Twelve tribal leaders of Syria arrive in Yerevan

Twelve tribal leaders of Syria arrive in Yerevan

28.03.2005 14:31

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – A delegation comprised of the leaders of 12 Arab
tribes inhabiting in northeastern Syria, accompanied by
representatives of the Armenian Church’s Beria Prelacy, arrived in
Yerevan on Monday, ARF press service reported.

Armenian National Assembly’s ARF faction secretary Hrair Karapetian
and ARF Bureau’s Hai Dat and Political Affairs Office director Kiro
Manoyan met the honorable guests at Yerevan’s Zvartnotz airport.

The influential tribal leaders, some of whom reside in Saudi Arabia,
Jordan, Iraq and Qatar, are in Armenia to take part in the events
commemorating the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, pay
tribute to the Genocide victims and once again remind the world of the
vicious crime, the perpetrators of which are still trying to deny it.

Their hospitable ancestors gave refuge to the fragments of the
Armenians who had miraculously survived in the Genocide; today, many
of those Armenians and their heirs still live side-to-side with the
friendly Arab people and enjoy equal rights.

The trip was organized by the Armenian community of Aleppo. The
delegation is set to meet with the Armenian Catholicos, National
Assembly leadership, Armenia’s prime minister, government ministers,
politicians and the Yerevan State University professors.

March 28, the delegation members will be received by Armenian Foreign
Minister Vardan Oskanian and later by Yerevan Mayor Yervan Zakharian.
The delegation members will also pay visits to the Tsitsernakaberd
Memorial, Matenadaran, and Armenia’s popular sites. A news conference
will be held upon the completion of the trip.

The delegation is comprised of the following tribal leaders: Udey al
Ghasi of Al Shumar tribe; Fayez el Ghubein of Al Anaze tribe; Abdel
Uahab Isa Suleiman of Bakard el Jabal tribe; Muhammad al Tai bin Abdel
Razak of Al Tay tribe’s second branch; Hlu el Hlu of Aduan tribe;
Hasan Obeid el Khalil of Harp tribe; Abdel Karim Obeid of Harp tribe’s
second branch; Khalil Abud Zhdghan of Ogeidad tribe and a member of
the Syrian parliament; Muhammad Mslad of Chbur tribe and a member of
the Syrian parliament.

ANKARA: Armenian question has prejudice on both sides

Armenian question has prejudice on both sides

More than 80 percent of Armenians see the `genocide’ as an obstacle to
normalising relation with Turkey.

NTV- MSNBC, Turkey

March 28 – An opinion poll conducted by TESEV in Turkey and HASA in
Armenia shows that both countries have prejudice against each other.

The project, which looked into both countries’ perceptions of each
other, showed a high level of lack of information about the other. The
opinion poll canvassed 1,200 Turks and 1,000 Armenians, which was
conducted over a two year period.

The project said that although there the psychological foundation
necessary for dialogue in both countries there is a low level of
information and very strong negative views towards Turkey in Armenia.

The poll also revealed that 17 percent of the Turks surveyed thought
that Armenians are Jewish, 13.5 percent that it is a communist state
and six percent that it is run by a monarchy. While 68.7 percent of
Armenians define Turks using bad adjectives this figure drops to 34
percent among Turks when they define Armenians. Ninety-four point one
percent of Armenians would not lettheir daughter marry a Turk while
68.1 percent of Turks would not their daughter marry an
Armenian. While 67 percent of Armenians say they would not trust a
Turkish doctor, the figure for Turks regarding an Armenian doctor is
24 percent.

Language of Jesus’ era nearly gone: Scholars work for the survival o

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
March 26, 2005 Saturday Home Edition

Language of Jesus’ era nearly gone;
Scholars work for the survival of Aramaic

by CRAIG NELSON

Malula, Syria — The words of the Lord’s Prayer coming from George
Rezkallah’s mouth are somehow more melodic and less throaty than the
Arabic that is spoken in the Holy Land and most of the Middle East.

Rezkallah is speaking Aramaic, the language of Jesus, and here in
this windy village of canyons and churches in the Syrian desert —
one of only a handful of enclaves in the world where Aramaic is still
spoken — the 67-year-old teacher and other residents are struggling
to keep the language from dying.

“I still go to the fields and vineyards around here and ask shepherds
and farmers to tell me words and to use them in songs, proverbs and
stories,” said Rezkallah, who commutes to Damascus weekly to teach
Aramaic at a church in the capital’s Christian quarter.

“It’s important the language remain alive, and I and others do our
best to keep it alive. But its future isn’t good,” he said with a
sigh.

The language’s name is derived from “Aram,” Noah’s grandson. A
Semitic language closely related to Hebrew and Arabic, Aramaic is at
least 3,000 years old, and for more than a millennium, it was the
Middle East’s lingua franca.

In Syria, Aramaic’s decline began in the seventh century, when the
Christian, Aramaic-speaking territory fell to an Arab invasion, which
brought a new language as well as a new religion, Islam.

In the Middle East, Aramaic has been surpassed by Hebrew in what is
modern-day Israel and by Arabic and Farsi elsewhere. Experts guess
there are about 800,000 Aramaic speakers, with the number shrinking
by the year.

The surviving speakers are confined to tiny pockets in Iran and
southern Armenia, as well as here in Malula and two nearby villages,
Rezkallah said. Some scholars add hamlets in Turkey and Iraq to that
list.

Even in an Aramaic stronghold such as Malula, the language is
undermined in the most conspicuous ways, said the Rev. Toufic Eid,
the superior at Malula’s Convent of St. Serge and St. Bacchus.

Eid said construction of an Aramaic-language institute in Malula has
foundered, and not even the masses in Malula’s Greek Catholic and
Greek Orthodox churches are said in Aramaic.

However, the accomplices in Aramaic’s slow death are the same
culprits poised to vanquish more than half of the world’s estimated
6,000 languages in the next 50 years — mobility and economic
progress.

Until 1960, there were no roads to Malula, and until 1970, there were
no schools. Now, children here are taught Arabic, French and English
in state-run classrooms.

Mass food production means that to survive, Malula’s residents do not
have to work in the fields, where the vocabulary was passed on and
learned in previous generations.

The dying out of farming and shepherding of animals has been a hard
blow to Aramaic, for it is those occupations that gave the language
most of its vocabulary and imagery.

“When these jobs vanish, so do the words connected with them,” said
Rezkallah, citing the biblical story of Jesus reviving the widow’s
son from the dead.

“The words that Jesus used to tell the boy to rise are the same words
that shepherds still use to urge baby sheep to get up,” he says.

The other key sign of Aramaic’s weakening hold on Malula’s 3,000
residents sprouts from atop almost every one of the town’s homes —
a TV satellite dish, receiving channels from across the region.

The impending disappearance of Aramaic strikes an especially deep and
saddening chord to the people of Malula. Something besides words,
they say, will be irrevocably lost if Aramaic disappears.

“A language connotes a way of logic and a way of thinking, so it’s
important to know the language Jesus spoke. It helps us understand
the circumstances of his life,” Eid said.

He and others argue that there is intrinsic merit in keeping alive
the language through which the spiritual insights of Christianity
were first expressed. There is also value, they say, in maintaining
the tongue that during formative centuries molded the religious ideas
of the three great monotheistic religions — Judaism, Christianity
and Islam.

For still others, it is a deeply spiritual matter, connecting them to
their parents and grandparents, as well as their faith.

“It is the language of Jesus and has been created in me. I can’t
forsake myself, so how could I forsake the language?” said Rita
Wahbeh, 23, who guides visitors through the convent, built in the
fourth century and named after two Roman soldiers who converted to
Christianity and were executed in 297 after refusing to worship Roman
gods.

BAKU: Azeris in Russia appeal to Putin

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
March 25 2005

Azeris in Russia appeal to Putin

AssA-Irada 25/03/2005 02:24

Azerbaijanis living in Russia have appealed to President Putin
expressing their discontent over the recent attack on the Azeri
diaspora leader Soyun Sadigov.

“Sadigov is closely involved in maintaining the Russo-Azeri relations
and solving the problems of Azerbaijanis living in Russia. Moreover,
as a chairman of the “Garabagh” International Charity Foundation,
he is actively involved in the settlement of the Upper Garabagh
conflict. Therefore, it is obvious that this action was committed by
forces opposed to his activity,” said the appeal.

The diaspora leader’s car was subjected to a shooting by unidentified
individuals on March 18. Sadigov was not hurt, however, his driver
Zuyev was injured.

Sadigov, born in the Garayazi county of Georgia in 1960, received the
title of the Soviet Union unarmed self-defense champion in 1978. He
is a candidate of science and is also engaged in business.

Kyrgyzstan coup sparks unrest among Russia’s allies

Kyrgyzstan coup sparks unrest among Russia’s allies
By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

The State, SC
Posted on Sat, Mar. 26, 2005

The Associated Press

MOSCOW – Russia could see many of its closest allies topple like
dominoes and its own regional clout shrink inexorably after the
swift overthrow of the man who ruled Kyrgyzstan for 15 years, an
event that has turned up the heat on other autocratic rulers across
the ex-Soviet landscape.

This week’s overthrow of the government in Kyrgyzstan was the third
uprising in Russia’s sphere of interest in less than two years. Unlike
Georgia and Ukraine, however, the tussle between the government and
the opposition had nothing to do with a wider, East-West competition
for influence.

Instead, it centered on a previously weak and divided opposition
capitalizing on the deep unpopularity of an increasingly autocratic
president. Russia has depended on such leaders to promote its strategic
interests.

Already, the ripples of revolution have been felt far beyond the small,
mountainous nation of 5 million people in Central Asia.

Friday, in Belarus, on Russia’s western edge, riot police clashed with
demonstrators calling for President Alexander Lukashenko’s resignation,
beating them back with truncheons.

And in tightly controlled Uzbekistan, which borders on Kyrgyzstan,
opposition leaders from various movements issued a joint statement
of admiration for the Kyrgyzstan coup.

A domino effect would have deep ramifications for Russia.

Moscow wants desperately to form a free-trade zone that could restore
some of its Soviet-era economic power, but that requires cooperation
from Kazakhstan and Belarus. Today, those countries are in safe hands
from Moscow’s point of view, but the opposition might not see such
an alliance in their nations’ interest.

The fourth partner in the project, Ukraine, has suggested it could
pull out if new President Viktor Yushchenko’s government decides it
is not in the national interest.

Moscow needs oil- and gas-rich Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan
to help maintain its status as a top energy transporter, and Tajikistan
and Armenia, which both host Russian bases, as outposts for its
military in Central Asia and the Caucasus.

New, opposition-led governments in any of those nations could cut
into Russia’s strategic sway.

After losing its stake in last fall’s political battle in Ukraine,
the Kremlin has taken a careful approach to Kyrgyzstan, making no
visible effort to help keep its longtime leader from losing power.

Meanwhile Friday, Russian President Vladimir Putin warned against
placing excessive hopes in the Commonwealth of Independent States,
a loose alliance of 12 former Soviet nations that Moscow has sought
to dominate.

With surprising candor, Putin said the CIS was merely a forum created
for the “civilized divorce” of the former Soviet republics, in contrast
to the European Union, which was built to foster real cooperation.

“All disappointments come from excessive expectations,” Putin said.

ANKARA: Europe Expects Turks To Confess Armenian Genocide First ToJo

Turkish Press

Europe Expects Turks To Confess Armenian Genocide First To Join EU: McCarthy

Published: 3/24/2005

ANKARA – American Historian

Prof. Dr. Justin McCarthy of the Louisville University said on Thursday
that Europe expected Turks to confess Armenian genocide first to join
the European Union (EU).

“Can it be appropriate to join an institution which demands acceptance
of a lie as an entrance fee? Can you enter an organization which
tells you that you can join it only if you accept that your father
is a murderer? Will Turkey enter the EU by telling a lie about its
history?… Such a confession will make everything worse,” said
McCarthy addressing the meeting on “Truth about Armenian Issue”
held at the Turkish parliament.

During his speech, the American historian explained that the Armenian
genocide claims didn’t have historical ground. McCarthy said that
Ottomans and Armenians lived as friends for years, stressing that
this friendship which continued for 800 years was harmed when Russians
incited Armenians to revolt against the Ottomans.

McCarthy pointed out to the fact that the decision of deportation
was taken seven months after the Armenian revolt, stressing that
“that was a war, not a genocide.” He also stressed that Ottomans were
right to see Armenians as an enemy in that period of time.

Noting that the documents of the so-called genocide allegations
put forward by the Armenian sources were either ‘false or biased,’
McCarthy said that the Ottoman documents on the issue had sound basis
and that the Ottomans didn’t fabricate false documents.

McCarthy remarked that Turks should oppose the lies told about
their ancestors, adding that it was a difficult fight because there
was prejudice against Turks. “But the truth is on your side,” he
said. McCarthy suggested that the academic studies written on the
issue by Turks should be translated into English, noting that he knew
that Turks were not afraid of the realities.

Referring to the schemes of the Armenian nationalists, McCarthy said
that they wanted Turks to “confess (committing the genocide) first,
but then they will ask for compensation and finally they will demand
territory.” McCarthy remarked that Armenian nationalists wanted
to get lands (provinces) of Erzurum, Van, Elazýg, Sivas, Bitlis
and Trabzon and added that he knew that Turks would not give in to
that pressure. He said that EU should see the fact that Armenian
nationalists didn’t want the wellbeing of Europe. “Europeans use
genocide claims for their short-term interests,” he said.

Responding to questions after his speech, McCarthy said that the
deportation of Armenians didn’t mean genocide. “You can’t talk about
genocide when 80 percent of the people survive. The number of those
who died because of starvation is much more than the one who died
being shot… Also the Armenians living in Istanbul, Izmir and Edirne
were not deported. In Germany where a genocide was committed, Jews
living in Berlin and in other parts, all died…Ottomans were very
smart, if they wanted to kill Armenians, 80 percent of the Armenians
would not survive…Nobody talks about that, but Russians are more
responsible for the killing of Armenians as they maltreated them.”
In sum McCarthy said that all the deaths were a result of the war.

Reminding of the Turks who died because of hunger due to Russian
occupation and Armenian revolt, McCarthy said that bloody massacres
were committed by the Armenians and this was an indisputable fact
and a proven history.

McCarthy ended his words saying that the ‘Blue Book’ included a
series of lies and in that respect it was a book based on fabricated
documents.

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Blast outside building housing Armenian gov’t’s customs committee

RIA Novosti, Russia
March 24 2005

BLAST OUTSIDE BUILDING HOUSING ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT’S CUSTOMS
COMMITTEE

YEREVAN, March 24, (RIA Novosti, Gamlet Matevosyan) – A blast
occurred around 12 noon Moscow time on Thursday outside the building
housing the State Customs Committee of the Armenian government. There
were no casualties, RIA Novosti was told at the customs committee’s
press-service.

The detonation took place at the time when the office car carrying
customs committee chairman Armen Avetisyan drove up to the entrance.

The committee chairman did not suffer, but the blast damaged his car.

Top committee officials explain the incident as due to energetic
measures undertaken against the shadow economy since the beginning of
the year, and also tighter customs administration.

“The morning’s incident shows once again that the steps to improve
and tighten up customs administration are having effect,” it was
noted at the press-service.

“To those who hope to weaken with such steps the will of the
committee leadership in the struggle against the black economy we
would like to say that the committee will be consistent in exposing
customs irregularities through stricter administration,” it was
pointed out at the press-service.

BAKU: Amb. of Azerbaijan in Moscow meets with Amb. of Slovenia inRus

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
March 23 2005

AMBASSADOR OF AZERBAIJAN IN MOSCOW MEETS WITH AMBASSADOR OF SLOVENIA
IN RUSSIAN FEDERATION
[March 23, 2005, 20:32:20]

On March 23, the ambassador of Azerbaijan in Moscow, the doyen of the
diplomatic corps Ramiz Rizayev has met the new ambassador of Slovenia
in Russia of Andrey Benedeichich, who, before appointment as the head
of mission of the country in Moscow held the post of proxy
minister-deputy head of permanent mission of Slovenia at OSCE in
Vienna.

During conversation, the Azerbaijan diplomat has informed his Slovene
colleague on features of the diplomatic protocol in Russia, current
socio-economic and political situation in the host country, also
about the condition of the Azerbaijan -Russian relations. Special
accent has been made on strategic character of the said relations,
positive changes of their development in economic, humanitarian and
political spheres.

The ambassador of Slovenia, in turn, has noted that his country,
since this year being chairman of OSCE, in the new quality would
actively promote settlements of the Armenia-Azerbaijan,
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

Thus, the diplomat has stated that during the forthcoming April visit
of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Slovenia to Baku, alongside
with problems of strengthening of the Slovenia-Azerbaijan mutual
relations, also will be focused the questions connected to
intermediary activity of his country in this mentioned problem.

During the meeting, also discussed were other questions representing
mutual interest.

Novorossiisk Armenians seek Russian,Armenian presidents’ interventio

NOVOROSSIISK ARMENIANS SEEK RUSSIAN, ARMENIAN PRESIDENTS’
INTERVENTION TO STOP COSSACK RAMPAGE

ArmenPress
March 23 2005

NOVOROSSIISK, MARCH 23, ARMENPRESS: According to a report from the
southern Russian city of Novorossiisk in the province of Krasnodar,
the local Armenian community will ask for intervention of Russian and
Armenian presidents to stop a new wave of anti-Armenian rampage.
Yerkramas weekly, a newspaper run by the Armenian community of
southern Russia, said local Armenian community accused the city
law-enforcement bodies of failing to stick to their promises and
guarantee local Armenians’ safety.
The newspaper said these guarantees were given on March 22 morning
after Cossacks from nearby regions went on a rampage in a town
quarter populated by Armenians destroying cars, cafes and shops,
owned by Armenians. On the same day local mayor appealed to Armenian
and Greek diasporas and the Cossack to observe law and stop
disorders, but on the same evening around 200 Cossacks arrived in the
town to attack Armenians and Greeks.
According to a witness, the clash was caused by a squabble at a
local cafe when Cossacks led by their chieftain attacked a group of
Armenians and Greeks who were having a birthday party. In the
subsequent fight the chieftain was injured and was rushed to a
hospital where doctors had to operate on him. Local law-enforcement
bodies opened a criminal investigation.
Inter-ethnic tension in this region that has the largest Armenian
community around the globe, according to various estimations, between
800,000 to 1 million, constituting 18 percent of the region’s overall
five million population, have become commonplace.
The historic Armenian presence in the Krasnodar region dates back
centuries, mainly due to the incentives offered by Tsarist officials
to Armenians willing to move to the region. Throughout the 19th
century, the Armenians contributed to an expansion of the region’s
commerce and agriculture.
Additional numbers of Armenian refugees settled in the region in
1988 in the wake of anti-Armenian pogroms by Azeris in Sumgait,
Kirovabad, and Baku.
A related influx of Armenians from Nagorno Karabagh, Javakhk, and
Abkhazia also strengthened the Armenian presence in the Krasnodar
region. After fleeing the anti-Armenian attacks by Azeris, the
Russian-speaking Armenians from Baku, in particular, often preferred
to resettle in Krasnodar, Stavropol, and Moscow, rather than in
Armenia, mainly because of their lack of Armenian language skills and
the need for Russian schools that were closing in Armenia.

ARF representatives meet with Georgian envoy

ARF representatives meet with Georgian envoy

22.03.2005 

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – Armenian Revolutionary Revolution (ARF) Supreme
Council of Armenia representative Armen Rustamian and National
Assembly’s ARF faction leader Levon Mkrtchian met on Tuesday with
Revaz Gochechiladze, the Georgian Ambassador to Armenia, ARF press
service reported.

The ARF members voiced their concern over the statements by Georgi
Gachechiladze, purportedly an advisor to the Georgian president,
regarding the Javakhk Armenians, the Armenian Genocide, and the
Armenian Revolutionary Federation; he had made the statements in an
interview with the Georgian newspaper Rao-Rao.

The ARF representatives reiterated the party’s position to assist the
Georgian authorities in resolving the socio-economic, educational and
political issues of the Javakhk Armenians. They also expressed their
concerns regarding the attempts of turning the Armenian churches in
Georgia into Georgian ones.

Ambassador Gochechiladze noted that Georgi Gachechiladze’s statements
do not represent those of the Georgian government and are partly a
result of his being uninformed. The ambassador also mentioned that he
had already passed on the ARF views and worries to Tbilisi. The ARF
members also conveyed their party’s willingness to boost the relations
with the Georgian party and political circles; the ambassador promised
to assist in this regard.

The meeting, initiated by the ARF, lasted about one hour.

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