About 33K Out Of 43K Bids To Legalize Unauthorized Constr. Allowed

ABOUT 33 THOUSAND OUT OF 43,560 BIDS FOR LEGALIZING UNAUTHORIZED
CONSTRUCTIONS GET POSITIVE SOLUTION

YEREVAN, AUGUST 22, NOYAN TAPAN. Chief Advisor to Yerevan Mayor Grigor
Melkumian stated at the August 22 press conference that about 33
thousand out of 43,560 bids submitted to Yerevan Mayor’s Office for
legalizing unauthorized constructions have received a positive
solution. According to him, 94-95% of the bids upheld are those for
legalizing unauthorized garages and booths, with the sums received
already being registered as the state budget revenues of about 3 bln
drams (about 7 mln USD). G. Melkumian said that although the term of
the law’s being in effect has expired, the process of making positive
solutions about the bids, issuing general plans on their basis and
signing agreements will continue. At present, citizens have not
received 3,700 decisions and 2,700 general plans issued.

No news for legal successors of ‘New York Life Insurance’

AZG Armenian Daily #146, 19/08/2005

Insurance

NO NEWS FOR LEGAL SUCCESSORS OF ‘NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE’

Azg touched upon the process of getting back the deposits from “New York
Life Insurance” American-French company. As we informed before, a charge
free consulting committee that helped the applicants fill the documents was
created at RA Justice Ministry on September 27, 2004. The documents were to
be sent to the board of the US Resolution Fund. The deadline for the
application submission was February 28. 1211 applications were sent to the
US. and only 13 of them had insurance policies.

Already six months passed from the day the applications were sent. We tried
to find out at RA Justice Ministry whether there is any news for the legal
successors or the inheritors. Ara Saghatelian, spokesperson of RA Justice
Ministry, said that there is no news, adding that they spared no efforts to
achieve positive results. He said that our ministry had the
plenipotentiaries to accumulate and send the applications only, while the
rest of the developments of the procedure depend on the verdicts of the US
courts.

“We have no influence on the procedures that take place in the US,” Mr.
Saghatelian added.

By Gohar Gevorgian

ANCA Calls on State Dept. to End Inaction on Blockades

Armenian National Committee of America
888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: (202) 775-1918
Fax: (202) 775-5648
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet:

PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
August 18, 2005
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

ANCA CALLS ON STATE DEPARTMENT TO END INACTION
ON TURKISH AND AZERBAIJANI BLOCKADES

— Urges Congress to Increase Pressure on the Administration

WASHINGTON, DC – The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)
this week called on Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to condemn
Turkey and Azerbaijan’s illegal blockades, and urged Members of
Congress to escalate their pressure on the Administration to oppose
these blockades and other attempts by Ankara and Baku to
economically isolate Armenia and Nagorno Karabagh.

In an August 16th letter to Secretary Rice, ANCA Chairman Ken
Hachikian expressed the Armenian American community’s “profound
disappointment regarding the continued lack of meaningful diplomacy
on the part of our government to pressure Turkey and Azerbaijan to
lift their longstanding and illegal blockades of Armenia and
Nagorno Karabagh.” Hachikian recalled the Secretary’s recent
comments sharply criticizing Syria’s border closure with Lebanon
and her statement that “good neighbors don’t close their borders to
their neighbors.” Hachikian closed the letter by asking the
Secretary to ensure that “our government’s policy of opposition to
blockades and support for open borders is applied universally and
without double standards.”

In an August 18th memo to Congressional offices, the ANCA urged
Senators and Representatives to increase their pressure on the
Administration to oppose growing Turkish and Azerbaijani efforts to
isolate, circumvent, and harm Armenia and Nagorno Karabagh. The
ANCA specifically called on legislators to press the Administration
to not provide any U.S. assistance to railroads traversing the
Caucasus that circumvent Armenia. The letter voiced support for
H.R.3361, the “South Caucasus Integration and Open Railroads Act of
2005,” which was introduced on July 21st by Armenian Caucus Co-
Chairmen Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) and Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Rep.
George Radanovich (R-CA).

Commenting on the day of the resolution’s introduction, ANCA
Executive Director Aram Hamparian, welcomed the “effort to protect
U.S. taxpayers from subsidizing an ill-advised and over-priced
railroad project that – at the insistence of Turkey and Azerbaijan
– has been designed to exclude Armenia. Constructing this railroad
around Armenia runs directly counter to U.S. foreign policy and –
as if that wasn’t bad enough – makes absolutely no financial sense
– which is precisely why its sponsors will surely turn to the
American taxpayer to foot the bill.”

The ANCA Congressional memo also called for increased support for
H.R.3103, known as the “End the Turkish Blockade of Armenia Act.”
This measure, which was introduced by Representative Adam Schiff
(D-CA) and Frank Pallone, calls upon Turkey to end its blockade of
Armenia and requires the U.S. Department of State to report on its
efforts to reverse this violation of international law.

Activists continue to send ANCA WebFaxes to their Members of
Congress in support of these two pieces of legislation using the
ANCA’s website –

#####

Text of ANCA letter to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice

August 16, 2005

The Honorable Condoleezza Rice
Secretary of State
Department of State
2201 C Street, NW
Washington, DC 20520

Dear Madam Secretary:

I am writing, on behalf of the Armenian American community, to
express our profound disappointment regarding the continued lack of
meaningful diplomacy on the part of our government to pressure
Turkey and Azerbaijan to lift their longstanding and illegal
blockades of Armenia and Nagorno Karabagh.

Our community was once again reminded about the absence of any
serious U.S. effort to end these violations of international law by
your comments on another matter involving the closing of borders.
Speaking in Beirut at a July 22nd news conference with the Lebanese
Prime Minister, you demanded that Syria fully open its border with
Lebanon, appropriately noting that, “good neighbors don’t close
their borders to their neighbors.” In your strongly worded
remarks, you drew international attention to the “very serious
situation on the Lebanon border where Lebanese trade is being
strangled.”

As you know, according to the World Bank’s estimates, the Armenian
economy has suffered billions of dollars in losses due to the
Turkish and Azerbaijani blockades. Successive Administrations and
the Congress are on record condemning Turkey and Azerbaijan’s
conduct as hindering our country’s interests, undermining American
values, and preventing progress in this strategically important
region. Yet, these blockades have remained in place for more than
a decade, with little more than pro forma protests and ineffective
gestures on the part of our government.

We would respectfully ask that our government’s policy of
opposition to blockades and support for open borders be applied
universally and without double standards. In this spirit, we call
on you to forcefully and publicly condemn the Turkish and
Azerbaijani blockades of Armenia and Nagorno Karabagh and to use
the full leverage of our government to immediately end these
violations of international law.

Thank you for your consideration of our concerns. We look forward
to your response.

Sincerely yours,

Kenneth V. Hachikian
Chairman

www.anca.org
www.anca.org.

BAKU: Amb. of Uzbekistan Said His Country Has No Relations withKarab

Baku Today, Azerbaijan
Aug 18 2005

Ambassador of Uzbekistan Said His Country Has No Relations with
Karabakh Separatists

Baku Today / Turan 18/08/2005 10:46

The Ambassador of Uzbekistan to Azerbaijan Ismatulla Irgashov sent
a response letter to the Karabakh Liberation Organization (KLO),
in which he reported, his country has no links with the occupation
regime in Nagorno-Karabakh, KLO told Trend.

The KLO chairman Akif Nagi applied to the Uzbekistan Embassy and
demanded to cease cooperation of this country’s organizations with
the Nagorno-Karabakh separatists in the communication field. In his
return letter the Ambassador reported, the “Daewoo Unitel” company,
operating in Nagorno Karabakh is located in Tashkent and is not
Uzbekistan company. This company belongs to Holland and Greece.

The KLO chairman accepted the Ambassador’s explanations and noted,
the country took always an unbiased stand and even up to the moment
has not set up diplomatic relations with the occupation Armenia.

“We appreciate such a position of the fraternal Uzbekistan, anyhow,
we once again have to inform the government of Uzbekistan of our
concern over the setting up relations between the companies operating
in Uzbekistan with the occupation regime of Nagorno Karabakh,” the
KLO statement notes.

2005 Arpa International Film Festival Announces Dates and HighlightE

2005 Arpa International Film Festival Announces Dates and Highlight Events

Persian Mirror
Aug 17 2005

Los Angeles , CA – The 2005 Arpa International Film Festival will be
held October 3 – 7 at the Arclight Cinemas in Hollywood.

VISIONARIES is theme of the week-long event that will present over 50
features, documentaries, shorts and animated films from 18 countries.
The festival concludes with an awards ceremony at the historic
Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel on Friday, October 7.

Arpa Official Selection includes the works of Caroline Aaron, Shohreh
Aghdashloo, Ed Asner, Catherine Bell, Eric Bogosian, Dan Bucatinsky,
Vikram Chatwal, Erica Christensen, Andy Dick, Finneus Egan, Jenna
Elfman, Dori Fram, Rene Gabri, Isaac Hayes, David Kriegel, Roger
Kupelian, Danica McKellar, Gor Mkhitarian, Tahmineh Milani, Gary
Null, James Oxford, Joanelle Romero, Timilee Romolini, Don Roos,
Peter Rosen, Jane Seymour, Dora Serviarian-Kuhn, Vijay Singh, Diego
Velasco, Sevag Vrej, and Aaron Weisblatt.

ABOUT ARPA

As a resource for international filmmakers, the Arpa Film Festival
celebrates independent thought, artistic vision and cultural
diversity in cinema. Arpa was created as a non-profit organization in
1997 to give Armenian filmmakers a forum to share their vision. Arpa
expanded its scope to include the works of all filmmakers who address
the issues of diaspora, multi-culturalism and global empathy. Now in
its 8th year, Arpa has grown into a dynamic forum for world cinema in
Los Angeles. Hence, this year’s theme: Los Angeles has always
welcomed great VISIONARIES who draw power from the city’s cultural
diversity. Indeed, Los Angeles is a city of unlimited cultural power.
With civic art in mind, Arpa honors those filmmakers who unify the
different cultures and communities of LA, redefining what Los Angeles
stands for as a global city and as a dream.

ARPA 2005 HIGHLIGHTS

Oct. 3, Opening Night : “KHACHATURIAN”: The award-winning documentary
about the renowned classical composer. Directed by Peter Rosen;
narrated by Eric Bogosian.

Oct. 4, International Spotlight Film : “UNWANTED WOMAN”: Iranian
director Tahmineh Milani explores social, political, and cultural
effects on a woman who harbors a criminal.

Oct. 5 American Spotlight Film : “CALL WAITING”: Los Angeles premiere
of the Don Roos-produced, one-woman, two-character film starring
Caroline Aaron.

Oct. 6 Special programs focusing on Armenian, Latin and women
filmmakers; global empathy and war; family animated shorts and
documentaries.

For Sponsorship & Program Ad Book opportunities, please contact Arpa
at (323) 663-1882.

The Arpa Foundation for Film, Music and Art is a charitable,
non-profit, tax-deductible organization registered as a 501 (c) 3
Corp.

Meeting Of Ministers Of Culture Of South Caucasian Countries To Take

MEETING OF MINISTERS OF CULTURE OF SOUTH CAUCASIAN COUNTRIES TO TAKE
PLACE IN KIEV ON SEPTEMBER 15-16

YEREVAN, AUGUST 15, NOYAN TAPAN. On September 15-16, Ministers of
Culture of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia will discuss issues
concerning the cultural cooperation in Kiev, the capital of the
Ukraine. According to the Press Service of the Council of Europe,
the event is to be held within the framework of the program of the
Council of Europe on cultural exchange among countries of the region,
cooperation in the sphere of culture and strengthening of democracy.

Here at last: folklore dance troupe travelled for six days by coach

Here at last
by Sarah Stack, Evening Gazette

ic Teesside.co.uk, UK
Aug 12 2005

An Armenian folklore dance troupe travelled for six days by coach to
attend a Teesside festival.

The 31 members of Mush-Gyumri, who are performing in the Billingham
International Folklore Festival, were held up at every border they
passed.

The group, due to arrive in Billingham last Tuesday, did not get here
until Friday but were still as excited as ever about taking part.

Neither their gruelling trip or rainfall during yesterday’s outdoor
performance in Billingham dampened their spirits.

“They love it here but we hope their journey back won’t be as bad,”
said Kathryn O’Donnell, the group’s guide.

“They left Armenia on July 30 and at first were stuck at the Georgia
and Russia border for over a day.

“When they got to Ukraine their bus broke down and then at every
border they met they had to take all their luggage off the bus to be
scanned and load the bus again.

“Finally, when they reached Calais, their driver did not have the
correct visa to enter the UK and they all had to travel over as
foot passengers.”

A coach was driven down from Billingham to get them.

Also entertaining the crowd yesterday were troupes from Greece,
Cyprus, Indonesia and Ecuador.

For an archive of stories on this subject click on to
icTeesside.co.uk/teespride

BAKU: Foriegn minister received German delegation

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
Aug 13 2005

FOREIGN MINISTER RECEIVES GERMAN DELEGATION
[August 13, 2005, 20:21:23]

Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan Elmar Mammadyarov has met today with
the delegation of the German Federal Intelligence Service headed by
August Hanning, FM’s press service said.

Informing the guests on the democratic reforms implemented in
Azerbaijan, Minister E. Mammadyarov noted his county’s foreign policy
was oriented towards integration into the European and Euroatlantic
structures. In this connection, he mentioned Azerbaijan’s cooperation
with NATO in the framework of the Partnership for Peace Program,
as well as the country’s involvement in the European Union’s New
Neighborhood Policy.

The Foreign minister dwelt on the existing problems including the
Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh and the current
state of the peace process. He described the occupation factor as
inadmissible in the 21st century characterized by rapid development
of democratic societies.

Speaking of socio-economic development in Azerbaijan, Minister E.
Mammadyarov provided the members of the German delegation with
detailed information about the course of implementation of the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan, Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum and Baku-Tbilisi-Kars
large-scale energy and transport projects touching on the
projects-related security issues.

Afterwards, the parties exchanged views on the situation in the
Middle East, Iraq and South Caucasus, fight against international
terror and Islamic factor and a number of other issues.

Slain writer played key role for park and for Pagan

Slain writer played key role for park and for Pagan

The Villager (New York)
Volume 75, Number 12
August 10 – 16, 2005

By Lincoln Anderson

Steven Vincent of E. 11th St., who was murdered on Aug. 2 in Basra,
will go down in history as the first American journalist killed in
Iraq. But before his tragic end he also carved a place for himself in
East Village history as a core member of the group that brought City
Councilmember Antonio Pagan to power and helped bring about the
cleanup of Tompkins Square Park.

Vincent, 49, an art journalist turned war correspondent, had returned
to Iraq three months ago for his third visit there since the start of
the war. He was planning to come back to the East Village in
mid-August to write a book on the history of the city of Basra. The
Sunday before his murder he had written a column that ran in The New
York Times charging that insurgents had infiltrated the Iraqi police
in Basra and were acting as a death squad.

Speaking last Sunday, Lisa Ramaci, Vincent’s widow, said she felt the
Times column probably is what caused his death.

`I’m going to say that was the straw that broke the camel’s back,’ she
said. `He was going around asking a lot of probing questions,
including to a lot of [radical cleric] Motaq al-Sadr’s men. He was
going around with a female translator – that was offensive to
them. Steve was saying Basra had fallen under the control of radical
Shiites – and they want women to walk around in a bag. I think he was
basically killed to shut him up. Steve pulled no punches, he called
them as he saw them, and that’s why he’s dead,’ Ramaci said.

Vincent and his translator were abducted by masked gunmen after he had
left a money-changing business. Vincent was shot once in the head and
four times in the torso, according to Ramaci. His interpreter was shot
three times in the chest, but survived. Ramaci said official sources
told her that the two were taken to a warehouse where their captors
were overheard shouting and cursing at them for five or six hours –
calling Vincent an infidel and his translator a whore – before they
were killed.

Ramaci said the translator is being held at a military hospital and
believes she can identify two of the perpetrators.

Vincent had visited Iraq twice before, in the fall of 2003 and in
early 2004. These trips produced a book, `In the Red Zone.’ He also
wrote for the National Review and Christian Science Monitor while in
Iraq.

On 9/11, Vincent had watched from his rooftop as the second hijacked
jet hit the twin towers and then and there decided to write about
political issues.

`He didn’t sleep for weeks. He was so freaked out at what he saw,’
Ramaci said. `He didn’t want to go back to art journalism.

Ramaci said Vincent, who was of Armenian descent, had become
fascinated with Islam and had read the Koran and tons of books about
the religion.

Before leaving for Iraq this last time, Ramaci said Vincent told her
that if he got killed it should be considered `a casualty of war – and
you can chalk me up as one more victim of the World Trade Center.’

Vincent was from California and hitchhiked his way to New York. He and
Ramaci met while they were smoking in the lobby of a Times Square
movie theater showing `The Road Warrior.’

Ramaci had homesteaded a building on E. 11th St. that the city took
from a derelict landlord, and two years after meeting, Vincent moved
in with her. Concerned at the direction of the neighborhood and
wanting to do something about it, they were among the 13 founding
members, along with Pagan, of the Democratic Action Club. DAC felt
that, after 19 years representing the neighborhood, Councilmember
Miriam Friedlander had to go. Pagan was their candidate.

They were tired of all-night `metal jams’ in the park without a curfew
at which people would pound away on fenders or garbage can lids or
anything metal they could get their hands on. After the 1988 riot over
the proposed curfew, the administration left Tompkins Square alone for
four or five years and it became a homeless tent city. Parents had to
clean up hypodermic needles from playgrounds before their children
could play in them. Their were complaints about `aggressive
panhandling.’ DAC said enough was enough. Vincent, in particular,
personally took on the squatters who at one point were in as many as
25 buildings, gaining their everlasting enmity.

Vincent, who was first a writer and then editor of the East Villager,
a local newspaper, became the club’s main writer. With Howard Hemsley,
Pagan’s campaign manager for both of Pagan’s elections, Vincent wrote
DAC’s `manifesto,’ which was printed on the back of the East Villager,
and also their `10 points’ flier that was posted around the
neighborhood. The flier asked if people wanted the park back or if
they were tired of Friedlander’s policies, with `Join us,’ written
after each point. Vincent was more active in Pagan’s first campaign.

Pagan, who represented the Second District from 1991-97, now works for
Lower East Side Coalition Housing. He said he rarely speaks to the
press, but that `This is important.’

`He was a man of conviction,’ Pagan said of Vincent. `Not only a
dreamer, but a man who transformed things by his actions. You can see
what we call `the liberation of the streets and park.’

`At every step of the way, there was Steven,’ Pagan said. `There was a
major team effort, but if you were to separate the few that actually
impacted things, he was there. He was a true renaissance man. He died
fighting for what he felt was the truth. It was a big loss, personally
and collectively.’

Hemsley kiddingly referred to Vincent as DAC’s `minister of
propaganda.’ He said Vincent did have a particular ax to grind with
squatters, noting that Vincent was adamant about including language
criticizing them in their `manifesto’ and other literature.

`I remember working with him on the mission statement of purpose for
our club,’ Hemsley said. Part of the statement that Vincent insisted
be included was that DAC would `refuse to glorify poverty.’ `Steve was
very big on this,’ Hemsley said, `upper-class kids coming down to the
Lower East Side to pretend to be poor for the glamour of poverty. What
the squatters did was jump in before people who were poor, old or
unable to squat.’

One specific point on this theme in the mission statement was: `We
reject the myth that poverty is cool, somehow politically correct or a
way to hide from adult responsibility.’

There were poster wars, in which the squatters would doctor DAC’s
posters, Hemsley said.

Vincent served for two years on Community Board 3, appointed by
Pagan. Ramaci served on the board for six years, headed its State
Liquor Authority Committee, and was also elected a Democratic district
leader for two years. But the DAC members eventually went back to
their private lives after they felt their job had been done, Hemsley
said; they weren’t professional politicians to begin with, just
concerned citizens. After the park was renovated, they tried to bring
positive uses to it, like the Charlie Parker Jazz Festival, he said.

Kate Walter was also appointed by Pagan to C.B. 3 at the same time as
Vincent.

`He was active in getting the park restored to the community so it was
usable,’ Walter said. `We were considered conservative on the
community board because we didn’t want a tent city in Tompkins Square
Park. The anarchists all thought it should remain that way. I think
a lot of people felt like Steve and me,’ Walter said, `but they were
afraid to say it, because nobody wanted to be called a yuppie or a
gentrifier. And nobody wanted to have another riot, either.’

Vincent had a running battle with the East Village’s anarchist
newspaper, The Shadow. However, The Shadow’s Chris Flash said
hostilities between them had diminished in recent years.

`I will admit, in recent years, we had an amicable,
respect-each-other’s-differences sort of relationship,’ Flash
said. `There was no animosity.’ Recalling their past newspaper wars,
he said, `He had a vehicle to attack and we had a vehicle to attack
back. We didn’t draw first blood – they did.’

A memorial will be held in September, Ramaci said, adding that she is
thinking of starting a foundation in his name as a Committee to
Protect Journalists.

`Steven didn’t have the money to hire a security guard or a driver,’
Ramaci said. `He had himself, his wits and his translator.’

Ramaci said Vincent’s body was still in Basra, where it was being
autopsied, and that it would be autopsied again when it was returned
to America. He will be buried in Greenwood Cemetery in Brooklyn.

http://www.thevillager.com/villager_119/slainwriterplayedkey.html

Armenian Delegation to Visit Sverdlovsk Region August 22

ARMENIAN DELEGATION TO VISIT SVERDLOVSK REGION AUGUST 22

09.08.2005 07:50

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ August 22-24, 2005 a delegation of Ararat region of
Armenia headed by Governor Alik Sargsyan will visit the Ural capital.
The guests will meet with representatives of the Sverdlovsk region
Government to discuss prospects of cooperation between the regions.
Armenians will also visit Pervouralsk. According to the Press Service
of Pervouralsk Administration, they will get acquainted with town
infrastructure, as well as will visit Pervouralsk New Pipe Factory
Public Corporation and Europe-Asia Border memorial, reported IA
Regnum.