6 comments on the situation

Ha’aretz, Israel
June 29 2004

6 comments on the situation

By Yoel Marcus

1. One of the Israeli government’s favorite hobbies over the
generations has been freaking out the public from time to time. At
the moment, it has decided to distribute Lugol to all residents
living in the vicinity of the nuclear reactors in Dimona and Nahal
Soreq. This pill is meant to protect them against radioactive fallout
in the event of a leak, and it is supposed to be on hand in every
household, like gas masks. The question is why, all of a sudden, do
we need them. Has there been a leak that no one told us about? Israel
has always been evasive about its nuclear capacity. So what’s going
on? What gives with these pills? Are we getting ready for a nuclear
war, or just the mega-attack we’ve been obsessing over? Come to think
about it, once the gas masks from the last panic are being recalled,
why not use the opportunity to distribute Lugol to everyone? In any
case, the concerned citizen should be able to walk into the nearest
pharmacy and pick up a bottle. I’ve got a good brand name: Vanunu
Forte.

2. The media recently reported a new invention: a chair with hidden
electrodes that turns into a polygraph machine without the person
sitting in it noticing a thing. If this is true and the chair is on
the market, we should consider buying some for the Knesset, the
government conference room and the living room at Sycamore Ranch. Who
knows? Maybe we’ll catch someone telling the truth.

3. If we hadn’t seen it with our own eyes on live TV, we might have
thought it was a Yatzpan comedy skit. Arafat, dressed to the nines in
his uniform and insignia, festively announced to the world that he
was declaring a hudna – a cease-fire – for the entire period of the
Olympic Games in Greece. On the one hand, it’s not clear what one
thing has to do with the other. On the other hand, it’s beyond me why
he is so anxious to show that he’s a chronic liar. Because if he can
turn the flame up and down as he sees fit, Israel is right in saying
that he orchestrates terror from his seat in the Muqata and nothing
is done without his okay. “If he can get the violence to stop, then
let him do it right now – not for the sake of sports but for the sake
of our lives here.” I had to hear this sentence twice for it to sink
in that the speaker was not Sharon but Yossi Beilin, the last of the
Arafat groupies.

4. Avraham Burg’s decision to quit the Knesset to go into private
business shows that the man is not leadership material. He belongs to
a band of aspiring middle-aged politicians who are good talkers but
lack stick-to-it-iveness. There is no more important asset for a
politician aiming for the top than patience. Britain is a classic
example in this department. Leaders don’t drop down from the sky:
they climb up from below. Parachuting straight to the summit hasn’t
been very successful in this country. Netanyahu and Barak, both
airlifted leaders, suffered a crash landing and resigned from the
Knesset only to try again. As Golda Meir and Pinhas Sapir told Moshe
Dayan when he was an up-and-coming Mapainik: “Patience, young man.
Biology will do the trick.” Dayan was unconvinced. “In that respect,
I can’t rely on you,” he said. But for Dayan’s partner, the
indomitable Shimon Peres, biology is operating in reverse. He’s
beating all the ambitious young `uns and marching toward a unity
government at the age of 81.

5. Dennis Ross, head of the Jewish Agency Institute for Jewish People
Policy Planning, says that the decisions of the Israeli government
don’t take the Jews of the Diaspora into account. He wants official
representatives of the Jewish people to be involved in the
decision-making. Very nice. First let them immigrate to Israel and
serve in the army. Dear Abbys we have aplenty.

6. Turkey, butcher of the Armenians and oppressor of the Kurds,
doesn’t like Israel’s policy in the territories – so much so, that it
has ordered its ambassador in Tel Aviv to return to Ankara for
“consultations.” Now Israel is urging its tourists in Turkey to pack
their bags and come home for consultations. I would say that’s a
fitting diplomatic response, wouldn’t you?

A non-Armenian’s view of life in his adopted home

armenianow.com
25 June 2004

Outside Eye: A non-Armenian’s view of life in his adopted home

By John Hughes
ArmeniaNow Editor

It’s good to see that the Government of Armenia is taking seriously the
mandates of the Council of Europe to clean up its muddied and bloodied
record on protection of human rights.

As a condition of membership in the Council, leaders of the country were
told by the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) that the
practice of jailing political dissidents would have to stop.

And so it has.

The case of Lavrenti Kirakosyan is a sparkling example of how the boys on
Baghramian Avenue have turned a page, to comply with Council demands.

Problem is, they turned the page backward.

It would appear that what has happened with Kirakosyan is no different than
what was happening in Armenia 30 years ago, when Communist leaders
fabricated charges to justifying jailing (or worse) those who spoke ill of
The Party.

A few details for clarification . . .

Lavrenti Kirakosyan is a leader of the National Democratic Party, one that
opposes the administration of President Robert Kocharyan.

During an anti-government demonstration outside the Opera House in April,
Kirakosyan was arrested and charged with disobeying a police officer. He
received a sentence of 10 days in jail.

Two hours before he was to be released, police were sent to search his home,
on a claim that he illegally possessed firearms (belonging to alleged
associates). A search turned up no such weapons. So police searched again.
This time, police found 59 grams of marijuana, for which Kirakosyan has been
sentenced to 18 months in jail.

Kirakosyan is known in his village as a community leader who doesn’t even
smoke cigarettes, much less anything stronger.

It is true that this is not his first arrest (though the first on drug
charges). During other times of political tension in 1996, he was jailed on
charges that appeared as transparently invented as the ones by which he is
now being held.

Some things about the cops’ discovery:

1. The dope was found on top of a water heater, where other objects in the
same place were covered with dust, yet the bag holding the pot was not
dusty.

2. Drug sniffing dogs participated in the search and found nothing.

3. Police say they photographed the search, including the discovery of the
evidence. But they say the film was damaged, so they have no photographs.

4. Two men from Kirakosyan’s village were called in to witness the search.
Both say nothing was found until a second search turned up the contraband.
But both also say police coerced them into signing statements to the
contrary.

I don’t know Lavrenti Kirakosyan. Nor do I share his view that Kocharyan
ought to be kicked out of office.

I do, though, know that decent people in this country are routinely abused
by the power structure Kocharyan represents. And I suspect many of those
citizens would agree that the schemers in power are making a joke of the
Council of Europe – a body that, for whatever mandates it might impose,
seems terribly inept at enforcing compliance.

The upshot of the matter is this: Far from the eye of PACE, in Strasbourg,
the heavys in Yerevan can make it appear as though they’re behaving
properly. “Look,” they can say, “we didn’t jail a political dissident, we
jailed a drug dealer.”

Lavrenti Kirakosyan faces 18 months in prison on, at best, questionable
charges. And the message clearly enforced is that if authorities want to put
somebody away, they’ll find a way to do it. Just like in the old days.

While we’re on the topic . . .

Edgar Arakelyan is serving an 18-month sentence stemming from his
participation in a political rally that turned violent.

To break up a crowd of demonstrators, police used water canons, percussion
grenades, tear gas and riot batons.

Arakelyan had a plastic water container, and when police struck with their
weapons, he struck back with his, an empty Jermuk bottle.

Nearly three years ago a bodyguard for President Robert Kocharyan beat a man
to death in a café. Aghamal “Kuku” Harutyunyan was found guilty of negligent
manslaughter. He never saw the inside of a jail.

The sentence for throwing a plastic bottle during a police-dominated melee?
Eighteen months.

The sentence for beating a man to death in a café? Zero months.

The difference? That’s the question the Council of Europe should consider if
it is serious about enforcing human rights in Armenia.

Consultation at NKR Government

Azat Artsakh, Republic of Nagorno Karabakh (NKR)
June 24 2003

CONSULTATION AT NKR GOVERNMENT

On June 21 the prime minister of NKR Anoushavan Danielian held a
government consultation to consider the questions included in the
upcoming meeting of the government. The members of the government
recommended for the meeting about ten documents concerning the
establishment of the government agency `Administration of the NKR
Ministry of Development of Industrial Infrastructures and Building’,
confirmation of the regulations for the ministry and infrastructures,
government agencies, non-commercial organizations, coordination of
work of the agency. Making his observations on the discussion and
opinions about the mentioned questions, A. Danielian emphasized the
importance of structural reforms in the effective coordination of
controlling functions maintained by the legislation. He especially
mentioned the necessity of right choice of cadres, competent
specialists for responsible positions. The prime minister expressed
confidence that with the assistance of the NKR Council for Civil
Service will manage to make the right choice and complete the
personnel of the system with best cadres which is of essential
meaning. Touching upon the problems of privatization of the state
property A. Danielian once again stated the position of the
government that the state areas and property should be privatized
exclusively through tender and the auction of buildings must be open
and transparent to make the process available for everyone. These
should be put out for sales at market prices and not `distributed
free of charge’. During the consultation the NKR bill `On tourism and
tourism business’ was also touched upon. Drawing attention to the
importance of the bill, regulation of relationships and legal
organization concerning the sphere of tourism, A. Danielian said that
he expects serious progress from the steps undertaken and a serious
concept must be worked out for making tourism in Artsakh attractive
and prospective especially that there exist all the conditions for
its development. During the consultation the minister of agriculture
Benik Bakhshiyan presented information on the commencement and course
of harvest of arable crops. The members of government discussed a
number of other economic, social and organizational matters.Â

AA

Akhtamar film released

ArmenPress
June 24 2004

AHKTAMAR FILM RELEASED

YEREVAN, JUNE 24, ARMENPRESS: The Yerevan-based Moskva cinema
house will screen on June 27 the first showing of a new film, called
Akhtamar, based on the same name poem by Armenian poet Hovhanes
Tumanian. The music is composed by an Istanbul-based Armenian
composer Sirvard Garamanuk.
The film is about a young man, who attempting to cross the water
to get to his lover Tamar, living on an island in the middle of Lake
Van (in Turkey) ultimately succumbs to the waves in the night, “after
their secret love was revealed by some jealous enemies, who put down
the light, that served for him as a beacon and all frustrated were
his hopes to see the familiar light in the dark. Pulling all his
strength together, in vain he tried to find his way”.
The film was shot by a combined crew of producer, director and
cameramen from Armenia and New York on Lake Sevan . “The idea of the
film is to introduce the young generation to classical and
traditional Armenian art, ” film producer said today.

Chess: Indian challenge ends

Calcutta Telegraph, India
June 24 2004

Indian challenge ends

Tripoli: Indian challenge ended at the world chess championship as GM
P. Harikrishna and IM Neelotpal Das bowed out in the second round.
Harikrishna went out after a valiant effort against European champion
and 2001 finalist Vassily Ivanchuk of the Ukraine in the second round
while Das lost in the first set of tie-beak rapid games against
Armenian Grandmaster Ashot Anastesian.

Das had earlier held his famous rival to a draw twice in the normal
time control in the two-game match, but failed to keep the momentum
ticking in the rapid chess.

India fielded five players in the championship but stalwarts Krishnan
Sasikiran, Dibyendu Barua and Surya Shekhar Ganguly crashed out in
the first round itself and with the ouster of Harikrishna and Das in
round two the team will return home early.

Top seed Grandmaster Veselin Topalov of Bulgaria proceeded to the
third round with back-to-back victories over compatriot Alexander
Delchev.

Repairs of Dadivank vestibule

Azat Artsakh – Republic of Nagorno Karabakh (NKR)
June 23 2004

REPAIRS OF DADIVANK VESTIBULE

On June 17 the scientific council of the NKR agency for study of
historical environment and preservation of monuments discussed the
project of reconstruction of the vestibule of the monastery of
Dadivank. The head of the agency S. Sarghissian informed that the
project was accepted which means that the reconstruction works will
start this year as there is already a benefactor ready to fund the
reconstruction of the vestibule. The author of the projects of
reconstruction of the small domed church, the cathedral and the
church vestibule of Dadivank monastery architect Samvel Ayvazian said
the reconstruction of the cathedral started last year and will be
completed at the end of the current year. As to the small domed
church, its reconstruction will start only after the removal of the
frescoes which the former director of reconstruction works, painter
Armen Mnatsakanian willfully did himself in the church. There is
already the decision of the scientific council and the permission of
the head of the Artsakh diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church
Parghev Martirossian for the removal of the fresco.

SUSANNA BALAYAN

Theriault Lectures at Haigazian University on the ComparativeDimensi

PRESS RELEASE
Department of Armenian Studies, Haigazian University
Beirut, Lebanon
Contact: Ara Sanjian
Tel: 961-1-353011
Email: [email protected]
Web:

HENRY THERIAULT LECTURES AT HAIGAZIAN UNIVERSITY ON THE COMPARATIVE
DIMENSION OF GENOCIDE DENIAL

BEIRUT, Tuesday, 22 June, 2004 (Haigazian University Department of
Armenian Studies Press Release) – Prof. Henry C. Theriault lectured at
Haigazian University on “The Armenian Genocide and the Comparative
Dimension of Denial” on Friday, 30 April, 2004.

Theriault has a Ph.D. in Philosophy from the University of
Massachusetts. He serves as Assistant Professor of philosophy and
coordinates the Center for the Study of Human Rights at Worcester State
College (Massachusetts, USA). His research focuses on genocide,
nationalism, and the philosophy of history, with particular emphasis on
issues of genocide denial.

Theriault first described the active, state-sponsored denial of the
Armenian Genocide. In the United States alone, the Turkish government
pours millions of dollars into its negationist campaign, hiring
lobbyists (like Bob Livingston and Steven Solarz) to defeat
congressional recognition legislation, as well as public relations firms
to put its version of the events in question out. Ankara also uses its
own diplomatic personnel, funds different initiatives, prints denialist
books and then sends these out free to school districts and newspapers.
When the French Parliament was voting to recognize the Armenian
Genocide, the Turkish government threatened to shut French companies out
of billions of dollars of contracts. “The explicitness, the extent and
the state sponsorship of denial of the Armenian Genocide make it perhaps
the great example of denial,” concluded Theriault. He pointed out that
the Turkish campaign is happening on almost every level and it appears
to encompass every feature of similar denialist attempts, including
state sponsorship and the targeting of the media, educational
institutions and the political realm. Theriault said that the
appointment of Heath Lowry, an American denier of the Armenian Genocide,
as tenured professor at Princeton shows that joining the denialist
bandwagon often has its rewards. The struggle against denial, therefore,
has to be constant, for positive signs in this regard are often
counterbalanced by negative developments.

After asserting that the Turkish campaign is not the only case of
denial, Theriault dealt at some length with two other similar examples.
The first was the attempt by some Japanese circles to deny the
atrocities committed by the Japanese military in Asia between 1931 and
1945, including the Nanking massacre of 1938, when between 100 and 260
thousand of the total 600 thousand inhabitants of the then capital of
Nationalist China were killed in extremely brutal ways. Although the
Japanese government burned in 1945 a tremendous amount of evidence
related to its military activities, a great deal of indirect evidence is
still available on the Nanking massacre. The latter has been brought
together and used by a number of Japanese scholars. There are also many
eyewitness accounts by Westerners, some of whom tried to set up safe
zones for refugees fleeing the Japanese. Nevertheless, attempts to deny
this particular massacre and Japanese wartime atrocities in general have
heated up significantly since the end of the Cold War. While this denial
is not state sponsored per se, many important Japanese government
officials, including the current mayor of Tokyo and functionaries in the
Ministry of Education, are either outright deniers or very sympathetic
to denial efforts. There are also deniers in well placed university
positions, including the prestigious Tokyo University. The deniers are
also usually advocates of the remilitarization of Japan. They see the
Japanese defeat in World War II and also the claim that Japan committed
atrocities as the major hindrance for the re-assertion of Japanese power
in Asia. It is evident, said Theriault, that their sophisticated
campaign has considerable effect on young people. In 2001 deniers
attempted to enforce the use in Japanese schools of a new textbook
reflecting their views. Theriault added that this effort was opposed by
local grass-roots movements of average citizens, an important sign of
the strength among the Japanese population of the kind of full
recognition movement absent in Turkey.

Within the Japanese context, Theriault also referred to the denial of
the ordeal of about 200 thousand Asian (and some Dutch) women and girls,
the so called ‘comfort women,’ who were used as sexual slaves by the
Japanese military. Some of these women were raped 30 times a day, six
days a week. Many of them lasted for only a few months, while others
were massacred at the end of the war because the Japanese government
feared that their plight might lead to yet another war crimes trial.
Among other arguments, denialist historians in Japan have resorted to
relativism to undermine the credibility of the stories of these women.

Theriault’s second example was related to denialist attempts in the
United States. After referring briefly to Holocaust denial attempts by
neo-Nazi groups, he stated that “the real strong denials, beyond the
Armenian Genocide, happen with what the United States has done in its
own past and present.” He argued that “the United States was founded by
genocide, through slavery.” Theriault’s focus was on the genocide of
native Americans. He said that something like nine million natives lived
on the territory of the United States before the European influx. By
1890, however, the United States government recognized that only
approximately 200 thousand natives remained. Theriault said that
exterminatory deportation, like that of the Cherokee and the Navajo, was
a common tool used to get rid of the natives. Even in their designated
points of arrival and resettlement, conditions of starvation were often
imposed. Many continued to die of disease, because they were extremely
weak and starving. Nevertheless, denial of the genocide of native
Americans is still very strong. It works primarily
through omission; people just refuse to talk about the issue. There was
a strong backlash to newspaper editorials urging free discussion of this
topic, which were published in 1992, the fifth centenary of the European
discovery of the Americas. That pitch of denial has continued in the
past decade, and deniers try to explain the extermination of the natives
as just an unfortunate thing. Even when native Americans sue the
government to reclaim their lands on violated treaty grounds, the courts
usually throw these cases out. Moreover, when uranium was discovered in
the twentieth century in native American reservations, the United States
claimed the uranium in the name of national security, without proper
compensation.

Theriault then briefly pointed out a few other instances of genocide
denial. For example, the German genocide of the Herero in South West
Africa in the first decade of the 20th century is still more or less
omitted from German and world history. The Herero refused to leave their
land and resisted German colonial expansion. They were defeated,
however, and massacred; out of 80 thousand Herero only an estimated
10-15 thousand escaped. Recent calls by their survivors for some kind or
recognition and reparation have been ignored. In the modern era, the
Indonesian, Australian, British, American and other governments denied
the atrocities committed during the Indonesian invasion of East Timor in
1975 because of oil interests in the region and Indonesia’s value as a
Cold War ally. The United States was the main arms supplier to Indonesia
and aborted all attempts to have the East Timor issue discussed at the
United Nations. Finally, the United Nations, the United States, France,
Belgium and others covered up the Rwandan Genocide as it was happening
in 1994. The United Nations headquarters ignored requests from its
personnel on the ground to increase the number of its troops keeping the
peace in Rwanda and actually cut them down. Even after the genocide
began, the American media presented the violence as an ongoing ethnic
conflict, rather than a case of orchestrated genocide by a perpetrator
group against a victim group. Over 800,000 people were killed in Rwanda
in just 100 days.

Theriault closed the first section of his talk by arguing that denial of
past and ongoing genocides allows other perpetrators to come along; “the
strength of denial and the willingness maybe to give in to denial
ourselves allows us to think that it’s not happening again and we don’t
have any responsibility.”

Although each genocide had its particular characteristics, Theriault
stated that denials of various genocides sound exactly alike; deniers of
different genocides usually use the same types of arguments again and
again. In the second and concluding part of his lecture, he mentioned
some of these arguments:
(a) The ‘civil war’ thesis: the violence was not committed by a
perpetrator group against a victim group; instead, the two groups were
both combatants.
(b) Blaming the victims, by arguing that through their behavior and
actions they provided the initial cause of violence.
(c) The absence of any central plan or intent on the side of the
perpetrator; the acts of violence were spontaneous.
(d) The ‘wartime propaganda’ arguments; the enemies of the perpetrator
group exaggerated and even fabricated the evidence in order to mobilize
public opinion for their war effort.
(e) The ‘numbers game’; the manipulation of pre-genocide population
figures, the number of casualties, and the causes of death to make it
appear that the mass violence did not amount to genocide. This argument
usually does not work alone, said Theriault, but can be very effective
if used together with other arguments.
(f) The argument of ‘insufficient evidence’. However, this line of
reasoning is becoming increasingly untenable in light of new historical
research.
(g) ‘Definitionalism’ or the claim that a particular instance of mass
violence does not fit the United Nations 1948 definition of genocide.
Sometime the definition itself is manipulated and misrepresented to
attain the desired goal of denial. Theriault argued, however, that “if a
lot of people are killed unjustly by a government, the labeling is not
as important.” Deniers who resort to definitionalism often mislead
people into thinking that these are ‘either/or’ cases and that we should
not care if a particular case of group violence is not a genocide.

In the lively question-and-answer session that followed, Theriault
expressed anxiety that “the rhetoric of human rights is now very clearly
being used by the United States and by others as a tool for violating
human rights.” He said that people in the United States and elsewhere
have an arrogance about their susceptibility to propaganda; they think
that they are not susceptible to propaganda and do not realize that
their minds are being manipulated in certain ways. Hence, they are not
critical towards what they are being told. Theriault also said that he
was working on a book on the subject of his lecture.

Theriault’s talk at Haigazian University was part of his first-ever
lecture tour in Lebanon, initiated by the Lebanese-Armenian Heritage
Club of the American University of Beirut. He also gave public lectures
on genocide-related themes at the American University of Beirut, the
Hagop Der Melkonian theatre hall and at the Armenian Catholicosate of
Cilicia, based in Antelias, north of Beirut.

Haigazian University is a liberal arts institution of higher learning,
established in Beirut in 1955. For more information about its activities
you are welcome to visit its web-site at <;.
For additional information on the activities of its Department of
Armenian Studies, contact Ara Sanjian at <[email protected]>.

http://www.haigazian.edu.lb/
http://www.haigazian.edu.lb&gt

Armenian conference of parliamentarian friendship

ARMENIAN CONFERENCE OF PARLIAMENTARIAN FRIENDSHIP

Azat Artsakh – Republic of Nagorno Karabakh
June 21 2004

By the undertaking of the speaker of the National Assembly of RA
Artur Baghdassarian the first meeting of the Armenian Conference of
Parliamentarian Friendship with the participation of 75 representatives
of 25 countries started on June 18. The delegation from NKR was
headed by NKR NA speaker Oleg Yessayan. The aim of the conference
is to bring together the efforts of the National Assembly of the
Republic of Armenia, members of parliament of Armenian nationality
representing the parliaments of different countries of the world and
the groups of parliamentarian friendship with the National Assembly,
and direct at the promotion of democracy in Armenia, working out
ways of settlement of all-Armenian problems together, promotion of
inter-parliamentarian relations, effective use of the international
experience of parliamentarism in the republic. During the discussion
of all-Armenian issues the regulation of the problem of Karabakh
was paid special attention. Each of the speech-makers touching upon
the importance of a fair settlement favouring the Armenian party
mentioned that this conference may have positive influence on this
crucial and urgent problem. The speaker of the NKR National Assembly
mentioned that they will participate actively in these meetings and
said that hopefully one of the future meetings will take place in
Artsakh as well. The speaker of the National Assembly of Armenia
Artur Baghdassarian presenting the significance of the conference
in his address emphasized that it may become important basis and
stimulus for the settlement of numerous issues that the Republic of
Armenia is now facing. Touching upon these issues Artur Baghdassarian
emphasized the settlement of the Karabakh problem. “Armenia has always
supported the settlement of the conflict through peaceful political
negotiations assuming the necessity of compromise. All the political
forces of the parliament of Armenia are unanimous in this question and
made a joint political statement. We think that in the past decade
Nagorni Karabakh proved to the world its accomplishment as a state
and deserved the independent status. The people of Nagorni Karabakh
expressed their will in the referendum and no force can deprive them
of their right for national self-determination. Armenia considers its
duty to back Nagorni Karabakh in all its undertakings. We seek for the
participation of NKR in the negotiations as a separate party for any
achievement of the negotiations must first of all be acceptable for
the people of Karabakh,” said the speaker of the National Assembly
of RA. For known reasons the president of the Republic of Armenia
was not present at the conference, and his message was presented by
Artashess Toumanian. “I am grateful to the friends of Armenia who,
being represented in parliaments of different countries, make their
contribution to progress in Armenia.” Underlying the speeches was the
unity Armenia-Diaspora-Nagorni Karabakh, and as the speaker of the
NKR parliament mentioned, the important thing is maintenance of this
unity. According to the chairman of the World Armenian Congress Ara
Abrahamian, “The problem of Karabakh is extremely important for us, the
fair settlement of which may be a favourable factor for the Republic
of Armenia. And in this framework this conference will also have an
important role.” Anyway, according to the foreign minister of Armenia
Vardan Oskanian, “After the two-day discussions it will become clear
what contribution each of the participants of the conference can make
to the settlement of the problems presented at the conference.” Let
us hope that these discussions will become real actions.

CHRISTINE MNATSAKANIAN.

New Organization

NEW ORGANIZATION

Azat Artsakh – Republic of Nagorno Karabakh (NKR)
June 6 2004

On June 10 the founding meeting of the NKR public organization of
refugees took place with the participation of the undertaking group
and refugees from different regions of the republic. The head of
the department of migration and refugees under the NKR government
Serge Amirkhanian addressed the guests. One of the aims of the
organization is raising the problems of the refugees living in NKR
at the NKR state bodies and international organizations, as well as
social and economic assistance to the refugees and defence of their
legal interests. The main aim set by the organization is to pursue
the question of compensation for the possessions left by these people
forced out from Azerbaijan in 1988-1992. Besides, the organization
intends directing its activity at the assistance to the development of
the native region, the process of its integration and unification with
the motherland. The administration of the newly founded organization
addressed the heads of regional administrations with the request to
assist to the activity of the organization. The founding meeting
chose the members of administration: Sanasar Saroyan (chairman),
Aida Avanessian (secretary) and Vladimir Sarghissian (cashier). The
discussion of the regulations of the organizations is continuing.

Chess: ‘Rest of the world’ triumphs as Anand draws Kasparov in Chess

‘Rest of the world’ triumphs as Anand draws Kasparov in Chess

Deepika, India
June 16 2004

Moscow, Jun 15 (PTI) Former World Champion Viswanathan Anand drew his
final round game with World No. 1 Garry Kasparov ensuring victory
for the Rest of the world team against Armenia at the Hyatt Ararat
in Moscow, here today.

Despite a defeat in the sixth and final round, Rest of World held on
to their lead, winning the match with a narrow 18.5-17.5 score.

Rest of the world began the last round with a cushion of two point lead
at 16-14, while Armenia looked for two extra wins, without defeats.

Playing the World No. 1 Garry Kasparov with white pieces, Anand
snatched the precious half a point with a comfortable draw. The
Sicilian Pelican game between Anand and Kasparov, saw neither player
willing to take the risk.

A little out of the theoretical waters, Anand captured the center
“d” pawn and offered a draw which Kasparov accepted. Just into the
middle game, Anand held more than an even position on the quenside,
but Kasparov’s double bishop ensured splitting of the point.

Anand completed the event with two wins, a lone defeat to Leko and
three draws.

The only decsive game of the day came from the Vaganian-Adams game,
wherein the veteran Armenian brought in all his experience in the
Queens Indian game to down the English Grandmaster.