TBILISI: Armenia To Let Azerbaijani Militaries To Its Bases WithinNA

ARMENIA TO LET AZERBAIJANI MILITARIES TO ITS BASES WITHIN NATO TRAININGS

Prime News Agency, Georgia
March 14 2006

Tbilisi. March 14 (Prime-News) – NATO Rescuer 2006 training will be
held in Yerevan at the end of June, PanARMENIAN.Net says, as quoting
Artur Agabekian, Deputy Armenian Defense Minister.

According to him, the representatives of 20 countries, including
those of the South Caucasus, will arrive in Yerevan.

“Armenia has always been supporting cooperation after Partnership
for Peace principle and now is ready to receive the representatives
of Azerbaijan and Turkey”, he said.

Artur Agabekian also said that a conference for final planning would
be held in Armenia in April to define a precise date of trainings
and list of participants.

Ten arrangements are to be held in Armenia in 2006 within the
frameworks of the Armenian-NATO cooperation.

We’ll Do Our Best To Correct The Electoral Rolls

WE’LL DO OUR BEST TO CORRECT THE ELECTORAL ROLLS

Panorama.am
18:33 17/10/05

The Coordinator of Coordinating Council Mher Shahgeldyan had a meeting
with journalists in the National Academy of Science.

Concerning the upcoming referendum he mainly focused on the electoral
rolls.

“I would not say that the situation is hopeless or vice versa. But
there are many problems to solve. The important one is to correct
the electoral rolls.

The Department of Visa and Passport must deal with that question,
as we had serious problems during the previous elections”, – said
M. Shahgeldyan and added, “There is also the president’s recommendation
to the chief of the police concerning that problem”. /Panorama.am/

Baku Offers EU To Support Baku- Akhalkalaki-Kars Railway Constructio

BAKU OFFERS EU TO SUPPORT BAKU- AKHALKALAKI-KARS RAILWAY CONSTRUCTION PROJECT

Pan Armenian
17.10.2005 21:39 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In the near future Baku will submit its action
plan within the EU New Neighbors Program, head of the Azeri MFA
department of economic affairs and development Ashraf Shikhaliyev
informed. “Within next 10 days we will send our action plan, which
represents the priorities of our cooperation with the European Union,
to Brussels,” he stated. In his words, Azerbaijan offers EU to support
Baku-Akhalkalaki-Kars railway construction $400 million project.

Looking within, reaching out Armenian cleric says on ME Christians

Fresno Bee (California)
October 12, 2005, Wednesday FINAL EDITION

Looking within, reaching out Armenian cleric says Mideast Christians
must rise to the challenge of living in a Muslim world.

Ron Orozco The Fresno Bee

Christians face a challenge living in the Middle East, His Holiness
Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia in Antelias,
Lebanon, said Tuesday.

Christians live as a minority in that part of the world, where most
people are Muslim. He said some Christian churches struggle for
survival and that they must reorganize themselves in order to live
peacefully with Muslims.

“It is a challenge that should move the Christian Church to recovery,
rediscovery and renewal,” said Aram I, moderator of the World Council
of Churches, which is made up of 340 churches representing more than
400 million Christians globally.

Aram I gave a lecture Tuesday in front of several hundred people at
Fresno Pacific University in southeast Fresno. It was part of a
pontifical visit in California, marking the 10th anniversary of Aram
I’s enthronement. The Western Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic
Church arranged the visit.

Before Aram I’s talk, an ecumenical prayer service was held in his
honor at Butler Church near Fresno Pacific. Ten doves were released
upon his arrival — one per enthronement year.

Bishop John T. Steinbock of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Fresno gave
one of the opening prayers. And Pacific Chamber Singers wrapped up
the service by singing “The Lord’s Prayer” in Armenian.

“I didn’t know what to expect, but then everyone stood up and I
thought, ‘Oh, my, this guy is important,’ ” said Jennifer Eastwood, a
Fresno Pacific senior majoring in vocal performance and a chamber
singer. “I felt honored to sing.”

At Fresno Pacific’s Ashley Auditorium, Aram I’s lecture, “Challenges
Facing Christianity in the Middle East,” came just days after the
university held Building a Culture of Peace week. The university is
supported by the Mennonite Brethren Church.

Islam in the Middle East, Aram I said, has created a new context for
Christians to live out their faith in their communities — from
Greek, Armenian and Syrian Orthodox to Roman Catholic to Protestant.

“We live with Muslims; they’re our neighbors,” said Aram I, wearing a
black robe. “It is very important we reactivate our living together
as one community in the Middle East.

“With Muslims, we share common values,” he said. “We cannot live in
isolation. We need to develop a kind of theology as churches so
living together is manifested concretely. We still can preserve our
identity.”

Those attending the lecture had an opportunity to ask questions. One
student asked whether it was possible for Christians to serve Muslims
and still hold on to their faith beliefs.

Aram I answered yes. Christians shouldn’t compromise their missionary
role, including serving others such as Muslims.

“Serving doesn’t recognize boundaries,” he said.

Anna Ambaryan, a Fresno Pacific sophomore who is of Armenian descent,
said she felt a sense of pride as she listened to an Armenian
spiritual leader.

“He said not to compromise but to be strong in your faith,” Ambaryan
said. “That will show God’s love to others.”

Aram I’s Fresno visit will conclude today, when he blesses an
agricultural field at North and Clovis avenues and visits California
Armenian Home and First Armenian Presbyterian Church in Fresno.

Regional Conference Of US Chambers Of Commerce To Be Held In Yerevan

REGIONAL CONFERENCE OF US CHAMBERS OF COMMERCE TO BE HELD IN YEREVAN

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Oct 13 2005

YEREVAN, October 13. /ARKA/. The American Chamber of Commerce in
Armenia (ACCA), with the assistance of the US Embassy in Armenia,
will hold a regional conference of Chambers of Commerce in Yerevan on
October 15-16. ACCA Board of Directors Edit Khachatryan reported that
the motto of the conference will be “Common Future”. The conference
will be attended by members of American regional chambers of commerce,
as well as by other businessmen. The goal of the conference is
improving cooperation and exchange of information between the American
chambers of commerce in the region and finding common approaches to
the development of business environment and investment climate in
the South Caucasus.

The ACCA launched its activities in Armenia in spring 2001.

Controversial Conference On Genocide Held In Turkey

CONTROVERSIAL CONFERENCE ON GENOCIDE HELD IN TURKEY
Aisha Labi

The Chronicle of Higher Education
October 7, 2005, Friday

An academic conference on Turkey’s controversial “Armenian question”
took place last month in Istanbul, despite legal maneuvering by Turkish
nationalists that had threatened to prevent it. The conference was
originally to have taken place in May, but was postponed at the last
minute under pressure from government officials.

The meeting was rescheduled at Bogaziçi University, also known
in English as Bosphorus University, but was once again postponed
on the eve of its opening, this time because of a legal challenge
that questioned its scientific validity and the qualifications of
its participants. The challengers also said it was inappropriate
for Bogaziçi, a public university, to be the venue for such
a gathering, which they said contravened its mission.

Academics from Istanbul Bilgi University, Bogaziçi, and Sabanci
University, three of Turkey’s leading higher-education institutions,
organized the meeting, which they described as the first conference
on the Armenian issue in Turkey not organized by state authorities
or government-affiliated historians. Bilgi and Sabanci are private.

Armenians have long contended that the killings of up to 1.5 million
Armenians in 1915 and subsequent years, during the waning days of
the Ottoman Empire, constituted genocide by Ottoman Turkish forces.

Turkey officially rejects that view. Turkish historians and other
academics have become increasingly outspoken in challenging the
nationalist line on the issue, however, and growing international
attention has also focused on the matter. Talks on Turkey’s bid
to join the European Union began last month, and the government’s
inflexibility on the Armenian question remains a sticking point.

The conference, titled “Ottoman Armenians During the Demise of
the Empire: Issues of Democracy and Scientific Responsibility,” was
postponed in May after its organizers could not guarantee participants’
safety.

Last month participants had arrived in Istanbul and the rescheduled
meeting looked set to begin on time when the fresh legal challenge
against it came to light. A three-judge panel of an administrative
court had ruled, 2 to 1, that a legal investigation of the conference’s
validity should take place, even though its organizers were notified
of the decision only the day before the conference was to begin.

With that inquiry pending, Bogaziçi could no longer play
host to the conference without being held in contempt of the court’s
ruling. Organizers hastily shifted the venue to Bilgi so the conference
could proceed.

‘Anti-Democratic Development’

The official response to the threat to the rescheduled conference
differed starkly from the government’s approach in May, when the
justice minister took to the floor of Parliament to brand the meeting
“treason” and a “dagger in the back of the Turkish people.” This time,
in comments broadcast on television, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan said he was saddened by the new threat to the conference. He
characterized the legal challenge as an “anti-democratic development”
to which he was opposed.

Aybar Ertepinar, vice president of the Council of Higher Education,
a government-financed organization that oversees all Turkish
universities, said that although his group had not been invited to
take part, the conference should have been allowed to proceed at
Bogaziçi.

“Our Constitution grants academic and scientific freedom to
universities,” he said. Taking up the opponents’ challenge “was an
unfortunate decision of the court that went beyond the borders of
its responsibility,” he said.

With the more than 350 participants once again assembled in Istanbul,
the conference’s organizers decided that “we can either do this now or
we cannot do it all again,” said Fatma Müge Gocek, an associate
professor of sociology at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor
who was on the meeting’s advisory committee.

Organizers had selected Bogaziçi as the venue for the meeting
precisely because it is a public institution, but they decided they
had no choice but to relocate to Bilgi. The rectors of all three
sponsoring universities welcomed the participants, who met in marathon
sessions to condense into two days a program that was to have been
spread over three.

Because the conference had received so much attention in the Turkish
news media, participants did not even need to be notified of the
change, said Ms. Gocek. Opponents were also aware of the new location,
and about 100 protesters showed up to heckle participants and pelt
them with eggs and tomatoes, she said.

As the conference concluded, Ms. Gocek said she felt a real “paradigm
shift” had occurred. “We had lots of Turkish journalists there who said
they are not going to use the word ‘alleged’ from now on, in terms
of talking about the genocide. They may refer to ‘genocide claims,’
but they will no longer talk of an ‘alleged genocide,'” she said.

Papers from the conference will be published immediately in Turkish,
which was the working language of the gathering, and as soon as
possible in English, Ms. Gocek said.

Shift to NATO mil standards will impede Armenian-Russian mil coop

ARMINFO News Agency
October 8, 2005

SHIFT TO NATO MILITARY STANDARDS WILL IMPEDE ARMENIAN-RUSSIAN
MILITARY PARTNERSHIP

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 8. ARMINFO. “In the times of the USSR Russia had a
great contribution to the development of the Soviet republics, but
nowadays such expenses are unthrifty on Russia’s part,” said a deputy
of the Russian Parliament, Alexander Fomenko, on the NATO “Rose Roth”
seminar, Yerevan.

According to Mr. Fomenko, Russia holds no interest in investments in
South Caucasus. At present Russia indulges its Southern Caucasian
partners just for the sake of maintaining good relations. “If Russia
makes neither economic nor political use from assisting Southern
Caucasian countries, the expenses are senseless,” said Mr. Fomenko
and noted that the situation in Armenia is much more pleasant for
Russia than the situation in other Southern Caucasian countries.

Now there is more Armenian, Georgian and Azeri business in Russia
than there is in Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan. There are many
Russian companies owned by rich Armenians, Georgians and Azeris. Why
should the Russian authorities invest its own money in the countries
if they can do this through rich Armenians, Azeris or Georgians in
Russia.

Russia should treat the countries individually. With Armenia Russia
should lean on the potential of its Armenian community which is today
even more influential than the Russian Jews. Using this potential
Armenia can attain prosperity, says Fomenko. Strategic partnership is
a complex and multi-vector thing. For example strategic partners
should have common military standards – this implying that neither
Russia nor Armenia should switch to NATO standards. Armenia’s present
contacts with NATO give no ground for concern but this is just from
the first appearance, says Fomenko.

Armenia FM Visits Armenian Community of Sydney

PRESS RELEASE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of Australia & New Zealand
10 Macquarie Street
Chatswood NSW 2067
AUSTRALIA
Contact: Laura Artinian
Tel: (02) 9419-8056
Fax: (02) 9904-8446
Email: [email protected]

10 October 2005

RA FOREIGN MINISTER VISITS THE ARMENIAN COMMUNITY OF SYDNEY

Sydney, Australia – On Sunday, 9 October, 2005 His Excellency, Mr Vartan
Oskanian, Minister for Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia arrived in
Sydney with his official delegation at the invitation of the The Hon
Alexander Downer MP, Foreign Affairs Minister of Australia. The RA Minister
was welcomed at Sydney International Airport by government officials and
Primate of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of Australia and New Zealand,
His Eminence Archbishop Aghan Baliozian accompanied by Diocesan Councillors
and community leaders.

Mr Oskanian’s first engagement with the Armenian-Australian Community was by
attendance at the Divine Liturgy held at the Armenian Church of Holy
Resurrection. In his sermon dedicated to the 1600th anniversary of the
Armenian Alphabet on the Feast of the Holy Translators that was celebrated
on Saturday, the Primate declared the presence of the Minister to be the
crowning glory of celebration for the Community. The Minister responded to
the honour granted him to address the congregation in the Church and replied
to the warm welcome of the Primate. In response to the Primate’s sermon
where the Archbishop declared that the independence of Armenia began long
before the 14 years that is celebrated in September but some 1600 years ago
when the written Armenian language was established that would bring alive
the Word of God through the translation of the Holy Bible, the Minister
stated that the true independence of the Armenian nation began in 301 when
Christianity was adopted as the state religion.

Following the church service, the Primate hosted a luncheon in honour of the
Minister at the Prelacy that was also attended by the delegation from
Armenia and Diocesan Council.

In the afternoon, the Armenian Community gathered in large numbers at the
Austral-Armenian Association’s Galstaun Centre to welcome the Minister. Mr
Oskanian is the first Foreign Minister from the Republic of Armenia to make
an official visit to Australia. The Minister briefed the gathering on the
current state of affairs in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabagh, advocating the
important role of the Diaspora and purporting the roles of all stakeholders
in the future development of the homeland. Question time with the Community
followed the Minister’s briefing after which Mr Oskanian met with the local
Armenian media for a press conference in a closed session.

The Foreign Minister is meeting with his Australian counterpart today in the
nation’s capital, Canberra on official matters and will meet with other
Ministers and Members of Parliament throughout the course of the day. Later
this evening the Australian Foreign Minister will host a dinner at
Parliament House in honour of His Excellency Mr Vartan Oskanian. Dinner
guests will include Members of Parliament, delegates and representatives
from the Armenian-Australian Community. His Eminence Archbishop Aghan
Baliozian will also be a dinner guest of the Australian Foreign Minister.

How Will Nation Vote?

A1+

| 17:47:43 | 08-10-2005 | Politics |

HOW WILL NATION VOTE?

If the majority votes for the constitutional amendments but the number of
those who have voted makes less that 1/3 of the citizens registered in the
rolls the operating Constitution will remain if force.

The election to the local self-government showed that the electoral activity
has lowered , since only 35% of the voters took part in the election of the
Nor Nork community head.

Will the constitutional amendments be adopted? We addressed to 100 citizens
with this question October 3-6.

29% of the respondent suppose the amendments will not be adopted.

32% of the respondent think that the amendments will be adopted. Some of
them say that the outcomes will be forged. Some of them consider that this
is the desire of Europe. Only minor part of them rate the amendments as
progressive.

33% found difficulty in answering

The Persian pleasure principle

Varsity, Canada (The University of Toronto’s Student Newspaper)
Oct 7 2005

The Persian pleasure principle

Incoming U of T human rights professor Michael Ignatieff needs to put
down his romance novels and focus on the injustices in modern-day
Iran, argues Samira Mohyeddin

“What the historian says will, however careful he may be to use
purely descriptive language, sooner or later convey his attitude.
Detachment is itself a moral position. The use of neutral language
(‘Himmler caused many persons to be asphyxiated’) conveys its own
ethical tone.” -Isaiah Berlin, “Introduction” to Four Essays on
Liberty (1969).

Michael Ignatieff-Canadian author, journalist, and director of the
Carr Centre for Human Rights Policy at Harvard’s Kennedy School of
Government-was recently invited to Iran by an Iranian NGO known as
the Cultural Research Bureau to lecture on human rights and
democracy. On July 17, 2005, Ignatieff wrote a lengthy editorial
about his experiences in Iran, entitled “Iranian Lessons,” for the
New York Times Magazine.

Ignatieff notes early on that, due to the recent victory of noted
hard-liner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in the Iranian presidential elections,
the speaker had to alter his planned lecture. Instead of asking,
“What do democracy and human rights mean in an Islamic society?”,
Ignatieff asked, “Can democracy and human rights make any headway at
all in a society deeply divided between the rich and the poor,
included and excluded, educated and uneducated?”

Initially, one thinks that Ignatieff is speaking to the necessity of
equating socio-economic rights with universal human rights, a project
that Canadian Louise Arbour-currently the United Nations’ High
Commissioner for Human Rights-is advocating and developing.
Ignatieff, however, does not speak to the constituents whom he
attempts so poorly to champion. Instead, he chooses to give voice to
the enfranchised upper echelons of Tehran’s society.

Although his article begins in southern Tehran, with a detailed
description of a walled cemetery dedicated to those who senselessly
perished in the first Gulf War, Ignatieff does not address the
concerns of the more than forty per cent of Tehran’s population who
live below the poverty line in the city’s south end.

Why would Ignatieff choose to not have a single conversation with
anyone in southern Tehran? After all, it was this exact constituency
that brought a divisive figure like Ahmadinejad to power in response
to promises of practical aid. The same constituency that made Michael
Ignatieff alter the topic of his lecture. Other than an overblown and
prosaic description of the walled cemetery, complete with Persian
poetry and tea-drinking mourners, Ignatieff does not offer much
insight about the population and its challenges, and leaves southern
Tehran to its impoverished mourning.

Referring to something that he coins as “Persian pleasure,” Ignatieff
paints a charming picture of present-day Isfahan, a UNESCO heritage
city in central Iran: “I spent a night wandering along the
exquisitely lighted vaulted bridges, watching men, not necessarily
gay, strolling hand in hand, singing to each other, and dancing
beneath the arches….I came away from a night in Isfahan believing
that Persian pleasure, in the long run, would outlast Shiite
Puritanism.” Never bothering to define what “Persian pleasure” is,
Ignatieff disregards Iran’s multicultural, multilingual, and
multi-ethnic reality, and instead chooses to paint a little miniature
of boys and men frolicking with one another-but who are not
necessarily gay-and just leaves it there.

Ignatieff also trivializes women’s issues by making repeated
references to women’s dress, make-up, and hair. Yet, Ignatieff fails
to mention that the covering of women’s hair, however miniscule an
issue it may seem these days, is mandatory for women in Iran, and
failure to do so carries the penalty of 102 lashes.

After lamenting the fact that “young Iranians are so hostile to
clerical rule,” Ignatieff goes on to make an audacious suggestion to
the female students that he speaks to in the university, telling them
not to reject Sharia law outright but to “reform Sharia from within.”
Irrespective of Ignatieff’s deluded prescription, what was heartening
was the answer that those female students gave to Ignatieff’s
suggestion: “You are too nice to Sharia law. It must be abolished. It
cannot be changed.”

Early on in the article, Ignatieff describes how he came upon the
scene of a small student-led demonstration regarding the elections in
Iran and was witness to a secret police officer attempting to abduct
one of the students and push him into the back of an unmarked
vehicle. Ignatieff goes on to describe how some of the demonstrators
came to the aid of the student by punching and kicking the officer.
Ignatieff’s next assertion regarding what he had just seen is quite
puzzling and disappointing.

Referring to the student-who had managed to wrangle himself
free-Ignatieff posits, “In a more genuinely fearful police state, he
would have gone quietly.” Is he suggesting that Iran is not a police
state? Although Ignatieff does recognize that the Iranian government
does not give much credence to the concept of human rights, he fails
to offer any critical assessment of the situation of human rights in
Iran.

This convenient disregard for the facts is unfortunately not
restricted to Ignatieff alone. In 1985 the United States Congress
tried to pass a resolution officially recognizing the massacre of
more than a million Armenians, specifically referring to the
“genocide perpetrated in Turkey between 1915 and 1923.” Sixty-nine
historians sent a letter to Congress disputing this resolution,
writing, “As for the charge of ‘genocide,’ no signatory of this
statement wishes to minimize the scope of Armenian suffering. We are
likewise cognizant that it cannot be viewed as separate from the
suffering experienced by the Muslim inhabitants of the region….But
much more remains to be discovered before historians will be able to
sort out precisely responsibility between warring and innocent, and
to identify the causes for the events which resulted in the death or
removal of large numbers of the eastern Anatolian population,
Christian and Muslim alike.”

One of the 69 historians was well known Orientalist and Islamic
scholar, Bernard Lewis. Although the New York Times reported in 1915
that Armenian and Greek Christians were “being systemically uprooted
from their homes en masse…and given the choice between immediate
acceptance of Islam or death by the sword or starvation” (“Turks are
Evicting Native Christians,” New York Times, July 11, 1915), Lewis
declared in a 1993 interview with Le Monde magazine in France that
what happened should not be considered genocide. In a second
interview a few months later, he referred to “an Armenian betrayal”
in the “context of a struggle, no doubt unequal, but for material
stakes….There is no serious proof of a plan of the Ottoman
government aimed at the extermination of the Armenian nation.”

Although Lewis is not a human rights or genocide scholar, he is a
historian and, like Ignatieff, who purports to be a human rights
champion extraordinaire, he has a certain responsibility. I am not
suggesting that Ignatieff’s self-induced myopia regarding the abysmal
human rights record of the Islamic Republic of Iran is on par with
genocide denial. I am arguing, however, that we all make choices.
Lewis made a choice during the Le Monde interview when he referred to
the genocide of the Armenians as “their version of history.”
Ignatieff also makes a choice when he praises Iran on “the
achievements of the revolution,” and continually fetishizes Persian
culture throughout his article.

On July 19, 2005, two days after Ignatieff’s piece was published,
Amnesty International reported that two youths, both under the age of
18, were executed in the Iranian province of Mashad for reportedly
having sexual relations with one another and sexually assaulting a
13-year-old boy. Prior to their execution, both were given 228 lashes
for theft, consuming alcohol, and disturbing the peace. Unlike
Ignatieff’s idyllic miniature of late-night Isfahan, these boys are
“necessarily gay,” and were hung for being so, in true medieval
fashion.

This is where his dreamy and congenial romance with Persian pleasure
falls apart. Ignatieff’s self-induced myopia regarding the
socio-political situation of Iranians, particularly the young, is the
specific reason why his article on Iran reads more like the account
of a political-economist-turned-harlequin-romance-writer than that of
a human rights scholar.

85/news/2005/10/06/Feature/The-Persian.Pleasure.Pr inciple-1012725.shtml

http://www.thevarsity.ca/media/paper2