Kyrgyz president hails CSTO rapid deployment forces’ air component

Kyrgyz president hails CSTO rapid deployment forces’ air component

AKIpress news agency web site
5 Aug 04

Bishkek, 5 August: Kyrgyz President Askar Akayev met the defence
ministers of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO)
member-states and the CSTO Secretary-General Nikolay Bordyuzha in the
Cholpon Ata state residence on 5 August.

The president has congratulated the heads of defence ministries on the
forthcoming joint exercises.

The first full-scale exercises of the CSTO rapid deployment forces,
with the use of an air component deployed in the town of Kant, will
take place tomorrow 6 August , the head of state said.

“The CSTO member-states have not only a reliable shield, but also a
sword for retribution,” the president said about the use of a new air
component of the Collective Rapid Deployment Forces (CRDF).

Askar Akayev recalled the decision to establish the CRDF – adopted in
Yerevan in 2000. The countries had managed to establish a security
bastion in the Central Asian region in a very short time since that
moment, the president said.

The course of the exercises – the first phase of the Rubezh-2004
Border-2004 in Almaty and the second phase held in the mountain firing
range of Edelveys in eastern Issyk-Kul Region – was discussed at the
meeting.

Northern Avenue Residents Intend to go on a Hunger-Strike

RESIDENTS OF NORTHERN AVENUE OF YEREVAN INTEND TO GO ON A HUNGER-STRIKE

YEREVAN, August 4 (Noyan Tapan). On August 5, a group of persons
renting land plots in the Dalma Gardens and a group of residents of
the Northern Avenue, organized a picket near the building of the RA
government. They represented their problems to the Ministers that
arrived to the sitting of the government and demanded the solve
them. According to Vachagan Hakobian, the Chairman of the “Northern
Avenue” public organization, the residents of the avenue will protect
their rights with not only such methods. Application-complaints have
already been sent to international organizations. According to him, a
part of the residents is ready to undertake extreme measures, a
hunger-strike and even self-immolation. According to V.Hakobian,
unlawful actions were committed during realization of the territory of
the Northern Avenue. In particular, physical violence was applied in
relation to the residents, wrong estimation of apartments was carried
out, the cases of the citizens not signing agreements were sent to the
courts and they were solved in favor of the plaintiff, the state. A
number of citizens remained without shelter, as it was impossible to
buy apartments with the allocated money. To recap, upon the March 27
2003 decision of the RA government “On Change of Borders of Lands in
Dalma Gardens Subject to Protection and Change of Purpose,” 256 out of
530 hectares of the gardens are removed to the category of forest
lands and about 50% of lands are transferred for building. It’s
envisaged to carry out construction, to build a highway, a road net,
fairs and service entities in the above-mentioned 256 hectares.

Antelias: Statement on Iraq

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

“The Christian-Muslim Co-existence is a vital dimension
of the Middle Eastern Society”
Stated His Holiness Aram I

Antelias, Lebanon – “For centuries Christians and Muslims have lived
together in the Middle East. Centuries of co-existence, interaction and
dialogue of life have created close affinities in different spheres of
society life as well as common values and traditions. Therefore, the
Christian -Muslim co-existence is neither a conceptual notion nor an imposed
reality, it is an integral and inseparable part of the societies in the
Middle East”, affirmed His Holiness Aram I, in Antelias, Lebanon.

Referring to the bombings of the churches in Iraq, Catholicos Aram I said:
“Violence in all its forms and expressions is against human and religious
values and principles. We have repeatedly stressed the need for dialogue,
solidarity, mutual tolerance, respect and understanding. Neither Islam nor
Christianity will accept violence as a way to solve problems. Bombing of
Christian churches in Iraq is a deep harm against the Christian-Muslim
existence. Both Christians and Muslims with their equal obligations and
rights are co-citizens of the Arab countries. It is my firm expectation that
the government of Iraq will take the necessary measures to protect the
rights and the well being of all citizens. It is also my expectations that
Christians and Muslims in Iraq and in different parts of the Middle East
will continue their dialogue and collaboration based on shared values and
aspirations, and strengthen their commitment to peace with justice”, stated
His Holiness.

##

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/

NKR Prez Thanks Diplomats for Active Contrib Towards NKR Recognition

ARKADY GHOUKASSIAN THANKS ARMENIAN DIPLOMATS FOR ACTIVE CONTRIBUTION
TO INTERNATIONAL RECOGNITION OF NKR

STEPANAKERT, July 30 (Noyan Tapan). As part of celebrations of the
10th anniversary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the
Nagorno-Karabakh Republic, on July 30 NKR President Arkady Ghoukassian
received a delegation of the Armenian MFA led by Minister Vardan
Oskanian as well as workers of the central staff of the NKR Ministry
of Foreign Affairs led by Minister Ashot Ghulian. The delegation also
included Armenia’s ambassadors to a number of foreign states. The
meeting was attended also by permanent representatives of the NKR
abroad. According to the Head Information Department attached to the
NKR President, during the meeting Vardan Oskanian expressed his
gratitude to the NKR leadership for the invitation to take part in the
ceremonial events in connection with the jubilee of the Karabakh
foreign-policy department. He pointed out that during the jubilee
celebrations a consultation on topical issues of Armenia’s and
Karabakh’s foreign policies took place, which proved useful in terms
of exchanging opinions and in terms of prospects for further
development and deepening of cooperation between the ministries of the
two Armenian republics. Ghoukassian thanked the Armenian diplomats for
their active contribution to the resolution of Nagorno Karabakh’s
problem, pointing out the importance of solving tasks facing the
Armenian people through combined efforts of Karabakh, Armenia and the
Armenian Diaspora. In this connection, the NKR head stressed the need
for more frequent conduct of meetings between the workers of the two
foreign-policy departments. A ceremony of signing the Protocol on
Cooperation between the Ministries of Foreign Affairs of Armenia and
Nagorno Karabakh took place in conclusion.

Central Bank to register new commercial bank

ArmenPress
July 28 2004

CENTRAL BANK TO REGSITER NEW COMEMRCIAL BANK

YEREVAN, JULY 28, ARMENPRESS: Tigran Sarkisian, the governor of
Armenia’s Central Bank, said July 27 that theBank has agreed to
register a new commercial bank with Swiss capital. He said the new
bank-ArmSwiss Invest and Trust Bank, will most likely start operating
later this year. Its constituent capital is 3.3 billion of Armenian
drams.
He said the new bank will be dealing with providing VIP services,
conducting transactions at world markets and pursue also an
investment policy. It is also supposed to offer new banking tools for
the domestic banking sector, which Sarkisian said are not offered by
any of the local commercial banks and “this makes the new bank
interesting.”
Sarkisian also predicted that by the end of the year one of the
leading commercial banks may be re-sold or a merger of banks may
occur.

Number of 90th Genocide Anniversary Events to be Held Abroad in 2005

A NUMBER OF EVENTS COMMEMORATING ARMENIAN GENOCIDE 90TH ANNIVERSARY TO
BE HELD ABROAD IN 2005

YEREVAN, JULY 27. ARMINFO. A number of events commemorating the 90th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide will be held abroad in 2005.

A special state commission has already been set up led by Armenia’s
Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan.

The key event will be the Apr 2005 international conference on the
Armenian Genocide. FM Vardan Oskanyan says that the conference will
receive wide response worldwide and many well-known scientists and
politicians will take part in it.

Turkish Press to Spread Disinformation About Vienna Meeting

TURKISH PRESS TO SPREAD DISINFORMATION ABOUT VIENNA MEETING

President of the Armenian Studies Institute in Ankara is No Exception

Azg/am
24 July 2004

In Azg Daily’s July 20 and 21 coverage we said that documents on the
Armenian Genocide were exchanged by Turkish and Armenian scientists
during the Vienna meeting. This information was based on Anatolu news
agency as well as Turkish Miliet, Eni Shafak and Radical publications.

Though Azg Daily gave no comments to those issues (but only
translated), it is not hard to guess that the Turkish newspapers and
Anatolu news agency are prone to mar documents. But the fact that the
president of the Armenian Studies Institute in Ankara Hasan Okta stood
beside the press in document distortion came as a surprise.

Hasan Okta in his interview to Radical ventured to declare that the
Armenian side is represented by the president of the Armenian Genocide
institute-museum and a professor of the National Academy of Sciences
of Armenia. It is simply not true.

The fact that scientists from Armenia were absent from the meeting
doesn’t necessarily mean that there was no one from the Armenian
Diaspora. There were such cases in the history. But we understand that
the primarily role in these meetings belongs to the scientists from
Armenia but not the ones unwittingly having another citizenship.

In other words, we do not exclude the probability that scientists from
the Diaspora participated in the Vienna meeting, which enabled the
Turks to call the meeting “Armenian-Turkish” and enroll the president
of the Armenian Genocide institute-museum and a professor from the
National Academy into this list without even mentioning their names.

Though Hasan Okta haven’t mentioned the president of the Institute of
History of the National Academy Dr. Ashot Melkonian among the meeting
participants, the latter informed Azg Daily: “The last two days the
Armenian press constantly writes about the Vienna meeting. Meanwhile
it is a brazen lie, and Lavrenti Barseghian, president of the Armenian
Genocide institute-museum spoke of this in `Hayastani Hanrapetutyun’
(Republic of Armenia) July 22 issue. This fact comes to prove that it
is unacceptable to have dialogue with the Turks. I still hold to a
view that we should not participate in any conference on the issue of
the Armenian Genocide till Turkey gives up its denialist stance. It is
especially true for the Vienna meeting as the Turkish side violated
our precondition according to which we should have discussed not the
fact of the Genocide but the issue of overcoming its consequences.”

The situation causes apprehension in so far as the Turks may go on
blaming the Armenian side for the refusal to participate in the
meeting and for not having documents proving the Armenian Genocide.

Therefore, accepting Ashot Melkonian’s words, we should also consider
the probable outcomes of our refusal. Perhaps Lavrenti Barseghian,
president ofthe Armenian Genocide institute-museum is right saying:
“We are ready to leave for Vienna. No matter how hard Turkey tries to
hold us back we are ready to assault. Let no one doubt that we’ll
stand despite all the traps that our ideological enemy sets. In May of
2005 we’ll be at the arranged place.”

By Hakob Chakrian

Lullabies Sad Beyond Belief

Georgia Straight, Canada
July 22 2004

Lullabies Sad Beyond Belief
By alexander varty

It was just one of those games you play when you’re stuck in traffic
and it’s too hot and you’ve got to do something or go crazy, but it
got me thinking anyway. “Name some songs that make you sad,” she
said, and after trotting out the usual suspects–the occasional
Richard Thompson ballad, pretty much anything by Nick Drake, the
Hello Kitty theme–I found myself stumped.

On reflection, however, I think I’ve identified the most miserable
song in the English language: “Rockabye baby, on the treetop…”

You know the rest: the terrible wind, the splintering crash, and, one
presumes, the strangulated cry of the unfortunate infant. It’s like a
Lemony Snicket novel writ small.

I’ve always wondered why this dismal little ditty is so popular, and
I suspect it’s because it encapsulates the archetypal emigrant
experience: exile from the ancestral home, a stormy passage, and
disaster. Think of all those Scots driven across the Atlantic by the
Highland clearances. But the horrors of “Rockabye Baby” pale when
compared to “Nazei Oror”, an Armenian lullaby based on a poem by
Avetis Aharonian. It’s worth quoting at length: “The caravan
passed/With a burden of tears/And in the black desert/Fell to its
knees/Exhausted/Ah, with the pain of the world/Don’t cry/I have
already shed many tears/My milk has frozen/On your lifeless lips/I
know it is bitter/My child/And you don’t want it/Ah, my milk has
become/The taste of my grief.”

This is a more explicit song of exile: the caravan it refers to was
made up of women and children deported from Turkey in 1915, during
what has come to be known as the Armenian holocaust. Somewhere
between one and one-and-a-half million Armenians lost their lives
during this systematic campaign of genocide, instigated by the dying
Ottoman empire, and a million more fled to Syria, Lebanon, Greece,
North America, and Russia–where, following the breakup of the Soviet
Union, Armenians finally founded a state of their own.

Armenian Lullabies, which contains “Nazei Oror” and a dozen other
bedtime songs, is a product of the New York City – based Traditional
Crossroads label, but it was recorded in Yerevan, the capital of
Armenia. And it’s informally dedicated to the survivors of the
massacres of 1915; singer and folklorist Hasmik Harutyunyan first
heard several of its featured tunes from women who had survived the
pogrom.

Not surprisingly, it’s a beautiful but mournful document, even if
“Nazei Oror” is the only song specifically inspired by historical
events. Armenian music tends toward minor keys and plaintive
melodies, and a traditional Armenian childhood was never easy:
although the culture that produced these songs was devoutly
Christian–one reason for its persecution by the Turks–it also
believed in an array of supernatural beings, some quite malignant.
These could, on occasion, threaten a child, and thus many Armenian
lullabies have a magical as well as a soporific function: they were a
mother’s way of weaving a protective spell to keep her infant safe.

In her singing, Harutyunyan fuses maternal tenderness, fierce memory,
and spiritual conviction, making Armenian Lullabies a recording that
should appeal to more than just Armenians and ethnomusicologists. And
she’s helped in this by the instrumentalists of the Shoghaken
Ensemble, who have two CDs out on the Traditional Crossroads imprint,
including the recently released Traditional Dances of Armenia.

Naturally, the Shoghaken Ensemble’s dance music is more sprightly
than its lullabies; percussionists Kamo Khachaturian and Levon
Tevanyan contribute clattering, capricious rhythms that would be
effective in any village square, or at any folk-festival gathering.
But the band’s star is zurna virtuoso Gevorg Dabaghyan, whose
clarinetlike instrument wails and cajoles and chants as seductively
as any voice.

It’s interesting to consider Armenian music as the missing link
between the music of Mediterranean Europe, North Africa, and
Asia–appropriately enough, given Armenia’s location. On Traditional
Dances of Armenia the performers employ the dhol, a drum that’s also
used in Punjabi bhangra, and the bowed string instrument known as the
kamancha, a staple of Iranian classical music. But they also feature
the oud, which can be found almost everywhere in the Muslim world,
and the kanon, a kind of hammered dulcimer not unlike that popular in
both Hungary and India, while some of the melodies they play wouldn’t
sound out of place in Morocco or the south of France.

What’s more important, though, is that the performances on
Traditional Dances of Armenia, like those on Armenian Lullabies, are
passionate enough to possess more than merely academic appeal.
Armenian culture may have been threatened, but it clearly remains
very much alive.

http://www.straight.com/content.cfm?id=3985

NATO technical centre opens in Yerevan

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
July 21, 2004 Wednesday

NATO technical centre opens in Yerevan

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

NATO will provide free satellite and Internet communication to a
number of scientific and educational centres of Armenia, thanks to a
technical centre for realization of the NATO programme Virtual Silk
Road that opened in the Armenian capital on Wednesday.

Besides Armenia, science-education institutions of Azerbaijan,
Georgia, as well as Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan
and Uzbekistan will also get free equipment and satellite and
Internet communication.

The executive director of the Arena Company, which is acting as NATO
partner in Armenia, Grigor Babayan, said the programme is designed
for three years and costs 2.5 million U.S. dollars. Armenia’s share
is about 500,000 dollars.

Babayan said Arena would provide with Internet communication Yerevan
State University within the framework of the NATO programme, as well
as Yerevan Physics Institute, the office of the U.N. development
programme mission and several other centres.

The Arena director said 33 more institutions of the country would be
connected to the web in the coming year.

Turkish PM’s visit to France re-opens debate on EU membership

EUbusiness, UK
July 19 2004

Turkish PM’s visit to France re-opens debate on EU membership

A three-day visit to France by Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
Erdogan starting Monday re-opened the debate as to whether Turkey, a
secular country with nearly 70 million Muslims, should be admitted
into the European Union.

Most French newspapers dedicated significant coverage to the visit
and examined the question, which has divided the political class.

President Jacques Chirac’s ruling conservative Union for a Popular
Movement (UMP) has come out against the idea, even though Chirac
himself favours Turkey eventually joining the EU but does not see it
as ready yet. The opposition Socialists are backing Ankara’s bid.

Erdogan’s visit is seen as a key opportunity to persuade an EU
heavyweight to back the accession bid before the European Commission
released in October a report on Turkey’s democratisation progress.

That report is to form the basis of a decision EU leaders will make
in December on whether to formally open membership talks with Turkey.

In a sign of the issue’s sensitivity, Chirac will not receive Erdogan
until Tuesday.

French Prime Minister Jean-Pierre Raffarin will play host by greeting
Erdogan at his official offices after his arrival late Monday.

During his time in Paris, the Turkish leader will meet other
political leaders, business chiefs and representatives of France’s
Turkish community.

Liberation, a left-leaning daily, firmly planted the Turkish flag in
the EU in an editorial, saying that, while Turkey was historically
separate from Europe, its common adherence to secularity meant it
ought to join European institutions.

“There is no convincing reason to think that Islam is not by its
essence incompatible with democracy and secularity,” it said.

The right-leaning Le Figaro, however, listed reasons to doubt
Turkey’s readiness, among them cultural differences, “the reality of
the genocide of the Armenians” in 1915 during the disintegration of
the Ottoman Empire and the continuing “military occupation in the
north of Cyprus”.

It tempered that position a little by printing an essay by a
political science professor, Dominique Reynie, who noted that Turkey
was a member of NATO and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation
and Development, had a separation of religion and state, and allowed
women to vote.

“All of democratic Turkey has placed its hopes in an opening of
negotiations,” he wrote.

But a companion essay by a UMP deputy, Jacques Myard, warned of a
“utopian” vision of a vast “federal Europe” encompassing Turkey which
would fail because of “the clash of cultures and national realities”.

Chirac has taken a cautious stance on Turkey, at the risk of being
seen as blowing hot and cold.

In April, he said he wanted to Turkey eventually admitted, but —
just days before the bloc expanded to 25 states by taking in mainly
former Communist central European countries — he said conditions for
entry were still some way off.

Then last month, US President George W. Bush raised European hackles
by putting his weight behind Turkey’s bid in the hopes that it would
become an example for other Muslim states to follow.

“I will remind the people of this good country that you ought to be
given a date by the EU for your eventual acceptance into the EU,”
Bush said in Ankara on June 27 before attending a NATO summit in
Istanbul.

Chirac, who has maintained prickly relations with Bush since the
run-up to the US invasion of Iraq, shot back that the US leader had
gone too far.

“It would be like me telling the United States how to run its affairs
with Mexico,” he said.