second psychiatrical expertise appeared in a defeatist
situation and held very weak positions. He ungroundedly recognized
Safarov limitedly responsible. To recap, the specialist who carried
out the first psychiatrical expertise recognized the defendant sane
and insisted on this point of view at the court sitting.

According to the representatives of the aggrieved party, the third
psychiatrical expertise will be an expertise of documents: it will be
decided through comparison of the results of 2 expertises which of
the experts correctly presented Safarov’s health condition. Nazeli
Vardanian reported that they are going to submit both of expert
conclusions to the independent experts by the next sitting to be held
on December 15.

It’s expected that the second Azeri officer who participated in the
NATO program in Budapest, Anar Aliyev, will at last appear before
the court at the December 15 court sitting.

Bharion Singh Shehawat: “I Am Here As Pilgrim”

BHARION SINGH SHEKHAWAT: “I AM HERE AS PILGRIM”

Noyan Tapan News Agency
Oct 10 2005

ETCHMIADZIN, OCTOBER 10, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Karekin II,
Catholicos of All Armenians received Bharion Singh Shehawat, the Vice
President of India arrived on an official visit to Armenia, accompanied
with Vahan Hovhannisian, the RA NA Deputy Speaker, Ashot Kocharian,
the RA Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to India, and
Deepak Vohra, the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of
India to RA, on October 7, at the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin.

His Holiness expressed a special satisfaction with the kind and warm
relations present between the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin and the
Embassy of India. In the person of the Vice President, His Holiness
expressed his gratitude to the authorities of India as well for the
care and attention towards the monuments of the Armenian people
created during the history as well as for the assistance to the
Armenian Church.

Bharion Singh Shekhawat, being glad of the occasion of his visit
to an ancient Christian country, said: “I’m here as a pilgrim. I’m
greatly impressed with the Armenian people’s devotion towards belief.”

As Noyan Tapan was informed by the Information Services of the Mother
See of Holy Etchmiadzin, the problem of terrorism and challenges
arisen before the world were also touched upon at the meeting.

Eurasia Foundation Provides Over $100,000 Grants To TenMunicipalitie

EURASIA FOUNDATION PROVIDES OVER $100,000 GRANTS TO TEN MUNICIPALITIES, COMMUNITY UNIONS OF ARMENIA

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Oct 10 2005

YEREVAN, October 10. /ARKA/. Eurasia Foundation provided over USD
100,000 grants to ten municipalities and community unions of Armenia,
Press-service of Eurasia Foundation reported ARKA News Agency. The
recipients of the grant are municipalities of Berdavan, Martini, Masis,
Metsamor, Sisian and Vedi, as well as to intercommunity unions Aparan,
Ararat, Noyemberyan and Tumanyan for development of inert-community
cooperation. The projects are aimed at establishment and development
of inter-municipality networks, equipped with Internet; data exchange
network, as well as assistance to development of inter-community
cooperation to improve effectiveness of usage of available resources
and quality of services rendered to population.

“Eurasia Foundation assists development of self-government through
development of propfessional and technical capacities of municipalities
and more close cooperation between them. After this projects completed,
we can expect establishment of functional inter-municipality networks”,
Director of Eurasia Representative Office in Armenia Ara Nazinyan
told journalists.

All systems go – SOAD takes its Armenian heritage seriously

Fresno Bee (California)
October 7, 2005, Friday FINAL EDITION

All systems go System of a Down takes its Armenian heritage and
politics seriously as it gears up for a Fresno concert.

Mike Osegueda The Fresno Bee

It was a Tuesday. System of a Down had finished a show at Cleveland
State University the night before. It was an off day.

Well, it was supposed to be.

If not for a promise that lead singer Serj Tankian made to his
grandfather before the band left in August for its 10-week tour,
System of a Down would have been relaxing in a hotel room or shooting
a video or doing whatever touring bands do on their days off.

But System of a Down is not like other rock bands. Far from it.

Instead, Tankian and the band were in Batavia, Ill., outside the
office of Rep. Dennis Hastert, R-Ill., leading a rally to persuade
the speaker of the House to put a resolution on the House’s floor
that would recognize the Armenian genocide.

Joined by members of the Armenian National Committee of America, the
Armenian Youth Federation and Tankian’s Axis of Justice organization,
the chart-topping metal band (all of whom are of Armenian descent)
added star power to the rally, which included Tankian reading a
letter he delivered to Hastert urging the congressman to put the bill
to a vote.

“When I left town,” Tankian says by phone two days after the
incident, backstage before a show in Detroit, “I saw my grandfather,
he’s about 97 years old — we really don’t even know his actual age
because all the documents were lost and we guessed his age based on
his memories — and you know, I promised him that I’d try to get a
hold of Dennis Hastert. It’s a personal thing for me. It’s not a
political thing.”

That message is sure to resonate with people in Fresno, with the band
visiting Tuesday for a concert at the Save Mart Center.

Sponsored by U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Pasadena, the bill in question
would formally call the Ottoman Empire’s killing of 1.5 million
Armenians after World War I a genocide.

It already was passed by the bipartisan House International Relations
Committee.

“When I read about that, I thought, ‘OK, it’s back to Dennis
Hastert’s hands,’ ” Tankian says. “This has happened before. We’ve
had a resolution in Congress regarding the genocide in 2000 and 2004.
Both times he didn’t bring it up to the House floor. The first time,
[then-President] Clinton had written him a letter saying that our
interests in Turkey could be endangered and stuff like that.

“This is the third opportunity. We wanted to go there and encourage
him to bring it to the House floor. It’s something that needs to come
out.”

And if you’re asking what all this had to do with a concert, then
you’ve obviously never listened to a System of a Down CD.

Like Rage Against the Machine before them, System of a Down has
accumulated a massive fan base behind both a roaring metal sound and
conscious-minded lyrics.

The band’s latest album, “Mezmerize,” (which debuted at No. 1 on the
charts, selling 800,000 copies in its first week) is full of opinion.
Pick a topic: war, religion, politics, Hollywood, sex, drugs and,
yes, genocide.

Unlike someone such as Kanye West, whose out-of-nowhere comments
about President Bush’s handling of Hurricane Katrina are now
infamous, System of a Down is in-your-face political on stage, in the
studio and in real life.

“We’ve always done what we wanted to do, myself and the band, what’s
in our hearts socially, politically, musically,” Tankian says. “It’s
difficult because when you talk about politics they make you a
political band and forget about the depth of your art. However, the
Armenian genocide is a personal issue; it’s not political.”

In Fresno, System of a Down is a highly talked-about band. People say
they know them, met them once, their cousin knows the drummer, that
kind of stuff.

Makes sense, considering System’s heritage. Many Armenian fans in
Fresno take it a step further and have a sense of ownership over the
band, seeing as how famous musicians of Armenian descent in the
American mainstream are limited to Cher.

“When we see someone like System of a Down make it — being that
they’re first-generation, they’ve come from the same place a lot of
Armenians here have come from — to see them do well almost connects
all the Armenians from all these different places,” says Vartan
Hekimian, 28, of Fresno. “I’m glad they speak up.”

Of this relationship with the band’s Armenian fans, Tankian says:
“It’s really great when people can feel a part of your music and feel
a part of your ethos. It’s a special connection.”

Despite both of System of a Down’s overt traits — being political
and being Armenian — Tankian says the band is not constricted to
these things. It’s not two-dimensional. That’s selling System short.

“If you listen to our music,” he says. “You can’t really say it’s
Armenian music. You can’t. But there is a certain melancholy that I
think comes from our people that exists in our music, that is a
characteristic of our music. But there’s other many other shades,
colors, characters and things that define System of a Down.”

The reporter can be reached at [email protected] or (559)
441-6479.

INFOBOX

If you go

What: System of a Down in concert with Mars Volta and Hella

When: 7 p.m. Tuesday

Where: Save Mart Center

Tickets: $32.50, $37.50 and $45

For more info: (559) 347-3400 or

GRAPHIC: SONY System of a Down (from left, Daron Malakian, John
Dolmayan, Serj Tankian and Shavo Odadjian) is held in high esteem by
many in the Valley’s Armenian community.

www.ticketmaster.com

ANKARA: EP delegation: Will the genocide be recognized?

Turkish Press
Oct 7 2005
X-Sender: Asbed Bedrossian <[email protected]>
X-Listprocessor-Version: 8.1 — ListProcessor(tm) by CREN

Press Review

CUMHURIYET

EP DELEGATION: `WILL THE `GENOCIDE’ BE RECOGNIZED?’

Members of the European Parliament Human Rights Subcommittee led by
Helene Flautre yesterday paid a visit to the Turkish Parliament.
During the meeting, delegation members called on Ankara to recognize
the Armenian genocide claims and consider the issue of education in
Kurdish. Polish members of the delegation noted that Poland had to
acknowledge its part in the Jewish holocaust and asked when Turkey
would face up to its own history. Afterwards, Ozlem Cercioglu of the
Republican People’s Party (CHP) said, `There were losses on both
sides during the war. Although Turkey has opened up all of its
archives, Armenia still refuses to open theirs.’ /Cumhuriyet/

Scattered People Strive To Preserve Tradition

SCATTERED PEOPLE STRIVE TO PRESERVE TRADITION
By Naush Boghossian, Staff Writer

Los Angeles Daily News, CA
Oct 5 2005

In many ways, the behavior of Armenians in the Diaspora is most
similar to that of the Jews.

Without the language, you can’t maintain the culture in its
same richness, and you lose the sense of the literature and the
storytelling, said Caroline Allouche, who teaches Hebrew at a Jewish
nursery school in North Hollywood.

“If you go to a public school and learn English and English customs,
you’re going to lose what we teach them in private school: the
holidays, the values of the Jewish culture,” she said. “When you have
a background, you have to keep it. In America, it’s a melting pot,
and with so many different cultures it’s great to show we exist.”

But Koreans, for example, who have one grammar school in Los Angeles,
don’t find their identity in the world threatened.

Charles Kim, who serves on the board of directors of the Korean
Institute of Southern California, which operates the Korean Wilshire
Elementary School and 13 Saturday schools, said losing the language
is to be expected as new generations grow up in America.

Only one of his four children speaks Korean.

“They will become Americans. There’s a high probability my kids
may marry non-Koreans, and a few more generations and they’ll say
I’m one-eighth Korean,” Kim said. “Then I think they will play a
significant role in promoting different cultures. This is a country
where we can showcase all different cultures harmoniously.”

Referendum On Constitution In Armenia Scheduled November 27

REFERENDUM ON CONSTITUTION IN ARMENIA SCHEDULED NOVEMBER 27

Pan Armenian
04.10.2005 13:46

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian President Robert Kocharian today signed
a decree on conducting a referendum on the Draft Changes to the
Constitution of the Republic of Armenia, reported the Press Service
of the Armenian leader. The referendum on Constitution is scheduled
for November 27. Besides, the Armenian President signed the Law on
Amendments and Supplements to the Armenian Law on Referendum.

Deputy Parliament Speaker Says Europe Must Be Tough With Turkey

DEPUTY PARLIAMENT SPEAKER SAYS EUROPE MUST BE TOUGH WITH TURKEY

Armenpress
Oct 4, 2005

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 4, ARMENPRESS: The deputy speaker of Armenia’s
parliament Vahan Hovhannissian told a press conference on Monday that
if Europe seeks stability and peace in the South Caucasus, it must
be tough with Turkey, and request implementation of certain criteria
before granting it full membership to the European Union (EU). These
would include a resolution of the Cyprus and Kurdish issues, as well
as recognition of the Armenian genocide, he stressed.

What is most incredulous, Hovhannisian said, is Turkey’s occupation
of an EU member country, which it refuses to recognize. Hovhannisian
pointed to Turkey’s non-compliance on a myriad of issues and its tough
stance with Europe, saying that this sets a `dangerous example for
Azerbaijan,’ which is also showing signs of refusing to cooperate,
this time with the OSCE and Armenia.

He said that though European political forces understand Turkey’s
refusal to recognize the Armenian genocide is dangerous, he explained
that Armenia must nevertheless aggressively advance the issue. `We
must share our position with the Europeans; we cannot rely on Euro
officials.’