Haypost To Be Passed To Dutch Company ING For Trust Managemnt

HAYPOST TO BE PASSED TO DUTCH COMPANY ING FOR TRUST MANAGEMNT

Noyan Tapan
Sept 11 2006

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 11, NOYAN TAPAN. The company Haypost will be passed
to the company ING (Netherlands) for trust management, NT correspondent
was informed from a reliable source. The above mentioned company is
engaged in postal and banking activity. The spokeswoman for Haypost
Astghik Martirosian declined to comment on the matter. To recap,
since 2005, Haypost has been passed to the international company
Converse Invest for trust management a 5-year period.

"Robert Kocharyan Is The Pupil Of Levon Ter-Petroyan"

"ROBERT KOCHARYAN IS THE PUPIL OF LEVON TER-PETROSYAN"

A1+
[05:48 pm] 12 September, 2006

"There wasn’t any power change in Armenia in 1998. One wing of the
Armenian National Movement (ANM) passed the power to the other,"
announced Sergey Shakaryan, expert from "Caucasus" analytic centre in
club "Pastark" today. <>pHe claims that Levon Ter-Petrosyan’s greatest
mistake was his announcement in which the latter declared that Armenia
would not develop unless the Karabakh conflict was regulated.

"Turkey hasn’t given Northern Cyprus but the country continues to
develop regardless of that fact. Can anyone say that Turkey doesn’t
develop?"

The expert considers that rumors that the best and democratic party
in Armenia is the ANM, disseminated by Azerbaijan and Turkey, are
not accidental.

"Azerbaijan and Turkey hope that with the help of the USA, ANM will
again resume power, and they will take Karabakh and other territories
back," said Mr. Shakaryan. The expert is not delighted with Robert
Kocharyan’s policy in connection with Karabakh conflict. "Levon
Ter-Petrosyan was a political puppet.

He hasn’t divulged yet what he was promised in 1997 in connection
with the Karabakh conflict. As for Robert Kocharyan, he is Levon
Ter-Petrosyan’s pupil and adherent." Sergey Shakaryan is convinced
that the regulation of the Karabakh conflict doesn’t depend on the
will of the Armenian or Azeri authorities as the OSCE Co-chairs try
to present it to the world.

He thinks the USA is not concerned what the sides under question will
gain as a result of the conflict settlement. "The Karabakh conflict
is merely a stake for the USA. The USA urges Armenia to take its
army out from the territory of Karabakh which is apparently felt in
Mettew Bryza’s announcement. Thus, we can see that the USA wants to
use the Cyprus version to have an absolute right to send its troops
to the region.

The USA considers our region as a perfect place, a base for the war
against Iran.

In case the USA launches war against Iran Mr. Shakaryan is sure
nothing can be done to prevent the final collision of Christian and
Muslim countries.

Armenian Parliament Rejects Opposition’S Proposal For Setting Up Int

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT REJECTS OPPOSITION’S PROPOSAL FOR SETTING UP INTERIM COMMISSION FOR CIVIL AVIATION

Arka News Agency, Armenia
Sept 11 2006

YEREVAN, September 11. /ARKA/. The Armenian Parliament has rejected
the Armenian opposition’s proposal for setting up an interim commission
to study the situation in Armenia’s civil aviation.

The ex-member of the "Justice" faction Victor Dallakyan reported
that the commission is supposed to contribute to the investigation
of the RA Government’s activities in civil aviation and in observing
safety standards.

"With the help of experts the commission will determine the causes
of the crash of the Armenian airplane near Sochi on May 3, when 113
people were killed," he said.

The proposal was seconded by the newly elected Secretary of the
"Justice" faction Grigor Harutyunyan.

However, only 51 instead of the necessary 66 parliamentarians voted
for the proposal.

ANKARA: E.P.’s Turkey Report Includes Issues Far From Common Sense A

E.P.’S TURKEY REPORT INCLUDES ISSUES FAR FROM COMMON SENSE AND OBJECTIVITY, TAN

Turkish Press, MI
Sept 11 2006

ANKARA – "It is obvious that the (EP) report (on Turkey) focused on
issues which has nothing to do with common sense and objectivity. We
hope that those points will be addressed before the vote in the
General Assembly at the end of this month," Turkish MFA spokesman
Namik Tan said regarding the Turkey Report which was adopted by the
Foreign Affairs Committee of the European Parliament (EP), yesterday.

Upon a question, Tan said that the report, which was prepared by
Christian Democrat MEP Camiel Eurlings, would be voted at the General
Assembly on September 28th, 2006.

Tan noted, "several matters in the report which are far from to be
real and written with political impulses do not reflect EP’s esteem
and seriousness." He mentioned as example issues like the so-called
Armenian genocide.

Tan said, "we expect the EP would encourage Turkey-EU relations. We
hope MEPs will demonstrate common sense to fix this situation during
general assembly meeting."

Books: March Of Horrors: Truth Is The First Weapon Against Genocide

BOOKS: MARCH OF HORRORS: TRUTH IS THE FIRST WEAPON AGAINST GENOCIDE
by Deborah E. Lipstadt, The Weekly Standard

The Weekly Standard
September 11, 2006 Monday

Terrible Fate
Ethnic Cleansing in the Making
of Modern Europe
by Benjamin Lieberman
Ivan R. Dee, 416 pp., $27.50

Ethnic cleansing has changed the face of Europe. In 1913 Salonika was
a multicultural city with more Jews and Muslims than Greek Orthodox
Christians. By the middle of the 20th century it was a Greek city with
virtually no Jews or Muslims. Until the beginning of the 20th century,
Macedonia had been home to both Bulgarians and Greeks. In 1916 Greeks
fled. At the beginning of the 20th century the western sectors of the
Russian empire were heavily populated by Jews, who had lived there
for centuries. Within a few decades virtually no Jews lived in these
areas, or in many other parts of Europe.

The Polish port city of Gdansk was once a German city. Little, if any,
of the German presence is felt there today. Izmir used to be home to
a substantial Greek population. It no longer is. In eastern Turkey
there are scores of towns and villages once populated by millions
of Armenians. The Turks expelled them in acts of unprecedented
intensity. In what was the Austro- Hungarian Empire an exceptionally
diverse mix of peoples once lived. Little of that diversity is still
evident.

These changes were the result not of natural population movements but
of brutal actions, now termed ethnic cleansing. This is the subject
of Benjamin Lieberman’s compelling book.

What motivates neighbor to brutally turn on neighbor? It may be
conflicting languages, religions, or national identities. Some
attackers consider it a chance for personal gain: Never underestimate
the lure of looting, or deriving perverse pleasure from driving
neighbors from their homes. There is yet another factor: history,
or more properly put, the rendition of history to which one portion
of the population has been exposed. While these stories of betrayal
and injustice may be true, others are greatly exaggerated or false.

As Lieberman demonstrates, ethnic cleansing feeds upon itself. As
the century progressed it became an increasingly familiar response to
political situations. People knew it, and considered it a legitimate
means of solving their perceived problems.

While the Armenian genocide and the Holocaust are probably the best
known of the century’s atrocities, neither is a template for ethnic
cleansing, which has generally been used by weak governments to
deflect attention from genuine problems. In contrast, the Holocaust,
the Armenian genocide, and, for that matter, Stalin’s treatment of
a host of minorities, were conducted by authoritarian regimes at the
height of their power.

The Holocaust is certainly not a template because, generally, ethnic
cleansing’s objective is the removal of a segment of the population
through deportations, population transfers, and forced migration. The
perpetrators know that the result of these actions could be death,
even on a massive scale. However, their objective is not murder. In
contrast, Nazi Germany chased down every Jew it could find in order
to murder them. They did so even when the men and materiel used for
the killing could have been better deployed elsewhere.

The new Jewish Museum in Rome contains a letter written on a crumpled
piece of paper by a Jew as he was being deported from the Italian
capital. It is dated May 20, 1944. Rome was liberated on June 4th. As
the Allied forces were on Rome’s doorstep, the Germans, rather than
throw all available resources to repelling the enemy, were deporting
Jews to Auschwitz. The letter writer never returned.

How might ethnic cleansing be repaired and prevented in the future?

Unless refugees are returned in short order to their homes, the chances
for resettlement are very poor. If they do return, there must be local
reconciliation projects, economic development, legal proceedings,
and effective guarantees of security. Those who have committed these
acts must be apprehended and tried in the appropriate legal setting.

Lieberman believes that historians from both sides of the conflict
must work together to create an accurate historical record. It may
well be research by historians–Turkish historians in particular–that
will compel Turkey to end its genocide denial. As Turkish historians
explore what their country did, it will become increasingly difficult
for the government to continue to hide behind historical fictions. But
it is not sufficient, Lieberman notes, for the historians to conduct
research. The broader public will have to accept its findings. Once
that happens, the policymakers will have no choice but to follow in
their wake.

Germany’s postwar entry into the "family of nations" was hastened by
its strategic geographic importance in the Cold War. However, that
reentry would not have been as swift or complete had Germany not openly
acknowledged and made amends for the unspeakable horrors committed by
both the Nazi leaders and millions of Germans during World War II. Its
willingness to face its past was certainly not complete. Perpetrators
were given light sentences or never prosecuted. Slave laborers found
it difficult to receive compensation. Nazi-era judges continued in
their posts. Medical doctors who participated in gassing experiments
went on to distinguished careers in Germany.

These failings notwithstanding, Germany did not shrink from
acknowledging the deeds it had committed and making some restitution
for them. This certainly facilitated the healing process.

This is a painful book to read. Many people will recoil from the
repeated tales of looting, physical persecution, and death. That
would be a mistake. The only hope for an end to this terrible march
of horrors is for people–particularly Europeans–to understand and
acknowledge it. As Lieberman notes in his conclusion, "arriving at
a new understanding of history" will not resolve all problems, but
it will increase the chances that different groups will be able to
live in peace together.

Deborah E. Lipstadt, professor of Holocaust Studies at Emory, is
the author, most recently, of History on Trial: My Day in Court with
David Irving.

BAKU: Jordan Eager To Develop Cooperation With Azerbaijan In Tourism

JORDAN EAGER TO DEVELOP COOPERATION WITH AZERBAIJAN IN TOURISM SECTOR
Author: S.Agayeva

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Sept 9 2006

Jordan intends to develop cooperation with Azerbaijan in the sphere
of tourism, Farrukh al-Habibi, the Jordanian Minister for Tourism
and Antiquary, told journalists on 9 September after a meeting with
Abulfaz Garayev, the Azerbaijani Minister for Culture and Tourism.

Azerbaijan ahs a rich political potential, he underlined, noting his
country’s intention in the expansion of cooperation with Azerbaijan
in this sphere.

The Minister stressed that it is planned to develop a project on
cooperation. In the near future this project will be submitted to the
Azerbaijan for consideration. The Minister hopes that the cooperation
will be mutually profitable for two countries.

In respect to the resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict Farrukh
al Habibi noted that Jordan was interested in the peaceable resolution
of the conflicts.

Canberra: No, Minister, We Are Not Free Of Terror

NO, MINISTER WE ARE NOT FREE OF TERROR

Canberra Times, Australia
September 9, 2006 Saturday

I T WAS somewhat disturbing to hear someone as eminent as
Attorney-General Philip Ruddock claim on television on Monday that
there has never been a terrorist attack on Australian soil. The
reality is there have been many terrorism incidents, although the
number of deaths is quite low.

The first recorded act of terrorism in Australia was the shooting in
1868 of the visiting Duke of Edinburgh at Clontarf beach in Sydney.

This caused great embarrassment, as he was the first royal visitor
to NSW.

The perpetrator, Henry James O’Farrell, was an Irishman from Victoria
and an alleged Fenian (predecessor organisation to the Irish Republican
Army).

This incident led to acrimonious exchanges between the NSW and Victoria
governments and, some claim, to today’s adversarial relationship
between NSW and Victoria.

Fortunately, the Duke of Edinburgh did not die and Australia has
been relatively fortunate in the number of deaths attributable to
politically motivated violence (PMV). (This includes terrorism. The
term "politically" also embraces "ideologically", "sociologically"
and "religiously" motivated violence.) The bloodiest incident occurred
during World War I, in January 1915, when two Muslims, Mulla Abdullah
and Gool Mahomed, opened fire on a picnic train near the town of
Broken Hill in NSW.

They were members of a religious sect headed by the Sultan of Turkey
who apparently objected to Australia’s military operations against
Turkey. Six died, including the two attackers.

There is little data about the period 1915 to the 1960s, although
there were undoubtedly violent incidents that were not recorded as
politically motivated.

During the 1960s and ’70s, there were regular bombings and firebombings
involving the Croatian Revolutionary Brotherhood (HRB) and members
of the Serbian community – who in turn were backed by the Yugoslav
intelligence service. The HRB was a terrorist organisation formed in
Australia in the early 1960s by Croatian immigrants to Australia. It
was responsible for more than 120 terrorist acts in Australia and
Europe. Surprisingly, there were no resultant deaths in Australia.

In 1966, the Leader of the Federal Opposition, Arthur Calwell, was
shot in his car at Mosman, Sydney, by Peter Kocan, shortly after an
anti- Vietnam conscription meeting at the Town Hall. Calwell’s lower
face was cut by flying glass, but he was not otherwise injured.

In February 1978, the next most significant incident in terms of loss
of life occurred outside the Hilton Hotel in Sydney. It has generally
been believed that members of Ananda Marga were responsible for an
improvised explosive device that detonated in a garbage truck, killing
a policeman, Constable Paul Burmistriw, and two garbage collectors,
William Favell and Alec Carter.

A Commonwealth Heads of Government Regional Meeting was taking place
at the hotel at the time.

The suggested intent of the attackers was to kill Indian Prime Minister
Morarji Ranchhodji Desai, whose government’s policies were detrimental
to Ananda Marga.

There are several books about this incident, such as Tom Molomby’s
Spies, Bombs and The Path of Bliss, but there has never been any
certainty as to who was responsible.

If members of Ananda Marga were responsible, they could have been
acting without the sanction of the organisation.

Conspiracy theorists make the unlikely claim that Special Branch or
ASIO were responsible in an attempt to gain additional resources.

In June 1980, David Opas, a Parramatta family court judge, was shot
dead at the front door of his Woollahra, Sydney, home by a person or
persons unknown.

Then in December 1980, two members of the Justice Commandos of
the Armenian Genocide shot and killed Sarik Arijak, the Turkish
Consul-General, and his bodyguard, Engin Sever, at Dover Heights
in Sydney.

The perpetrators were believed to have flown into Australia to
undertake the operation with local support, and left after the
attack. No-one was ever prosecuted.

In December 1982, two members of the Palestinian group, 15 May, flew
in to Sydney and with local support bombed the Israeli Consulate-
General in Sydney and the Jewish Hakoah Club at Bondi. No one was
killed. The police case against the local supporters fell apart when
the key witness left the country.

In July 1984, Pearl Watson, the wife of a Parramatta Family Court
judge, Ray Watson, was killed by an improvised explosive device at
their Sydney home.

In November 1986, the Justice Commandos of the Armenian Genocide
struck again. This time, two members resident in Sydney attempted
to bomb the Turkish Consulate in Caroline Street, South Yarra, in
Melbourne. The only person killed was Hagop Levonian, one of the
bombers. Levon Demirian, the other bomber, was arrested as he was
about to leave the country for Lebanon. He served 10 years in jail.

In 1989, David Locke, a member of the right-wing Australian Nationalist
Movement in Perth, was killed by two other members of the group,
who suspected him of being an ASIO or police informer.

In 1990, David Noble, a member of the right-wing group National Action
was murdered with an axe by two other members of the group after a
party to celebrate Hitler’s birthday.

In April 1991, unknown assailants shot dead the chairman of the Coptic
Human Rights Commission, Dr Makeen Morcos, in Sydney, after he gave
a radio talk criticising Islamists and the Egyptian Government for
harassing and murdering Coptic Christians in Egypt. It is thought
that he was assassinated by agents of the Egyptian Government or one
of the Islamist groups in Australia.

Another National Action member, Wayne Smith, was murdered in April
1991 in Sydney because of suspicions that he was an ASIO or police
informant. This time, ASIO had a covert sound-activated microphone
at the site and the recording of his murder was later used to convict
an National Action member.

In 1993, the Reverend Doug Good, a pastor in Western Australia,
was stabbed to death just before going to officiate at a marriage
between a Christian man and an Iranian woman who had converted from
Islam to Christianity.

Good’s attacker, an Iranian Muslim, killed the pastor at his home,
claiming he was defending himself from a homosexual advance.

In September 1994, John Newman, a Cabramatta politician, was shot
in the chest and killed. Seven years later, a jury found a bitter
political rival, former Fairfield city councillor Phuong Ngo, guilty
of masterminding the murder.

In 1996, suspected Islamic extremist Mohammad Hassanein entered
Australia with the possible intention of attacking, with local support,
Jewish targets. There is some dispute as to whether Hassanein was a
dangerous terrorist or simply a deluded individual.

The facts are that he did have past connections with an extremist
group in Egypt, he did travel here on a false passport, and he was in
Melbourne in the lead-up to a Jewish congress. As far as is known, he
had no access to weapons or explosives. ASIO and the Australian Federal
Police decided not to take any chances; he was arrested and deported.

In July 2001, anti-abortionist Peter James Knight shot and killed a
security guard, Steven Rogers, at a Melbourne abortion clinic.

In October 2002, Dr Margaret Tobin, the South Australian Director
of Mental Health, was shot four times in the back and killed in
her Adelaide office building. A deregistered Sydney psychiatrist,
Jean Eric Gassy, was found guilty of her murder. Dr Tobin had been
involved in his removal from the medical register.

By my count, the current death toll for PMV incidents in Australia
is at least 22 – 13 by shootings, five by improvised explosive
devices and four by stabbing or unknown circumstances.There have
been other well-known violent incidents in Australia, such as the
murder of anti-drugs campaigner Donald Mackay in 1977 in Griffith,
or the Russell Street police headquarters bombing in Melbourne in
1986, but the primary motivation in those cases was criminal rather
than political.

A concern now is Islamist extremist "sleeper cells" in Australia that
could one day be responsible for much more deadly attacks than those
we have suffered in the past. This issue is complicated by the large
numbers of people who are here illegally and who have disappeared into
the general community. The Department of Immigration and Multicultural
Affairs estimates there are 60,000 people unaccounted for. If correct,
this presents ASIO and other national security agencies with a
near-impossible monitoring task, despite the good work they have
done in the past. A further concern now is "cleanskin" (no police or
security record) self-starter Islamist extremists, probably born or
brought up in Australia, who may act with little or no outside support.

The most likely cause of death would be from multiple improvised
explosive devices, similar to the bombings in Madrid, London and
Mumbai. We could then easily end up with numbers of dead and injured
far surpassing the total of all previous incidents in Australia.

Clive Williams is a Visiting Fellow at the Strategic and Defence
Studies Centre, ANU.

European Heritage Days To Start In Armenia From Zvartnots Historic-A

EUROPEAN HERITAGE DAYS TO START IN ARMENIA FROM ZVARTNOTS HISTORIC-ARCHAEOLOGICAL RESERVE-MUSEUM

Noyan Tapan
Sept 07 2006

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 7, NOYAN TAPAN. This year the European Heritage
Days will officially start on September 21, at Saint Petersburg
Hermitage museum.

Armenia will join this European cultural event on September 9,
with the event to be held at the Zvartnots historic-archaeological
museum. The European Heritage Days will be held in Armenia under the
heading "Glance at the Middle Ages."

As RA Deputy Minister of Culture and Youth Affairs Gagik Gyurjian
informed journalists at the September 7 press conference, this
year Armenia will not take part in the events to be held in Saint
Petersburg. In Gagik Gyurjian’s words, the European Heritage Days
held under the aegis of the European Union since 1999 every year
from August to November unite 48 country members of the European
Cultural Convention. Thanks to joint work of 15 years this initiative
is indisputable success. In his words, only last year 37 thousand
monuments and sights appeared in the pivot of this All European
cultural campaign uniting 21 mln 700 thousand citizens who familiarized
themselves and became witnesses of European cultural values common
to everybody. The deputy minister said that the first and foremost
aim of the European Heritage Days is to propagandize tolerance among
neighboring countries and peoples in order to prevent any kind of
vandalism and extremist actions. Last year manifestations of vandalism
and extremism towards Armenian historic-cultural values took place
in Armenia’s neighboring countries, which were condemned by the EU
member countries.

Iravunk Newspaper Editor Says He Is Attacked For His Professional Wo

IRAVUNK NEWSPAPER EDITOR SAYS HE IS ATTACKED FOR HIS PROFESSIONAL WORK

Panorama.am
15:48 06/09/06

"I left home at about 10 a.m. Suddenly two skinheads appeared,
knocked me down and started beating with feet," Hovhannes Galajyan,
editor of Iravunk newspaper, details the attack made on him.

The skinheads escaped when they saw people coming out of the building,
Galajyan says. The editor reported to the district office of the
Armenian police. The attack is connected with my professional
work, Galajyan assures, because, as he says, he has no personal
enemies. However, the editor does not clearly understand which
publication has caused such violence.

Armenian Aryan Union Supreme Board has issued a statement raising
its voice of protest against the regular encroachment of a mass
media representative.

The statement demands from the law enforcement structures of Armenia
to take measures and punish the criminals.

RA President’s Name To Be Inscribed On "Kind Angel Of Peace" Complex

RA PRESIDENT’S NAME TO BE INSCRIBED ON "KIND ANGEL OF PEACE" COMPLEX IN RUSSIA

PanARMENIAN.Net
06.09.2006 13:43 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Architectural and park complex titled "Kind Angel
of Peace", that will be opened September 9 in the town of Novozybkov
(Bryansk oblast, Russia), will immortalize the names of 2.5 patrons
and organizations supporting philanthropy. These are leaders of 9
states, over 30 Ambassadors, heads of over 50 towns and 30 provinces,
politicians, businessmen, public figures and art workers. They are
all the laureates of Patrons of Century foundation.

Sheremetyev, Tretyakov, the Mamontovs are among 60 philanthropists
of the past. The list of honorary patrons of the present includes
Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia Alexy II, Chairman of the Council
of Muftis of Russia Ravil Haynutdin, Catholicos of All Armenians
Garegin II, Presidents of Armenia, Belarus, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan,
North Korea, Serbia and Ivory Coast.

The first stone will be laid in the foundation of the complex in
Pyongyang October 5. Besides, complexes will be constructed in Armenia,
Belarus, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Croatia, reported RIA Novosti.