Red maple Rock the vote!

The Toronto Star
March 10, 2005 Thursday

Red maple Rock the vote!

by Alex Kucharski, Planet Bookworm

This year’s Red Maple fiction books look very promising and I’m here
to give you Planeteers the up to date guide to the 10 fantastic books
that are nominated. The nominees span from the genre of historical
fiction to fantasy to mystery to animal adventures to current issues.
All Red Maple voters from Grades 7 and 8 only, will have a hard time
picking the book that shall win the 2005 Red Maple Award.

Here’s your clip-and-save guide.

Book: Airborn

Author: Kenneth Oppel

Plot: While on a rescue mission of an old man in his hot air balloon,
Matt Cruise, a cabin boy on board the Aurora, a “900-foot luxury
airship,” is told an amazing story of fantastical creatures that this
old man has seen flying through the clouds. Matt does not think
anything of this story, however a year later after a rich girl named
Kate comes on board with her obnoxious chaperone, ready to prove this
story of her grandfather true, Matt must put his doubtful thoughts
away and help Kate on her journey. Matt and Kate encounter pirates,
shipwreck and much more adventures, before they are able to figure
out if these creatures really exist.

Prediction: Airborn is a fantastic adventure story that will make the
top three for sure! As for winning the Red Maple Award, that’s all up
to the participants of the Red Maple program. However, this is sure
to be on the top of many favourites’ lists. 10/10

Book: The Heaven Shop

Author: Deborah Ellis

Plot: Binti is the star of a hit radio show in Malawi. She lives with
her brother, sister and father, in a small coffin shop. During the
day she attends a private girls school, while once a week she records
her show. To her, her life is perfect. But she is soon struck by
tragedy, when her father dies and she is left as an orphan with only
her siblings and evil relatives. Their relatives split the three
siblings up and put them to hard work, not caring about them.
However, Binti and her sister escape to their grandma where they
learn to live a poorer life but still manage to be happy.

Prediction: This sad story is very touching and extremely informative
about the current AIDS epidemic in Africa. A must read! Deborah Ellis
was nominated for the Silver Birch Award four years ago for the first
book in her Parvana series. My premonitions show me that she will
probably be in the top three or even the winner. But I can’t tell you
exactly. 9/10

Book: A Different Kind of Beauty

Author: Sylvia McNicoll

Plot: Liz and Beauty make a perfect team. Liz is a Grade 8 girl who
is training Beauty, a future guide dog. Throughout Beauty’s training
course, both come among many hardships, including startling news from
her sister, meeting a blind boy in their school, and the split of Liz
and Beauty, once Beauty’s training is over. It’s a puberty-filled
roller coaster of breakups and splits. The ending is full of
surprises and coincidences you could never imagine.

Prediction: I absolutely loved it! It’s fun, intelligent and full of
emotion. I actually had brief moments where I was surprised that I
could read or draw as I felt as if I were blind myself. This book
definitely has a spot in the top three. Will it make it win? I don’t
know. My crystal ball is stuck on that one, and so am I. 9.5/10

Book: Nobody’s Child

Author: Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch

Plot: Three siblings, Miriam, Marta and Onnig, are orphaned by the
Adana massacre of Armenians in 1901 and travel back to their home in
Marash with their friend, Kevrok and his aunt, to go back to live
with their family. However, with such a big household, poverty soon
strikes and difficult choices are to be made. Miriam and Marta are
separated from their relatives and Onnig to go to a “special”
orphanage. Once they settle in and become part of the orphanage life,
the Turks start deporting and killing people from Marash. Can Miriam,
Marta, Onnig and their family along with Kevrok and his aunt survive
and reunite?

Prediction: This story is very sad, depicting these hard times very
realistically. I recommend this book to absolutely everyone. But I
cannot make a prediction for this novel. With further consultation of
my Tarot cards, I was still not able to decrypt this book’s future
success in the Red Maple Awards. 8.5/10

Book: Dead and Gone

Author: Norah McClintock

Plot: In the third instalment of the Mike and Riel series, Mike is
given 100 community hours for a box of cupcakes he stole back in the
first book of the series. While he is doing his community service at
the town recreation centre, he comes to know Emily Corwin, a rich
girl whose mother was murdered a few years ago. As Mike is thrust
into this mysterious girl’s life, he uncovers some dirty secrets that
should have been uncovered years ago, when the investigation for the
murderer of Emily’s mother was still going on. Alex

Kucharski

Book worm

BAKU: Azeri TV questions mediator’s awareness of Karabakh frontlines

Azeri TV questions mediator’s awareness of Karabakh frontline situation

ANS TV, Baku
11 Mar 05

[Presenter] The special envoy of the OSCE chairman-in-office, Andrzej
Kasprzyk, has arrived in Yerevan to discuss the latest truce violations
on the front line with the Armenian Defence Ministry and the general
staff of the armed forces. Kasprzyk plans to meet Armenian Foreign
Minister Vardan Oskanyan. They will schedule a meeting between the
Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers.

[Correspondent] The special envoy of the OSCE chairman-in-office,
Andrzej Kasprzyk, visited Tbilisi this morning and has already arrived
in Yerevan.

[Passage omitted: similar ideas]

[Kasprzyk speaking to journalists] I have always done my best to
prevent the situation from deteriorating. I take special steps when the
situation escalates. I learned from the media that the cease-fire was
severely violated. I visited the Azerbaijani Defence Ministry to learn
about the situation. I am now going to Yerevan to discuss this issue.

[Correspondent] Kasprzyk said that the countries guaranteeing the
cease-fire regime should be politically interested in maintaining it.
Every time the cease-fire is violated, he should use his mandate and
inform the OSCE chairman and the co-chairs of the Minsk Group.

The latest monitoring on the Azerbaijani-Armenian front line was
carried out four days ago on 7 March. Approximately five kilometres
away from the area of the monitoring, from 1230 to 1500 [0830 to
1100 gmt], using machine guns and grenade launchers, the Armenian
troops fired at the Azerbaijani positions near the village of Qapali
in Tartar District. The shots were fired from the occupied village
of Seyidsulan in Agdara District.

It is interesting that Kasprzyk learned about the truce violation
that was taking place during the monitoring only from the media.

Ceyhun Aliyev, Ceyhun Asgarov and Aytan Mammadova, ANS.

Egypt’s ‘second Rome’ arises from the waters

Independent online, South Africa
March 11 2005

Egypt’s ‘second Rome’ arises from the waters

By Graham Howe

Graham Howe goes searching for Antony and Cleopatra on the road to
Alexandria.

The desert highway runs from Cairo to Alexandria down at the coast.
Risking life and limb, peasants harvest the olive trees separating
the northbound and southbound lanes.

Outside the city gates we pass the Birqash Camel Market on the very
edge of the Western Desert. For centuries, caravans have travelled
the length of Egypt on the Forty Days Road from the troubled region
of Darfur, Sudan, to the world’s biggest camel souq.

Following the Rosetta branch of the Nile after the mightiest of
rivers divides north of Cairo, the highway heads into the salt
marshes of the delta. Resisting the urge to follow alluring signs to
the monasteries of Wadi Natrun, the battlefields of El Alamein and
the city ruins of Zagazig, we zigzag past modern leisure resorts
salvaged from the sands.

Our guide, Dr Wahid Moustafa Gad, identifies the old stone towers en
route as colonies where farmers breed hamam (pigeon), a culinary
delicacy, for Cairo’s best restaurants.

Along the way he points out on the map how the Nile resembles the
lotus, the symbol of Lower Egypt. The ancient Egyptians likened the
delta to the flower; the oasis of al-Fayyoum to the bud; and the main
river to the stem.

Two hours after leaving Cairo, we arrive at the city gates of
Alexandria, the capital of Graeco-Roman Egypt founded by Alexander
the Great in 331 BC.
Under Cleopatra, Alexandria rivalled Rome as the centre of the
universe – and was the setting for her stormy romance with Marc
Antony.

Pharos lighthouse, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World (the
Pyramids of Giza, also on the list, are in Egypt too) symbolised
Alexandria’s status as a beacon of culture.

Like much of ancient Alexandria – including Cleopatra’s Palace,
Alexander’s tomb and the Great Library – the lighthouse is no more,
having been toppled in the earthquake of 1303. (This may come as a
shock to the unwary tourist.)

We stroll round Fort Qaitbey, a magnificent citadel built of
shimmering pink marble on the promontory where the lighthouse once
winked at the world. Fishermen cast a line and fishing boats bob up
and down in the Mediterranean.

We visit the Bibliotheca Alexandrina, an awe-inspiring new library
with space for some 8 million manuscripts. A 21st-century version of
the great classical library of Alexandria, the modern glass-and-steel
structure on the waterfront features giant exterior walls carved with
hieroglyphs and symbols from every known alphabet.

Statues of Alexander the Great and Ptolemy overlook an architectural
showpiece that symbolises the sun rising out of the Mediterranean and
the rebirth of Alexandria in the late 1990s.

A city of literary traditions since antiquity, Alexandria inspired
famous writers such as Lawrence Durrell (author of The Alexandria
Quartet), EM Forster (Alexandria: A History & Guide) and CP
(Constantine) Cavafy (the poet whose home is now a museum).

EM Forster recommended: “The best way of seeing Alexandria is to
wander aimlessly about.” Behaving like most tourists, we heed his
advice and go looking for the past – at sites such as the Roman
amphitheatre, Pompey’s Pillar (aka Diocletian’s Pillar) and the
catacombs of Kom ash-Shuqqafa, the largest Roman burial site in
Egypt.

The guidebooks warn that the Alexandria of Alexander and Cleopatra
lies buried six metres underground and undersea – as well as in
distant capitals. Two of the ancient city’s most famous obelisks,
commonly known as Cleopatra’s Needles, stand by the Thames in London
and in Central Park, New York.

One of the most famous exhibits in the British Museum – the Rosetta
Stone, the key used to decipher hieroglyphics – comes from the nearby
port of Rosetta where the Nile ends its journey 6 680km from its
headwaters on the shore of Lake Victoria.

Historians say ancient Alexandria is as elusive as the fabled city of
Atlantis. CP Cavafy, the poet of early-20th-century Alexandria,
declares somewhat more encouragingly: “It goes on being Alexandria
still. Just walk a bit along the straight road that ends at the
Hippodrome and you’ll see palaces and monuments that will amaze you.”

Visitors will find remnants of the city’s great rulers in the new
Alexandria Museum. The grand Italianate villa of the American
Consulate houses a fascinating collection of treasures salvaged by
divers from underwater sites in the harbour late last decade.

Submerged in shallow water near Abu Qir for more than 2 000 years,
these finds include a colossal granite statue of Isis, a sphinx,
columns and capitals which archaeologists speculate may come from
Cleopatra’s palace: all of them are being exhibited for the first
time.

We were looking forward to lunch after visiting the magnificent
mosque of Abu al-Abbas al-Mursi, where thousands of worshippers were
attending Friday’s midday prayers.

A port with period bars and ahwas (coffee-houses) from the early 19th
century, where people play dominoes and backgammon, Alexandria is
renowned for seafood such as sea bass, sole, squid, shrimp and crab.

With expectations high, we headed for the Mohamed Ahmed restaurant, a
culinary landmark billed as The Great Pyramid of Alexandria. Jostling
with the locals in the clattering café, we tucked into a feast of the
city’s native dish, foul (rhyming with “cool”) Alexandria.

Mashed into a paste (ta’amiyya), puréed into a dip with garlic and
fried onion (besara) or with tomato, garlic and eggs (foul mesdames),
the famous fava beans are a versatile legume served at breakfast,
lunch and dinner throughout Egypt.

We also relish delicious mezze, frittata and fried goat’s cheese –
all served without any culinary preventions on metal plates with
fresh pita bread for cutlery.

“So where’s the chicken?” asks one of our bemused party, “I ordered
fowl.” When they serve foul in Alexandria, they mean beans, beans,
beans – any way you like. Of course, you could order a McFelafel
(chickpea patties) at the ubiquitous McDonald’s.

A popular seaside resort, the promenade at Alexandria runs for some
20km along the turquoise shores of the Mediterranean with a
never-ending bar, hotel and café strip. In its modern heyday from the
1900s to the 1950s, this melting pot of the Mediterranean attracted
settlers from all over the Levant.

A thriving community of 80 000 Jews lived in Egypt early last century
– dwindling in the city to the 200 who still observe Shabbat at the
city’s pink marble synagogue.

In The Alexandria Quartet, Lawrence Durrell writes in the late 1940s:
“The communities still live and communicate – Turks with Jews, Arabs
and Copts and Syrians with Armenians and Italians and Greeks … the
hundred little spheres which religion or lore creates and which
cohere softly together like cells to form the great sprawling
jellyfish which is Alexandria today.”

Alexandria lost its cosmopolitan heart when many left after Gamel
Abdel Nasser’s revolution of 1952.

Our guide, Dr Wahid, says Alexandria has been occupied by Alexander
the Great, the Greeks, Romans, Fatimids, Turks, Napoleon and the
British.
Today the Moorish seaside palace built by the kings of Egypt is a
retreat for President Hosni Mubarak, while the lush Montazeh Palace
Gardens and neighbouring Salamlek palace are open to the public and
tourists.

Who could come all the way from the Cape to Cairo without going for a
swim in the Mediterranean?

We head past once-grand Victorian hotels such as the Windsor Palace
and the Cecil – a winter retreat for No~Ql Coward, Somerset Maugham,
Winston Churchill and the British Secret Service – and past
Pastroudi’s coffee shop, the haunt of literati in the 1920s
immortalised in Durrell’s Alexandria Quartet.

At Mamoura, the most exclusive beach suburb, taking a dip turns out
to be quite a mission. After paying a toll to get past the entry
boom, we pay a second toll to get on to the sand. After paying a
third fee at the changing booth and a fourth for a deckchair, we’re
finally ready for our expensive swim, clutching tickets that cost
R20.

On the beach an unusual sight awaits us: all along the high-tide
mark, fully dressed adults sit in a long line of deckchairs gazing
out to sea. Finding a way through the human barrier, we wade
self-consciously into the waves, feeling hundreds of curious eyes
upon us. We are the daily entertainment.

It is worth all the effort. We are adrift in a completely foreign
culture in the Mediterranean, on the northern tip of Africa,
thousands of kilometres away from Cape Town’s familiar southern
realms.

No one sunbathes on the sand at Alexandria, a right of way for the
vendors who hawk everything you could ever need on the beach, from
swimsuits, towels, sunglasses and hats to peanuts, pastries and
cooldrinks.

Sitting on the edge of Africa, I recall the words of Happy Mahlangu,
South Africa’s ambassador to Egypt, who told me: “South Africa looks
north to Africa and plays a leadership role on the continent. Egypt
looks north to Europe and the US and plays a leadership role in the
Middle East.”

Graham Howe was a guest of EgyptAir, the Egyptian Tourist Authority
and Egypt & Beyond.

——————————————————————————–

Some Facts
Visas: Obtain a tourist visa to Egypt from your travel agent (at a
variable cost of R235) or obtain free of charge direct from the
Egyptian Embassy at 270 Bourke St, Muckleneuk, Pretoria, tel:
012-343-1590.

Cost: From R12 999 for a 7-day tour, including flights
Johannesburg-Cairo and Cairo-Luxor and all transfers, taxes,
accommodation, tours, entry charges and a fully inclusive
three-night-and-four-day Nile cruise.

Health: Inoculations for cholera, hepatitis A, tetanus and typhoid
are recommended. Avoid all ice and fresh water unless in a sealed
bottle. Carry tissues for toilet paper.

Currency: Take US$ traveller’s cheques or currency. One Egyptian
pound = R1.

Best months to visit: October-November and March-May.
Tipping: Baksheesh is widespread at all tourist destinations.
Security: Egypt maintains tight security at all tourist and transport
points, including the entrance to many hotels.

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–Boundary_(ID_NX02SdJkJE2wOwBDRr1TNg)–

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=14&amp

Archbishop Mutafian in Mischief

ARCHBISHOP MUTAFIAN IN MISCHIEF

Azg/arm
5 March 05

Ever since exterminating 1.5 million Armenians and depopulating
historic Armenia, successive regimes in Turkey have been hard at work,
in an obsessive determination to wipe out all traces of Armenian
heritage in our ancestral land.

However, since Ataturk’s Europeanization, the traditional Turkish
scimitar has been replaced by more sophisticated methods with the very
same ultimate goal to drive the original inhabitants of the land into
oblivion.

Recognizing fully the role of the Armenian Church in preserving the
Armenian culture and identity, the Turks have turned it into a prime
target of destruction. Thousands of houses of worship have been
reduced to ruins. Additionally, the Turks have resorted to every ruse,
any kind of Byzantine law to emasculate the remaining Armenian
community in Istanbul, especially decapitating its spiritual
leadership.

Contrary to Lausanne Treaty (1923) provisions, the Turkish government
has shut down the Holy Cross Armenian Seminary, the only center where
young generations of clergy could be trained. When Armenians resorted
to other creative means to replenish the dwindling pool clergymen by
emoting aspiring clergymen at the Jerusalem Seminary, the Turkish
government acted swiftly to ban that route as wail, accusing Armenians
of training terrorists in that seminary. One of those returning
seminarians, Father Manuel Yergatian, ended up in jail with ludicrous
accusations and he suffered most of his 14 years verdict in the
Turkish dungeons.

While denying all venues to train young clergy, the Turkish government
has devised another trap: thus the Turkish law prohibits anyone from
being elected as the Armenian Patriarch who is not born in Turkey.
These restrictions severely curtail the number of potential
candidates, only to eliminate all the candidates in a matter of
several years.

Under these devilish Turkish schemes, clergymen of dubious reputation
will ascend the Patriarchal throne default. The current Patriarch,
Archbishop Mesrob Mutafian, is the product of that default.

His predecessors, Archbishop Karekin Khachadourian, Archbishop Shnork
Kalousdian, and even Archbishop Kazanjian, have served the
Patriarchate with extreme prudence, cognizant of the limitations and
restrictions imposed by the Turkish government. Thanks to their
prudence, wisdom and inspiring personalities, the great traditions of
the Istanbul Armenian community have been preserved, the creative
impulse of the intellectual life has remained productive, and the
institutions have survived.

The emergence of Archbishop Mutafian has altered the scene
dramatically. Traditionally united, the Istanbul Armenian community
has been severely divided. He has bullied intellectuals, journalists
and benefactors by his unorthodox behavior; however, thanks to the
wisdom of the injured parties not to react, eccentric behavior of this
young clergyman continues its damage.

Since Archbishop Mutafian was easily elected to the Patriarchal
throne, with Turkish government crutches, he was intoxicated with his
instant success and he used the Patriarchal throne as a launching pad
to try his luck as the Supreme head of the Armenian Church – where he
discovered that Turkish tentacles were not long enough to help him in
his outlandish design. He was frustrated and he turned against the
Holy See of Etchmiadzin; used every opportunity to demonstrate his
disrespect and he broke away from the traditional hierarchal
relations, which the former Patriarchs had established and cherished
sacredly.

All his predecessors had been coerced by the Turkish government to get
involved politically to promote its dubious agenda to the detriment of
the Armenian cause, but they had wisely shied away from engaging in
any such adventure. Yet Archbishop Mutafian gleefully engaged in that
adventure at the first advance of the Turkish authorities. He allowed
himself to be used as a political tool when he took a tour of Europe
last year to promote Turkey’s admission into the European Union, while
the world Armenian political leadership was opposing the move
vehemently.

Upon his return to Istanbul he believed that he had earned Brownie
points with the Turkish government. When he approached the Turkish
authorities with problems plaguing the Armenian community, he
discovered that nothing had been changed, and that the same
authorities continued their discrimination policies. They continued
usurping community assets and controlling the Armenian schools to
eradicate any ethnic tradition left there.

As the Turkish heavy hand was relentlessly working to disrupt
community life, instead of complaining to the International Court, or
declaring a hunger strike at UN Headquarters to draw attention to the
plight of the Armenian community, he dared to show up at the Turkish
TV to say what the Turks waited to hear and what they wanted the world
to hear – that Armenian community had been living freely and
peacefully and that no other Armenians from abroad had to meddle im
their affairs.

When the European Union representatives visited Turkey to contact the
community leaders, Greeks, Kurds and Jews courageously cited their
grievances, yet Archbishop Mutafian disappeared on a Greek island.

During President Bush’s visit he spoke of humanitarian values and
complained about Abu Ghreib Prison in Iraq, instead of complaining
about Midnight Express style Turkish prisons.

As the world Armenian community struggles for the recognition of the
Armenian Genocide, Archbishop Mutafian plays the Turkish tunes: that
history has to be left to the historians, as if there was anything
left to be said about the genocide.

The Armenian Mirror Spectator

Armenian wrestlers snatch two silver medals at Tehran Tournament

ArmenPress
March 4 2005

ARMENIAN WRESTLERS SNATCH TWO SILVER MEDALS AT TEHRAN TOURNAMENT

TEHRAN, MARCH 4, ARMENPRESS: Armenian free-style wrestler Roman
Amoyan (55 kg weight category) snatched silver medal at an
international tournament in Iran losing in the finals to an Iranian
rival.
He has won the second silver medal for the Armenian team. The
first was won by Vahram Hunanian (60 kg) from Gyumri.

Zimbabwe to Free More Than 60 South African Mercenaries

Voice of America
March 4 2005

Zimbabwe to Free More Than 60 South African Mercenaries

By Peta Thornycroft
Harare
04 March 2005

A lawyer for more than 60 suspected South African mercenaries jailed
in Zimbabwe for their involvement in a coup plot in oil-rich
Equatorial Guinea says they may return to South Africa on Saturday.

The year long saga of a suspected coup plot in Equatorial Guinea is
drawing to a close as a group of South Africans’ prison sentences are
reduced by four months following an appeal to the country’s second
highest court.

Back home in South Africa, they face charges under the country’s
anti-mercenary legislation. But lawyers say they are likely to
negotiate a plea bargain and be instantly released.

According to South Africa and Equatorial Guinea, the men had planned
to fly to Malabo, overthrow the government and install an exiled
opposition leader.

Among the alleged plotters was British businessman Mark Thatcher, son
of former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. He was accused of
partially financing the alleged plot and was recently fined $500,000
by a South African court for violating its anti-mercenary laws.

The group’s alleged ringleader, former British army officer Simon
Mann still has four years of his sentence to serve in Zimbabwe’s
maximum security prison on the outskirts of Harare.

His lawyer Jonathan Samkange has hinted he might get a presidential
pardon around the time local elections are held at the end of the
month. South African and Equatorial Guinean prosecutors want to try
him for the alleged coup attempt.

In Equatorial Guinea, a more than a dozen South Africans and
Armenians are serving long prison sentences for their role in the
alleged plot.

The men detained in Harare had flown in from South Africa to collect
weapons bought from the Zimbabwe government’s defense industries.

South African intelligence operatives had tipped off Zimbabwean
security forces who arrested the men. They claimed they were on their
way to guard a mine in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The men were tried and pled guilty to relatively minor immigration
and firearms charges. The state had no evidence to connect them to
the alleged plot in Equatorial Guinea. Zimbabwe has no legislation to
prevent mercenary activities.

Attorney Alwyn Griebenow, who represents the men in Harare waiting to
be released, says they could be home on Saturday.

He says he is not sure why they have not already been released
because all the documentation is complete. He also said he is not
sure if they are sent to the airport Saturday whether there will be
any seats available on a flight to Johannesburg.

Analysis: All change in Belarus, Moldova?

Washington Times/United Press Int’l
March 2 2005

Analysis: All change in Belarus, Moldova?

By Gareth Harding
Chief European Correspondent

Brussels, Belgium, Mar. 2 (UPI) — After the rose revolution in
Georgia and the orange revolution in Ukraine, could the former Soviet
republics of Moldova and Belarus be the next states to swap
authoritarian rule for democracy?

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European and American leaders are increasingly optimistic that the
non-violent uprisings in Tbilisi and Kiev will create a snowball
effect similar to that which rumbled through the former communist
countries of central and eastern Europe in 1989.

“The democratic revolutions that swept this region over 15 years ago
are now reaching Georgia and Ukraine,” U.S. President George W. Bush
told Slovaks in central Bratislava last week. “In 10 days, Moldova
has the opportunity to place its democratic credentials beyond doubt
as its people head to the polls. And inevitably, the people of
Belarus will someday proudly belong to the country of democracies.”

Viktor Yushchenko, the newly elected Ukrainian president who
spearheaded protests against rigged elections in November, also
believes freedom is on the march in eastern Europe. “The orange
revolution set a very good example for many citizens because it
showed them the way to protect their rights,” he told United Press
International last month. “This example is relevant to any country
where rights are not respected.”

The political map of Europe has been redrawn since the Berlin Wall
came crashing down in November 1989, spreading democracy eastwards
like an ink-blot. Eight former communist states — the Czech
Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary, Slovenia and
Slovakia — became members of the EU and NATO last year, and Bulgaria
and Rumania are on course to join the union in 2007. Democracy has
also begun to take root in Albania and the war-torn states of the
former Yugoslavia, with Croatia and Macedonia likely to join the EU
in the next three to five years.

But it was the revolutions in Georgia — where Eduard Shevardnadze
was ousted from power in 2003 — and Ukraine, where massive street
protests forced a re-run of fraudulent elections in November, that
have provided the greatest inspiration to activists in the former
Soviet bloc.

“No one can say now that democracy is not possible near Russia or
that post-Soviet countries can’t become properly functioning
democracies,” says Pavol Demes, who has advised opposition groups in
Ukraine and Serbia and now heads the German Marshall Fund’s
Bratislava office. “There are now five concrete examples of Soviet
republics freeing themselves from communism and then authoritarianism
(Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Georgia and Ukraine) that the people of
Belarus and Moldova can dream about, learn lessons from and act on.”

Voters in Moldova, a desperately poor country of 4.2 million people
nestled between Romania and Ukraine, get their chance to choose
between Western-style liberal democracy and Russian-style
authoritarianism Sunday. Communist President Vladimir Voronin, who
has ruled the country since 2001 and traditionally been close to the
Kremlin, now favors tighter links with Europe. But his conversion to
the EU cause may have come too late for impatient voters fed up with
endemic corruption and the continent’s lowest living standards.
“There is a communist dictatorship in our country and, consequently,
there are conditions for a revolution,” said Yuri Rosca, leader of
the Christian Democratic People’s Party. Emulating Yushchenko’s
tactics in Ukraine, the opposition has swathed itself in orange and
booked the central square of the capital, Chisinau, for a fortnight
in anticipation of street protests.

The situation in Belarus, Europe’s last dictatorship, is less
promising for freedom fighters. A former Soviet republic of 10
million people that shares borders with three EU states, Belarus has
been ruled with an iron fist by Communist President Alexander
Lukashenko since 1994. Blatant vote-rigging in November elections —
opposition parties failed to win a single seat in parliament — was
slammed by international observers and earned Belarus the dubious
honor of being the only European country included on U.S. Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice’s “outposts of tyranny” list in January.

But many campaigners and analysts are confident that change will come
to the communist state sooner rather than later. “If it can happen in
Georgia and Ukraine, then it can happen in Belarus,” says Irina
Krasovskaya, president of We Remember Foundation. Oxford professor
and east European expert Timothy Garton Ash told UPI: “It would be
very foolish of us to imagine that change won’t come in countries
like Moldova, Belarus and perhaps Armenia in the next three to five
years.”

Others, however, are less optimistic. Belarus has high growth rates,
low unemployment, a strong welfare state and little social unrest.
Despite Western criticism, Lukashenko has higher approval ratings
than many democratically elected leaders — even independent
observers credited him with almost half the vote in last year’s
elections.

“The circumstances in Belarus and Moldova are very different from the
other countries that have become democracies,” says Demes. “Europe
and America are only now discovering these two states.”

The EU has imposed mild sanctions on Belarus but has done little to
actively support regime change in the country. The U.S.
administration, on the other hand, adopted the Belarus Democracy Act
last year, which not only slaps sanctions on the communist
government, but also supports non-governmental organizations fighting
for freedom, democracy and an independent media.

“We stand by the people trying to bring forward democratic reform,
but you cannot impose it from the outside,” said one senior U.S.
official. “What we can do is help with media reform and work with
political parties, so that instead of dictators in power you show
people how to build up parties with a grass-roots base.”

Last week, Bush made true on his inauguration speech pledge to
support those struggling against tyranny when he met with 21
“champions of freedom” from central and eastern Europe in Bratislava.
“He told us he deeply cares about our cause and will do his best to
help in the coming years,” said Demes, one of the 21 freedom fighters
chosen to meet the president. “All of us came away from the meeting
feeling very encouraged.”

BAKU: Armenia violates ceasefire again

Armenia violates ceasefire again

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Feb 28 2005

Baku, February 25, AssA-Irada

Armenian military units fired from their positions in the occupied
Shikhlar village of Aghdam District at the positions of the Azerbaijani
armed forces located in the Orta Gishlag village of the same district
with submachine and machine guns on Friday afternoon, the ATV reported.

Residents of the village were hiding in the basements of their
houses during the shooting. The Ministry of Defence did not confirm
the report.

The ceasefire has been breached by Armenia in Aghdam District seven
times this month.

Another local TV channel, Lider, reported that ceasefire was also
breached in the Tovuz District.*

ANC-Pasadena Honors CA Assemblymember Carol Liu

Armenian National Committee
Pasadena Chapter
1445 Sierra Madre Villa Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91107

PRESS RELEASE
February 26, 2005
Contact: Hovig Dimejian
Tel: (626) 523-3454

PASADENA ANC HONORS CALIFORNIA ASSEMBLYMEMBER CAROL LIU FOR
ARMENIAN GENOCIDE EDUCATION EFFORTS

Pasadena, CA – The Pasadena Chapter of the Armenian National
Committee presented Assemblymember Carol Liu (D-44) with its
Community Leadership Award at their annual awards event held on
February 20, 2005. The State Legislator has been at the forefront
of efforts to include instruction on the Armenian Genocide in the
Pasadena Unified School District and throughout the State of
California.

At a well attended awards dinner held at the Pasadena Community
Center, Assemblymember Liu was praised by a number of speakers.
Master of Ceremonies Raffi Hamparian welcomed friends of the
Assemblymember who came to the podium to praise Liu for her
outstanding dedication to her Armenian American constituents. The
Chairman of the ANCA-WR Steve Dadaian and Pasadena ANC Chairman
Hovig Dimejian delivered speeches regarding the work of the ANC and
how the organization’s goals are shared by Assemblymember Lui.

Among the many distinguished guests on hand for the event were
Pasadena Mayor Bill Bogaard, City Councilmember Victor Gordo,
Pasadena Unified School District Board Members Mike Babcock and
Stephan Lazardo, Haig Kartounian from the Office of Congressman
Adam Schiff, Vahik Gourjian from the Office of California State
Senator Jack Scott, Burbank Unified School District Board Member
Paul Krekorian, Glendale Community College Board Member Armine
Hacobian and Rev. Babouchian, Pastor of Pasadena’s Saint Sarkis
Armenian Apostolic Church.

“Carol Liu, more than anyone else, deserved the Pasadena ANC’s
Community Leadership Award which we presented to her this evening,”
commented Pasadena ANC Chairman Hovig Dimejian. “Carol has been
there for our community in Sacramento and here at home. Her
leadership on education issues and particularly her steadfast
commitment to teaching all Americans about the Armenian Genocide
has been outstanding,’ the Chairman added.

Assemblymember Liu has been an active supporter of the Bay Area
ANC’s new educational website, TeachGenocide.org and its lesson
plans “Human Rights and Genocide: A Case Study of the First
Genocide of the 20th Century.” In March of 2004 the Assemblymember
co-hosted, along with the Pasadena ANC, a workshop for Pasadena
schoolteachers interested in teaching about the Armenian Genocide.

Assemblymember Carol Liu (D-La Cañada Flintridge) represents the
44th Assembly District, which includes the cities of La Canada
Flintridge, Pasadena, South Pasadena, Temple City, and Duarte;
parts of the cities of Arcadia and Monrovia; and the communities of
Glassell Park, Highland Park, Eagle Rock, and Altadena.

A fifth generation Californian and the child of an immigrant, Liu
was born in Berkeley and raised in Oakland. She was first elected
to public office in 1992 as a member of the La Cañada Flintridge
City Council on which she served for eight years, including two
terms as Mayor. She is currently in her third term as a member of
the California State Assembly.

The ANCA is the largest and most influential Armenian American
grassroots political organization. Working coordination with a
network of offices, chapters, and supporters throughout the United
States and affiliated organizations around the world, the ANCA
actively advances the concerns of the Armenian American community
on a broad range of issues.

Crude oil to be prospected in Shirak province

ArmenPress
Feb 25 2005

CRUDE OIL TO BE PROSPECTED IN SHIRAK PROVINCE

GYUMRI, FEBRUARY 25, ARMENPRESS: Inspired by reports that crude
oil reserves have been discovered in the neighboring Turkish province
of Kars Armenian National Academy of Sciences had released 160
million drams for primary prospecting of an area in the northern
Shirak province, bordering Turkey.
This territory was first prospected in an effort to track down
crude oil fields 45 years ago but then scientists found no
substantial evidence of it.
The money does not envisage well-boring. It will be used mainly to
examine the chemical composition of underground waters and some other
necessary studies. The studies are supposed to be conducted in two
stages, they will kick off in April and will be over in autumn. If
evidence of oil reserves is found, Armenia will asked donor
organizations for new funding.