Armenia Ready to Discuss Return of Regions in Return for Status, Sec

Armenpress

ARMENIA READY TO DISCUSS RETURN OF ARMENIAN- CONTROLLED REGIONS IN RETURN
FOR SECURITY AND STATUS FOR KARABAGH

YEREVAN, APRIL 13, ARMENPRESS: Armenian foreign minister Vartan Oskanian
said today he will not have a tete-a-tete meeting with his Azerbaijani
counterpart Elmar Mamedyarov in London on April 15. He said instead the OSCE
Minsk group co-chairmen will have separate meetings with both foreign
ministers. According to him, this format was proposed by the cochairmen, who
believe that it would be more effective at this stage.
“We have had many meetings (with Mamedyarov) and there is no urgent need
for another such meeting,” Oskanian told a news conference.
Oskanian described recent press reports that the international peace
brokers have developed a new package of proposals to end the long-running
dispute over Karabagh as “obvious exaggeration.” “We have not reached a
point in the talks so as to discuss new fresh proposal,” he said, adding
also that the Minsk group cochairmen expect Armenian and Azeri presidents to
express their approaches to a set of issues.
Oskanian denied opinions that the sides are close to striking the final
peace deal, but did not rule out a breakthrough at any moment. He said the
parties have reached accord on the frameworks of issues which they want to
be discussed. He termed this “progress”, saying previously one of the sides
used to deny discussion of this or that related question. “When we begin to
discuss the details of this or that issue our positions still appear to be
far from one another,” he said.
Oskanian voiced Yerevan’s readiness to discuss “the return of Armenian
controlled-territories around Nagorno Karabagh,” saying Armenia looks upon
them as a security guarantee. “These regions will remain under Armenian
forces’ control to ensure the security of Karabagh and decide its future
status, they could be given back in return for its security and status,” he
said.
He also said there is no final agreement on whether presidents Aliyev and
Kocharian would meet either in Moscow on May 8-9, or in Warsaw, later that
month.

Kocharian Has not Received Official Request on Genocide Commission

ADMINISTRATION OF ARMENIAN PRESIDENT DID NOT RECEIVE LETTER WITH OFFER
TO CREATE BILATERAL EXPERT COMMISSION TO STUDY FACTS OF ARMENIAN
GENOCIDE IN 1915

YEREVAN, APRIL 13. ARMINFO. The administration of Armenian President
Robert Kocharyan has not received a letter from Turkish Prime-Minister
Rejep Taib Erdogan with an offer to create a bilateral expert
commission to study facts of Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey in
1915, president’s press-secretary Victor Soghomonyan stated ARMINFO.

Meanwhile, ATP agency informs that Turkish Foreign Minister Abdula
Gyul stated at Turkish Parliament Apr 13 that Erdogan sent the letter
to Kocharyan with the offer to create the mentioned
commission. According to the source, Turkey is ready to negotiate with
Armenia on the staff and work of the commission. It may be another
chance for normalization of relations between Armenia and Turkey, the
massage says.

Driveway polarizes neighbors

The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
04/13/05

Driveway polarizes neighbors

Judge to decide if Buckhead homeowner owes city millions and jail
time

By TY TAGAMI

To Sarkis Agasarkisian, the massive rock pile signifies beauty,
strength and peace of mind.

The free rock from a city sewer excavation buttressed his crumbling
and dangerous driveway, the immigrant from Armenia said. “My driveway
today is like heaven.”

T. Levette Bagwell/AJC
(ENLARGE)
Sarkis Agasarkisian says he built his rock driveway with city
approval; a judge decides today whether that’s true. What’s not in
dispute is that the project divided Agasarkisian and his Buckhead
neighbors, who consider his effort ugly.

LOUIE FAVORITE/AJC STAFF

To his neighbors in the swank Buckhead area, the pile of so-called
“tunnel muck” is straight from hell. They see it as an eyesore that
has silted a downstream lake and damaged their property values. They
see the rocks and the trees he tore down to place them there as an
obvious act of environmental devastation and arrogant disregard for
the law.

A judge will decide today which side is right, but several things
already seem clear: The Agasarkisian family has a history of moving
soil and cutting down trees in Buckhead, and the family from “the
land of stone” and their neighbors in “the city of trees” have
fundamentally different notions of beauty.

Agasarkisian, who came to the United States in 1979 at age 21 and is
now a U.S. citizen, was fined nearly $50,000 for felling the trees
without permission. He could end up paying much more. Observers say
he piled anywhere from 50 to 700 dump-truck loads into the ravine
between his ranch-style home and West Conway Drive. Atlanta Municipal
Court Judge Lisa West said after the bench trial last week that she
would rule today whether he dumped the rock without a permit and did
so too close to a drainage ditch, as the city has claimed.

Agasarkisian faces fines of more than $1 million, and his attorneys
say he theoretically could be sent to jail for more than 100 years.
Shel Schlegman, a neighbor who has led the fight against the
driveway, said he and the other residents in the Mount Paran Road
area believe Agasarkisian has ruined his property. “It looks like a
logging camp,” said Schlegman, an architect. “It’s all just stone.
There’s nothing green there.”

Schlegman said he believes Agasarkisian thought he could act with
impunity after watching his brother do something similar to his own
property, without apparent sanction.

Agasarkisian’s brother lives a mile away, in a ranch-style house
surrounded by similarly unhappy neighbors.

The residents of Swims Valley Drive say Aroutioun Agasarkisian, or
Harry, as they call him, cut down dozens of pines that once hid his
home from the road. They say he hauled in soil and terraced the
sloping yard into what they derisively call the “rice paddies,” then
allowed weeds to grow. A brick ledge that peeled off the front of the
house is still where it fell, and a stone fountain near the street
stopped gurgling soon after it was built and has been dry ever since,
they say.

“It’s an unsightly mess,” said Al Goodgame, whose house at the end of
the street overlooks a forested ravine. “He mows his grass once a
year. It’s almost like it’s his revenge for when we made a stink when
he cut down the trees.”

Goodgame, a retired landscape architect, wrote a letter to the
neighborhood association president in April 2000, complaining that as
many as 45 mature trees had been toppled and that the city had done
nothing about it.

Why ‘ugly homes’?

The letter, signed by nearly all the residents on the street,
described a chaotic scene. It said chain saws buzzed on the property
from mid-February until late March of that year, often until 11 p.m.
The letter said car headlights provided illumination and a sport
utility vehicle and a Ryder truck were used to pull down partially
cut trees.

The residents of Swims Valley Drive worried that the city would not
penalize their neighbor for cutting down trees without a permit.

Sarkis Agasarkisian said his brother was not fined because he got a
tree-removal permit after one fell on his house, damaging the roof.

The city’s senior arborist, Frank Mobley, would not talk about the
case, saying records did not exist from that period.

One question lingers. Even if Sarkis Agasarkisian thought he could
build a massive driveway with impunity, why would he want to?

Schlegman, the architect, insists Agasarkisian could have repaired
the drive with much more subtle engineering – a road that hugged the
contours of his property and retaining walls that held a lesser
amount of rock under the lowest point. He said he was baffled by the
site development decisions of the Agasarkisian brothers. “Why do
these people want to live in ugly homes?” he asked.

Goodgame, who has lived on Swims Valley since childhood, speculates
that Armenians and Buckhead natives may have different ideas of
beauty. “It’s cultural: I’m beginning to think that trees are
something they don’t like,” he said.

One expert on Armenia said there may be cultural issues at play.

Dennis Papazian, a history professor at the University of Michigan at
Dearborn, said Armenia is called “the land of stone.”

Built for the ages

“There are a lot of rocks there,” said Papazian, who directs the
university’s Armenian Research Center. He said Armenians have built
with stone for 3,000 years. “There is a tendency for Armenians to
overbuild. That is a cultural characteristic.”

On a visit to post-Soviet Armenia, he noted how newly prosperous
farmers were building farmhouses. They used steel and stone and
concrete. “They look like little fortresses, and they’re fairly ugly,
to be honest,” said Papazian, who was born in the United States. He
said Armenia was the site of frequent invasions, which led to
deep-seated psychological insecurity.

“If you didn’t build for the ages,” he said, “they would tear it
down.”

http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/atlanta/0405/13driveway.html

Montreal: Metro mugger needs love – not prison, supporters say

The Gazette (Montreal)
April 12, 2005 Tuesday
Final Edition

Metro mugger needs love – not prison, supporters say: Youth who
shoved 90-year-old down stairs a victim of parental negligence, court
hears

SUE MONTGOMERY, The Gazette

Emrys Brooks Djierdjian made a terrible mistake when he robbed a
90-year-old woman and shoved her down some stairs, but he is a teen
in need of love and support, not prison time, say friends and
neighbours from his small village who have stepped forward to take
him under their collective wing.

The 18-year-old, who pleaded guilty to armed robbery, is a victim of
parental negligence, said Andre Lamarre, one of 17 residents of St.
Alphonse de Rodriguez, who showed up at Quebec Court yesterday to
vouch for the teen.

“I know he is a good person, but he lacked what all children need to
become a good citizen.”

Lawyer Marie-Laure Braun has asked that her client be released on
bail until he is sentenced.

Quebec Court Judge Jean-B. Falardeau is to render his decision
tomorrow.

An only child, Brooks Djierdjian attended school for just half a year
throughout the primary years, said supporter France Pellerin. His
Armenian father and anglophone mother kept him at home, so he never
developed normal social skills.

“When one of the neighbours had him over for dinner, he didn’t know
how to use cutlery and he put his arms around his plate, as if to
protect it, as if someone would take it from him,” she said.

“Where was the department of youth protection? Where was the school
board? Why didn’t anyone do anything to help him?”

Pellerin and others from the village of 2,000, 60 kilometres north of
Montreal, said they decided as a group that instead of sitting back
and watching bad news on television or reading about it in the paper,
they would take some responsibility as members of society.

They’ve raised money to pay for any therapy Brooks Djierdjian needs.

One has offered him a job.

Even the victim, Gemma Martel, who suffered a fractured pelvis,
broken arm and bleeding in the brain, has written a letter of
forgiveness to her aggressor, said supporter Catherine Ruiz-Gomar.

“If this society believes in rehabilitation, then we need to give
people the means to do it,” Lamarre said.

Those who know him describe Brooks Djierdjian as an intelligent teen
who reads a lot, is interested in the world and is not prone to
violence.

“He doesn’t have the profile of a criminal or someone who is
rebelling,” said Lamarre, who has taught CEGEP for 33 years.
“Perhaps, mentally, he’s a bit younger, but he needs compassion and
support to develop.”

Brooks Djierdjian’s life was made even more difficult when his mother
committed suicide in 2003.

When the boy turned 18, in January, his father dropped him in
Montreal with $100 in his pocket in order for him “to become a man,”
Pellerin said.

After the mugging at the Berri-UQAM metro station, police confirmed
Brooks Djierdjian had been living with friends downtown for a few
weeks.

The teen’s father, artist Berdj Djierdjian, has been present at his
son’s court dates, and admits the young man has had a hard life.

His mother was mentally ill and refused to speak to her son in the
years before her suicide, he has said.

Karabakh Peace Process Guarantee of South Caucasus

KARABAKH PEACE PROCESS GUARANTEE OF SOUTH CAUCASUS EXISTENCE: FRENCH SENATOR

YEREVAN, APRIL 12. ARMINFO. The Karabakh peace process is a guarantee
for the South Caucasus existence, says the head of the French-Azeri
friendship group of the French Senate Amrboise Dupont.

The 525th newspaper (Baku) reports Dupont as saying that Paris is
closely watching the OSCE MG process.

Asked if one can hope for France’s unbiased position in the context of
charges of pro-Armenian stance Dupont says that as OSCE MG co-chair
France does it best to attain fair resolution of the Karabakh
conflict. France is an arbiter in this game with the rules set by the
players, says Dupont noting that peaceful resolution is most desirable
in any case.

He says that French Senate is not planning any hearings of the
Karabakh issue. At least he has no such information. Such hearings may
be held between Poncelet and the presidents of the South Caucasian
parliaments.

Besides French Senate has a group called Audit who studies the
situation in conflict zones including in the South Caucasus.

OSCE Office helps organize student essay contest on role of women

OSCE
April 8 2005

OSCE Office helps organize student essay contest on role of women in
Armenia

YEREVAN, 8 April 2005 – The winners of an essay contest on the role
of women in Armenia were announced today at an award ceremony in
Yerevan. They were chosen from more than 500 students who took part
in a nationwide competition.

The contest was organized by the OSCE Office in Yerevan, the U.S.
Peace Corps in Armenia and the Center for the Development of Civil
Society.

The event marked the end of a gender activities month, which started
on 8 March, International Women’s Day, and ended on 7 April,
celebrated in Armenia as the Beauty and Motherhood Day.

“The essay contest inspired hundreds of students to focus on women’s
rights and the role of women in Armenia’s public and civic life,”
says Ambassador Vladimir Pryakhin, Head of the OSCE Office. “This is
only one of several projects, developed by the OSCE, which aim to
enhance the role of women in Armenia’s public life.”

The contest was administered by Peace Corps volunteers in nine
regions of Armenia. Twenty seven regional as well as three national
winners were chosen.

“This project is one of the few country-wide initiatives that aims to
promote gender education and awareness through outreach to young
Armenians, especially in the regions of the country,” said Blanka
Hancilova, Democratization Officer with the OSCE Office in Yerevan.
“In order to raise gender awareness and gender mainstreaming, our
Office works with both men and women in the secondary and higher
educational institutions, as well as in the governmental structures.”

For further information, please contact:

Gohar Avagyan
OSCE Office in Yerevan

89 Teryan St.
375009, Yerevan
Armenia
Tel.: +374 1 54 10 62
+374 1 54 58 45
Fax: +374 1 54 10 61

Six Armenian Women, Trafficking Victims,Returned To Armenia From Mos

SIX ARMENIAN WOMEN, TRAFFICKING VICTIMS, RETURNED TO ARMENIA FROM MOSCOW DUE TO OPERATIVE MEASURES IN 2004

YEREVAN, APRIL 6. ARMINFO. As a result of operative measures in 2004
6 Armenians women subjected to trafficking were returned to Armenia
from Moscow. The press-service of the Armenian Police informs ARMINFO.

According to the source, the statistics of data on trafficking
in Armenia has been recorded since August 1 2003, when the new
Criminal Code of Armenia came into effect. In 2004 two cases of
trafficking in persons were registered (Article 132 of CC RA) and 11
cases of procuring abroad (Article 262 CC RA). Two criminal cases
were initiated on the fact of trafficking. 46 persons were brought
criminally responsible for trafficking and procuring, however, there
are no statistic data on victims. The persons subjected to trafficking
are mainly transported to the UAE and Turkey. At the same time, there
are no data on transportation of children abroad for the purpose of
donor organs either.

Vladimir Kazimirov: One Can Hardly Expect Hostilities To Resume InKa

VLADIMIR KAZIMIROV: ONE CAN HARDLY EXPECT HOSTILITIES TO RESUME IN KARABAKH

07.04.2005 04:40

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In compliance with the logic of the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict tone can hardly expect resumption of hostilities
at least in the next 2-3 years, former OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair
Vladimir Kazimirov stated at discussions over the Nagorno Karabakh
issues in Yerevan. In his words, the resumption of hostilities is not
favorable to Armenia, however it may become a force revenge for the
Azeri party. One should not expect local clashes aiming to attract
the attention of the international community. Unleashing local
clashes will be easy, but difficult to finish, Vladimir Kazimirov
noted. Thereupon the considered the response “the settlement of the
conflict should proceed only peacefully” to the militant calls voiced
in Baku inadmissible. As noted by Kazimirov, he has written to OSCE
Chairman-in-Office Dimitrij Rupel about it many times.

Catholicos Of All Armenians Extends Sympathies On Death Of Pope John

CATHOLICOS OF ALL ARMENIANS EXTENDS SYMPATHIES ON DEATH OF POPE JOHN PAUL II

ETCHMIADZIN, APRIL 4, NOYAN TAPAN. On April 3, His Holiness Karekin II,
Catholicos of All Armenians, sent a letter of condolence on behalf of
the worldwide Armenian Church to the Vatican, wherein he extended his
sympathies to the Roman Catholic Church, her clergy and faithful, on
the death of His Holiness Pope John Paul II. The letter of condolence
submitted to Noyan Tapan by the Press Service of the Mother See
of Holy Etchnmiadzin, in particular, read: “We fondly recall our
meeting with His Holiness in the Vatican, as well as his historic
visit to Armenia in 2001, the first visit of a Bishop of Rome to our
biblical land. In recent years, we witnessed the courage and strength
displayed by our Brother in Christ during his illness, which provided
the most excellent example of dignity, faith, hope and submission to
the all-providential Will of God. Throughout the 26 year tenure of Pope
John Paul II, His Holiness was a vigilant defender of life and champion
of justice. His constant appeals for peace and reconciliation among
nations were always based firmly on his strong moral convictions and
love of mankind. In more recent years, through his efforts and the
work of our predecessors of blessed memory, the fraternal love and
solidarity between our two Churches were greater reinforced and made
stronger. Today, Armenians dispersed throughout the world sympathize
with your Church and faithful, and we stand ready to continue together
on the paths of righteousness and service, all for the greater glory of
God. Offering our affectionate greetings and our blessings to you all,
we pray that the protective Right Hand of the Almighty grant progress
and renewal to the Roman Catholic Church. It is our plea that Our Risen
Lord bestows you with strength and wisdom at this difficult time for
the benefit of your faithful flock.” According to the Press Service
of the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, the same day requiem was held
in the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin for the late Pope John Paul II.

Paruyr Hayrikian: Armenia Must Come Up With Initiative In UN OnOccac

PARUYR HAYRIKIAN: ARMENIA MUST COME UP WITH INITIATIVE IN UN ON
OCCACION OF 90TH ANNIVERSARY OF GREAT GENOCIDE

YEREVAN, APRIL 4, NOYAN TAPAN. Armenia with its allies must come
up with an initiative in the United Nations Organization on the
occasion of the 90th anniversary of the Great Armenian Genocide. Paruyr
Hayrikian, the Chairman of National Self-Determination Union, assured
this at the April 2 sitting of the Presidium of the union. In his
letter addressed to Vartan Oskanian, RA Foreign Minister, Hayrikian
mentioned that the initiative particularly concerns the recognition of
the 1915-1923 Genocide committed against the Armenian nation in their
historical homeland, Armenians’ right to liquidate the consequences
of the Genocide and adoption of a resolution concerning international
community’s obligation to assist Armenians in that issue. Hayrikian
calls on to submit as a draft resolution and main fact the “1987
resolution adopted by the Council of Europe, as well as the maps
underlining the borders of Armenian autonomy given under the rule
of European General Governors in the territory of Turkey in 1914;
the areas recognized as Armenian by numerous states of the world by
the 1920 Sevr agreement; the areas in this region populated with
Armenians before 1920 Turk-Kamal and communist armed forces joint
attack on Armenia and 1920-1921 occupation of Azerbaijan and Armenia
by communist armed forced, where no Armenians live now, especially
Kars, Ardahan and Nakhijevan.