Armenian church set on fire in Budennovsk Russian town

ABUILDING ARMENIAN CHURCH SET ON FIRE IN BUDENNOVSK RUSSIAN TOWN

PanArmenian News Network
July 18 2005

18.07.2005 02:52

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The monument to Armenians, the founders of the town
was desecrated for the second time during the recent six months,
Yerkramas, the newspaper of Armenians of South of Russia reports.
According to Editor-in-chief Tigran Tavadian, the opening ceremony of
the memorial to the Fathers – Founders of the town of Saint Cross
took place October 17, 2004. The memorial is constituted of an
8-meter high arch, a Khachrar (cross stone) and a composition of
stones. The bell mounted under the arch has gathered the flock of the
Armenian Church for many years. For the first time the vandals
desecrated the monument in February 2005. The other day another act
of vandalism was committed. Lanterns were broken, the Khachkar was
damaged with fragments of concrete and dead body of a cat was thrown
under the arch. According to the source, the action bore a ritual
character. However on July 16 a recurrent incident took place. The
abuilding Armenian Church was set to fire. The fence was burnt and
the flame reached the Church itself. The witnesses do not doubt it
was arson. It is not ruled out that the vandals purposed the
objective to stir up tension in the town. “The inactivity of the law
enforcers, who are more interested in persecuting peaceful workers
without registration than in catching criminals, arouses
indignation”, Tigran Tavadian stated. To remind, the town of Surb
Khach (Saint Cross, presently Budennovsk) was founded by Armenian
migrants from Karabakh in 1799.

Feature – History will teach us

Feature – History will teach us
By Stefanos Evripidou

Cyprus Mail, Cyprus
July 17 2005

THE CYPRIOT merchant Abdulhamit Bey built a tobacco factory in his
hometown of Larnaca, served as a Turkish Schools Inspector, a Larnaca
Hospital Committee member and a Larnaca Municipal Councillor three
times before his death in 1918.

This we know because it is the first name listed in the fifth edition
of Aristides Koudounaris’ Biographical Lexicon of Cypriots, 1800-1920,
including for the first time the names of Turkish Cypriots who
contributed to the historical life and soul of the island of Cyprus.

The first edition was published in 1989, containing the names of 657
Greek Cypriots, Armenians, Latins and Maronites. It took Koudounaris
a decade to collect and assimilate information on the great names
of Cyprus, investigating books, periodicals and private records,
while travelling to London, Athens and Egypt to collect information
personally. He assures us that, in literary circles, “oral history”
is an accepted source and very often encouraged.

The latest edition is double the size, with 1,358 names of Cypriots
who contributed politically, intellectually or through education to
Cyprus, and includes, for the first time, 125 Turkish Cypriot names.

Koudounaris explains that the book was incomplete without Turkish
Cypriots who made “fascinating contributions to Cyprus” but it was
only possible to collect this information once the checkpoints opened.

Since then, he has been a regular traveller to the north, arranging
visits with family members of older prominent figures in society.

“You would be surprised to see how big the intellectual participation
of Turkish Cypriots who contributed a lot to Cyprus without the
knowledge of the Greek Cypriots. I believe it is time to write an
objective history of Cyprus,” he said.

Ozel Vasif, a former tennis star of Cyprus, helped by providing
her house as the meeting place. “She is the niece of the barrister
Sir Munir Mehmet Bey (1890-1957). Thanks to her, I was able to
invite Turkish Cypriots to her house for tea. They would come with
information on their ancestors. We often stayed until 3am talking with
these people who brought records and files of the accomplishments of
their grandparents,” said Koudounaris.

It was one such evening when the historian learnt of the first Turkish
Cypriot mayor of Nicosia, Podamyalizade ªevket Mehmed Bey (1873-1955).

Now the book is in high demand in education circles and among the
Turkish Cypriot community. “I have 20 new names of Turkish Cypriots and
hope to collect another 40 before I make a new edition, and translate
it into Turkish and English.”

So why is the book considered so valuable a piece of history?

“About 25 years ago, it occurred to me that Cypriots did not know
anything about the people of the past, despite roads being named after
many of them. If I asked about Yangos Tornaridis for instance, a great
literary man who went to Athens, no one knew of him. I decided someone
had to collect this data and put it together,” explains Koudounaris.

And what better person to do it than the studious historian who studied
at Trinity College, Dublin, as a youth because it was devoid of Greeks,
forcing him to speak the English language.

His flat in Nicosia is covered wall to wall with eclectic paintings,
wooden furniture, but most of all, books. This is a man who loves
his jobs.

“You must research personally. I went to London, Athens and Egypt for
research and got a lot of information from people directly, including
the Patriarch of Alexandria Partheniou, who loved Cypriots very much.

“I will keep going north and working on the list of Turkish Cypriots,
even in the pouring rain, I couldn’t care less, I love it.”

“It’s amazing the contribution they made. I was so absorbed at times
talking to family members. They kept all the information intact.
Turkish Cypriots feel very proud of their ancestors whereas Greek
Cypriots tend to take their accomplishments for granted. They were
very willing to co-operate once they realised that I wasn’t compiling
two separate lists.”

A name some might recognise in the book would be Raif Mehmed Huseyin
Bey (1882-1941), father of the familiar political figure Rauf Denktash.

“Raif Bey. I read his obituaries in Greek Cypriot papers. It is
amazing how popular he was. He started out as a policeman and the
Brits rightly thought to appoint him as a judge because he was so
clever. He was successful and very fair as a judge and left a fine
memory, the complete opposite to his son,” said Koudounaris.

Asked why he limited the biographical book to the period 1800-1920, he
replied: “You must let history pass a 100 years to judge impartially. I
am not trying to do a ‘Who’s who?’ of Cyprus. I chose something more
difficult, to do a ‘Who was who?’ based on the Oxford model,” he said.

“Time must pass before you can study whether somebody broke away in
life, whether they left traces. It’s harder to do but you get a great
satisfaction by realising which people contributed towards humanity
and how present people lack this.

“The contribution of offering rather than taking in life: it’s a
great principle they followed in those days, which is why they were
successful. Taking is very normal nowadays. People cannot think in
terms of contribution.”

The book is written in the “language of the literary minded people”,
different from katharevousa and demotic Greek.

“I stuck to this mindset because I was quoting from the papers and
sources that I found. You would be surprised what I found on Turkish
Cypriot dignitaries in Greek papers. In those days, they mentioned
weddings, funerals, and engagements, but now less so. I also included
quotations from travellers and missionaries to Cyprus, particularly
in the 19th Century,” he said.

One of the high points of the laborious research undertaken was the
many afternoons Koudounaris spent beneath the House of Representatives
reading minutes of assembly sessions recorded from 1884.

The archives are in perfect order, a hidden gem locked in the basement
of the House away from the public eye.

“There are amazing details in there starting from the first minutes
of the House. I got to read statements from both communities in the
late 19th Century. Even back then, they were discussing union with
the motherlands. The one time they got together in parliament was in
1925 when all Cypriot deputies agreed to stop paying tribute to the
Brits. A Turkish Cypriot proposed the discussion. This was the first
time both sides worked together on something.”

“It is a fantastic archive and should be open to the public to see.”
Koudounaris highlighted the need to encourage scholars to research
more on the history of Cyprus. “The PIO should be more helpful here,
and the same with the libraries. They close at a time when most
researchers work. We need to do something to encourage more scholars
and researchers to look at these archives.

“Look at the Grand Code at the Archbishopric, full of all important
historical facts. It documents the 40-year reign of Archbishop
Sophranios the Third, who started during the Turkish rule and ended in
the British. It is closed to the public. Nobody knows anything about
his personal correspondence with the pashas and the rest of the world,
somebody must do that.”

This is something Koudounaris feels very passionate about… the
importance of history.

“If you read historical books and are interested in history, you may
realise by comparing to the present day, if there were any mistakes
committed in the past, and in so doing avoid them in the present.
This is the significance of history. This is how we keep repeating
our mistakes ever and ever again and never find a solution to the
Cyprus problem.

“It is a characteristic of today’s society, without a doubt, they
are less informed and less interested in history,” he concludes.

–Boundary_(ID_V+OMZ7WqMc2uG4E/y7zYvg)–

Negligent donors let children starve in Niger – MSF

Negligent donors let children starve in Niger – MSF
By Matthew Green

AlertNet (by Reuters)
01 Jul 2005

MARADI, Niger, July 1 (Reuters) – International donors, including
the European Union, ignored urgent calls for food aid for Niger,
exposing thousands of children to the risk of dying of hunger, an
official at a medical charity said on Friday.

Medecins sans Frontieres (MSF) said the landlocked West African country
issued a warning in November that the worst drought in years would hit
food supplies for more than 3 million people, but that rich countries
ignored its pleas.

“We have been in an emergency situation for at least three months,
and they haven’t responded,” said Doctor Mego Terzian, who heads
MSF’s feeding scheme in the southern town of Maradi.

The situation in Niger highlights Africa’s plight days ahead of next
week’s Group of Eight industrialised nations summit in Scotland,
where Britain plans to put fighting poverty on the continent at the
top of the agenda.

“It’s clear there have been deaths because there wasn’t an immediate
response,” he told Reuters. “I don’t know what happened. They knew
in October or November that there would be a food crisis, but they
didn’t react.”

When asked which donors he was refering to, Terzian named the European
Union — the biggest donor to Niger — and France, adding that other
countries should also urgently increase aid.

Severe drought and last year’s locust invasion that swept across much
of the Sahel zone south of the Sahara have devastated crops in Niger,
exposing more than a quarter of the population of 12 million people
to a food crisis.

“The problem is that the mobilisation by the international community
has been slow,” said Seidou Bakari, coordinator of the Niger
government’s food crisis unit. “We are doing what we can with what
little we have.”

“WE’RE NOT TO BLAME”

The European Union says it is the biggest single donor to Niger —
providing an average of about 90 million euros ($109 million) a year
in grants of both emergency and development aid. The former colonial
power, France, is the second biggest contributor.

“You can’t accuse us of doing nothing,” said EU spokesman Boubacar
Soumare. “We regularly contribute each year to the emergency food
stocks .. If everyone did the same as we do, then we wouldn’t need
emergency aid.”.

Soumare said the EU had signed a deal two weeks ago to provide 2.5
million euros in food assistance for Niger in 2005, alongside a 1
million euro contribution to the U.N. World Food Programme, which is
more than doubling aid to Niger.

A further 3.5 million euros is slated by the EU for food aid in 2006,
but aid workers fear that unless donors adopt far more ambitious
targets, then many lives will be lost.

MSF is mounting a major feeding operation to save thousands of
malnourished children from dying, but says its clinics may soon be
overwhelmed as hunger worsens in July and August, when rains encourage
malaria and diarrhoea.

Few other relief agencies have started work in Niger, while Paris-based
MSF says subsidised food provided by the government and U.N. World
Food Programme is only reaching a fraction of the needy, and many
cannot afford it.

MSF says that unless donors distribute free food aid now — changing
the current policy of selling it at below-market prices or lending
it for later repayment — death rates could rocket.

Arab states have offered help to Niger, where virtually the entire
population is Muslim. The government says Libya sent 300 tonnes of aid
including mineral water while Saudi Arabia sent 100 tonnes of dates.

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/L01342303.htm

Azeris Are Discontent

AZERIS ARE DISCONTENT

A1+
15-07-2005

It turns out that the Azeris are not pleased with the meeting about
the Karabakh conflict organized in Georgia by the International
Crisis Group. «After familiarizing with the documents prepared by
the International Crisis Group I realized that it corresponds to
the interests of Armenia. That’s why the Azeri experts disagreed
with the document and expressed their discontent», said the Azeri
Parliament deputy and participant of the meeting Gyultekin Hajieva
to the Azeri press.

Mrs. Hajieva did not like the offer included in the document to
organize a referendum on Karabakh, so she suggests the document must
be «improved».

By the way, Ilgar Mamedov, an expert for Azerbaijan, has participated
in the processing of the document. As far as his participation did not
contribute to the inclusion of pro-Azeri clauses in the document, he
has announced about the end of his cooperation with the organization.

–Boundary_(ID_nFUVX0jMCV9Z3kjW4+IezA)–

UEFA Cup, FSV Mainz 4 – FC Mika 0

Mainz savour dazzling debut
Thursday, 14 July 2005
By Andreas Alf at the Waldstadion

Two goals from promising striker Benjamin Auer helped
1. FSV Mainz 05 to a comfortable victory at home to FC
MIKA as the German side took a huge step towards the
UEFA Cup second qualifying round on their debut in
continental competition.

Ruman opener
The Armenian side were massive underdogs going into
the game and after Petr Ruman gave the Bundesliga
outfit the lead on eleven minutes, there was no way
back. Auer then doubled the lead ten minutes before
half-time, and following Nikolce Noveski’s strike to
make it 3-0 just prior the hour, the former Germany
Under-21 striker rounded off a comprehensive win with
his second of the evening.

Debut goal
But while Auer took the plaudits it was Antonio da
Silva that inspired the win. The tireless Brazilian
playmaker took the game to the visitors from the
kick-off, his probing runs and searching balls
immediately putting MIKA on the back foot. The
visitors defended stoutly but soon found themselves
behind when Czech striker Ruman opened his account for
his new employers with an excellent long-range drive.

Hovhannisyan fumble
The goal sent a crowd of 22,000 inside local rivals
Eintracht Frankfurt’s stadium into raptures but while
their defence was never troubled, MIKA goalkeeper
Garnik Hovhannisyan was not overly tested either in
the minutes that followed. Perhaps it was the lack of
action that caught the custodian cold on 35 minutes as
he fumbled Benjamin Weigelt’s vicious long shot into
the path of Auer, who slotted in.

Poor marking
Mainz, who qualified through UEFA’s Fair Play draw,
continued where they left off after the interval, and
added to their lead on 58 minutes when the defender
Noveski headed in unmarked from five metres. Auer
found himself in space close in nine minutes later,
and duly thrashed in a volley as the German side
closed in on victory. Only the minor miracle of a
four-goal win by MIKA in the second-leg in Eriwan on
28 July can deprive them

Synopsys Co. Philanthropic Foundation to be established in Armenia

PanArmenian News
July 14 2005

SYNOPSYS COMPANY PHILANTHROPIC FOUNDATION TO BE ESTABLISHED IN
ARMENIA

14.07.2005 03:16

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Synopsys company Vice-President Rich Goldman has
arrived in Armenia with his main goal being establishment of a
company philanthropic foundation. Synopsys Armenia CJSC SG head Hovik
Musaelyan told .am edition of PanARMENIAN.Net. In his words, the
establishment of the foundation is the next stage of the company
programs. The body mission is solving education and social issues.
`Thus serious attention is planned to be paid to orphans’ and
retirement homes. There are also programs aimed at discovering
talented children in Armenia, providing computer classrooms to
schools and higher education institutions, environment events and
much more,’ H. Musaelyan remarked. Within education programs Armenian
higher education are planned to be provided with auditoriums for
distance learning. President prize in high technologies is also
expected to be awarded. In the words of the Synopsys Armenian office
head, the foundation program will be approved one of these days.
Hovik Musaelyan is appointed foundation manager. It should be
reminded that Synopsys Corporation is one of the world leaders in
production and design of chips and microelectronic systems. The
company has its representations in 60 countries of the world.

1007 Foreign citizens visited Karabakh within 2005 first half

PanArmenian News
July 12 2005

1007 FOREIGN CITIZENS VISITED KARABAKH WITHIN 2005 FORMER HALF

12.07.2005 07:26

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ 1007 foreign citizens from over 30 countries of the
world have visited Nagorno Karabakh in the former half of 2005. The
indicator exceeds that of the same period past year 71%. Most foreign
citizens have come to the Nagorno Karabakh Republic from the US,
France, Germany, Austria and Italy. The US has a share of 30% of all
visits to the NKR. Some 70% of those arriving in the NKR are
tourists, the rest 30% were business trips, Mediamax reported.

Karabakh settlement talks with OSCE Minsk Group begin in Baku

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
July 11, 2005 Monday 7:38 AM Eastern Time

Karabakh settlement talks with OSCE Minsk Group begin in Baku

By Viktor Shulman

BAKU

Issues related to the opening of transport services between
Azerbaijan and Armenia via the territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, as well
as matters related to the return of displaced persons to their
permanent residence places were high on the agenda of talks held at
the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry with co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk
Group – Yuri Merzlyakov (Russia), Bernard Fassier (France) and Steven
Mann (the United States) on Monday, head of the Azerbaijani community
of Nagorno-Karabakh Nizami Bakhmanov told reporters.

According to Bakhmanov, “The issue of displaced (Azerbaijani) persons
is the main one, as it is impossible to solve the issue of the
region’s status without their return to Nagorno-Karabakh.”

In the view of the official, “There is progress in the negotiating
process.” He said, “We hope the public will be really informed about
it after a meting of the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia in
Kazan on August 26, within the framework of the CIS summit.”

Bakhmanov believes on the whole, “A stage-by-stage settlement of the
Karabakh conflict is possible,” however stressed that this process
will be real after occupied territories of Azerbaijan are freed.

Bakhmanov pointed out the co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group “have
many proposals and ideas for the conflict settlement and they will
discuss them today with Azerbaijani President Ilkham Aliyev.”

The Russian representative of the OSCE Minsk Group believes it is
premature so far to speak about the details of the talks in Baku.

According to Merzlyakov, “many various matters were discussed” at a
meeting with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mamedyarov that
lasted for more than two hours and “their discussion will be
continued today with President Aliyev.”

The Russian official believes in general “there are certain positive
moments in the settlement” process.

Karabakh to hold population census in October

ArmenPress, Armenia
July 11 2005

KARABAKH TO HOLD POPULATION CENSUS IN OCTOBER

STEPANAKERT, JULY 11, ARMENPRESS: Authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh
are planning to conduct the first ever population census, since it
declared independence from Azerbaijan, later this year, between
October 18-27.
Sergey Davtian, the head of Karabakh statistical service, said the
census ‘will become another step towards consolidation of Karabakh’s
independence.” He said the census returns will help the government to
design its projects and forecast social-economic developments.
A special government commission, headed by a deputy prime
minister, was established to conduct the census. The last population
census in Karabakh was held in 1989, when it had a population of
192,000. Armenians made 76% and Azeri 23%, with Russian and Kurdish
minorities. The capital city is Stepanakert.

Armenia’s Defence Minister Is Not Afraid of Terrorists

ARMENIA’s DEFENCE MINISTER IS NOT AFRAID OF TERRORISTS

YEREVAN, JULY 8. ARMINFO. “Both Armenia’s law machinery and security
system are out of dependence on acts of terrorism in other countries
and they should constantly and attentively watch on this problem”,
stated Armenia’s Defence Minister Serzh Sargsyan commenting on Jul 7
acts of terrorism in London.

He named the appropriate and right step for the country Armenia’s
participation in anti-terroristic coalition. To remind, at present 46
Armenian peacemakers fulfill their peacemaking mission in Iraq.