ANC San Gabriel Valley Meets With Assembly Member Calderon

Armenian National Committee of the San Gabriel Valley
420 West Washington Boulevard
Montebello, California 90640
Telephone: (323) 772-1918

PRESS RELEASE

July 22, 2009
Contact: Viken Pakradouni
Tel: (323) 772-1918

ANC SAN GABRIEL VALLEY MEETS WITH ASSEMBLY MEMBER CALDERON

CITY OF INDUSTRY, CA — On June 19, 2009 the Armenian National Committee of
the San Gabriel Valley met with California State Assembly Member Charles
Calderon. Attending the meeting were ANC San Gabriel Valley Chairman Viken
Pakradouni and Board Member Jack Hadjinian. The two, both constituents of
the Assembly Member’s, thanked Calderon for work on Armenian American issues
in Sacramento and Armenian Genocide education initiatives in the Montebello
Unified School District.

`It was important that we took this opportunity to reconnect with Assembly
Member Calderon,’ noted Pakradouni. `In addition to discussing his
continued support for Armenian Genocide affirmation and educational efforts,
we were pleased to discuss ways in which the Armenian American community can
increase its civic engagement in the district.’

The two discussed SB 234 also known as the Genocide Awareness Act with
Calderon. The legislation promotes the inclusion of oral history component
within California’s currently mandated genocide education curriculum. Both
the current curriculum and SB 234 reference the Armenian Genocide.

Calderon invited students from the Mesrobian Armenian School’s high school
program to participate in his district office internship program in the
coming year.

`This is a vital program to engage young Armenians in the political world,
public service, and understand how the process works. The community
appreciated developing this educational opportunity with his predecessor,
then Assembly Member Ron Calderon, and look forward to continuing this
relationship with Assembly Member Charles Calderon,’ said Hadjinian.

ANC of the San Gabriel Valley advocates for the social, economic, cultural,
and political rights of the area’s Armenian American community and promotes
increased Armenian American civic participation at the grassroots and public
policy levels.

Samvel Babayan Foretells Imminent War

SAMVEL BABAYAN FORETELLS IMMINENT WAR

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
22.07.2009 16:58 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Azerbaijan is getting ready for a war,"
ex-NKR Defense Minister Samvel Babayan told a news conference in
Yerevan. "There’s no document obligating Azerbaijan not to start a
war. Baku showed no reaction to mediators’ recent offer to withdraw
snipers from contact line," Babayan noted, adding that RA and NKR
armies have to be ready for a war. According to Samvel Babayan,
Azerbaijan’s demands to cede all NKR territories are absurd, so one
must prepare oneself for the worst in these circumstances.

"Watching Azerbaijan to replenish its army, one can safely say
Azerbaijan is preparing to resume hostilities. I believe war will be
started in near future," Samvel Babayan emphasized.

Greek Americans To Mark Turkish Invasion Anniversary

GREEK AMERICANS TO MARK TURKISH INVASION ANNIVERSARY

Greek News
me=News&file=article&sid=10735&mode=th read&order=0&thold=0
July 20 2009

Posted on Monday, July 20 @ 10:11:19 EDT by greek_news

The Greek American community will organise various events to mark
the 35th anniversary of the Turkish invasion of Cyprus and condemn
Turkeyʼs continuing illegal occupation of the islandʼs northern part.

On Sunday, July 19, Archbishop Demetrios conducted a memorial service
for the victims of the July 1974 military coup against the government
of the late Archbishop Makarios and the Turkish invasion which
followed, at Saint Catherineʼs church, and delivered a speech. The
consul generals of Greece and Cyprus and Cyprus Federation of America
and International Coordinating Committee — Justice for Cyprus (PSEKA)
representatives gave short greetings.

On Monday, July 20, the Cyprus Federation of America and PSEKA will
host a cultural event in Astoria to include songs, poetry and testimony
reading. Archbishop Demetrios and Cypriot and Greek diplomats will
address the event. The protection of Cyprusʼ cultural heritage, which
is in peril due the continuing Turkish occupation, will be the focus
of various events to be hosted on 21, 22 and 23 of July in Washington.

On Tuesday, July 21, the Helsinki Commission of Congress (consisting of
Senate and House of Representatives members) will host a briefing at
Congress with the issue of "Cyprusʼs religious and cultural heritage
in peril".

The panelists of the briefing include Charalampos Chotzakoglou,
Professor of Byzantine Art and Archaeology, Klaus Gallas, Art
Historian and Byzantine expert Michael Jansen, author of "War and
Cultural Heritage: Cyprus after the 1974 Turkish Invasion."

A report prepared by the Law Library of Congress, "Destruction of
Cultural Property in the Northern Part of Cyprus and Violations of
International Law" will be released at the briefing.

A press release issued yesterday by Senator Benjamin Cardin,
Chairman of the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe, and
Co-Chairman Congressman Alcee Hastings, says that "the 35-year-long
artificial division of Cyprus has taken a tremendous toll on the lives
of the people of that country. Despite clear international commitments
on the importance of preserving religious and cultural heritage,
hundreds of churches, chapels and monasteries in the northern part
of Cyprus remain in peril. Thousands of icons, manuscripts, frescos,
and mosaics have been looted from sites in northern Cyprus — many
ending up on international auction blocks."

The impetus to hold this briefing was given after on the spot finding
by senior advisors of members of Congress, who have recently visited
Cyprus, of the extent of the destruction of the Cypriot cultural
heritage in the occupied territories. Some of them spoke to the MPs
with anxiety about the loot of the sacred places of worship in the
occupied territories.

Similar lectures on the destruction of the Cypriot cultural heritage in
the occupied areas will be held on July 22, at the US Inter-religious
Commission on July 23 at the distinguished Hudson Institute.

The Coordinated Effort of Hellenes will hold a Capitol Hill
commemoration of the division and occupation of Cyprus. It will take
place at a breakfast reception on Wednesday, July 22 from 9:00 – 11:00
a.m. in the Speakers Dining Room (H-122) in the U.S. Capitol Building.

Those in attendance will include between 20 and 30 of the top advocates
for Cyprus in the U.S. House of Representatives and the U.S. Senate.

The hosts of this reception, who will also be in attendance, include
many of the most active Greek-American and Cypriot-American community
leaders – the board members of CEH. They will be meeting that week
with numerous key Senators, Members of Congress and Administration
officials regarding Cyprus settlement efforts.

MESSAGE OF PHILIP CHRISTOPHER The President of PSEKA Philip Christopher
issued the following statement on the occasion of the 35th Anniversary
of the Turkish Invasion.

"Another year has passed and we are nearing the 35th Year of
the invasion and occupation of Cyprus. It is once again time
for us to reflect our strengths and weaknesses, achievements and
disappointments. We call on people to attend the Memorial Service at
St. Demetrios in Astoria and CYPRUS…..35 YEARS LATER, a cultural
event at the Hellenic Cultural Center (information listed below). A
Congressional Commemoration of the Cyprus Invasion and Occupation will
also be held on Capitol Hill on July 21st & 22nd. Hellenic Communities
around the world are commemorating this tragic date in various ways.

The world has changed since 1974. The Republic of Cyprus is now a
member of the European Union. Cyprus today, is not the Cyprus of
1974. Today The Republic of Cyprus is a cosmopolitan nation. The
Speaker of the Parliament is of Armenian descent. There is a Russian
community of 20,000, a thriving Armenian and Maronite Community, and
a significant East Asian community as well. Cyprus today is bridge
of Europe to the Middle East, with a strong economy, that guarantees
all rights to all citizens.

We urge everyone to remember that the Cyprus problem is not a
bi-communal problem, it is a problem of invasion and continued
occupation. The solution of the Cyprus tragedy lies squarely with
the Turkish generals and the Turkish government. A solution cannot
be achieved without the removal of all Turkish troops and settlers,
and the return of all Cypriot citizens to their ancestral homes.

Letʼs all take some time on Sunday to remember the tragic events of
July 20, 1974. To spend a few minutes in recognition of those who gave
their lives, of the missing, of the refugees, and of the enclaved. Our
children and grandchildren have grown up never seeing their family
homes. The overseas Cypriots have waged their own war against the
Turkish occupation, and we have struggled against sometimes seemingly
insurmountable forces.

Although through the years we have not been frightened off by the
success of the affluent Turkish lobby or the general indifference of
the international community, many of us have been overtaken by the
feeling of complacency. I encourage everyone to continue the fight
for justice for the Cypriot people. Some things are clearly inherently
right or wrong. And right is on the side of freedom for Cyprus!

We urge everyone to stay strong and focused on battling this great
ongoing injustice, and assure you that we will not stop, we will not
rest, until we see the removal of Turkish troops, the removal of the
illegal settlers, and return of all refugees to their homes.

We urge all individuals, to express their frustration in the way they
feel appropriate. Whether itʼs writing letters to their Member of
the Senate and Congress, writing editorials, or demonstrating their
frustration outside of the Turkish embassy hosting cultural events –
everything counts, everything matters, as long as we work legally
and cohesively, as long as our efforts are united and work toward a
common strategy.

I am very happy to see the younger generation of Cypriot and Greek
Americans active in the cause for justice for Cyprus. Our younger
people may not have seen first hand the pain and violence of the war,
but their hearts and souls are tied to Cyprus and the cause of justice
and human rights."

http://www.greeknewsonline.com/modules.php?na

International pianists win top medals

Cincinnati.com
July 19 2009

International pianists win top medals

Pianists from the Republic of Georgia, Ukraine and China shared the
top three medals in the Cincinnati-based World Piano Competition,
which ended its 53rd season last Sunday at the Aronoff Center for the
Arts.

Alexander Beridze, a pianist from the Republic of Georgia, won the
gold medal and a New York debut concert in Alice Tully Hall at Lincoln
Center. Dmitri Levkovich of Ukraine won the silver, and the bronze
went to Chinese virtuoso Dizhou Zhao.

The other three semifinalists were Fanny Azzuro of France, Elizabeth
Schumann, 27, of Blacksburg, Va., the only American contestant, and
Grigor Khachatryan of Armenia.

The top six contestants share more than $20,000 in cash awards.
Janelle Gelfand

Russia says talks on Nagorno-Karabakh constructive

People’s Daily Online, China
July 19 2009

Russia says talks on Nagorno-Karabakh constructive

The meeting between the leaders of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan on
resolving the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute was constructive, an aide to
the Russian president said on Saturday.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and his Armenian counterpart Serzh
Sargsyan discussed the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict in Moscow on Friday
and then met in a tripartite format with Russian President Dmitry
Medvedev on Saturday.

The talks were "prolonged and, in our view, very constructive,
"Medvedev’s foreign policy aide Sergei Prikhodko was quoted as saying
by the Interfax news agency.

At the meeting, Medvedev reaffirmed Russia’s readiness to continue its
efforts to help find mutually acceptable decisions, Prikhodko said.

Sargsyan and Aliyev have met six times over the past year in a bid to
settle the territorial dispute.

The talks between Aliyev and Sargsyan on Friday "were deep, concrete
and serious," said Matthew Bryza, U.S. co-chairman of the OSCE
(Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe) Minsk Group, a
mediator in the conflict.

They failed to reach a consensus, but the talks will continue, Bryza
was quoted as saying by the Itar-Tass news agency.

Nagorno-Karabakh, a region with a largely ethnic Armenian population,
declared independence from Azerbaijan in 1991, sparking conflict ever
since.

Source: Xinhua

Nagorno-Karabakh

The Straits Times (Singapore)
July 18, 2009 Saturday

Nagorno-Karabakh

WHAT HAPPENED: An area over-whelmingly populated by Armenians, who are
Christians, was incorporated into the predominantly Muslim republic of
Azerbaijan in 1923.

The Armenians have long lived in the area, but the Azeris settled
around the region, transforming it into a landlocked enclave.

WHY: Soviet leader Joseph Stalin initially accepted that Nagorno-
Karabakh should be included in Armenia. But as he wanted neighbouring
Turkey to join the communist camp, he gave the region to Azerbaijan,
whose people are ethnically and linguistically related to the Turks.

The decision was never accepted by the Armenians but, during the
Soviet era, brute force ensured order.

OUTCOME: Violence erupted in 1988, even before the Soviet Union itself
began to disintegrate. Armenia’s decision to proclaim a ‘union’ with
Karabakh led to almost open warfare with Azerbaijan.

About 4,000 people were killed in clashes over the next five years and
at least 200,000 became refugees.

The problem still festers: Nagorno-Karabakh is ruled by an Armenian
self-proclaimed local government, and international mediation efforts
have so far failed to find a long-term solution.

Russia uses the conflict to maintain control over Armenia, which
supports Russian policies, and to ward off West-leaning Azerbaijan.

BAKU: Armenia Faces Great Problems Related To Military Service: MP

ARMENIA FACES GREAT PROBLEMS RELATED TO MILITARY SERVICE: MP

Today.Az
2.html
July 17 2009
Azerbaijan

"Armenian soldiers who voluntarily crossed border to Azerbaijan
in an effort to go a third country understand very well that
Azerbaijani authorities will not return them home," Azerbaijani
member of parliament and chairman of Great Establishment Party Fazil
Mustafa said.

"Armenian army faces great problems regarding military
service. Armenian soldiers do not want to serve in their country,"
he said.

19-year-old soldier Karen Arturyunyan crossed border to Azerbaijan
on July 15 in the area of the Gadabay region due to torture in the
Armenia army.

http://www.today.az/news/society/5390

BAKU: Armenian Soldier Gives Himself Up To Azerbaijani Army Because

ARMENIAN SOLDIER GIVES HIMSELF UP TO AZERBAIJANI ARMY BECAUSE BEING TORTURED

Trend
July 16 2009
Azerbaijan

The Azerbaijani defense ministry spread information about another
captive Armenian military man.

"Armenian military man was captured in the territory of Gadabay region
on contact line of Armenian-Azerbaijani troops on July 15 at night,"
head of press-service of the defense ministry lieutenant-colonel
Eldar Sabiroglu old Trend News on July 16.

According to him, resident of Yerevan Karen Norigovich Harutunian, 19,
soldier of 549-motorifle battalion of Armenian defense ministry
could not stand tortures of colleagues and decided to leave
service. "Armenian military man passed border and gave himself up to
Azerbaijani soldiers," he said.

Earlier other three Armenian military men – Grant Markosian, Artur
Vartevian and Alik Tevosian voluntarily gave themselves up to
Azerbaijan in the territory of Agdam region late February.

Two Armenian soldiers Harutunian Ogan Vadinagiyevich, 18, and Tomosian
Gevorg Serjikovich, 18, voluntarily passed to Azerbaijan in the
territory of Geranboy region on contact line of Armenian-Azerbaijani
troops on May 31 at 13:00.

Harutunian Ogan and Tomosian Gevorg were soldiers of drill company
N7 of rifle battalion N38862 under Armenian defense ministry. During
preliminary talk they said about unbearable conditions and tortures
in Armenian army. They passed to Azerbaijan on this regards.

Two Azerbaijani soldiers are in captivity in Armenia.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan
lost all of Nagorno-Karabakh except for Shusha and Khojali in December
1991. In 1992-93, Armenian armed forces occupied Shusha, Khojali and 7
districts surrounding Nagorno-Karabakh. Azerbaijan and Armenia signed
a ceasefire in 1994. The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia,
France, and the U.S. – are currently holding the peace negotiations.

French Ministry Of Foreign Affairs Expressed Condolences To Families

FRENCH MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS EXPRESSED CONDOLENCES TO FAMILIES OF PLANE CRASH VICTIMS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
16.07.2009 21:13 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ French Ministry of Foreign Affairs sent condolences
to Iran and RA leaders in connection with the crash of the plane in
Iran on July 15. In its message French Ministry of Foreign Affairs
expressed condolences to families of jet crash victims, Press Service
of French Embassy in RA reported

Expert: Armenia’s Future Depends On Rural Development

EXPERT: ARMENIA’S FUTURE DEPENDS ON RURAL DEVELOPMENT

ARKA
July 16, 2009

YEREVAN, July 16. /ARKA/. Armenia’s future depends on rural
development, Armenian Center for National and International Studies
(ACNIS) Director Richard Giragosian said Thursday at a seminar focused
on rural poverty and democracy in Armenia.

He singled out agricultural development as one of key components of
the country’s internal strength.

In his opinion, now agriculture development is more important than
even Armenia’s relations with Turkey or Iran.

Speaking about the impact of poverty on democracy in Armenia,
Giragosian said that the worst situation is in villages.