Armenian authorities arrest three men in connection with U.S.smuggli

Armenian authorities arrest three men in connection with U.S. smuggling case
By AVET DEMOURIAN

AP Worldstream
Mar 21, 2005

Armenian authorities have arrested three men in connection with an
alleged plot uncovered by U.S. authorities to smuggle Russian military
weapons into the United States, a top security official said Monday.

The three suspects allegedly worked with Artur Solomonyan, an Armenian
who was among 18 people charged by U.S. authorities earlier this month
in an alleged scheme to smuggle grenade launchers, shoulder-fired
missiles and other Russian military weapons into the United States,
said Grach Arutyunian, a National Security Service official.

He said no weapons have been smuggled out of Armenia, where the
Russian military has a base, and there was no evidence indicating
Russian soldiers were involved in the scheme.

Arutyunian said the three suspects arrested in Armenia _ Spartak
Elibekian, Armen Barekamian and Grigor Martirosian _ had helped take
digital pictures of weapons at Solomonyan’s request at an Armenian
military base. A check has shown that no weapons have been smuggled
from the base, Arutyunian told reporters.

He didn’t say when the arrests were made.

The arrests of suspects in the United States resulted from a year-long
investigation in which an FBI informant posed as an arms buyer who
claimed to have ties to al-Qaida. Using a digital camera, members
of the ring, which included Armenians and South Africans, provided
pictures of the weapons they said they had available for sale,
prosecutors said.

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1) ARF Responds to Georgian Official’s Slanderous Accusations
2) Rights Group Calls Level of Abuses in Turkey Still ‘Unacceptable’
3) Russia and Georgia to Hold Talks over Bases by End of Month
4) ANC Leads Effort to Address Problems at Grant High School
5) ANCG Hosts Afternoon with Endorsed Candidates
6) Celebrated Comedian Vahe Berberian to Perform for Anahid Oshagan Campaign
7) AYF Camp: Building for Our Future
8) Electoral Idiots

1) ARF Responds to Georgian Official’s Slanderous Accusations

In a recent interview published in the Georgian newspaper “Rao-Rao,”
advisor to
Georgian president Saakashvilli Georgi Gachechiladze, leveled serious charges
against the Armenian Revolutionary Federation. In the March 14 publication,
Gachechiladze alledged that according to records of a closed session of a
Russian Security Service meeting, released to him in 1991 by former Georgian
president Georgian Zviad Gamsakhurdia, then Russian President Yeltsin’s
“national security advisor” A. Mihranian [who never held that title] told that
session, “It is imperative to direct the energy of people of the North
Caucusus
to work against Georgia.”
Gachechiladze expounded, telling the paper that the approach is a classic
doctrine of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, which envisions Georgia’s
collapse by way of the North Caucasus–for the creation of a “Greater Armenia”
that expands toward the Black Sea and Abkhazia.
Asked how Georgia would react if internal political forces sought to seceded
from Georgia, Gachechiladze pointed to Javakhk Armenians, saying that it was
exactly for that reason that they were slaughtered and subsequently driven
from
Turkey. “Coaxed by Tsarist Russia, those Armenians were ultimately betrayed;
some found haven in Georgia. I don’t think that they would blindly assume that
role, once again, under the influence of Russia.”
Responding to Gachechiladze’s remarks, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
released the following statement:

1. The Armenian Revolutionary Federation has never sought and does not seek
“Georgia’s destruction through North Caucasus.” The ARF is pursuing the
protection of the rights of the Armenians of Javakhk within Georgia.
Statements
such as those made by the Georgian president’s advisor may only foment
disturbance in the Caucasus.

2. On the eve of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the Georgian
president’s advisor insults the memory of the Genocide victims, accusing them
of becoming a blind tool in the hands of others. Actually, he is repeating the
official position of Turkey, the perpetrator of the Genocide. Such a
reprehensible stance of the Georgian president’s advisor is incompatible to
the
high office he holds.

3. The Georgian presidential advisor’s threats directed at the Javakhk
Armenians are basis to suspect that the attempts to initiate disruption in
Javakhk are aimed at justifying those very threats. The Georgian presidential
advisor’s intimidating tone is unbecoming of a state that claims to be a
champion of democracy; it resembles the style of dictators speaking to their
subjects in tyrannies.

4. The level of the Georgian presidential advisor’s ignorance may be low
enough to call a Yeltsin aide an ARF member, but it should not be as low as to
overlook the real problems in Javakhk.

5. The ARF is ready to assist the Georgian authorities in protecting the
political and civil rights of the Javakhk Armenians as well as resolving their
socio-economic problems if the Georgian authorities take such steps.
Continuing
the discriminatory policies of the Georgian authorities towards the Javakhk
Armenians can not result in favorable consequences for Georgia.

2) Rights Group Calls Level of Abuses in Turkey Still ‘Unacceptable’

ANKARA (AFP)–Human rights violations decreased in Turkey in 2004 but are
still
at an “unacceptable level” compared to European Union norms, Turkey’s main
human rights group said Friday.
“We can speak of a general improvement when we compare the 2004 human rights
record to that of 2003,” Yusuf Alatas, the head of the Human Rights
Association
(IHD) told a news conference unveiling the group’s annual human rights
report.
“But if we assess the figures without comparing them to previous years, the
situation is not encouraging at all,” he said. “Human rights violations are
still at an unacceptable level and far from EU standards.”
A summary of the IHD report shows the group received 843 complaints of
torture
and mistreatment in 2004, compared to 1,202 in 2003.
Alatas said the figure showed that Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s
government had failed to live up to its “zero tolerance” promise as far as
torture is concerned.
The report said nine publications were seized or banned in 2004, compared to
285 the previous year.
The number of non-governmental organizations closed down by authorities
dropped from 47 to 13 during the same period.
Prosecutors filed various charges against 467 people for only expressing
their
views, down from 1,706 people in 2003.
The report, however, said the number of people killed in armed confrontations
increased from 104 to 240.
The figure appeared to reflect a rise in clashes between security forces and
Kurdish rebels in the country’s mainly Kurdish southeast since last June, when
the rebels ended a five-year unilateral ceasefire with Ankara.
In a landmark decision last December, the EU gave Turkey the green light for
accession talks scheduled to begin on October 3, but the country is still
under
pressure to prove its full commitment to democracy and human rights.

3) Russia and Georgia to Hold Talks over Bases by End of Month

MOSCOW (AFP)–Georgia said Friday that it was close to resolving the thorny
issue of Russian military bases on its territory with Moscow.
“The issue is practically resolved,” Georgy Khaindrava, Georgia’s minister
for
conflict resolution, said on a visit to Moscow.
“We are working on the details and hope that a solution will be found before
the end of May,” he said in an interview with Moscow Echo radio.
The Georgian official said that the three-year time limit that Moscow has
requested to withdraw its two basesone in the mostly Armenian populated
reagion
of Javakhk–which Georgia inherited from Soviet times, was “reasonable.”
The two nations have agreed to hold talks on the issue, which has strained
relations between Moscow and Tbilisi for years, before the end of March.
Russia’s two bases remaining on Georgian territory are in the Akhalkalak
region in the south and Batumi in the west.
“The bases are an anachronism… that dates to the Soviet times and were
meant
to protect the (Soviet) south,” Khaindrava said Friday. “Today NATO and Turkey
are not longer Russian enemies, so there is no longer an argument for their
existence.”
Last week, the Georgian parliament passed a resolution that gave Russia until
January 1 to close the facilities, but Russia is insisting it will need at
least three years to withdraw its equipment and troops.
In a joint statement signed by Russia and Georgia during a 1999 summit of
member countries of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
(OSCE) in Istanbul, Moscow agreed to close two of four military bases in
Georgia and to present a timetable for closure of the remaining two.

4) ANC Leads Effort to Address Problems at Grant High School

NORTH HOLLYWOOD, CA–The Armenian National Committees (ANC) of East and West
San Fernando Valley mobilized on March 8, after a fight broke out between
several hundred Armenian and Latino students at Grant High School, requiring
police intervention. The incident resulted in the arrest of four and expulsion
of eight students, and has garnered significant attention on television news,
talk radio, and print media. The ANC met the following day with the Committee
on Armenian Students in Public Schools (CASPS) and Grant High School officials
to immediately quell the alarming situation.
Within two days after the incident, the ANC co-sponsored a meeting with
parents and Grant High School officials, attracting over 300 participants.
During the entire week after the incident, members of the ANC were on campus
collaborating with parents of Armenian students and school administrators to
analyze the causes leading to the incident, and how to prevent such incidences
from occurring in the future.
“The fights that broke out at Grant High School between Latino and Armenian
students are of serious concern to all communities including the Armenian
American community,” stated Manug Haladjian, Chairman of the East San Fernando
Valley ANC. “This has been an issue at Grant High School in prior years, and
this latest incident is evidence that this issue must be taken more seriously
by all concerned parties,” continued Haladjian.
The ANC and CASPS (The Committee for Armenian Students in Public Schools),
recently organized several meetings on the issue with experts in the field
from
various schools in the area. In addition to meeting with these specialists,
parents, students, and school officials, on March 17, the ANC and CASPS also
met with representatives from the City and County of Los Angeles Human
Resources Commission, and the offices of State Senator Richard Alarcon,
Assemblywoman Cindy Montanez, and Los Angeles Councilwoman Wendy Gruel to
arrange a meeting between Armenian and Latino leaders in the area.
“Excellent education can only be achieved through a safe, healthy, and
positive school environment that fosters respect and understanding for all
cultures,” said Ara Papazian, who chairs the West San Fernando Valley ANC. “We
strongly encourage school officials to view this issue with an eye toward
system-wide, long-term solutions that raise the level of cultural
understanding
among school administrators, teachers, students, and parents.”
Beginning in 2004, the ANC recognized the need to address the issues facing
the increasing number of Armenian students in the public schools. The ANC
began
implementing a course of action which sought to raise awareness of the
challenges facing the Armenian students and look for ways to improve their
educational environment. Over the past six months, the ANC has organized
meetings with Los Angeles Unified School District Officials, including School
Board Member Jon Lauritzen, Grant High School Principal Sandra Cruz, and
various other LAUSD administrators and teachers.
In an effort to improve their understanding of the cultural differences of
Armenian students, 20 educators from Grant High School, including Prinipal
Cruz, will be participating in the March 30 Armenian Cultural Conference in
Pasadena. Now in its tenth year, the Armenian Cultural Conference, which is
sponsored by the school districts of Burbank, Glendale, EIEP of Los Angeles,
Pasadena, and Montebello, aims to raise awareness and understanding of the
Armenian culture among public school teachers and administrators, so that they
may deliver more effective and culturally sensitive education to students of
Armenian descent.
The ANC, along with CASPS and Grant High School, will co-host a meeting on
March 31 with parents of Armenian students at Grant High School to discuss
concerns and start looking for long-term solutions and programs to address the
various issues with Armenian youth in public schools. In addition, a meeting
will be organized for students, in April, to allow them to air their concerns.
On May 4, the ANC, CASPS, and Grant High School will host a town hall meeting
for the entire community on this issue.
“We stand ready to work with school officials, parents, students and other
community groups in the spirit of partnership, implementing programs that will
address these issues and their root causes,” affirmed ANC leaders in a joint
statement released last week.

5) ANCG Hosts an Afternoon with Endorsed Candidates

GLENDALE–Eager voters and concerned citizens gathered at St. Mary’s Apostolic
Church on Sunday, March 13, to meet the ANCG endorsed candidates. The event,
hosted by the Armenian National Committee of Glendale, offered community
members and candidates for city office a chance to speak one and one and
exchange ideas.
Unlike the numerous candidate forums that have been held, this event offered
ArmenianAmericans an opportunity to ask candidates more specific and personal
questions. Non-English speaking citizens were grateful for the opportunity to
ask questions of non-Armenian speaking candidates with the assistance of a
translator. Furthermore, the format of the event allowed candidates to spend
time with individual voters. Rather than responding to questions in 30
seconds,
candidates could spend as much time as needed to answer questions or listen to
voter’s concerns.
“The candidate forum was an exciting opportunity to have supporters and
community members ask questions about our platform, ideas and show their
support for my candidacy,” commented Ardashes “Ardy” Kassakhian, candidate for
City Clerk.
“The rally really fed into the energy and momentum of our campaign and the
Glendale ANC is doing a tremendous job in raising awareness about this
upcoming
election.”
Anahid “Anna” Oshagan, candidate for City Council added, “These are great
opportunities for voters to meet candidates and get to know them on a personal
level.
As a candidate, it’s great to be able to spend time with the voters and listen
to their concerns. After all, these elections are about the voters not the
candidates, and only by knowing and understanding the communities needs can we
candidates become strong leaders.”
Other candidates present included: City Council candidates Ara Najarian
(current
Glendale College Trustee), Larry Miller and Mayor Bob Yousefian; School Board
Candidates Greg Krikorian (current school board President) and Chuck Sambar
(current school board member), and Nayiri Nahabedian; College Board candidates
Dr. Armine Hacopian (current trustee) and Victor King (current trustee).
For more information regarding the candidates or ways to get involved, please
contact the Armenian National Committee of Glendale at (818) 243-3444 or
[email protected].

6) Celebrated Comedian Vahe Berberian to Perform for Anahid Oshagan Campaign

GLENDALE–Celebrated artist and comedian Vahe Berberian has stepped up to help
Anahid Oshagan’s Glendale City Council campaign with a benefit performance of
his highly acclaimed first monologue, “Yevaylen” but with a twist. He will be
performing “Yevaylen, Revisited” at Anoush Restaurant on March 22.
A hysterical and smart monologue, “Yevaylen, Revisited” tackles topics as
diverse as family, growing up in Beirut, and observations on the Armenian
identity concentrating mostly on the Armenian archetype. Performed in
Armenian,
Yevaylen was presented in Pasadena to standing room only crowds for many
months
and toured around various cities in the US and Canada. “Yevaylen,
Revisited” is
based on the same monologue with added twists and turns and brand new
material.
“I think it’s imperative for us as a community to get involved in local
politics. It’s very exciting to see all these young Armenians running for
office, and what is even more exciting is the fact that they are intelligent,
educated people with progressive agendas,” says Berberian, “I love Anahid.
She’s a smart, warm, compassionate human being and I have no doubt that she
will play a very positive role within city politics.”
In a string of fundraising events with an artistic focus, many local artists
have donated their time and talent to aid Anahid Oshagan in her bid for a
council seat. In early March, “Art for Oshagan” a silent art auction at
Harvest
Gallery involved twenty artists and was a huge success. Actress Lory Tatoulian
is slated to perform one of her stage sketches at another fundraising event in
March.
Oshagan is running on a platform to bring our community together and improve
the quality of life for all of Glendale. She will protect our environment,
reduce the impact of traffic, build more mini-parks, support our police and
fire departments, and support the development of arts and culture in our city.
“There are many important issues in Glendale and one of them is arts and
culture–this is one of my priorities in this race,” said Oshagan. “Art is a
universal language and it is a force that can unite many parts of Glendale’s
diverse mosaic of communities.”
Anahid Oshagan’s candidacy for the City Council has a vision to bring harmony
and mutual understanding to the diverse communities of Glendale. Stemming from
her political experience and her dedication to the community, Anahid will
bring
a fresh new perspective and will become a unifying force for all of Glendale.
Recognizing this fact, Congressman Adam Schiff (D-29) has endorsed Anahid’s
bid for the City Council as has Raffi Manoukian of the Glendale City Council,
the Glendale ANC, the San Fernando Valley Young Democrats and the California
School Employees Association. The community has also supported her bid in a
big
way: in January-February time period, her campaign was third in fundraising in
a field of 19 candidates.
Anahid’s background is ideally suited for the city council. Coming from a
family that instilled in her the values of hard work and helping her
community,
Anahid has developed a solid history of community involvement and service.
As a
student leader at CSUN, Anahid was instrumental in aiding the 1988 Armenian
earthquake relief effort and raising awareness of Armenia’s bid for
independence. After graduation, she worked to aid victims of domestic violence
and mentored juvenile inmates. She has taught English as a Second Language to
immigrants and spearheaded fundraising efforts for a program to immunize
children in Armenia and Karabagh.
For the past three years, Anahid was Congressman Adam Schiff’s District
Representative working as the liaison to the City of Glendale and the
Armenian-American communities throughout the 29th Congressional district.
Anahid now works as a non-profit attorney. If elected, she will be the first
Armenian-American woman to serve on the Glendale City Council.
“Yevaylen, Revisited,” will take place Tuesday, March 22 at Anoush restaurant
in Glendale at 401 W. Colorado St. Doors open at 7 p.m. and the performance
begins at 8 p.m. Suggested donation is $25. Mezze will be served. For
reservations contact Christina at (818) 317-1710 or email [email protected].
Visit for info about Vahe.
Donations to the Oshagan campaign may be made to “Friends of Anahid Oshagan”
and sent to Friends of Anahid Oshagan, P.O. Box 4820, Glendale, CA 91222-0820.
Political contributions are not tax-deductible. Please see
<; for more information on
Oshagan’s candidacy as well as this and other events.

7) AYF Camp: Building for Our Future

By Aram Madenlian

Several generations of campers and counselors have learned vital facts about
Armenian history and culture, shared in games and crafts, all while making
lifelong friends at AYF Camp–now in existence for over two and a half
decades.
It is difficult to explain how a group of people that hardly know one another
at the beginning of a week can come together–sleep, eat, and play–to become
like family after only seven days.
There are a myriad of reasons why we return to Camp each year–whether it is
the pride you feel when you see an eight-year-old tearfully and passionately
talking about his great grandparents and the importance of genocide
recognition
or watching a group of campers sing “Verkerov Lee” in unison. As we have all
grown older, it is these memories that encourage us to volunteer our time in
maintaining and improving camp for future generations.
No matter what your age, you always feel a sense of connection to camp. As a
camper, you would eagerly wait all summer long for those one or two weeks that
you and your friends had talked about all year long. All of those detailed
discussions about what color group (Red, Blue, or Orange) you wanted to be in
or what counselor you hoped you had–or in some cases for the ones who were a
little strict you hoped you wouldn’t have–were of utmost importance.
As 17-year-olds, many of us suffered from AYF Camp withdrawal. The camper age
range is 8-16; however, you must be at least 18 years of age to be a
counselor.
That leaves a one-year gap away from AYF Camp, and for many it is a year too
long.
Most counselors are college students, who work part time, but choose to
volunteer their time to the camp for a number of reasons. Most counselors feel
a deep sense of loyalty and responsibility not only to AYF Camp, but most
importantly, to the campers. Passing on what they have learned at Camp and
continuing the traditions is an integral part of that process. They want to be
remembered as “great counselors” and positive role models for their campers.
Ultimately, many counselors aspire to be director one day.
It is, once again, that sense of connection that draws the director back.
Usually settled with family and career, a director takes a week of his or her
vacation time and decides to spend it at camp. While the safety of campers is
of paramount importance, the director also has to ensure that the campers are
having fun while also learning about the Armenian Cause. A good director will
know how to ignite that “spirit” inside the campers and counselors.
Unfortunately, “spirit” alone is not enough to sustain our camp structurally,
as AYF Camp is in dire need of renovation. In recent years, the Management
Board has made it a priority to upgrade the facilities and as a result, a
master plan was implemented for the renovation of AYF Camp. Improvements were
prioritized according to importance and necessity. It was immediately assessed
that the roofs on all of the cabins would not withstand another harsh winter;
the Board, subsequently, planned to replace the roofs on all of the cabins.

Beginning in May 2003, the Board organized the first of a series of camp
improvement weekends. The Board members, along with a core group of
volunteers,
undertook the implementation of this project. These twelve volunteers removed
two to three layers of asphalt shingle roofing, cut and installed new plywood
panels, and installed a new 40-year asphalt shingle roof on cabins 4,5,6,7,
and
10.
In June 2003, a new walk-in freezer, along with a new motor, was installed in
the kitchen. The installation was completed by a volunteer who donated his
time, tools, and a portion of the materials at no cost to the camp.
In July 2003, three new commercial grade hot water heaters were installed in
all of the camper bathrooms. The volunteer provided the three 1,000 gallon
water heaters at his cost, as well as his time, tools, and a portion of the
materials. Also in July 2003, the ARF Shant chapter organized a work weekend,
where members assembled and installed 33 new bunk beds, installed curtains in
all of the cabins, and painted the interiors of cabins 1, 2, 3, 4, and 8.
In October 2003, the Board members and a group of volunteers removed and
replaced the roofs of cabins 8 and 9. In addition, cabin 8 was essentially
rebuilt from the ground up, starting from the framing, to the installation of
new windows, doors, siding, and a new electrical panel. A member of the
Management Board donated the majority of the materials for cabin 8.
In March of 2004, the same group of volunteers removed and replaced the roofs
of cabins 2 and 3.
In May and June 2004, a contractor was hired to completely renovate the Boy’s
bathroom downstairs. The framing was replaced one stud at a time. New
sheathing, weatherproofing, exterior plywood, and siding were installed. The
old plumbing and electrical were also replaced. In addition, new shower
fixtures, toilets, urinals, sinks, windows, and doors were installed all
accented with a natural slate stone tile.
In June 2004, a small group of volunteers installed the interior drywall and
painted the exterior of cabin 8.
In October 2004, volunteers removed and replaced the roofs of cabin 1 and the
roof of the boy’s bathroom.
All these improvements were necessary for Camp to continue its daily
operations. They are, however, just the beginning. The AYF Camp Management
Board has made this revitalization effort its top priority and is counting on
you for your support.
In December 2004, Dr. Garo Chalian pledged to sponsor the renovation of the
infirmary ($25,000) in memory of his father. Actions have always spoken louder
than words for the Chalian Family as a whole. Whether as campers, counselors,
directors, or board members, the Chalian Family has always been involved in
the
Camp. Their role as activists within our community has truly benefited us all.
We are confident Dr. Chalian’s generosity will be contagious amongst our
community members and that it will start the 2005 year with the momentum
needed
to see our revitalization project through to its fruition. The improvements on
the infirmary are scheduled to start in May 2005.
The following is a complete list of future improvements for which the
board is
seeking sponsorship:

*Renovation of the Girl’s Bathrooms–$25,000

*Renovation of the Infirmary–(Sponsorship Secured – Dr. Garo Chalian)

*Renovation of the Camp Fire Pit–(Sponsorship Secured Garo Madenlian Fund)

*Renovation of the Pool and Pool Bathrooms–$75,000

*Renovation of the Kitchen–$50,000

*Renovation of Cabins 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10–$12,000 Each

*Renovation of the Staff Cabin–$15,000

*Renovation of the Lodge–$100,000

*Renovation of the Arts and Crafts–$30,000

*Construction of a New Cabin–$15,000

*Renovation of the Caretaker Cabin–$15,000

If you choose to become a sponsor, your name will be listed on the structure
you have chosen and will remain there for as long as the Camp is in operation.
Donations are not limited to sponsorships–any and all donations are welcomed
and appreciated. For more information regarding sponsorship and donations,
please contact Aram Madenlian at (714) 719-4608.

8) Electoral Idiots

By Garen Yegparian

It’s all I can do to not use names in this piece–all in the interest of
protecting the pride of the guilty.
In a place called Glendale, a very heated contest is raging for the office of
City Clerk. Who’d have thought that was possible? Well, it’s true and we, as
Armenians, are overly well represented– accounting for four of the nine
candidates. Two have earned the title above.
Just this week we’ve learned that one hasn’t voted in the last six years.
That’s nine elections! Remember, the City Clerk is the ELECTIONS officer of
the
city in question. What nerve! What astonishing obliviousness to political
reality! What gall expecting our community’s support when the candidate
doesn’t
even consider it important enough to vote!
The other candidate has seen fit to misuse the city seal for electoral
purposes and been outed by another of the nine and the local newspaper.
Remember, the City Clerk is the keeper of documents and records for the city.
In this case, the candidate is also a long-time city employee and should have
known better. What nerve! What astonishing obliviousness to political reality!
What gall expecting our community’s support when the candidate doesn’t even
respect the city they propose to represent!
But they’re not alone, in another race where our community is well
represented, two school board candidates chose to boycott (I can’t think of a
better characterization) a forum organized a few weeks ago by the Western
Diocese, and reported in this column. Why? Who knows. They were there, but not
on stage. This was a panel that, if you’ll remember, odars were dying to
appear
on. What nerve! What astonishing obliviousness to political reality! What gall
expecting our community’s support when they don’t even see fit to respect our
institutions and the programs they organize!
Nor is Glendale alone in its submissions for this grand title. In other local
elections, one candidate who seeks our community’s support is constantly
offending those who assist the campaign. There’s no appreciation for the
efforts on that candidate’s behalf. On the contrary, only denigration of such
support issues from the candidate’s mouth, both publicly and privately. Add to
this the offense given to broader, non-Armenian circles as well, and it’s time
yet again to exclaim: What nerve! What astonishing obliviousness to political
reality! What gall expecting our community’s support when they don’t even see
fit to respect community activists who support the campaign!
And our final contender is someone who might actually have promise in the
future, given the energy and enthusiasm exhibited in running for office.
Tragicomically though, this candidate ran against a well entrenched incumbent
and garnered a ‘whopping’ one-sixteenth of the votes. Why attempt political
suicide but doing things like this? Build yourself up among the constituencies
you’ll be serving, then go for it!
Here’s my plea to all those with electoral ambitions. Once this round of
elections is over, all those who are considering running next time should sit
together with representatives of Armenian political organizations to hash out
who has the best chance of winning in what seats. Then, let’s get behind those
people and support their campaigns. We’ll all do better, both individually and
as a community.

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ANKARA: Confession from writer of “Blue Book”

CONFESSION FROM WRITER OF “BLUE BOOK”

Turkish Press
March 21 2005

HURRIYET- British historian Arnold Toynbee, the writer of the “Blue
Book” shown as an evidence of Armenian allegations, confessed in his
memoirs that they wouldn’t have written the book if they had known
that it was being prepared for propaganda. In his “Recollections”
written in 1966 and translated into Turkish, Toynbee, who died in
1975, confessed, “the Armenians were after their political ideals
since Turkish-Russian War of 1877-78. They hoped that they could
establish a state like the Greek. The political intentions of the
Greek and Armenians did not have any legitimacy because both groups
were minorities. They aimed to divide the empire. Turks discovered
that the local Armenians could work as ‘fifth wing’ for the Russians.
So, Turks decided to send away the Armenians from the war zone. This
can be considered as a security measure. Some other governments made
similar decisions under similar circumstances. For example, when the
Japanese attacked the United States in Pearl Harbor, the United States
forced citizens of Japanese origin to migrate.”

Eurasec session to discuss intergration cooperation

RIA Novosti, Russia
March 18 2005

EURASEC SESSION TO DISCUSS INTEGRATION COOPERATION

MOSCOW, March 18 (RIA Novosti, Olga Semyonova) -Integration
cooperation and the draft budget for 2006 will be the main items on
the agenda of the session of the Inter-State Council of the Eurasian
Economic Community (EurAsEC) at the level of the heads of government
which will meet on March 24 in Astana (Kazakhstan), a spokesman for
the information and press department of the Russian Foreign Ministry
told RIA Novosti on Friday.

“The session’s agenda consists of the issues concerning the further
development of the integration cooperation between the Community’s
countries in trade, economic, energy, social, humanitarian and other
spheres and also the consideration of the Community’s draft budget
for 2006,” the spokesman said.

According to him, the heads of government of the EurAsEC countries
will deliver reports at the session about the economic situation in
their countries and will make proposals with regard to the problems
of economic cooperation which call for a joint solution.

The Russian delegation at the session will be headed by Chairman of
the Russian government Mikhail Fradkov.

The members of the Eurasian Economic Community are: Belarus, Russia,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. Armenia, Moldova and Ukraine
have the status of observers.

Day of doom

Record-Harvard Law School, MA
March 17 2005

Day of doom
By Raffi Melkonian

I’m kind of ashamed to admit it, but I used one of those law school
applicant discussion boards back when I was applying to school three
years ago. The one thing that makes me feel better about the whole
affair is that I’m sure I’m not the only one so besmirched on this
campus. Obviously, many law school applicants (and students) are
world-class neurotics, and it makes us feel better to try to exert
control over a fundamentally uncontrollable process – who precisely
is getting in to the schools we want? How do we compare? And most
important of all, when are we going to hear? Nor do we suddenly get
more civilized once in school – after all, the Greedy Clerks
discussion board for federal clerks and applicants is no less active.

Of course, I always noticed a lot of extraneous chatter on the
discussion board I used. Most of it was about things you expect
students to talk about – dating, for example – but some was really
offensive and nasty.

This week, though, there’s been a debate among some law professors –
writing online – about whether this kind of discussion board ought to
be cleaned up. I checked the most popular one, and it’s no surprise
that people are up in arms. Undeniably, the board has gotten pretty
bad in a lot of ways, including a startling quantity of the worst
sort of racism and anti-Semitism. As much as I share the protestors’
disgust with the speech involved, however, cleaning up such a web
site is a bad idea, for two reasons.

First, pressuring the site administrators to clean up the discussion
board by employing a software filter is the equivalent of sweeping a
potentially serious problem under the carpet. From the beginnings of
free speech theory, people have realized that one of the main
benefits of allowing people to voice even odious opinions publicly is
that those who disagree are confronted with the fact that the
minority opinion does actually exist. If there are law students who
feel comfortable using the kind of racial epithets contained on the
site, even under the thin blanket of internet anonymity, even as a
stupid sort of shocking joke, those of us who find such speech
disgusting should want to know about it. It’s all very easy to assume
that the great persuasive battles in terms of respect and civility
have been won. Displays such as those on the discussion board at
issue demonstrate that there might be work left to be done.

Second, just as with all (even private) controls on expression,
stifling evil speech might chill other speech that is really useful
and good. The overwhelming benefit of the discussion board, as I
remember it, was that traffic was high, knowledgeable people
abundant, and answers to questions quick. Every effort made to censor
discussion was quickly discovered to be over-broad, and instead of
leaving a clean board, changes made to get rid of the racists drove
away others as well. But those kinds of discussion boards are vital
for law applicants trying to figure their way out through a tough
process, and especially those without specialized institutional
support – my British alma mater, for example, had no advising
services, so I relied heavily on internet resources to organize
myself. If we believe in expanding this school’s diversity across
geography and social status as well as race, tools like admittedly
vulgar Internet boards are crucial in leveling the playing field of
applicant information. After all, the details that some people know,
and others don’t, are important – and if an active, unfettered,
discussion board can spread that kind of previously rare knowledge,
it’s a good thing.

I should be clear – I don’t like racists, and I don’t like
anti-Semites. Armenians, like myself, have had enough experience of
such people to know better. But people with offensive opinions do
exist, and from the evidence provided by the discussion board, some
may even be among us. Sending those people underground isn’t a good
way to solve this problem. Free speech, even when the censoring party
isn’t the government, is generally preferable to restricted speech –
and however uncomfortable such offensive language might make us, law
school applicant discussion boards aren’t an exception to that
general rule.

Raffi Melkonian’s posts on law school Internet discussion boards are
neither racist nor anti-semitic.

Russia Calls on Georgia for Repatriation of Meskhetians

Russia Calls on Georgia for Repatriation of Meskhetians

Civil Georgia, Tbilisi / 2005-03-11 21:28:33

In a statement issued on March 11 the Russian Foreign Ministry accused
the Georgian government of defying its commitment over repatriation
of Meskhetian Turks undertaken by Georgia upon its accession to the
Council of Europe (CoE) in 1999.

“Tbilisi does not even try to demonstrate that it wishes to solve
this issue. Numerous reminders by the Council of Europe look like
friendly reproaches rather than the attempts of inducing Georgia to
meet its commitments,” the Russian Foreign Ministry stated.

Currently a part of the Meskhetian Turks, who were deported from
Georgia in 1944, are residing in Russia’s Krasnodar district without
Russian citizenship

Eye of the beholder

Eye of the beholder
By ELAINE D’AURIZIO, STAFF WRITER

NorthJersey.com, NJ
March 13 2005

Think that abandoned factories in Edgewater, oil tanks near the Pulaski
Skyway or factory smokestacks in Paterson are real eyesores? Do you
laugh at the razzing in movies and by comedians about the Garden State?

It’s all, as they say, in the eye of the beholder. To artist Dahlia
Elsayed, they’re beautiful monuments to be memorialized.

“It’s part of our history,” said Elsayed, who lives in Palisades
Park, where she grew up. “For the people of New Jersey, it’s their
landscape.”

Her work has connected with gallery owners and museum curators for the
past 10 years and is on display until the end of April at Manhattan’s
Here Arts Center.

One of her paintings shown as part of “Weird New Jersey: The
Exhibition” is named “Favorite Ruins So Far.” It’s of abandoned radio
towers along the turnpike.

“[The towers] are outdated but dear to your heart,” Elsayed said.
“There are a lot of abandoned sites [in the state]. Everything in
New Jersey has changed so.”

Elsayed is depressed when landmarks are torn down. So she documents
them in pastel acrylic paintings. The abstract but often recognizable
figures – buildings, rivers and highways – are accompanied by words.
Poem-like, they are the artist’s reflections and feelings and create
a dialogue with the viewers.

“I think of them as journalistic paintings,” she said. “They really
tell stories.”

Memories and experiences in New Jersey are relived with the artist.
Thoughts, sounds and smells are stirred.

“People recognize a place and say, ‘I used to live there’ … or
‘My dad worked there,’~_” Elsayed said. “I love it. That’s really
satisfying to me. You want to see your experience on the wall. You
want there to be some kind of connection.”

For the last four years, Elsayed has been on a state grant teaching

in schools all over New Jersey, including Bergen, Passaic and Essex
counties.

“Schools have me come in to share my process with the children and
do creative projects that are based in storytelling and their local
environment,” she said.

The artist – a graduate of Barnard College and the Columbia University
School of the Arts – writes on a manual typewriter before she
paints. Then she puts “layers of washes of paint” on watercolor
paper. “I combine the literary with visual arts,” she said.

When the environment changes as much as it does in New Jersey, there
can be feelings of grief and loss.

Elsayed fondly remembers a Howard Johnson on Route 46 in Ridgefield
that was torn down.

“My dad would take us there for ice cream when you’d win something
or if a friend came over,” she said.

Her Egyptian father and Armenian mother immigrated to the United
States and settled in New York City, where Elsayed was born in 1969.
Growing up in Palisades Park, she strongly connected to her cultural
identity.

Elsayed loved listening to stories her mother, a librarian, and her
father told of earlier days in Armenia and Egypt. Her grandparents
lived with them and they spoke Armenian at home.

“What became the family heirlooms were these places they had lived,”
she said. “Their stories fascinated me.”

Strongly influenced by literature, she kept illustrated journals. She
compares them to the rug work and embroidery her grandmother and
great-grandmother did that was handed down from generation to
generation.

“Even though the materials are different and the work serves a
different purpose, the expression still comes from the same place –
the need to visually record and document your presence in the world
around you … to create a communicable history,” she said.

After 9/11, Elsayed feared a backlash against the heritage so dear
to her.

“As an Arab, you fear that the world is going to think of you one
way,” she said. And although her work had been exhibited before,
she became even more sought out.

“Suddenly I was in demand,” said Elsayed, who has traveled the world.
People wanted to buy her art. So did the government: The U.S.
Department of State bought her works for its “Art in Embassies”
program. She received prestigious grants and residencies from the
New Jersey Council on the Arts, the Edward Albee Foundation, and
ArtsLink. And she was sought out as a teacher, which she does about
nine months out of the year.

The grants and residencies have given Elsayed time to be alone to
create in her studio, which is in a former silk mill in Union City.

When she does, her work often links her two “homelands” – New Jersey
and the Middle East, which she has visited.

For example, one set of paintings is of a White Castle in Union City
and a mosque she saw on a trip to Egypt. Another called, “Jersey
City/Nasser City” are of residences here and near Cairo. The letters
are on sticks, like the “Hollywood” sign in California.

“It’s a capturing of the human experience as a woman, as an immigrant
artist,” she said.

Sensitive to what surrounds her, Elsayed took friends on a boat tour
of the Hackensack River in the Meadowlands. It impressed her and
resulted in a painting of a factory she saw along the shore and a
tiny canoe in the water. It’s called, “On the Turnpike.”

That doesn’t mean Elsayed does not understand ribbing about the Garden
State. She admits the Pulaski Skyway “is black and sooty.”

“But it’s sculptural,” she said. The artist and writer in Elsayed
tries to see the beauty in what surrounds her.

“Radio towers, abandoned factories … I think they’re aesthetically
beautiful,” she said. “When I see it, I’m trying to capture it …
the sounds, the smells, the colors ~E the feelings. It’s my vision
and I’m trying to pass that on.”

Armenian President and Georgian Prime Minister Discuss Process OfSet

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT AND GEORGIAN PRIME MINISTER DISCUSS PROCESS OF
SETTLEMENT OF CONFLICTS IN REGION

YEREVAN, MARCH 11, NOYAN TAPAN. The Armenian-Georgian relations have
always involved a wide range of issues of mutual interest, the RA
President Robert Kocharian pointed out at the March 11 working meeting
with the Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Noghaideli. Robert Kocharian
expressed satisfaction with the fact that the Armenian-Georgian
intergovernmental commision will continue to be headed by the prime
ministers of the two countries. Zurab Noghaideli stated that an
agreement has already been reached on holding the regular siiting
of the commission in the next months. According to the Presidential
press service, during the meeting, the sides discussed in particular
issues relating to the power and cargo transportation spheres, as
well as to trade organization in the border areas. The process of
settlement of the conflicts in the region and the prospects of the
regional cooperation were discussed as well.

Report: ex-Soviet security body to sign military agreements at summe

Report: ex-Soviet security body to sign military agreements at summer summit

AP Worldstream
Mar 09, 2005

Members of an ex-Soviet states’ security body plan to sign agreements
on military cooperation at a summer summit, a senior foreign ministry
official said Wednesday, the Interfax news agency reported.

Members of the Collective Security Treaty Organization, the security
arm of the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS), a 12-nation
grouping of former Soviet republics, have agreed a set of accords
aimed at strengthening the body, said Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei
Razov. He did not specify the date.

Razov said the deals will involve an agreement on training personnel
and shipping military products between member states at lower prices.

The Russia-dominated Collective Security Treaty unites six ex-Soviet
republics _ Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Belarus and
Armenia. Ukraine and Georgia, where pro-Western governments have come
to power, are not members of the security body although they belong
to the CIS.

Razov also said foreign ministers of CIS member states will meet in the
Belarusian capital Minsk on March 18 to discuss ways of improving and
streamlining the work of CIS bodies. If a draft document on the reform
is adopted, it will then be discussed at the CIS summit in Moscow in
May, held as part of ceremonies marking the 60th anniversary of the
end of World War II.

Karabakh Conflict Settlement Delay Profits None Of Conflicting Part

KARABAKH CONFLICT SETTLEMENT DELAY PROFITS NONE OF CONFLICTING PARTIES

YEREVAN, MARCH 7. ARMINFO. The delay in the Karabakh conflict
settlement profits none of the conflicting parties, says former
Russian co-chair of OSCE Minsk Group Vladimir Kazimirov.

One should not follow the vicious logic – let me be bad but he will be
worse. All the conflicting parties are still suffering – each in its
own way – from the heavy consequences of the conflict this including
unnecessary military expenses, blockade costs, resumed blood shed
risks, economic and democratic setbacks.

The conflict will be settled only when the parties get realistic and
responsible before their peoples for stability in the whole region.
It is pity that many still confuse a bird in the hand with two in
the bush and change real benefits of stable peace and cooperation for
chimeras of bloody revenge. Kazimirov says that Karabakh’s future is
difficult but peaceful.