Report Warns About Heavy Loss Of Religious Artifacts In Cyprus

REPORT WARNS ABOUT HEAVY LOSS OF RELIGIOUS ARTIFACTS IN CYPRUS
Julia Duin

Washington Times
July 21 2009
DC

Religious artifacts on the divided island of Cyprus are in great peril,
according to a U.S. Helsinki Commission document to be releasedTuesday
afternoon.

Thousands of Orthodox icons, manuscripts, frescoes and mosaics
have been looted from churches, chapels and monasteries in northern
Cyprus, ending up on international auction blocks, says the document,
theresult of a lengthy investigation by the Helsinki Commission and
titled Destruction of Cultural Property in the Northern Part of Cyprus
and Violations of International Law.

A copy of the 50-page document was provided to The Washington Times
in advance of a Tuesday press briefing and panel discussion on
Capitol Hill.

The panelists will include Charalampos Chotzakoglou, professor of
Byzantine art and archaeology at Hellenic Open University in Patras,
Greece; German art historian Klaus Gallas, who is a specialist on
theinternational smuggling of art artifacts; and Michael Jansen,
authorof War and Cultural Heritage: Cyprus after the 1974 Turkish
Invasion.

Most of the ruined property belongs to the Orthodox Church of Cyprus,
one of the world’s oldest national Orthodox churches, with the rest
belonging to Catholic, Armenian Orthodox, Maronite and Jewish groups.

Thirty-five years of occupation of Northern Cyprus by Turkish forces
have ruined a plethora of archeological and religious sites, says the
report, which adds that the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO) has been documenting the destruction
since 1984.

According to the report:

* 500 Orthodox churches or chapels have been pillaged, demolished
or vandalized.

* 133 churches, chapels and monasteries have been desecrated.

* 15,000 paintings have disappeared.

* 77 churches have been turned into mosques, 28 are being used by
the Turkish military as hospitals or camps, and 13 have been turned
into barns.

A staff member for the Helsinki Commission said a copy of the
report had been sent to the Turkish Embassy in Washington, but an
embassyspokesman said it had not been received.

It sounds like a one-sided presentation, said the embassy spokesman,
who asked to remain unidentified because he was not authorized to
comment on the record.

There’s no input from the Turkish side. There is no coincidence the
report is coming out this week because it’s the 35th anniversary
ofthe intervention by Turkey. Turkey respects all cultural heritages,
the spokesman said.

The Turkish Embassy spokesman pointed out a Nov. 28, 2001, letter
from Tahsin Ertugruloglu, foreign affairs minister for the self-styled
Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, that said Greek Cypriots destroyed
Muslim shrines and mosques in 103 villages between 1963 and 1974.

The report by the U.S. Helsinki Commission, which monitors compliance
with agreements among members of the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, included this claim by Turkey. But the report
also added that Cyprus, which exercises effective control over the
southern two-thirds of the island, has spent about $600,000 since
2000 to renovate 17 historic mosques.

According to the report, the 77 churches converted into mosques have
texts from the Koran inscribed where icons and paintings used to
be; the St. Anastasia monastery is now a hotel with a swimming pool
and casino; and the Byzantine-era monastery of Antiphonetes has had
itsicons and murals removed and sold to art dealers.

Jerome Bowers, a Northern Illinois University associate history
professor who recently returned from studying in Cyprus, said in an
e-mail that while Greek Orthodox artifacts in Northern Cyprus have
been damaged, the stolen goods have been smuggled out of Cyprus mostly
through the southern part of the island.

There can be no denying the fact that the destruction of
religiouscultural artifacts in the south has also taken place, he
wrote. In Paphos, for example, the Camii Cedit was not only destroyed
but replaced with a parking lot, and the square surrounding the
location is nowcalled March 9th Square, named for the date of the
mosque’s destruction.

The Christian church has ancient roots in Cyprus. Visited in A.D. 45
by the apostle Paul along with his co-workers Barnabas and Mark (as
recorded in Acts 13:4-12), it was ruled by Byzantine emperors for
hundreds of years. It was during this time that the vast majority of
churches were built in the region and decorated with brightly colored
frescoes and tiled mosaics.

In 1571, the island fell under the control of the Ottoman Turks, and
in 1878, the British took over. The native Cypriots are divided into
two camps: 80 percent Greek speakers and 18 percent ethnic Turks,
with the remaining 2 percent divided among Armenians, Maronites and
Latin-rite Catholics.

According to the report, the Greek government, with the help of Cypriot
armed forces, forced out Archbishop Makarios, the first democratically
elected president of the island, on July 15, 1974.

Turkey invaded five days later, taking over the northern 37 percent
of Cyprus, ostensibly to protect Turkish-speaking inhabitants. Several
years later, the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus was established,
though no country in the world besides Turkey recognizes it. TheGreek
Cypriot-led Republic of Cyprus claims to be the sole legitimate
government of the whole island, a claim every country in the world
except Turkey accepts.

The report says there are 660,000 Greek Cypriots living on the island’s
southern part, 89,000 Turkish speakers in the north and 43,000 Turkish
soldiers serving as an occupying force.

Hilmi Akil, the Washington representative for the Turkish Republicof
Northern Cyprus, dismissed the Helsinki Commission report as a
propaganda exercise, adding that Turkish Cypriot and Greek Cypriot
leaders recently agreed to set up a joint committee on cultural
heritage matters.

The theft of cultural artifacts takes place everywhere, including
South Cyprus, he said. What we’re objecting to is destruction,
which has happened on both sides of the island, is being portrayed
as something that only Turkish Cypriots have done.

Armenia Had To Act As Patron To NKR

ARMENIA HAD TO ACT AS PATRON TO NKR

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
22.07.2009 16:27 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia is ready to cede 7 NKR regions to Azerbaijan,
still, this will hardly satisfy Baku, ex-NKR Defense Minister Samvel
Babayan told a news conference.

"Since 1994 Armenian authorities were intending to cede 7 NKR regions
to Azerbaijan and only preserve a land corridor with Armenia. We
liberated our own territories, but today we’re negotiating and even
discussing our readiness to cede 7 regions to Azerbaijan. It’s simply
unacceptable for us." According to him, there’s no point in discussing
mutual concessions , as Azerbaijan is not ready to concede.

According to ex-NKR Defense Minister, Armenia shouldn’t have started
NKR conflict settlement negotiations with Azerbaijan. "Armenia had
to act as NKR’s patron, like Turkey does to Azerbaijan. Armenia is
not a direct party to conflict to participate in negotiations and
decide NKR’s fate," Samvel Babayan noted.

In his opinion, establishment of RA-Turkish relations is directly
linked to NKR conflict. "NKR issue intensified right after
intensification of Armenian-Turkish relations. In this situation NKR
issue was turned into bargain article," ex-Defense Minister emphasized.

US, Russian Karabakh Mediators To Be Replaced

US, RUSSIAN KARABAKH MEDIATORS TO BE REPLACED

Asbarez
Jul 22nd, 2009

MOSCOW (Combined Sources)–The Russian and American co-chairs of
the OSCE Minsk Group will be replaced in the coming months, Russian
co-chair, Yuri Merzlyakov, said on Wednesday.

Merzlyakov and his American counterpart Matthew Bryza will travel to
the South Caucasus in September with French co-chair Bernard Fassier
to prepare a new meeting between Azeri President Ilham Aliyev and
Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian, who met in Moscow late last week.

That trip will be Bryza’s last one to the region in his capacity the
American co-chair of the Minsk Group, Merzlyakov said, adding that
he too may also be replaced this year.

"I hope that after seven years of service as Russian Co-Chair of the
Minsk Group I’ll be allowed to leave the post," Merzlyakov said.

"I think it will take place this year."

Merzlyakov was appointed to the Minsk Group in September 2003,
replacing Ambassador Nikolai Gribkov.

Bryza, who is the US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European
and Eurasian Affairs, was appointed as America’s chief negotiator
for the Karabakh conflict in June 2006, replacing Steven Mann.

Earlier in June, Foreign Policy Magazine reported that Bryza had
been short-listed to become the Obama Administration’s pick for the
recently vacated ambassadorial post in Baku. That speculation was
later echoed by Azeri media, which reported that the US diplomat had
already been approved as the next ambassador to Azerbaijan.

Bryza, however, denied those reports, saying he had been assigned
with finding a solution to the Karbakh conflict as the US co-chair
of the Minsk Group.

"There is no information about my appointment as Ambassador," Bryza
reiterated during a press conference in Moscow Friday ahead of the
meeting between Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian and Azeri President
Ilham Aliyev.

He added though that if there was to be such an appointment, he would
be pleased to work in any South Caucasus country.

The three co-chairs will meet in Krakow, Poland on July 25-26 to
discuss the upcoming Aliyev-Sarkisian summit, Merzlyakov was quoted
as saying by the Azeri Trend News Agency.

The Russian diplomat said he hoped an October summit of heads of
state from the Commonwealth of Independent States, being held in
the Moldovan capital of Chisinau, would yield "some achievements" on
Karabakh "which could not be gained at the presidents’ Moscow meeting."

Imports Exceeded Exports By 4 Times In Armenia

IMPORTS EXCEEDED EXPORTS BY 4 TIMES IN ARMENIA

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
21.07.2009 14:25 GMT+04:00

Export volume decreased by 45.9% to comprise AMD 98.9 billion in
January-June 2009 in Armenia. In January-June 2009 imports decreased
by 27,5% to comprise AMD 479.9, compared with 2008 results.

According to RA National Statistical Service-provided data,
foreign-trade turnover comprised AMD 578.8 in January-June 2009,
decreasing by 31,5% compared with 2008 results.

Foreign-trade balance deficit comprised AMD 381 billion in January-June
2009.

BAKU: Ecranas Spokesman Is Asked To Leave Baku For "NKR" Visa In His

ECRANAS SPOKESMAN IS ASKED TO LEAVE BAKU FOR "NKR" VISA IN HIS PASSPORT

APA
July 21 2009
Azerbaijan

Baku.Mehman Suleymanov – APA. Spokesman for Lithuanian Ecranas club
Gedas Sarochka’s interview to apasport.az

– Today your team meets with Baku in return match within the second
qualifying of the Champions League. But you are not in Baku, but
at home…

-Yes. I am in Vilnius. I was asked to leave Baku.

– Recently you visited the occupied territories of Azerbaijan,
Khankendi. Did the problem arise from that?

– Yes, I have a visa in my passport tat I was in Nagorno
Karabakh. Therefore I faced with a problem in Baku. We were invited
there month-two ago. We attended the journalists’ tournament there.

– You probably know that Armenians declared non-recognized "Nagorno
Karabakh Republic" in the Azerbaijan’s territories. Didn’t you expect
that you will face with a problem in Baku in this case?

-I didn’t expect that the problem would be so serious. I came to Baku
and received hotel accommodations together with my team. But then I
needed to leave Baku. The person who came to hotel informed me that I
couldn’t stay in Baku for that visa in my passport. I returned home. I
didn’t face with any pressure. They only told me that I should leave
Baku for that visa. They informed me about the situation between
Azerbaijan Armenia, Nagorno Karabakh and said that I can return to
Baku after changing the passport. It was late. I can’t change the
passport and return to Baku in a short time. Today is a return game
between Baku and Ecranas.

-Didn’t they see that visa in your passport during the registration
in Baku airport?

-I think, no. They didn’t pay attention in that time, but then found
out it and asked me to leave. I regret for this story. I came to Baku
as a representative of the visitor team, as a friend and it was a
business travel at last. But it happened… I regret that I couldn’t
see beautiful Baku.

-How the return ticket and visa issue were solved?

– I had round-trip ticket for this Friday. They gave me a ticket for
another date and I had free ticket to return home.

-Do you regret for that?

– This is a life. The Armenians say that Nagorno Karabakh is their land
and you say that it is yours. I don’t want to speak about that and to
interfere in the political issues. In any case you know truth better.

ANKARA: Turkish-Azerbaijani relations get back on track

Sunday’s Zaman, Turkey
July 19 2009

Turkish-Azerbaijani relations get back on track

Turkish-Azerbaijani relations, which became unstable as a result of
Turkey’s initiative to improve its relations with Armenia, have calmed
down.

The publicity surrounding Turkish-Armenian rapprochement, begun when
Turkish President Abdullah Gül visited Armenia to watch a
soccer match between the two countries’ national teams, severely
damaged Turkish-Azerbaijani relations. Some circles both in Turkey and
in Azerbaijan claimed that the Turkish government’s move was a
betrayal of Turkish-Azerbaijani friendship, demanding that an
explanation be given to the Azerbaijani public.
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an and several other
officials have repeatedly stated that diplomatic negotiations should
be transparent in order for the public to remain informed, but that
this was not the case, making it impossible for the public to be kept
up to date about the state of negotiations. Uninformed about
developments, the image of Turkey was sullied in Azerbaijan. This was
a new challenge for Turkey, one it had not faced before and for which
it was largely unprepared. Turkish-Armenian negotiations came into
sharp focus in Azerbaijan, putting Turkish-Azerbaijani relations in
crisis, as some observers preferred to label it.

For almost two decades, heavily obsessed with Armenian enmity,
nationalism raged through the country and captivated its media. It
whipped up Azerbaijani animosity among some circles against Turkish
nationals in the country and abroad. To defame the Turkish government,
anti-Justice and Development Party (AK Party) forces worked
assiduously to revive Azerbaijani nationalism. Prime Minister
ErdoÄ?an harshly criticized six Azerbaijani deputies who visited
Turkey to express their concerns over the Turkish government’s move
with respect to normalization with Armenia. They became towering
figures in escalating tensions between the two countries. The prime
minister rejected claims that Turkey’s foreign policy contradicts
Azerbaijan’s national interests.

ErdoÄ?an paid an important visit to the Azerbaijani capital of
Baku on May 13 to speak at the Azerbaijani parliament and alleviate
tension between the two countries. His speech stirred intense public
pleasure with Turkey, finally putting to an end a short-lived crisis
between Azerbaijan and Turkey. Marking a thaw in relations between
Turkey with Azerbaijan, the prime minister’s address to Azerbaijani
deputies re-cemented their friendship. The Turkish government made a
successful decision to inform the Azerbaijani public about the ongoing
developments.

Still, Turkey’s Armenian policy still remains controversial among the
Azerbaijani public. Rumors circulate saying Armenian President Serzh
Sarksyan’s visit to Turkey will mark a lasting opening of the
borders. Speaking to Sunday’s Zaman, Ä°sa Gambar, a former
presidential candidate and the head of the biggest opposition party in
Azerbaijan, Müsavat, said: "Turkey should consult with
Azerbaijan if it aims to open the borders as this issue is very
sensitive in Azerbaijan. Turkey and Azerbaijan should jointly decide
on the issue. I said many times that Turkish-Azerbaijani relations are
far more important than the borders’ state of being open or closed."
Noting that normalization in relations with Armenia would deteriorate
relations with Azerbaijan, Gambar asked: "Turkey wants to have zero
problems with its neighbors, but will eroding relations with
Azerbaijan be a successful ‘zero problems with neighbors’ policy? I do
not believe the borders will open
unless there is a development in Turkish-Azerbaijani relations."
Lamenting weakened relations, Gambar stated that there is huge
potential and that the two countries may cooperate in the economic,
political, cultural, educational and health spheres, all of which are
not at desired levels.

Leila Alieva, president of the Center for National and International
Studies, told Sunday’s Zaman: "The border issue has a political and
economic meaning. Politically, closed borders are the only support
extended to Azerbaijan in the conflict. It is a reminder to Armenia
that if it does not respect the borders of her neighbors, it will have
direct consequences, like the absence of economic relations with
powerful and rich neighbors." Commenting on the economic aspect of the
border closure, she said: "The economic level is partly maintained
because Armenia continued to receive large sums of aid from the US and
Europe as well as through trade with Russia and Iran. Due to these
political and security aspects, I do not think that the media
exaggerated the issue.’ According to Alieva, the probability of the
border opening in October is "quite high."

Sunday’s Zaman asked Araz Aslanlı, director of the Caucasus
International Relations and Strategic Research Center (QAFSAM), about
Turkish-Azerbaijani relations. Aslanlı said he does not believe
the borders will open unless the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is
solved. "It is not correct to blame only the media for the escalation
of the crisis, though there were low-level, provocative articles. I
believe the behavior of officials contributed to the problem. Turkey
and Azerbaijan enjoy special relations that no other countries
do. Therefore, it is unthinkable for relations to further worsen," he
said.

Zeynal Memmedli, a media expert and the former director of the Media
Council in Azerbaijan, told Sunday’s Zaman that Turkish-Azerbaijani
relations worsened because the two societies do not know each other
well. "I am amazed by the fact that there are cultural centers of
Germany, the US and France in Baku, but there is not a single Turkish
cultural foundation. Turkey has to work more to promote itself," said
Memmedli. "Some media groups in Azerbaijan are directed by certain
forces, and journalists are not reflecting public opinion. They do not
even understand that anything bad about Turkey is bad for Azerbaijan,
too. The media is not a professional and independent one, and thus
articles are sometimes provocative and mislead the public."

Turkish-Azerbaijani relations have experienced their worst crisis in
the post-Cold War period, leading to high anti-Turkish sentiments
among the Azerbaijani public due to Turkey’s initiative to normalize
relations with Armenia. Turkey’s attempts, reiterating at every
instance that it will not take any step that does not coincide with
Azerbaijan’s national interests, have fallen short of appeasing the
Azerbaijani public, as Turkey continues to pursue relations with
Armenia.

19 July 2009, Sunday
MAHÄ°R ZEYNALOV Ä°STANBUL

Azerbaijan-Russia gas deal mainly attributable to Russia def policy

Today.Az, Azerbaijan
July 18 2009

Azerbaijan-Russia gas deal mainly attributable to Russia’s defense
policy against European Union: German expert

18 July 2009 [11:36] – Today.Az

Alexander Rahr, expert at the German Council on Foreign Relations,
spoke in an exclusive interview with Day.Az.

Day.Az: There is an opinion that the gas deal signed between
Azerbaijan and Russia could not prevent Azerbaijan from participating
in Nabucco, because Russia itself may become a party to the project

Alexander Rahr: I think that we live at a time where issues of energy
supply and energy security are dealt with lightning speed and
prematurely. I think that the deal between Azerbaijan and Russia is
mainly related to the defensive policy of Russia against the European
Union. Russia is somehow losing its influence in Central Asia and
therefore it aims to prevent the construction of Nabucco.

Russia creates certain facts for itself in the energy field and some
barriers to Europeans who are moving towards the Caspian Sea bypassing
Russia. I would describe it this way because for Russia this
transaction is very valuable and no one knows what will be the price a
few months later given the fact that what problems Turkmenistan
faced. The similar problems may appear with Azerbaijan over time. I
think that Russia now acts in a very adult way and consciously to
prevent the growing influence of Western energy companies, especially
Western policy on the Caspian coast.

Q: Dou you think Russia and the United States will decide to jointly
use the Gabala Radar?

A: I don’t have information in this respect. This idea is certainly
worth to think about more. Such decisions are not made quickly. The
very idea, of course, is good and which is not so much connected with
the radar, but with Russia’s attempt to prove to Americans that
control over Iran can be done together. I do not exclude also that a
similar radar could be deployed somewhere in southern Russia or
Central Asia.

Q: Is it worth to expect the Moscow meeting between Azerbaijani and
Armenia presidents to mark any progress and agreements on the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict?

A: The negotiations have been held for a long time. Frankly, I do not
see yet any dramatic shifts in one direction or another.

Q: Do you see a military solution of the conflict?

A: From Armenia’s viewpoint, I do not see any targets for military
action and this is the same case with Azerbaijan. We need to wait and
see development of world politics and impact of NATO in the region. I
do not think that this problem will be solved by military means.

/Day.Az/

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/53920.html

Armenian Centre Gets $916,000 In Grants For Renos, Upgrades

ARMENIAN CENTRE GETS $916,000 IN GRANTS FOR RENOS, UPGRADES

St. Catharines Standard
eDisplay.aspx?e=1659434
July 16 2009
Canada

The Armenian Community Centre in St. Catharines will receive more
than $458,000 each from the federal and provincial governments.

The government funding is through the Recreational Infrastructure
Canada program in Ontario and Recreation Ontario.

In a joint federal and provincial announcement made at the centre’s
Martindale Road site today, centre organizes said the money will go
to a new gym, play area and other upgrades.

The centre itself is paying the balance of the $1.375 million project
through sources such as fundraising and a mortgage.

If all goes well, the work could be complete by 2011.

http://www.stcatharinesstandard.ca/Articl

Digg, YouTube Dropping Support For Aging Internet Explorer 6 Browser

DIGG, YOUTUBE DROPPING SUPPORT FOR AGING INTERNET EXPLORER 6 BROWSER

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
16.07.2009 15:44 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Hot on the trail of social link aggregator Digg,
YouTube may be dropping support for the aging Internet Explorer 6
browser. While there is no official date – there isn’t any official
comment at all actually – users who still have to work with IE 6 are
getting a message suggesting they should update to a modern browser.

"We will be phasing out support for your browser soon. Please upgrade
to one of these modern browsers," the notice IE 6 users are getting
says. For YouTube modern browsers means Google Chrome (coincidently
or not, the first option), Internet Explorer 8 and Firefox 3.5.

As a side note, YouTube was already pushing Google Chrome as an
alternative asking users to "try YouTube in a new web browser" so now
Internet Explorer 6 users will be getting two links to download Chrome
on the same page very close to each other actually, Softpedia reports.

According to gs.statcounter.com statistical website, 13,7% of users
operate with Internet Explorer 6 in Armenia.

RA Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan’s Condolences On Crash Of Teheran-

RA PRIME MINISTER TIGRAN SARGSYAN’S CONDOLENCES ON CRASH OF TEHERAN-YEREVAN FLIGHT

Wedne sday, 15 July 2009

Dear Compatriots,

With a feeling of profound grief, I learned of the crash of Teheran –
Yerevan air flight which took away many human lives.

While deeply mourning over this terrible loss, we must have the
fortitude to withstand it together.

I express my sympathy and deep condolences to the families and close
relatives of the victims. Please be assured that we share in your
grief and will do everything to alleviate your pain.

http://www.gov.am/en/news/item/4805/