Pyunik close in on Armenian title

Pyunik close in on Armenian title
Thursday, 15 September 2005

The Armenian Premier League is back in full swing
following a four-week break with the title race
nearing its climax.

League split
The return to action saw the league split in two, with
the top six sides competing in the championship pool
and retaining the points they had accumulated from
playing one other, while the remainder battle it out
in the relegation group.

Pyunik prevail
Championship leaders FC Pyunik have increased their
advantage from five to ten points in just two matches
after their rivals slipped up. Pyunik began with a 5-0
triumph against FC Dinamo-Zenit Yerevan before winning
2-1 against second-placed FC MIKA. MIKA could only
draw their previous game against FC Kilikia thanks to
two penalties from Aghvan Mkrtchian.

Trio missing
However, it was not all good news for Pyunik. Armenia
Under-21 goalkeeper Apoula Edima, midfielder Karl
Lombe and forward Mamadou Diawara failed to return
after the holidays, and it is unclear when – indeed if
– they will return to the Pyunik fold.

Danaev signs
Third-placed FC Banants have also struggled after the
restart, a goalless draw against FC Kotayk preceding a
3-1 home defeat by Kilikia which only strengthened
Pyunik’s title challenge. Banants have released
Moldovan forward Dumitriu Gusila while signing Andrei
Danaev on loan from Ukrainian club FC Stal Alchevsk.

Triple capture
Kotayk, now within one point of third position after a
2-0 victory against Dinamo-Zenit, resumed their
campaign with three new players. Arkadij Chilingaryan
and Karen Navoyan joined from FC Lernayin Artsakh
along with midfielder Nikolay Agasyan whose
Dinamo-Zenit contract had expired.

Relegation issue
In the relegation section, FC Ararat Yerevan and FC
Shirak drew 1-1 in the first leg of their play-off.
Gor Atabekyan’s early goal for Ararat was cancelled
out on 68 minutes by Karen Khachatryan’s penalty for
the hosts. The losing side will face another play-off
against the team finishing second in the first
division to determine whether they preserve top-flight
status.

©uefa.com 1998-2005.

Loose association of former Soviet states hasn’t replaced USSR

Edmonton Journal (Alberta)
September 12, 2005 Monday
Final Edition

Loose association of former Soviet states hasn’t replaced USSR: They
can’t even unite for a common cause

by David Marples, Freelance

Is the CIS dead? The recent summit, held in Kazan, Tatarstan, despite
official publicity making much of an occasion that coincided with
the 1,000th anniversary of the city, provided clear signs that the
association has become practically defunct, and little more than
ceremonial.

The Commonwealth of Independent States was founded in December 1991
by the leaders of three former Soviet republics — Russia, Ukraine
and Belarus — as a means to accelerate the collapse of the Soviet
Union and to ensure that the Soviet president, Mikhail Gorbachev,
was deprived of any meaningful function. At that time Gorbachev had
tried to persuade several republics to sign a document that would have
prolonged the Soviet Union through decentralization while allowing
Moscow to control defence and foreign policy.

The founders of the CIS anticipated that it would be of benefit to the
various republics (the Baltic States never participated) to continue
to maintain close economic and security links.

Initially the informal capital of the CIS was to be Minsk, Belarus.
Yet, from the outset, there were some serious problems. For one thing,
the legal basis of the new organization was never clarified. The three
leaders who had signed the deal had no consent from their parliaments,
and its secretive nature carried all the hallmarks of a well-laid plot.

Ukraine never accepted formal membership, though it attended meetings
as an observer. The first Russian president, Boris Yeltsin, never
took the organization very seriously, other than during elections,
when he would use the CIS as a symbol of a Russian-led entity in what
he termed the Near Abroad.

As the Russian 14th Army established a breakaway republic at Tiraspol
in Moldova, several states feared that Russia intended to use the
CIS to control its former partners and to establish a new power base.

Other organizations developed outside and parallel to the CIS from
1996, the most serious being the GUUAM, a partnership that received
support from the United States and consisted of countries around
the Black Sea region (Georgia, Uzbekistan, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and
Moldova); the Russia-Belarus Union (Russia and Belarus); and the Common
Economic Space Group (CES — Russia, Belarus, Ukraine and Kazakhstan).

Other states have maintained a preference for bilateral relations
outside these entities.

According to U.S.-based Russian analyst Sergei Blagov, Russian
president Vladimir Putin has veered from supporting the idea of a
“divorce” among CIS states, to promoting greater unity after the 60th
anniversary of Victory Day in Moscow last May.

However, the Kazan summit appeared to make it plain that the CIS will
soon be dissolved. There are several reasons why.

First, Turkmenistan declined to attend the occasion, and its president,
Saparmurat Niyazov, declared that his state would become no more than
an observer in the future. Second, Georgia, one of the more activist
republics under President Mikhail Saakashvili, has initiated the
formation of what is termed a group of “democratic states” on the
border of Russia that would be oriented toward the United States
and the EU in particular. Third, Ukraine under Viktor Yushchenko has
stalled on the signing of 29 documents on the Common Economic Space,
agreeing to only about half of them.

The presence of Ukraine in Kazan at all was something of a surprise.
A meeting between Yushchenko and Belarusian president Alyaksander
Lukashenka produced few results and a proposed exchange of visits to
each other’s capitals failed to materialize.

Other states that might have resolved longstanding issues also failed
to do so, most notably Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed
territory of Nagorno-Karabakh; and the Republic of Moldova and its
separatist enclave, the Transdniester Republic.

Though the separation of the CIS states into authoritarian and
democratic regimes is somewhat facile, there is little doubt that
the states that have undergone political changes in recent times
–Ukraine, Kyrgyszstan and Georgia — are perceived by several others
as dangerously subversive, particularly by the virtual dictatorships of
Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan, and the genuine dictatorship
in Belarus.

But such states have not found a natural home under Moscow’s influence
either.

Russia indeed remains the most enigmatic of the CIS states, as
Putin appears to have accepted a smaller role on the world stage and
focused more on consolidating his own authority and removing internal
enemies. To date, he has tried to maintain cordial relations with the
United States while increasing his control over parliament and the
media through his security forces. He may thus decline to take steps
to dissuade Turkmenistan from its departure, and other republics are
thus likely to follow.

That still leaves scope for Russia to tighten its links with its
closest allies, Kazakhstan and Belarus, while exerting pressure
on its former closest partner, Ukraine, through economic pressure,
particularly the threat to raise oil and gas prices to world levels.

The CIS served the essential function of legitimizing the rise of
Russia over the Soviet Union, and what was essentially an internal
coup d’etat by former president Yeltsin. But as a loose association
of willing partners, it has failed manifestly to replace the USSR,
or even to unite the former republics in a common cause.

David Marples is a professor of history at the University of Alberta

ANCA: Record Numbers Set to Watch WebCast of Genocide Vote

Armenian National Committee of America
888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: (202) 775-1918
Fax: (202) 775-5648
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet:

PRESS RELEASE
September 13, 2005
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

RECORD NUMBER OF ARMENIANS SET TO
WATCH WEBCAST OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE VOTE

— Armenians from across United States and around the World
Tracking Progress of Legislation on the Internet

WASHINGTON, DC – Thousands of Armenians from the United States and
throughout the world are expected to watch the live internet
Webcast this Thursday, September 15th (starting at 10:30am EST) of
a key Congressional panel’s consideration of Armenian Genocide
legislation, reported the Armenian National Committee of America
(ANCA).

For the first time in nearly five years, the influential U.S. House
International Relations Committee will discuss and vote upon
legislation on the Armenian Genocide (H.Res.316 and H.Con.Res.195).
In October of 2000, the panel voted 24 to 11 to approve the
Armenian Genocide Resolution, but the measure was eventually
withdrawn from consideration only minutes before it was to go
before the full House of Representatives.

To watch the live Webcast, visit the website of the U.S. House
International Relations Committee and click on “Live webcast of
meeting.”

Thursday, September 15th – 10:30 am

“We have been tremendously encouraged by the growing number of
Armenians who are taking advantage of webcast technology to watch –
in real time – the Committee’s consideration of legislation on the
Armenian Genocide,” said Aram Hamparian, Executive Director of the
ANCA. “We join with Armenians throughout the United States in
looking forward to this opportunity to watch the legislative
process in action.”

The Committee meeting will be held at 10:30 am in room 2172 of the
Rayburn House Office Building, on Capitol Hill. Among the other
issues which are set to be considered by the panel during its
September 15th meeting are the following:

* H. Con. Res. 238: Honoring the victims of the Cambodian
Genocide that took place from April 1975 to January 1979.

* H. Res. 38: Expressing support for the accession of Israel to
the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

* H. Res. 388: Regarding the July, 2005, measures of extreme
repression on the part of the Cuban Government against members of
Cuba’s pro-democracy movement.

* H. Res. 409: Condemning the Government of Zimbabwe’s “Operation
Murambatsvina”

* H. Con. Res. 237, Welcoming President Chen Shui-bian of Taiwan
to the U.S. on September 20, 2005.

####

http://wwwc.house.gov/international_relations
www.anca.org

Iraq Group Threatens To Kill Lebanese-Armenian Hostage

IRAQ GROUP THREATENS TO KILL LEBANESE HOSTAGE

Agence France Presse — English
September 11, 2005 Sunday 7:10 PM GMT

A previously unheard of group in Iraq threatened to kill a Lebanese
hostage it accused of working with a liquor distribution firm that
“deals with the occupiers,” according to a video posted on the
Internet Sunday.

“The Group for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice” said
it had “captured an importer of food and liquor in Baghdad who works
for a company that deals directly with the crusader occupiers of Iraq.”

It demanded the company’s “withdrawal from Iraq as soon as possible
in order to free the Lebanese hostage — otherwise woe on him and you.”

The hostage, who speaking in Arabic gave the Armenian name of Garabet
Jean Chekerjian, said he held dual Lebanese and Cypriot nationality.

He was shown in the footage sitting on the floor with his hands and
feet tied.

A hooded gunman pointed an automatic weapon at his head.

Official sources in Beirut said the government was aware of the
reported kidnapping and had given instructions to its charge d’affaires
in Baghdad, Hassan Hijazi, to contact the Iraqi authorities and
“any other party” that might help secure his release.

The hostage exhorted Lebanese President Emile Lahoud and the embassy
in Baghdad to put pressure on his employers to pull out of Iraq.

“I hold dual Lebanese and Cypriot nationality and I work with the
branches of the Jeto Trading company in Lebanon, Cyprus and Iraq. The
company supplies foodstuffs and alcoholic beverages to the occupation
forces and the Iraqi army,” he said.

“I urge the company to leave Iraq and I ask the Lebanese embassy to
put pressure on the company and its owner to sever links with the
occupation forces and the Iraqi army.”

Addressing his boss Gebran Tomeh, as well as Lahoud, the captive called
on all Lebanese companies to quit Iraq, which he said was occupied
“as Lebanon had been 15 years ago.”

Dozens of foreigners have been kidnapped by anti-US insurgents in
Iraq and some have been executed by their captors.

About 30 Lebanese working for private companies in Iraq have been
kidnapped and later freed, most of them in exchange for a ransom. But
in September 2004, one Lebanese national was killed by his captors
and three others died during an attempted kidnap.

CIS Collective Security Chief To Inspect Russian-Armenian Drill

CIS COLLECTIVE SECURITY CHIEF TO INSPECT RUSSIAN-ARMENIAN DRILL

Interfax-AVN military news agency website
12 Sep 05

Moscow, 12 September: Secretary-General of the Collective Security
Treaty Organization [CSTO] Nikolay Bordyuzha will assess the teamwork
of Russian and Armenian military units which are part of the CSTO
Caucasus regional force in the course of the active part of an exercise
under way in Armenia.

“This exercise is important for us as an element of combat training
of the joint force,” Bordyuzha told Interfax-AVN today before flying
to Yerevan.

He said two motor-rifle regiments, representing each side, and support
subunits were taking part in the manoeuvres.

Assessing Armenia’s overall contribution to ensuring collective
security, the CSTO secretary-general described the republic as
“one of the organization’s most active members”. [Passage omitted:
Bordyuzha praises Armenian leadership]

He noted that the Russian-Armenian force set up within the CSTO
“holds joint exercises every year, just like the Russian-Belarusian
force to the west and the Collective Rapid Deployment Forces in the
Central Asian region”.

According to the CSTO secretariat, the joint tactical Russian-Armenian
exercise is being held in Armenia on 10-13 September. In the course
of the manoeuvres, the actions of units and subunits to protect and
defend the territory of CSTO member states are being practised. The
exercise involves ground units, the Armenian air force and personnel
of the 102nd military base of the Russian Defence Ministry. [Passage
omitted: Live firing will be held as part of the drill]

Armenian Premier To Participate In General Assembly Session

ARMENIAN PREMIER TO PARTICIPATE UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY SESSION

Pan Armenian News

12.09.2005 03:18

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today RA Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan departed
for New York to participate in the 60-th Session of the UN General
Assembly, RA government’s press office reported. Armenian Foreign
Minister Vartan Oskanian also serves on the Government delegation. The
high-level meetings will start on September 14 in the UN headquarters
and will continue till September 18. During the visit the Prime
Minister will participate in a meeting titled “Financing for
Development”. He is also expected to meet with UN Population Fund
Executive Director Thoraya A. Obaid, UN Children’s Fund Executive
Director Ann M. Veneman as well as with the representatives of the
Armenian Diaspora. Besides, the RA Premier will participate in the
reception organized by the US President George W. Bush. The delegation
will return to Yerevan on September 18.

BBC World Service – Turkish sensitivity towards their history

You can listen to the program feature on the Turkish sensitivity towards
their history by Dorian Jones is “hidden”
in the BBC World Service Outlook program until Thursday on

(broadband connection needed)

Otherwise there follows the main points from this program
(some of the spellings of Turkish names may be suspect as it is taken
from an audio report)

Thousands of Armenian orphan children were “saved” and brought up as
Turkish Muslims during the Armenian Genocide (these specific words are
used in the broadcast).
Fethiye Cetin’s book (now in its fifth reprint) reveals her grandmother
was one such child prepared after extensive research into one of
Turkey’s darkest chapters.
Armenians are routinely described in Turkey as enemies and spies and the
genocide is “hidden” from the population.
Fethiye decided to write the book after feeling pain reading about
conflicting statistics on the number of deaths: each victim in her view
was an individual human tragedy.

Prof Selim Deringi mentioned that there were intractable problems, and
the wounds from the past have not healed.
The opposite views (genocide of civilians v 5th column collaborators
with enemy in wartime conditions) show that there is not a state of
dialogue.
A Turkish conference on the genocide (the professor was one of the
organisers) was deferred after “intense government pressure”.
European and other external pressure has resulted in the conference
being reorganised.

There is very strong opposition to any change to the official position
on this issue.
Shukri Elekdar believes that recognition of the genocide is a threat to
Turkey’s future, particularly as he sees it as part of a wider policy to
seize Turkish territory
(this is demonstrated by Armenians referring to Eastern Turkey as
Western Armenia.
All Turkish political parties are united behind the government on this
despite the Armenian benefit from the support received from the USA.

Nevertheless, more and more people are delving into Turkey’s past.
Berkiye Pars is editing her film on her grandparent’s adopted child.
She wants Turks to have a chance to learn about their own past.
Many families have Armenian or Greek members – but they keep this a
secret, even denounce it though their own neighbours know this.

Yshim Fsoghlu is preparing a new film (Waiting for Clouds) on the
expulsion of 1 million Greeks as part of the population exchange.
This is another taboo in Turkey’s many dark chapters in its past.
She too has been threatened with legal prosecution as has Orhan Pamuk
but feels that artists must challenge historical taboos.
People can be reactive with such material but they must think and feel

http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/programmes/outlook.shtml#Thurs

The Turkish Identity

September 10, 2005
The Turkish Identity

Next week, the Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, will
address the United Nations here on one of the issues threatening to
slow down negotiations to admit Turkey into the European Union –
recognizing Cyprus. But he should also address the question of Orhan
Pamuk, the pre-eminent Turkish novelist who has been charged with
“public denigration” of Turkish identity.

In February, a Swiss newspaper quoted Mr. Pamuk on Turkey’s
longstanding refusal to discuss the Armenian genocide and the deaths
of some 30,000 separatist Kurds more recently. Mr. Pamuk’s remarks
inflamed Turkish nationalists, and he left the country. He faces the
possibility of three years in jail.

The charges against Mr. Pamuk violate the standards of free speech,
one of the prerequisites to Turkey’s admission to the European
Union. The charges also cut to the heart of Mr. Pamuk’s writing. The
question of Turkish identity informs his work. In “My Name Is Red,”
Mr. Pamuk never lets the reader forget the ethnic and cultural
diversity of Turkey’s past. Nor does he flinch, in “Istanbul,” from
reminding readers of the “deliberately provoked” 1955 riots that
destroyed several non-Muslim neighborhoods in that city. Beneath the
notion of a Turkish identity lies a tension, still noticeable today,
that has nourished Mr. Pamuk’s writing.

It has been about six months since Mr. Pamuk’s comments were
published, so it is unclear why the charges are being brought just
now. Whatever the motive, they are a reminder that one of Turkey’s
biggest obstacles in dealing with the West is the way it chooses to
patrol its own history.

Armenia allots $200,000 in assistance to victims of Katrina hurrican

Armenpress

ARMENIA ALLOTS $200,000 IN ASSISTANCE TO VICTIMS OF KATRINA HURRICANE

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS: The Armenian government approved on
Thursday $200,000 in assistance to victims of Hurricane Katrina. Deputy
foreign minister Arman Kirakossian said the money will be released from
government’s reserve fund and will be transferred on a special US government
bank account early next week.
Kirakosian said it will take the US government a long time to recover the
area hit by the disaster, adding also that the Armenian government is ready
to provide another assistance, should the US government ask for it. He said
Armenia had offered rescuers, doctors in the first days of the disaster. He
said though Armenia’s assistance is modest and symbolic in view of the
magnitude of damages assessed at around $100 billion, but ‘it is very
important for Armenia to demonstrate its solidarity with the people of USA,
because they were among the first nations to rush to help Armenians in the
aftermath of 1988 earthquake that destroyed northern parts of the country.”
He also recalled that Armenia has been one of the world’s leading
per-capita recipients of U.S. economic assistance that has totaled $1.6
billion since its independence. In a related development, Archbishop Khajag
Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church in the USA,
issued a new directive to local parish leaders on September 7, further
outlining relief efforts for Hurricane Katrina.
In the directive, the Primate asked local parishes to conduct two special
plate collections during services on September 11 and 18. Half of the money
raised will go towards relief efforts being conducted by Church World
Service and the other half will go directly to the Armenian Church of Baton
Rouge to be distributed to parishioners in the New Orleans area as needed.

European expert suggests three options for resolution of Karabakhdis

Armenpress

EUROPEAN EXPERT SUGGEST THREE OPTIONS FOR RESOLUTION OF KARABAKH DISPUTE

BAKU, SEPTEMBER 9, ARMENPRESS: Alen Deletroz, the Vice-President of the
International Crisis Group, a Brussels-based think-tank of independent
experts, working through field-based analysis and high-level advocacy to
prevent and resolve deadly conflict, proposed a three stage option for
resolution of the Armenian-Azerbaijani dispute over Nagorno-Karabakh.
Speaking at a meeting in Baku, he said though the key aspect of the
conflict is the status of Nagorno-Karabakh forefront, but suggested that it
be discussed in 10-15 years, Trend reports referring the Radio Liberty. He
also stressed both sides’ refusal from the use of force. According to
Deletroz, first of all it is necessary to ensure repatriation of internally
displaced persons and focus efforts on establishment of ties between
Azerbaijani and Armenian communities.
“It is possible by deployment of military forces of the countries, which
Azerbaijan and Armenia trust, in the zone of conflict,” Deletroz underlined.
He also stated that he would bring the proposals to the notice of
Azerbaijani and Armenian officials.