BAKU: Azeri Union Demands Withdrawal Of Troops From Iraq

AZERI UNION DEMANDS WITHDRAWAL OF TROOPS FROM IRAQ

Azadliq, Baku
20 May 04

Text of unattributed report by Azerbaijani newspaper Azadliq on 20
May headlined: “Occupying army should withdraw from Karabakh (sorry)
from Iraq”

The (left-of-centre) Union of Azerbaijanist Forces (UAF) expresses
its anger at the brutality being committed in Iraq and demands an
end to plunder and genocide. The occupiers must leave the country
and answer before international courts, the union said in a statement
disseminated yesterday.

The authors of the statement express their regret that the authorities,
a number of European-oriented parties and politicians are keeping
silent and called on the public not to be indifferent to the Iraqi
events. Stressing that an Azerbaijani contingent will also be named
amongst Europe’s military machine, the statement demands a withdrawal
of our troops from Iraq.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

UMP : Marseille =?UNKNOWN?Q?=E0_mar=E9e?= basse

Le Point, France
20 Mai 2004

Droite
UMP : Marseille à marée basse

La déferlante de la gauche aux régionales a sapé le moral des
militants. Malaise.

Charles Jaigu

« Je ne suis pas certain que vous soyez hyperpassionnés par l’Europe
», concède le jeune député Bruno Gilles devant une quarantaine d’UMP
du comité de circonscription, réunis le jeudi 15 mai dans un local
tapissé d’affiches de Renaud Muselier. Il y a deux ans, le nouveau
secrétaire d’Etat aux Affaires étrangères a laissé sa place de député
de la 5e circonscription de Marseille à son jeune suppléant de 42
ans. Ce fief n’a pas mieux résisté que les autres à la déferlante de
la gauche aux élections régionales. « Michel Vauzelle a frôlé les 50
%, Muselier 38 %, et le FN, seulement 12 % », détaille un
responsable, encore abasourdi. « Pour nous, c’est une année noire.
Nous avons déjà tiré un trait sur 2004 », ajoute un autre.

Ici comme ailleurs, les UMP s’affichent rebelles. Le lundi de
Pentecôte non férié ? « Une bêtise ! » murmure-t-on dans les rangs.
Le mariage homosexuel ? Une femme aux cheveux argentés sort de sa
réserve : « Tu m’as demandé de te seconder dans la mairie de
quartier, lance-t-elle au député, moi je veux bien, mais alors jamais
je ne marierai des homos ; ça, jamais ! » Acquiescement général. Un
homme aux faux airs de Gaudin s’agace de la ligne brouillée du
gouvernement : « Ces reculades ! ça ne nous rapportera pas un vote. »

Et pour l’Europe ? Tout le monde semble d’accord sur un point : pas
de Turquie en Europe ! « S’ils reconnaissent le génocide arménien, ça
ira, on verra bien dans vingt ans », tempère une autre. « Et, quand
ils auront reconnu le génocide, on se cachera derrière quoi pour
refuser l’adhésion ? » s’enflamme un fonctionnaire de police. Vote à
main levée. Unanimité contre l’entrée de la Turquie.

On ne s’attarde pas sur la Constitution européenne. Deux tiers de la
salle sont pour le référendum. Après une heure de débat, cocktail
improvisé. Whisky-Coca et cacahouètes. Sur la table, certains
s’emparent des dossiers photocopiés sur l’Unedic ou les intermittents
du spectacle. Histoire de tenir bon, dehors, sous le feu des
critiques

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Minister Oskanian Visits Cyprus, Discusses Melkonian

PRESS RELEASE
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia
Contact: Information Desk
Tel: (374-1) 52-35-31
Email: [email protected]
Web:

Minister Oskanian Visits Cyprus, Discusses Melkonian

Armenia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Vartan Oskanian, paid a two
day working visit to the Republic of Cyprus on May 19 and 20, and
met with high level officials.

With his colleague, Foreign Minister Georgios Iacovou, the two
discussed prospects for deeper bilateral relations, especially
in light of Cyprus’s membership in the European Union. The Cypriot
Foreign Minister expressed readiness to assist Armenia in its efforts
at European integration. The two ministers agreed that it is necessary
to bring the positive developments regarding the inclusion of Armenia
in the European Union’s Wider Europe – New Neighborhood Initiative
to their natural conclusion.

The Cypriot Foreign Minister discussed in detail the UN plan for
Cypriot reunification, and he stressed that the Greek Cypriot vote of
April 24 rejected the Annan plan and not the idea of reunification. He
reiterated that the Cypriot leadership remains ready for a negotiated
settlement for the island’s reunification.

Foreign Minister Oskanian outlined the recent discussions and meetings
that have taken place on the Nagorno Karabakh process, and also spoke
about Armenia’s internal situation.

During the visit, the Foreign Minister was received by the President of
the Republic of Cyprus, Tassos Papadopoulos as well as the President
of the Cypriot Parliament, Demetris Christofias. Minister Oskanian
reiterated the formal invitations made to both of them to visit
Armenia.

Minister Oskanian also met with the Cypriot Interior Minister,
Andreas Christou, and the Mayor of Nicosia Michalakis Zambelas. Among
other matters of mutual interest, they explored the situation of
the Melkonian Educational Institute. The Cypriot officials expressed
their concern about the possible future closing of the institution and
promised to do what they can in order for that educational institution
to continue to serve its mission.

The Minister and his delegation left Cyprus on Thursday, May 20,
to return to Yerevan.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.ArmeniaForeignMinistry.am

Nicosia: Armenian Foreign Minister arrives in Cyprus for working vis

Armenian Foreign Minister arrives in Cyprus for working visit

Cyprus News Agency
May 20 2004

Larnaca, May 19 (CNA) — Armenia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Vartan
Oskanian arrived in Cyprus for a two-day working visit, during which
he will be received by Cypriot President Tassos Papadopoulos.

Speaking on his arrival, Oskanian said that during talks tomorrow
with his Cypriot counterpart George Iacovou, “we will discuss and
address bilateral ties between Cyprus and Armenia.”

ANKARA: Turkish parliamentaryspeaker defines meetings in Strasbourgf

Turkish Parliament Speaker Defines His Meetings In Strasbourg Fruitful

Anadolu Agency
May 20 2004

ISTANBUL – Turkish Parliament Speaker Bulent Arinc said on Thursday
that his participation in the European Conference of Presidents of
Parliaments in Strasbourg was very beneficial to stress importance
Turkey attached to the Council of Europe (COE) and to explain Turkey’s
efforts on the road to European Union (EU) membership.

Arinc, who returned from Strasbourg, told reporters that three
sittings on “how democratic is our democracy?”, “modern technology and
democratic procedures” and “Co-operation for more democracy – National
Parliaments and European Assemblies” were held in the conference.

He delivered a speech on “how democratic is our democracy”, Arinc
stated.

Arinc said that he held bilateral meetings with his Greek, Georgian,
Russian and Armenian counterparts in Strasbourg.

He also met with Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly (COEPA)
President Peter Schieder, Arinc noted.

Arinc said that he also visited the European Court of Human Rights
(ECHR), Arinc stated.

Arinc pointed out that he received information from ECHR Vice President
about functioning of the court and the ECHR Vice President welcomed
Turkey’s progress in human rights.

Arinc, who went to Strasbourg on Monday, attended on the same day
the meeting of Athens Working Group which was formed by parliament
speakers of European Union (EU) member and candidate countries. The
theme of the parliamentary summit was “Europe of citizens: parliaments
and participation of citizens”.

Turkish Parliament Speaker Bulent Arinc, who delivered a speech in
the conference on Tuesday, said that ruling parties should always
remember that they were representatives not only of majority that
they represented, but also representatives of whole nation.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Eastern Prelacy: Crossroads E-Newsletter 05/20/04

PRESS RELEASE
Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
138 East 39th Street
New York, NY 10016
Tel: 212-689-7810
Fax: 212-689-7168
e-mail: [email protected]
Website:
Contact: Iris Papazian

CROSSROAD E-NEWSLETTER: May 20, 2004

NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVE ASSEMBLY
CONVENES IN PHILADELPHIA

OPENING ADDRESS BY PRELATE FOCUSES
ON THE ARMENIAN FAMILY
Delegates from the parishes under the jurisdiction of the Eastern
Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America, arrived in Philadelphia
yesterday to begin the deliberations of the National Representative Assembly
(NRA). The host parish, St. Gregory the Illuminator Church, welcomed the
delegates as they arrived to participate in the formal opening of the annual
meeting at 2 p.m. Welcoming words were offered by Jack Papazian, chairman of
St. Gregory Board of Trustees, and Rev. Fr. Nerses Manoogian, the Pastor. A
message from His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia,
offering congratulations and encouragement was read.
Reports were presented by the Religious and Executive Councils, the
Armenian Religious Education Council (AREC) and the Armenian National
Education Committee (ANEC).
The keynote address was delivered by Professor Vigen Guroian who
captivated the delegates and guests with his timely and provocative analysis
on the institution of marriage. Professor Guroian said:
For reasons that on this occasion I can review in only the smallest
detail, it may no longer be possible or permissible for the Armenian Church
in the state of Massachusetts and no doubt soon in many other states to
cooperate or collaborate with government in marrying persons, as has been
carried on in one form or another within Christendom since the fifth and
sixth centuries. It may be time for our bishop to instruct priests that in
states that adopt gay marriage laws the Armenian Church must withdraw from
the standard process and not deliver marriage consecration on behalf of the
state, in simple terms not to sign marriage certificates. It may be, that in
fact, Armenian Church faithful must for a time live defacto under a two-tier
arrangement in which they obtain a civil marriage to meet legal requirements
and qualify for married status in the eyes of the state and come to the
church to receive true, sacramental marriage. …Today in our land this
profound Christian truth about the divine and salving nature of marriage is
being contradicted in the most destructive and hateway way. We have seen the
celebration of this rejection of Christian truth spilling over into the
streets of San Francisco and Boston. There is little doubt what is coming.
We must fight to prevent this explosion of the meaning of marriage, not for
the sake of, at best, a Pyrrhic victory, but as testimony of our faith in
the love of God and his holiness.
An extended and lively question and answer period followed.
Later that morning Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan, the Prelate, delivered
his message, which focused on the Armenian Family. He spoke about the
Armenian Family as a Church and the Armenian Family as a Nation. The Prelate
said:
We are all aware that His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House
of Cilicia, proclaimed 2004 the Year of the Armenian Family. The family with
its narrow and wide meaning comprises all of us individually and
collectively with a national and universal understanding.
. The Armenian Church turned the Gospe’s message and salvific mission
into the sustenance that strengthened and spread the faith transmitted by
the apostles, giving Armenian nuances to our peoples distinct character. Our
language and literature were born and advanced within Christianity; stones
were given form and quality and became God’s Churches-Hripsime and
Zvartnotz. Sound was given the modulation of songs and became angelic
prayers, hymns, and melodies. For the simplicity and purity of the Armenian
soul, our church fathers defined our theology, ecclesiology and liturgy. All
of this formed the identity of the Armenian Church. She had her special
place in God’s family, praying in her style and tongue, singing with her own
mode and spirit, and a theology with her own philosophy and understanding.
These qualities imprinted such a deep and defining stamp on our nation’s
spiritual and intellectual bedrock, which became our image, our uniqueness.
In the words of our historian Yeghishe, it became the color of our skin.
Because of this, during our peaceful and prosperous times, but especially
during the times of destructions, massacres, and invasions by our enemies
and during the time we were deprived of our government, the Armenian Church
spread her protection over her faithful with total dedication, keeping them
members of the Christian and Armenian Church family. And it is a fact that
those who distanced themselves from the Mother Church lost a part of their
identity, to say the least. For centuries we lived safely with our own
identity thanks to the Armenian Church and her spiritual, cultural,
philanthropic, and Christ- and nation-loving mission. Today our confident
expectation is that the Armenian Church will continue her centuries old
mission to her children with the same understanding and dedication.
The theme of the family continued with the keynote address delivered by
Dr. Vigen Guroian, Professor of Religion and Ethics at Loyola College in
Baltimore. Professor Guroian spoke about the Armenian Christian Family Under
Fire.

ASCENSION DAY WILL BE CELEBRATED TONIGHT
Today is Ascension Day (Hampartzoum) and it will be celebrated tonight
in Philadelphia by the Prelate, the Prelacy clergy, NRA delegates, and the
faithful of the Philadelphia community. The Divine Liturgy will start at
7:30 pm, officiated by V. Rev. Fr. Anoushavan Tanielian, Vicar of the
Prelacy.

MIDWEST JEOPARDY TOURNAMENT WINNER
IS ARS ZAVARIAN SCHOOL
The Armenian Jeopardy Tournaments, organized by the Armenian National
Education Committee (ANEC), have become even more popular than expected.
Last Sunday, May 15, the Midwest Tournament took place in Chicago and the
first place winner was the Armenian Relief Society Zavarian School of
Detroit. Second place winner was the Taniel Varoujan School.
The championship game will take place this Sunday, May 23, at St.
Gregory Church, Philadelphia. The regional champions will compete for the
grand championship. Competing will be: ARS Zavarian School (Detroit);
Armenian Sisters Academy (Philadelphia); and St. Stephen Saturday School
(Watertown).
Good luck to all!

AKHTAMAR CHURCH ENDANGERED
The Assembly of Armenians of Europe issued an appeal following an
article that appeared in the Turkish Zaman newspaper about the Church of the
Holy Cross on the island of Akhtamar. The church is not protected by UNESCO
and the Assembly of Armenians of Europe is asking that letters be sent to
Mr. Laurent Levi-Strauss (Deputy Director for the Division of Cultural
Heritage, Chief of Section for Tangible Heritage, UNESCO, e mail:
[email protected] and to Mr. Francis Childe (Senior Programme
Specialist, Europe, Asia, Pacific, UNESCO, e-mail: [email protected] and
to the AAE Brussels Head Office, e-mail: [email protected]
The Church of the Holy Cross is situated on an island in Lake Van. The
church was built during the reign of King Gagik I and is one of the finest
examples of Armenian architecture.

U.S. CHURCH LEADERS PRESS PRESIDENT BUSH
ON PROBLEMS FACING HOLY LAND CHRISTIANS
Fifty leaders of evangelical and mainline Protestant, Catholic, and
Orthodox churches and church-related organizations in the United States
delivered a letter to President Bush on May 7, asking for a full
understanding of the crisis in the Holy Land confronting Christian
Palestinians, Christian institutions, and those who wish to visit the
birthplace of Christianity.
Stating that the churches have directed their concerns to the Israeli
government but to little avail, the church leaders appealed for the
President’s intervention to help restore the normal function of Christian
institutions in Israel and the occupied territories.
The letter addressed the concerns specifically regarding the effects of
the separation being constructed by Israel, taxation issues that may force
many church institutions to close due to the rescinding of their
longstanding tax-exempt status, and the denial and delay of visas by Israel
for clergy and church personnel resulting in understaffed seminaries,
churches, hospitals, education and other institutions.
The signers stated clearly that they do not mean to minimize the
suffering of Muslims and Jews, and asked the President to assist all
Muslims, Jews, and Christians in the Holy Land for peacemaking that builds
bridges to a new and hopeful future.
Source: National Council of Churches

THE VOICE OF GOD
I sought to hear the voice of God,
And climbed the topmost steeple.;
But God declared: Go down again,
I dwell among the people.
(Louis I. Newman)

Visit our website at

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.armenianprelacy.org
http://www.armenianprelacy.org

Camp Haiastan

PRESS RELEASE

Camp Haiastan
P. O. Box C
Franklin, MA 02038
Contact: Robert Avakian, Executive Director
Tel: 508-528-0505
Fax: 123-456-7890
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

CAMP HAIASTAN APPOINTS ROY S. CALLAN AS NEW EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

The Camp Haiastan Board of Directors is most pleased to announce
the appointment of Mr. Roy S. Callan as Executive Director of Camp
Haiastan. Mr. Callan will be replacing Robert A. Avakian, the current
Executive Director, who will be retiring after many years of service
to the Camp.

Roy Callan has been active in Armenian circles for several decades,
both on the West Coast and in the Mid-West. Born in California and
the grandson of an Armenian priest (Der Levon Parunakian), Mr. Callan
graduated from California State University with a Bachelor’s Degree
and California Lutheran University with a Master of Arts. He moved to
Detroit, has run the AGBU Camp Ararat summer camp in Michigan and is
currently a Social Studies teacher and Athletic Director at the Alex &
Marie Manoogian School in Southfield, Michigan. He and his wife have
also successfully run several businesses together in the Detroit area.

Dedication to family and the Armenian community has been the central
focal point of Mr. Callan’s life. He has been a church school teacher
at St. John ‘s Armenian Church for twenty-six years, an adult and
youth basketball coach for twenty years in the St. John’s Armenian
Church Basketball League, a member of the Knights of Vartan for over
fifteen years, a fund raiser for the Manoogian School, a Detroit
AYF Olympics coach, a Grants chairman for the One Hundred Hyes
Philanthropic Organization and a member and past president of the
Armenco Investment Club.

Roy Callan and Yerchanig Hoplamazian of Detroit were married in 1977
and have three children, Dickran, Vahan and Knar. All three are
Camp Haiastan veterans, having attended as campers in the 1990s.
They all have also been members of the AYF Kopernik Tandourjian
Junior and Senior chapters with Dickran serving as President of
the Senior chapter. Vahan has had the opportunity to serve in the
Armenian National Committee intern program in Washington, D.C. and
is currently an aide to a United States Congressman from New Jersey.
Knar is presently a student at Western Michigan University where she
is majoring in Education.

This next phase in Roy’s life story is the move to Franklin,
Massachusetts. The Callans will move East in June, after completing
the school year. When discussing the move to Franklin he was quite
clear in his motivation of adding to the Camp Haiastan legacy.
He is quoted as noting “…Camp Haiastan is clearly very special; it’s
mission is unique and extremely important to the Armenian community.
Robert Avakian has made immeasurable contributions and is clearly
“Mr. Camp Haiastan”. I look forward to adding my contribution to this
wonderful community asset.”

Stephen Mesrobian, the Board member who chaired the Search Committee,
was most impressed with the Callan appointment. “Roy brings everything
to the table; a committed member of the Armenian community, a
successful businessman, pertinent experience in the area of Armenian
camping, connections to Camp Haiastan, a born teacher, interest in
athletics and a deliberate, sound reasoning process. We have been
fortunate to have Bob Avakian as our Executive Director for so long.
Bob’s unique talents and experiences are impossible to replace.
But, as we enter this next phase in the life of Camp Haiastan, we
think we have in Roy Callan the right person for the right job at
the right time.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.camphaiastan.org

Genocide survivors speak at CHS History Symposium

Genocide survivors speak at CHS History Symposium
By JESSICA CARR , Daily Times Staff Reporter 05/21/2004

Kent County Daily Times, RI
May 21 2004

WASHINGTON VILLAGE — The auditorium at Coventry High School became
a narrative museum yesterday afternoon when three guest speakers
discussed the horrors of all three genocides of the 20th century
with students from CHS and five surrounding school districts for the
school’s History Symposium.

Moushegh Derderian, one of the last living survivors of the Armenian
Genocide, Alice Golstein, a Jewish woman who, along with her family,
experienced first hand all of the devastations that led up to the
Holocaust, and Loung Ung, a noted speaker on Cambodia, child soldiers,
women and war, refugee issues, domestic violence and land mines were
the three featured guests at the event.

Derderian, now in his 90s, was born in Sepastia, Turkey, which
occupied Armenia in 1911.He made his long and arduous journey to
America in 1920, shortly after the Ottoman Turkish government put up
arms against the Armenians. Derderian discussed with students many
of the brutalities that he experienced during the Armenian Genocide.

Golstein, born in the back forest of Germany at the beginning of
the Nazi era, was raised at a time when the value of all people and
a sense of justice had not yet become equally apparent. Now, as a
historian and senior researcher at Brown University, Golstein uses
her deeply-rooted tragic childhood as the basis for her current life
as an active member of Rhode Island’s Jewish community.

Loung Ung, one of the lucky few to survive one of the bloodiest eras
in the 20th century, is now a renowned speaker on the killing fields
of Cambodia that she and her family had to fight their way through.
Just five years after her birth in 1970, Ung and her family were
forced from there home in a mass evacuation. During her presentation,
Ung detailed for the students in the audience the injustice that
brought her father, mother and sister to an early death.

“My sister died from starvation at 14 years old,” Ung said. “For fear
of my own death, I ate charcoal and pretended it was cake. My sister
was only one out of nearly two million that were killed during this
time. There were so many deaths that families just dug holes under
their homes and pushed the bodies under.”

Ung also told the audience about the 20,000 mass graves that were
filled to the brim with hundreds of bodies, which had been killed by
a blunt instrument to the back of the head.

“I had dreamed that the soldiers that came to get my father would
have used a bullet to kill him rather than the blunt object because
I knew it would have been quicker and less painful,” Ung said.

Above all else, one of the biggest eye opening aspects of Ung’s
discussion, the students in the audience said, was her talk about the
gardens of death, the killing fields, the acres and acres of unusable
soil that stretch across all of Cambodia still because of all of the
land mines that are buried under the soil.

All three of these speakers and the entire day’s activities were made
possible by Mackenzie Zabbo and Nicole St. Jean, two seniors at CHS
working to complete the project requirements of the Certificate of
Initial Mastery (CIM) voluntary senior project.

“I was expecting a tragedy like the screen wasn’t going to be here
for us to use or the projector and the lights weren’t going to work,
but I think everything ended up turning out pretty well,” said Zabbo.
“All of the kids seemed to like all of the speakers and I really
learned a lot from them. There is only so much you can learn in the
classroom, but when we heard each of the individual survivors stories,
it just made so much more of an impression.”

With the help of their senior advisor, Matt Brissette, Zabbo and St.
Jean had been working to coordinate the History Symposium Day since
the beginning of the year.

“We read the book (First They Killed My Father: a Cambodian Daughter
Remembers, by Loung Ung) last year in Mr. Brissette’s class and I
just loved it, so when he suggested that we get her to come I was
just so excited about that,” Zabbo said.

“Then he suggested that we incorporate all three of the genocides
into one big event and make it the school’s first History Symposium
Day,” St. Jean said. “So that is what we did. It was a lot of work,
but I really learned a lot and enjoyed every part of it, especially
hearing the individual survivors’ stories.”

According to Brissette, seeing that this year’s History Symposium Day
was such a tremendous success, it is something that he would like to
make a permanent fixture in the school’s yearly agenda.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Minnesotan found slain in Armenia

Minnesotan found slain in Armenia
Matt McKinney, Star Tribune

Minneapolis Star Tribune , MN
May 20 2004

A Minnesota man who left the Midwest to teach in the exotic locales
of Tibet, India and the emerging nations of the former Soviet Union
was found stabbed to death outside his apartment Monday night in the
capital of Armenia, where he had been working for the past year.

Joshua Haglund, 33, a graduate of Mounds View High School, was planning
to leave Armenia in a few days for a trip through Iran before returning
to Minnesota for the summer, according to his family.

“This is the first day that I have not cried all day,” said his mother,
Maxine Haglund-Blommer of Shoreview. She said she saw her son a month
ago at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport as he passed through
town after attending a California job fair.

“He interviewed with five or six countries, then he stopped back here
with his suit. ‘Hi, how are you? My plane’s leaving in five minutes,’
and then he was gone.'”

Josh HaglundCourtesy Haglund FamilyHaglund, an experienced traveler
who has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Puerto Rico,
told his mother last Friday that one of the interviews had led to a
job offer in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.

He told her it would be his last overseas assignment.

“He said, ‘This is my last trip, Mom. I want to live close to you
guys.’ That was his plan,” she said.

Haglund’s death was characterized as a homicide by authorities in
Yerevan, Armenia’s capital. No arrests have been made, according to
an online news account.

A passerby found Haglund lying on the street outside of his apartment,
according to an article posted on the Web site Bakutoday.net, an
online English-language newspaper. A witness told authorities that
Haglund was badly wounded but still alive when she found him and that
he said something to her in English that she could not understand.

An ambulance arrived a few minutes later, but he had died, she said.
Police said it appeared that he had been beaten and stabbed inside
his apartment and that he had gone outside on his own.

A witness told the online newspaper that an open bottle of wine and
three glasses were found inside Haglund’s apartment, a clue that has
made his death only more confusing for friends at home.

“It must be something really serious,” said Sayompol Samod, a friend
from the Twin Cities, “because in the news article, there was a
[mention of] an open bottle of wine and beating to death. And one
article said it was a contract killing; another said it was a personal
motive. We are here so far away in the dark and not knowing what was
going on. The embassy is not telling us anything.”

Haglund earned an undergraduate degree in political science from the
University of Minnesota and a master’s degree in teaching English
as a second language from the University of Toronto. He taught there
for a time before embarking on his latest assignment.

He moved to Yerevan last year to take a job at the state-run
Linguistics University through an exchange program overseen by the
U.S. State Department. Armenia, which gained independence from the
former Soviet Union in 1991, is a nation of 3.3 million people that
lies just east of Turkey.

Haglund-Blommer said she and her son planned to go camping in the
Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness this summer, in what was to be
a continuation of a yearslong custom of mother-son camping trips that
took them to Mexico, Canada, New York and elsewhere.

“A lot of times Josh and I would go camping alone,” she said. “That
was the thing we did for the last 15 years. If every mother could have
the same connection that I have with Josh. … And I’m not singling
him out as anything special or anything. It was good.”

Haglund’s far-flung travels were never without an invitation to his
family to join him, his mother said.

“He was really always trying to get the family to come over,” she
said. “He always wanted to include his family in the places he was.”

Haglund, who enjoyed cooking, once treated his family to a Thanksgiving
meal of dishes he had learned to cook in all of the places he had
been. “The meal he put on was just amazing,” said Haglund-Blommer.

“To think he met such a violent death is just a real hard thing to come
to grips with,” she said. “Maybe we’ll never know what happened there.”

He is survived by his parents, a sister and two brothers. A sister
died in infancy. The family will learn today when the State Department
plans to ship his body home, his mother said.

Services will be held at St. Odilia Church in Shoreview at a time
and date to be determined.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Boxing: Abelyan brands Scott a bigmouth

Glasgow Daily Record, UK
May 20 2004

YOU’RE GONNA GET YOUR GOB SMACKED PAL

ABELYAN BRANDS SCOTT A BIGMOUTH
By David Mccarthy

WILLIAM ABELYAN last night vowed to shut Scott Harrison’s mouth after
the Scot insisted he’d hammer his Armenian challenger at Braehead on
June 19.

American-based Abelyan reacted with fury and insists he is ready to fly
to Scotland tomorrow to sort out the WBO world featherweight champion.

That won’t be necessary but come June 19 Abelyan’s anger should ensure
a terrific tear-up.

Speaking from his training camp in Las Vegas, he said: ‘Harrison’s
got a big mouth and I’m going to shut it for him.

‘He’s talking a lot of garbage. He’s scared that’s why he’s talking
big but I’ll be over there for the fight soon and we’ll see if he
talks just as big when he’s face to face with me.’

Abelyan, 25, insists his training has not been disrupted despite two
postponements of the fight following Harrison’s arm injury.

He added: ‘I’m ready to fight now. If my team said to me, ‘William
we’re going to Scotland tomorrow to fight Harrison’, I would be
straight on the plane. I have never been up for a fight more than
this one.

‘It’s the title and the fame I want, not the money. After I win the
title I will return to Armenia a hero.

‘I will be the first world champion boxer ever to come out of the
country.

‘The boxing ring is my house and Harrison is not welcome.’

Tickets purchased for the original date of May 29 will remain valid
for June 19.

Tickets, priced at £30, £50, £75 and £125, are available from Keith
Prowse Ticketing on 0870906 3839, Braehead Arena on 0870 444 6062
and online at

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.frankwarren.tv/tickets