Sevan Wanting Water

A1 Plus | 18:23:43 | 30-04-2004 | Social |

SEVAN WANTING WATER

“During 70 years Sevan Lake water level reduced by 41%”, Boris Gabrielyan,
Vice-Director of Hydro-Ecology Institute of National Academy of Sciences,
said during the seminar on ecology held be OSCE Yerevan Office. {BR}

According to him, water decrease influenced on ecosystem of Sevan Lake. In
particular, the aboriginal fish – koghak, ishkhan and beghlu face the danger
to disappear completely. He says the water quality and level are the reason
of it.

Armenian Authorities announce they are going to raise Sevan water level by 2
meters whereas the ecologists demand to increase it by 6 meters at least.

Karine Danielyan, “For Stable Development” Association Chair, thinks one
must give ‘the oligarchs possessing establishments’ on Sevan beach to
understand that they will suffer in both cases if hindering increase of
water level. “If they worry that their properties might appear under water,
they must realize that Sevan eutrophication will continue”, she explained.

UAF’s 128th Airlift Delivers $3.3 Million of Aid to Armenia

UNITED ARMENIAN FUND
1101 N. Pacific Avenue # 301
Glendale, CA 91202
Tel: 818.241.8900
Fax: 818.241.6900

For Immediate Release
3 May 2004
Contact: 818.241.8900

UAF’s 128th Airlift Delivers $3.3 Million of Aid to Armenia

Glendale, CA – The United Armenian Fund’s 128th airlift arrived in Yerevan
on May 1, delivering $3.3 million of humanitarian assistance.

The UAF itself collected $2.9 million of medicines and medical supplies for
this flight, most of which were donated by the Catholic Medical Mission
Board
($2.5 million); Health Partners ($150,000); MAP International ($108,000);
and AmeriCares ($103,000).

Other organizations which contributed goods for this airlift were: Dr.
Stephen Kashian of Illinois ($57,000); Armenian Canadian Medical Association
($52,000); Dr. Viken Garabedian of California ($52,000); Chene France
($39,000); and Shoebox Sharing ($31,000).

Also contributing to this airlift were: Armenian General Benevolent Union
($17,000); Harut Chantikian of New Jersey ($15,000); Armenian Eyecare
Project ($14,000); Prof. Ernst Leumann of Switzerland ($13,000); and U.S.
Department of Agriculture ($12,000).

Since its inception in 1989, the UAF has sent $383 million of humanitarian
assistance to Armenia on board 128 airlifts and 1,043 sea containers.

The UAF is the collective effort of the Armenian Assembly of America, the
Armenian General Benevolent Union, the Armenian Missionary Association of
America, the Armenian Relief Society, the Diocese of the Armenian Church of
America, the Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America and the
Lincy Foundation.

For more information, contact the UAF office at 1101 North Pacific Avenue,
Suite 301, Glendale, CA 91202 or call (818) 241-8900.

###

World Music

World Music: Omaggio: Berio Djivan Gasparyan / Tenores di Bitti / Kamkars
Queen Elizabeth Hall London

The Independent – United Kingdom;
May 04, 2004

Michael Church

THE TITLE indicated homage to the recently deceased Luciano Berio, but
the event reflected the homage he had paid to the folk music of North
America, France, Iran, Azerbaijan and the islands of the
Mediterranean.

We began with the folk songs he recomposed for his wife, Cathy
Berberian. Here they were sung by the mezzo Katalin Karolyi, who
handled two American ballads with sweet allure, swung jauntily south
to Armenia, hardened her voice to match the rough edges of a Sicilian
lament, and rang timbral changes for pungent songs from Sardinia and
the Auvergne. Did it matter that the words of the Aze rbaijani love
song which Berberian had originally collected were still
untranslatable? Of course not. Karolyi may not have Berberian’s
raunchiness, but this was a tour de force all the same, beautifully
abetted by musicians from the London Sinfonietta.

One thing Karolyi superbly demonstrated – for those who had forgotten
– was that a proper singer needs no amplification in the acoustically
excellent QEH. Nor do reed instruments, and when Djivan Gasparyan and
his two fellow-dudukists joined in via the stage mics we lost the
sonic intimacy Karolyi had built up. But their magic was still
irresistible: after a slow and meditative improvisation over his
friends’ drone, this Armenian master led them through dances and
laments. With its single-octave range, the apricot-wood duduk might
not be thought one of the world’s most expressive instruments, but
they gave the lie to this. Their slightly flattened harmonies set up
the yearning atmosphere we always associate with Armenia: the land
whose defining tragedy sent half its population into exile.

If this was music to dream to, what followed had us on the edge of our
seats: Berio’s “Naturale”, where viola and vestigial percussion
suffered plangent interruptions from the taped voice of a Sicilian
folk singer. Then we were in Sardinia, courtesy of four middle-aged
gents in matching brown outfits, who gave vent to the most
penetratingly nasal close-harmony I’ve ever heard. Once again,
unnecessary miking removed some of the poignancy, but these Tenores di
Bitti showed what drama could be extracted from minimal gear-changes
in key and intonation. It was a shame we weren’t told what their songs
were about.

Then it was playtime with that most congenial of Kurdish groups, the
Kamkars. Hassan Kamkar and his six children have made it their
mission to preserve the village music of Kurdish Iran, and their
hoof-drumming rhythms got the whole hall clapping along. And that
meant more than just the world-music fraternity, because the audience
was drawn from every kind of musical persuasion. This concert really
was what Radio 3 voguishly terms “boundary-crossing”.

Russian envoy hails Armenian authorities’ measures to end protests

Russian envoy hails Armenian authorities’ measures to end protests

Arminfo
21 Apr 04

YEREVAN

Both the Armenian authorities and protesters should be mutually
polite,” the Russian ambassador to Armenia, Anatoliy Dryukov, told
Arminfo, while commenting on the political situation in the country.

He said that it is the authorities’ constitutional duty to maintain
law and order, but the protesters should observe order as well. I can
comment on the situation in Armenia only as a representative of a
foreign country – without any attempt to interfere in the country’s
internal affairs,” the Russian diplomat said.

The current situation is a blow to the Armenian state, Armenian
statehood and to the economic and social development plans that the
Armenian government has announced, the ambassador said.

The political struggle is a usual and normal occurrence in a
democratic state. However, it is normal if the struggle is being
conducted within the framework of the law and the constitution. He
said that no-one is allowed to interpret the laws and the constitution
in their own manner,” the ambassador noted.

“I think the current situation has developed because some people are
trying to interpret the laws and the constitution in their own
manner,” the ambassador said. All this and the fact that people are
suffering are grave consequences. Dryukov believes that the work the
Prosecutor-General’s Office is doing now is an absolutely correct
reaction by the authorities and it is necessary to wait for the
results of the investigation.

Armenian vote marks a turning point: MPs acknowledge the genocide

Times Colonist (Victoria, British Columbia)
April 24, 2004 Saturday Final Edition

Armenian vote marks a turning point: MPs acknowledge the genocide
despite the prime minister’s wishes

by: Adrian Dix

April 24, 1915, 89 years ago today, was one of the most significant
and tragic days of the 20th century. On that date, the Ottoman Empire
arrested and murdered hundreds of Armenian community leaders and
intellectuals. It was the beginning of the Armenian genocide — the
first genocide of the 20th century.

On Wednesday, the House of Commons voted 153-68 in favor of a motion
to “acknowledge the Armenian genocide and to condemn it as a crime
against humanity.” The motion passed in spite of the opposition of
Prime Minister Paul Martin and his cabinet and exposes not only the
difficulty in defending human rights against crass self-interest, but
the emptiness of the federal Liberal rhetoric about the “democracy
deficit.”

The scope of the horror perpetrated against Armenians by the
government of the Ottoman Empire between 1915 and 1918, atrocities
that were renewed by the post-First World War Turkish state between
1920 and 1923, is virtually impossible to comprehend. An estimated
1.5 million Armenians died between 1915 and 1923 as the result of
systematic state policies of starvation, deportation, torture and
massacre.

Genocide is defined as “the organized killing of a people for the
express purpose of putting an end to their collective existence.”
Before the First World War, there were two million Armenians in the
Ottoman Empire. By 1923, the entire Armenian population of the region
had been expunged either through death or deportation.

Armenak Deragopian, an Armenian-Canadian living in Vancouver,
testifies to his family’s experience: “My father’s family was
massacred — about 16 people. My father survived because he was
working in Egypt at the time of World War One and was unable to
return to his home region. My mother managed to escape but much of
her family was massacred as well.”

In the wake of the First World War, recognition of the Armenian
genocide was pushed aside by political considerations as the
victorious powers carved up Europe and the Middle East and dealt with
the emerging Turkish state and the Soviet Union.

An avalanche of evidence demonstrates the scope of the Armenian
genocide — from eyewitness reports to comprehensive inquiries. And
many governments including Sweden, France, Switzerland, Holland and
Belgium have formally recognized the Armenian genocide and have
joined in the April 24 commemoration. Several leading NATO powers
have not — including the United States, Great Britain and Canada.
These countries have refused to recognize genocide for fear of
offending Turkey — a strategic NATO ally.

Turkey has fought hard to deny international recognition of the
Armenian genocide, using both its strategic position in the Western
Alliance and its growing economic power to block recognition efforts.
In 2000, the U.S. House of Representatives withdrew a motion on the
genocide under pressure from the Clinton administration after Turkey
threatened to deny access to its airspace for missions to Iraq.

When the French National Assembly passed a motion in 2000 to
recognize the genocide, the Turkish government cancelled a number of
important contracts for French companies.

The effort by the federal Liberal cabinet to block the Canadian
motion this week was motivated by similar concerns. Bombardier and
SNC-Lavalin are bidding on a major contract to extend the subway
system in Ankara. The Canadian Chamber of Commerce lobbied on their
behalf to oppose the passing of the Armenian motion, fearing
retaliation against Canadian economic interests.

Once the motion was passed, in the absence of the prime minister,
Foreign Affairs Minister Bill Graham issued a statement stating that
Canada’s position “had not changed.”

He added: “Canada has had friendly and co-operative relations with
Turkey and Armenia for many years. The Canadian government is
committed to make these relationships even stronger in the future.”

If nothing else, the vote recognizing the Armenian genocide
illustrates the hollowness of the prime minister’s commitment to end
the “democracy deficit.” Reacting to the vote, Martin suggested that
“Parliament and the government could have different views. And that,
in fact, is one of the great benefits of dealing with parliamentary
reform and parliamentary democracy.”

What is the point of having more “free votes” if they are
pre-determined as meaningless in terms of government policy by the
prime minister himself? This is not parliamentary reform. Martin is
furthering the democracy deficit by debasing our democratic
institutions.

After all, the government of Canada is a reflection of a majority in
Parliament, not a benign dictatorship that can accept or reject the
view of elected members of Parliament. Martin is prime minister
because a majority of members of Parliament elected by the voters are
Liberals. It is not because “he knows better.”

Canada’s MPs are to be praised for standing up against the prime
minister in recognizing the Armenian genocide. This is a victory for
the value of historical memory over self-interest. This April 24, the
memory of those who lost their lives in the genocide will not have
been forgotten.

Perhaps too, this vote can represent a turning point in the revaluing
of Canadian democratic institutions. Given the reaction of the prime
minister, however, the goal of erasing the democracy deficit seems
far away.

Adrian Dix was an adviser to the New Democratic Party government.

Mass killings of the past century

The Associated Press
April 22, 2004, Thursday

Mass killings of the past century

Background and resources on genocides and mass killings in the past
century:

-Armenian Genocide (1915-16): Ottoman Turks kill about 1.5 million
ethnic Armenians during World War I.

-Ukraine (1932-33): An artificial famine caused by Soviet leader
Joseph Stalin’s agricultural policies kills 7 million to 10 million
people.

-Nazi Holocaust (1933-1945): German leader Adolf Hitler leads attack
on Jews in Nazi-occupied Europe in which 6 million Jews die. The
Nazis also kill about 5 million other civilians, including Gypsies,
Poles, political opponents, gays, and others.

-Chinese Great Leap Forward (1959-61): About 30 million Chinese die
in famine that followed Mao Zedong’s effort at rapid rural
industrialization.

-Cambodia (1975-79): Khmer Rouge government kills about 1.7 million
Cambodians in a drive to purge western influence and start an
agrarian communist state.

-Rwanda (1994): Ethnic Hutu rebels lead attacks on ethnic Tutsis and
moderate Hutus, killing an estimated 800,000 people.

Resources for further study:

-Genocide links:

http://reslife.binghamton.edu/hillside/genocide/country.htm

Pasadena ANC To Commemorate 89th Anniversary of Armenian Genocide

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian National Committee of Pasadena
740 East Washington Blvd.
Pasadena, CA 91104-5007
Telephone: 626.798-0751
Fax: 626.798-7872

Thursday, April 15, 2004

Contact: Peter Tashjian
Telephone: (626) 255-4658

PASADENA ARMENIANS TO COMMEMORATE 89th ANNIVERSARY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Congressman Adam Schiff to be the Keynote Speaker at April 16th Event

PASADENA, CA (April 15, 2004) – The Armenian National Committee of
Pasadena (ANC-Pasadena) and its affiliated organizations will
commemorate the 89th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide with keynote
speaker Congressman Adam Schiff (D-CA 29) on Friday, April 16 at 7:30
p.m. at the Pasadena Armenian Center,740 East Washington Boulevard.

Congressman Adam Schiff will give attendees an update on the status of
House Resolution 193, which would commemorate the 15th Anniversary of
the U.S. ratification the U.N. Convention on the Punishment and
Prevention of Genocides. H.Res. 193 which was co-authored by
Congressman Adam Schiff, specifically mentions the Armenian Genocide
as an example of genocide in the 20th century.

The honorable Consul General of the Republic of Armenia, Gagig
Giragossyan, will also speak at the event. Hundreds of Armenian
Americans, along with community leaders and public officials are
expected to be present to attendthis special event and show solidarity
in the quest for justice for the victims of the Armenian Genocide.
Although historians and eyewitnesses have unequivocally described the
events of 1915-1923 as a state sponsored genocide, the Republic of
Turkey continues to deny the claims through public relations campaigns
and paid lobbyists.

`Congressman Schiff has always been a strong advocate of issues of
concern to our community since his days in the California State
Senate. As one of the principal co-authors of House Resolution 193,
he is the ideal person to provide insight on the status of the
resolution. We are very grateful that he accepted our invitation,’
stated Shahan Stepanian, ANC-Pasadena Chair. `This will be a unique
evening with all federal, state and city officials paying respect to
the martyrs of the Armenian Genocide,’ added Stepanian.

The ANC-Pasadena works to raise awareness and educate the general
public about issues of concern to the Armenian-American community.

To find out more about this event, call (626) 798-7872.

Armenian opposition plans another rally on 16 April

Armenian opposition plans another rally on 16 April

Mediamax news agency
14 Apr 04

YEREVAN

The Armenian opposition is going to stage another rally on Freedom
Square in Yerevan on 16 April, a representative of the Justice bloc,
MP Shavarsh Kocharyan, has said.

Addressing a briefing in Yerevan today, Shavarsh Kocharyan said that
this decision had been made at a meeting of the Justice and National
Unity opposition factions in the National Assembly today, Mediamax
reports.

In turn, the chairman of the political council of the Republic Party,
Albert Bazeyan, called on the party’s members and supporters to come
tomorrow to the party’s office, which had been sealed by the police,
and demand that it be opened. The Republic’s office was shut down on
the night of 13 April after the police dispersed an opposition rally
and arrested its several leaders.

“Despite the steps that can be taken against us, we will use our civil
and political rights,” Albert Bazeyan said.

Heads of the Armenian Police said on 13 April that they would not
allow the holding of unauthorized rallies in Yerevan.

Iran’s intelligence minister conferred with Armenian FM

Iran’s intelligence minister conferred with Armenian foreign minister

IRNA news agency
13 Apr 04

TEHRAN

Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan here Tuesday [13 April]
conferred with Minister of Information Hojjat ol-Eslam Ali Yunesi.

At the meeting, Oskanyan and Yunesi discussed issues of regional and
mutual interest, the public relations department of the ministry said.

[Passage omitted: About Oskanyan’s itinerary in Tehran]

Russian media censored in Armenia

The Russia Journal

Russian media censored in Armenia

MEDIA » :: Apr 13, 2004 Posted: 13:53 Moscow time (09:53 GMT)

YEREVAN – Issues of the Russian newspaper Independent Journal which featured
articles about the Armenian opposition have been prevented from being sold
in Armenian kiosks.

As reported to a Rosbalt correspondent by the Institute for Civic Society,
issues of the newspaper which contained articles about the leader of the
National Unity party, Artashes Gegamian, could not be found anywhere in
Yerevan. Kiosk vendors confirmed they never received copies of the issues in
question.

In addition, broadcasts by the television station NTV were suspended ‘for
technical reasons’. The suspension coincided with the broadcast of material
from April 5, which featured opposition meetings in Yerevan. /Rosbalt/