Doctoral candidate takes critical look at Diaspora-Armenia relations

armenianow.com
August13, 2004

Learning Curve: Doctoral candidate takes critical look at Diaspora-Armenia
relations

By Vahan Ishkhanyan
ArmeniaNow reporter

Eight months ago ethnographer Hrak Varjapetian and his family moved from
America to Armenia to research a complex question: What are the similarities
and differences between native Armenians and Diaspora?
Varjapetian is defending his doctoral thesis at the University of Wisconsin.
While interacting with his distant relatives, the ethnographer has also
focused a good deal of attention on the significance of statues and
memorials in Armenia.

A family making observations . . .
It is significant, he says, that monuments in Armenia are larger, more
imposing and, simply, more “monumental”.
“When the Armenian community is surrounded by Armenians it feels safe and
only then it can feel confident and can have monumental memorials,” says
Varjapetian, a native of Lebanon.
To make his point, Varjapetian compares the David of Sasun statue in
Yerevan, with the one in Fresno, California. The American version is much
less significant and “in contrast to Yerevan’s, the horse and David are
thin, weak and close to death”.
While there may be many practical reasons behind the way the hero is
depicted, the ethnographer sees it as an example that the mere size of
monuments reflects a society’s confidence and sense of security.
Another point of his research is that in Armenia people are experiencing the
Armenian reality. And, objects that might hold great significance for
Diaspora are part of the normal environment in Armenia.
“They sell both rock pictures and cross stones copies, because they are on
their soil. We haven’t ever seen rocks and cross stones in Diaspora. We only
heard about them or saw in photos,” Varjapetian says. “For Diaspora,
Armenian history starts with (expulsion from Western Armenia). If we learn
our identity from materialistic objects, Diaspora learns through oral
history.”
Varjapetian moved to America 30 years ago. He says that both in Armenia and
Lebanon, Armenians are in safe surroundings and among many generations of
relatives. But when a Lebanese Armenian goes to America or France he loses
his confidence and sometimes becomes angry at his father’s authority, who
had to be his protector.
So, in Los Angeles, Lebanese-Armenian writers, Vahe Berberian and Ishkhan
Ginbashian in their works ridicule the fathers’ role and sometimes throw
them from their pedestals. So, too, Armenians who emigrated to Paris in the
1920s rebelled against the older generation and national values. (For
example, in Shahan Shahnuri’s novel “Retreat Without a Song” the Armenian
hero sees Narekatsi to be the reason of the nation’s collapse.)
In contrast, the ethnographer observes, native Armenians stick more closely
to traditional values and morals.
There is also a big difference in understanding of Genocide, Varajeptian
says.
“Everything that people (living in Armenia) don’t like they call ‘genocide’,”
Varajeptian says. He uses the displacement of residents for North Avenue
construction as example.
“So many people say to me, that my father was born here, so how I can live
in (the Yerevan district) Masiv? And they also say, ‘as Turks did, now our
Government does an eviction, and this is genocide’. But for Diaspora,
Genocide is a historical event”.
While native Armenians need no reminders of their place, many Diaspora –
especially third generation – need to go back to their roots for some
identity.
He gives an example of an American writer Mishlin Aharonian-Markomin, whose
mother is an Armenian. He is the author of books about Genocide.
“Mishlin’s grandmother was born in Kharberd and she told him about Genocide.
Once Mishlin said to a Turk from Kharberd, that his mother is also from
Kharberd and an eye-witness of Genocide. The Turk said that there was no
genocide. So the question rose: either the mother lies or the Turk. While
clarifying that question his identity will be created”.
Varjapetian has relatives in Armenia and says it is a rich resource for an
ethnographer. But he does not want to live here because, in general, he says
Armenia is a rude place.
“At Vernisage a book-seller sells books in a cover,” he says. “I want to
take the wrapper off to look and maybe then buy. But the seller doesn’t
allow, saying ‘Can’t you see it from the pocket. If not don’t buy.’ Or a
woman puts a telephone outside and wants 100 drams for a call. After calling
you give money, 150 drams, 50 you want back and she throws it into your
face. Little things add to each other and become things that you can not
stand.”
His wife, Silva Dakesian, an English editor, is mostly dissatisfied with the
people’s rudeness. “When I came first it was very nice, I was happy that we
understood each other,” she says. “But then I started to notice that
Armenian Armenians and Armenians from Diaspora do not understand each other.
People give very coarse answers. For example, once I went to the library to
look for a book and the librarian shouted rudely. Then as she knew that I am
not from Armenia, she became very polite. Or in the yard of an art gallery I
was looking at a statue of Lenin. A manager passed and I asked where the
head of Lenin is, he said somewhat rough, ‘Why the hell do you need it?'”
The couple’s children, 10-year old Arev and 8-year old Nur, attended a
school in Yerevan and the most important thing for them was learning the
Armenian language.
“Now I can speak with my parents in America in Armenian and nobody will
understand it,” says Arev.
But, like his mother, Arev isn’t pleased with what he found among Armenian
society. Especially, he was sad to see children mistreat animals.
“They hit cats with stones,” the boy says. “They put out the eyes of one cat
from our yard. If you take a cat from the street you must take good care of
it without harming.”
Meanwhile, his sister, Nur, says she feels sorry for so many beggars in
Armenia. And the little Lebanese-Armenian-American says it inspires her to
be like a certain African-American.
She says she will become a follower of Martin Luther King, and set the poor
free from being outcasts.

PM to Focus on 12 Bln Drams worth of Program Implentation

IMPLEMENTATION OF PROGRAMS OF 12 BLN DRAMS TO BE IN CENTER OF
ATTENTION OF RA PRIME MINISTER

YEREVAN, August 11 (Noyan Tapan). The process of the fulfillment of
the instructions given by RA Prime Minister Andranik Margarian during
the previous consultation within the framework of the application of
the RA law “On the Introduction of Amendments in the RA Law “On 2004
State Budget” was discussed during the August 10 consultation held at
the RA Prime Minister. According to the RA government’s press service,
during the June 16 consultation the RA Prime Minister mentioned that
the implementation of programs planned at the expense of 12 bln drams
and approved on the basis of the amendments proposed by the government
will be permanently in the center of the attention of the RA Prime
Minister. He especially stressed the importance of quick and
qualitative carrying out of all the work. The Ministers of
Agriculture, Transport and Communication, the Chairman of the State
Water Committee have already presented reports on the carried out
work. Estimating, in general, the presented results as satisfactory,
the RA Prime Minister gave instructions on the improvement of the
quality of some work on road construction and asphalting. The RA
Minister of Urban Development, the Yerevan Mayor and the Heads of the
regional administrations of the republic presented the process of the
work carried out at the expense of the above-mentioned 12 bln drams,
in particular, the work directed at the construction and overhaul of
the entities of education. According to these reports, the RA Ministry
of Urban Development mainly carries out the work on the holding of
tenders and on the conclusion of agreements in satisfactory rates: in
the regions and Yerevan, the Governor’s Offices of Armavir, Ararat,
Lori, Kotayk, Shirak, Vayots Dzor and Tavush. The Governors of
Armavir, Shirak and Vayots Dzor reported that the majority of work on
construction and overhaul of schools has already started in their
regions. It was mentioned that repeated tenders were announced for the
repairs of some buildings of schools. In the Shirak region it was
decided to start the construction of a new building of the school in
2005 instead of the unexpedient repairs of a school in the village of
Vardakar. The Yerevan Mayor’s Office, the regional administrations of
Syunik, Gegharkunik and Aragatsotn haven’t held tenders for
construction and repairs of schools yet. The official registration of
planning-estimate documents draws to an end here. During the period
under review the RA Prime Minister estimated their work as
satisfactory. Andranik Margarian instructed the heads of the
Ministries and Departments, as well as the Governors to pay more
attention to the process of the official registration of documents for
the holding of tenders, to the qualitative carrying out of the work in
the speeded up regime in order to put the education entities into
operation in set terms. The RA Prime Minister once again mentioned
that such consultations will be held periodically till the end of this
year with the purpose of consideration of the already carried out work
and the problems of the next stage.

BAKU: Opposition party to continue protests

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Aug 9 2004

Opposition party to continue protests

Baku, August 9, AssA-Irada
The Whole Azerbaijan Popular Front Party (WAPFP) will continue
protests against the participation of Armenian officers in NATO
training to be held in Baku this September.
The party plans to picket the Defense Ministry on Wednesday as well
as the US and French embassies in Baku – on Thursday and on Friday
respectively.
The WAPFP intends to hold ten protest actions outside some of the
ministries and the embassies of NATO member states by September. The
police prevented the party’s August 2 picket held outside the Foreign
Ministry 2.
The Mayoral Office of Baku has not sanctioned the WAPFP’s protest
actions.*

Les chretiens victimes de l’islamisation extreme en Irak

La Croix
3 août 2004

TERRORISME. Les chrétiens victimes de l’islamisation extrême en Irak.
Les attentats d’avant-hier commis par des extrémistes visaient les
chrétiens qui, depuis plusieurs mois, se sentent menacés en Irak. De
nombreuses familles ont déjà quitté le pays. BAGDAD, de notre
correspondant.

HAMON Jean-Philippe

Depuis quelque temps déjà, le P. Bachar Warda avait comme un vague
mauvais pressentiment. L’explosion d’une voiture piégée, deux
semaines auparavant, à quelques pas de son église Mar Eliya, avait
alerté ce prêtre chaldéen de Bagdad Jedida, quartier populaire au
nord-est de Bagdad. Certes l’attentat avait échoué, la charge s’étant
déclenchée inopinément avant que le véhicule n’atteigne sa cible.
Mais son trouble a sans doute sauvé quelques-uns de ses 150 fidèles,
réunis, avant-hier soir, pour le deuxième office dominical. · peine
renseigné sur deux premiers attentats perpétrés contre des églises
syriaques et arméniennes dans le centre de Bagdad, Bachar Warda a
immédiatement ordonné l’évacuation de l’assemblée, la mettant à
l’abri, derrière l’église. Trois minutes plus tard, à 19 h 05, une
énorme déflagration semait l’effroi dans la rue, balayait portes,
autel, et vitraux de l’édifice ; et endommageait aussi la mosquée
chiite, jouxtant l’église.

Hier matin, la confusion était encore perceptible. Une dizaine de
femmes, certaines réprimant mal leurs larmes, tentaient de remettre
un peu d’ordre à la confusion, avant la messe prévue pour
l’enterrement d’un jeune homme, tué dans l’explosion. Le P. Bachar,
quant à lui, recevait les témoignages de sympathie d’une multitude
d’anonymes, dont des religieux musulmans. Je m’attendais à ces
marques de fraternité de mes confrères, mais elles me touchent
néanmoins beaucoup , explique-t-il. Pour le prêtre, les cinq
attentats commis, quasi simultanément, contre des lieux de culte
chrétiens à Bagdad et Mossoul, participent d’une stratégie du chaos.

S’en prendre aux chrétiens, c’est l’assurance pour ceux qui
commettent ces atrocités d’avoir un maximum de publicité à travers le
monde dans leur combat contre les Américains. Mais cette carte ne
prendra pas. Il y a trop de respect entre les confessions, en tout
cas, au niveau hiérarchique. Bachar Warda s’attend, cependant, à des
jours difficiles. Ces attentats vont inciter un peu plus les
chrétiens à fuir l’Irak, déplore-t-il. En quatre mois, 57 familles de
ma paroisse sont parties. Tout sauf l’Irak, me disent ces personnes.
C’est un véritable drame. Les chrétiens sont, depuis quelques mois,
persécutés. Il n’y a pas d’autres mots lorsqu’on interdit à un père
de famille d’exercer son travail et donc de subvenir aux besoins des
siens.

Au cours des deux dernières semaines, le prêtre a enterré trois
personnes : un membre du conseil municipal de quartier, un vendeur
d’alcool et la jeune victime de l’attentat. En cause, l’insurrection
qui chasse les Irakiens, de toutes confessions, considérés comme
collaborateurs du nouveau régime, mais aussi une islamisation
rampante et extrême de la société irakienne. Deux phénomènes liés,
pour Linard Nouiya, dont le magasin de CD audio a été récemment
plastiqué à Bagdad Jedida. Les problèmes ont commencé après avril,
suite au siège de Falloudja et à l’insurrection chiite de Moktada Al
Sadr, explique-t-il. Aujourd’hui pratiquement tous les commerces
chrétiens sont fermés dans le quartier à la suite de menaces et
d’attaques à la bombe. D’abord les débits d’alcool, puis les salons
de coiffure, les vendeurs de cassettes audio et vidéo, les magasins
de lingerie féminine. Des commerces principalement tenus par des
chrétiens. Et maintenant, les barbiers sont menacés parce qu’ils ne
taillent pas la barbe selon les normes islamiques…

Les extrémistes de tous bords sont suspectés d’être à la source de
cette vague de terreur. Les Wahhabites, tenants d’un islam sunnite
rigoriste, mais surtout les partisans du leader chiite radical
Moktada Al Sader. Des jeunes gens, en majorité désoeuvrés, encouragés
par leurs religieux, lesquels ont récemment édicté une liste de
crimes passibles de la peine de mort, dont la vente d’alcool et de
cassettes pornographiques. L’oncle de Linard, Albert, a quant à lui
décidé de quitter le plus tôt possible le pays , dès qu’il aura vendu
tous ses meubles. Je vis en prison ici, assure ce technicien en
électricité au chômage. Pour protéger ma maison, j’ai acheté un
chien, un rideau métallique et des armes que je sais à peine
utiliser. Je ne veux pas que mes enfants grandissent dans ce climat.
Je pars en Syrie, en espérant m’envoler ensuite pour l’Australie.

Deux mille familles chrétiennes auraient ainsi déjà choisi la voie de
l’exil en deux mois, selon un recensement du Mouvement démocratique
assyrien (MDA), le principal parti politique chrétien d’Irak. Les
chrétiens sont les premières victimes de la faiblesse du nouvel Etat,
explique William Warda, porte-parole du MDA. Dans les situations
difficiles, les minorités souffrent toujours le plus parce qu’elles
ne peuvent pas se défendre. Et vient se greffer le rejet croissant
par les Irakiens de la présence américaine. Les extrémistes, mais
aussi les ignorants, font l’amalgame entre chrétiens irakiens et
Américains. Actuellement, nous ne pouvons nous contenter d’espérer
que le gouvernement parvienne à sécuriser le pays.

Hier, comme de coutume, à la sortie de la messe, le P. Bachar Warda
s’est entretenu avec ses paroissiens. Le sujet reste toujours le même
: le départ pour l’étranger. Mon rôle est de leur conseiller la
patience. Mais mes propos sont vains pour ces gens simples qui
troqueraient volontiers la liberté d’aujourd’hui contre la
sécurisante dictature du temps de Saddam Hussein !

JEAN-PHILIPPE HAMON

Sur

Participez au forum sur l’Irak.

Inquiétude au Vatican

Dans un télégramme envoyé au patriarche chaldéen Emmanuel III Delly,
Jean-Paul II s’est déclaré profondément frappé par ces attaques
contre des communautés catholiques réunies dans la prière, et sans
aucun respect pour des lieux de culte . Le Pape déplore vivement les
agressions injustes à l’égard de ceux qui ne cherchent qu’à
collaborer pour la paix et la réconciliation de l’Irak , a ajouté
dans un communiqué le P. Ciro Benedettini, vice-directeur de la salle
de presse du Saint-Siège.

Le cardinal Roger Etchegaray, envoyé du Pape Jean-Paul II pour les
missions politiquement les plus difficiles, s’est déclaré bouleversé
dans un entretien accordé au quotidien italien La Repubblica, d’hier
: Ce sont des nouvelles fort tristes, pas seulement pour l’Eglise,
affirme-t-il, mais pour l’humanité tout entière (…), car c’est une
liberté fondamentale qui est touchée, la liberté religieuse.

www.La-Croix.com

Primate performs last anointing on Bishop Bagdasian

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

August 3, 2004
___________________

CLERGY, PARISHIONERS GATHER TO HONOR LATE BISHOP

Funeral services were held for the late Bishop Houssig Bagdasian on
Monday, August 2, 2004, at the St. Mary Church of Livingston, NJ. The
church, where Bishop Bagdasian served as pastor for many years, was
filled with clergymen, family of the bishop, and parishioners.

Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese of the Armenian
Church of America (Eastern), presided over the service, during which
Bishop Vicken Aykazian celebrated the Divine Liturgy.

The Primate read a message from His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme
Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, in which he expressed his
condolences for the loss and prayed for the eternal rest of Bishop
Bagdasian, the first Armenian-born bishop of the Armenian Church.

Following the badarak, the mourners attended a hokejash, served by the
parish’s Women’s Guild chapter.

Bishop Bagdasian was buried in his hometown of Providence, RI, on
Tuesday, August 3, 2004.

What follows is the eulogy delivered by the Primate during the funeral
service.

* * *

Truly, truly, I say to you,
unless a grain of wheat
falls into the earth and dies,
it remains alone; but if it
dies, it bears much fruit.
John 12:24

These words of our Lord are not only true in a literal sense, but also
when they are applied to all circumstances. Human life itself bears
testimony to this. It began with God breathing life into the nostrils
of the first man that He formed out of dust, and gave man the mystical
gift of regenerating the human race with the seed of his loins.
Similarly, behind every great and positive accomplishment in life there
is a grain of wheat, that sparkles in the human mind in the form of an
idea or a dream. If the grain is sown in fertile soil, in time it buds,
blossoms and bears much fruit.

Bishop Houssig’s example, from his childhood to his demise, reminds us
of our Lord’s parable on the grain of wheat. His entire life was
devoted to serving our church and our people. As a pastor, his flock
always held a special place in his heart. He left his mark by planting
the seeds of leadership in people who lead our church today, and in
others who will lead it in coming years.

Born on American soil in the city of Providence, Rhode Island, this
grain of wheat budded in the Sts. Sahag and Mesrob Church of the same
city. He attended the parish schools and began serving in the church as
a choir member and altar boy. This tells us something about the wisdom
and importance of exposing our young boys and girls to our liturgy,
traditions and parish life from the very beginning. Some will hear the
calling from above, while others, who are not given that gift, will
spend their lives in the spiritual sphere of the church, practicing
their faith.

Bishop Houssig was one of those youth who received the calling from
above and hearkened to the Divine voice that led him to Jerusalem, the
center of the Christian faith. There for four years he tolerated the
rigors of seminary life, which were very different than the life he knew
in his parents’ home in Providence. Finally, the grain of wheat that
had budded in Providence and had been transferred to the fertile soil of
the St. James Monastery bloomed, as he was ordained a celibate priest
and accepted into the brotherhood of St. James.

Instead of returning to the United States after his ordination, Bishop
Houssig stayed in Jerusalem and held several responsible positions in
the monastery. As a member of the St. James Brotherhood, he was deeply
involved in guarding the rights of the Armenian Church at the Dominical
sites. This was a great service to our church, since our holdings in
the Holy Land and our custodianship over the central sites of
Christianity make our church and people visible in the international
world. Bishop Houssig was at various times responsible for the
properties of the Armenian Patriarchate. In 1960 he was appointed
Patriarchal Vicar of Israel, and was responsible for the Armenian
community in Israel as well as for the properties of the Armenian
Patriarchate on the Israeli side of the border. During his 11 years of
service in the Holy Land, Bishop Bagdasian helped renovate several
Armenian churches, including St. Nicholas in Jaffa, St. Elijah in Haifa,
and St. Krikor Loosavorich in Jerusalem. In accordance with the words
of the Prophet Isaiah, “[Blessed] is he that has a child in Sion and
household friends in Jerusalem [Isaiah 31:9]”, our entire Diocese and
Bishop Houssig’s family were blessed that an American-born Armenian
priest played such an important role in the Holy Land.

Returning to the United States in 1971, Bishop Houssig was assigned to
the St. Mary Church, then in Irvington, NJ. He led the church in its
move to Livingston in 1974. After the church was destroyed by fire in
1980, Bishop Bagdasian’s leadership was key in helping the parish
faithful pull together to rebuild the church, which was consecrated in
March 1982.

His service to the Diocese was not limited to the St. Mary parish. He
was appointed Vicar General of the Diocese, headed the Diocesan Finance
Committee, and served on several other committees. He had also been a
member of the Diocesan Council. For a short while he was the chancellor
of the Diocesan Center. And he was dedicated to the Armenian homeland,
leading a group of 26 ACYOA members to the region devastated by the 1988
earthquake to help with reconstruction.

In 1991 the General Assembly of the Brotherhood of St. James elected
Bishop Houssig as a member of the Executive Council of the Patriarchate.
He accepted, and returned to Jerusalem. At the request of the Patriarch
and the Brotherhood, he was consecrated a bishop in 1992 by the hand of
Catholicos Vasken I. Through his consecration he became the first
American-born bishop of the Armenian Church. For over five years, the
bishop was in charge of all the properties of the Patriarchate.

Bishop Houssig was a great leader, a dedicated pastor, and above all
else, a kind friend to so many. His dedication to the faith he was
called to serve was strong, as was his love for his flock. He will
surely be missed in Livingston, throughout the Diocese, and in the
worldwide Armenian Church family.

Tomorrow he will be buried in the bosom of the land where he was born.
I pray that his remains, which we consecrated earlier, will be a source
of blessing and inspiration to us all and particularly to the young
generation. May the Lord sow many grains of wheat in the fertile soil
of His church, and may those grains bud and blossom, so that we have
others who will follow Bishop Houssig’s footsteps.

— 8/3/04

www.armenianchurch.org

Last-minute ante helps freshman

Los Angeles Daily News, CA
Aug 2 2004

Last-minute ante helps freshman

By Naush Boghossian
Staff Writer

GLENDALE — After years of studying, earning good grades and taking
advanced placement classes, Veronika Barsegyan got what she had been
hoping for: a big, fat letter of acceptance from UCLA.

It was followed, however, by another letter — this one explaining
that, because of funding shortages, she’d have to wait two years
before starting at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Disappointed, the 18-year-old Glendale resident enrolled in classes
at Glendale Community College.

But wait.

Barsegyan is now headed back to UCLA — the result of last week’s
state budget vote that directed $33 million back to University of
California and California State University campuses.

“I’d be more understanding if they said they couldn’t accept me
because my SAT scores weren’t high enough or my grades weren’t good
enough,” Barsegyan said. “But after you worked that hard, they tell
you you’re in, but you’re not in. And it’s hard to explain to
everyone who asks, ‘Where are you going to school?”‘

About 7,000 UC and Cal State applicants who had been redirected to
community colleges — with the understanding that they would be
guaranteed transfers to their chosen schools if they kept up their
grades — will again be offered positions at the schools.

Glendale Community College had 22 students who had indicated they
were interested in joining the guaranteed transfer program, and
Pasadena City College, 66.

“The reality is that these students had qualified by grade and by SAT
scores and … they had to redirect them despite having done
everything necessary to be admitted,” said Sen. Jack Scott,
D-Pasadena, chairman of the budget subcommittee on education that had
fought against the higher education cuts.

“We can’t deny dreams and the kind of values and upward mobility that
education gives people.”

Barsegyan — unlike the 80 percent of students who, when offered UC
redirecting, turned it down to attend other schools — chose not to
attend the private Loyola Marymount University at about $25,000 a
year because she didn’t want to go into debt.

She had already immersed herself in classes at Glendale College,
finishing summer school Thursday and planning to take classes in the
fall. Her goal was to finish up community college in one year.

“It was a dream of mine to go to UCLA, and I was kind of
disappointed. I was trying to hurry up and get there,” she said,
laughing. “It wasn’t like ‘Bummer, I’m going to GCC,’ but now I’m
really excited because it’s a completely different atmosphere there,
to experience the UCLA life.”

Barsegyan, who graduated from Rose and Alex Pilibos Armenian School
with a 3.9 grade point average and scored 1260 on her SATs, plans to
study political science and eventually apply to law school.

Her father, Apet, who had been closely monitoring the state budget
discussions, said he’s pleased that his daughter will attend the
university she was qualified to attend.

The family moved from Armenia to the United States 15 years ago, and
his children grew up knowing that education was the No. 1 priority.

“One of the goals for human beings is to lead a better life and
provide better living conditions for your children,” Apet Barsegyan
said. “In this case … even though the decision was made to cut the
financial budget to schools, people stood up to reverse it. That’s
what makes this a great country.”

Hairikian: Members of This Government are Remnants of Bolsheviks

MEMBERS OF THIS GOVERNMENT ARE REMNANTS OF BOLSHEVIKS, STATES PARUIR
HAIRIKIAN

YEREVAN, July 30 (Noyan Tapan). Steps undertaken against the Union for
National Self-Determination, i.e. the removal of the offices in
Vanadzor, Gyumri, Echmiadzin, and now the central office of the party
from buildings belonging to them, show that members of this government
are the remnants of Bolsheviks and don’t have connection with the
Armenian people, said Paruir Hairikian, the Chairman of the Union for
National Self-Determination, during the July 30 press conference.

Hairikian presented the collection of documents of 1988 about
releasing him from criminal responsibility, depriving him from
citizenship of the USSR and exile from the USSR’s borders. “Today is
the continuation of the past and the ground of the future,” stressed
the Chairman of the party.

BAKU: Azeri pressure group members to stand trial on 9 August

Azeri pressure group members to stand trial on 9 August

MPA news agency
27 Jul 04

BAKU

Baku’s Nasimi district court chaired by [judge] Famil Nasibov held
preliminary hearings into the case of six members of the Karabakh
Liberation Movement [KLO] today (27 July). The six men were arrested
for staging protests against Armenian officers’ participation in a
NATO conference in Baku on 22 June.

The court heard out the parties’ positions and rejected two petitions
by the defence.

The first petition was to change the preventive punishment and the
second to call new witnesses and use new materials. In particular,
lawyer Elcin Qambarov asked the court to take into account video
footage featuring police violence against the protesters which was
filmed by the ANS TV company and to call the deputy chief of the
Yasamal district police department, Cingiz Mammadov, to testify. The
judge did not consider it necessary to call additional witnesses. The
trial is set for 9 August. Qambarov said he will keep trying to get
new witnesses to be called and new materials to be used.

Armenia’s FM Meets With Thai MPs

ARMENIA’S FM MEETS WITH THAI MPs

YEREVAN, JULY 23. ARMINFO. Armenia’s Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan
met today with members of the Thailand-Armenian friendship group of
the Thai parliament.

The sides discussed the prospects and the ways of development of
Armenian-Thai parliamentary ties as well as the practical aspect of
Armenian-Thai cooperation. Oskanyan said that the visit will give a
new quality to Armenian-Thai friendly relations.

Delegation to learn Karabakh conflict history & its consequences

ArmenPress
July 23 2004

DELEGATION TO LEARN KARABAGH CONFLICT HISTORY AND ITS CONSEQUENCES

YEREVAN, JULY 23, ARMENPRESS: Foreign minister Vartan Oskanian
received July 22 a joint delegation of the German Marshall Fund (GMF)
of the U.S and Project on Transitional Democracies (PTD). The
Armenian foreign affairs ministry said the delegation has arrived
here to examine the Nagorno Karabagh conflict history and its
consequences and to learn the positions of Armenia and Karabagh on
how it should be resolved through a series of meetings and
discussions.
The delegation’s visit is within the frameworks of GMF and PTD
Project on the Resolution of Europe’s Frozen Conflicts. One of its
goals is to inform leading experts and decision-makers in Washington
and NATO on the Karabagh conflict, encouraging interested governments
to show assistance for its resolution.
The delegation members were received the same day by Armenian
president and deputy defense minister. Today they are leaving for
Karabagh on a one-day visit to meet with its authorities. After
wrapping up the visit the delegation members will present their
findings to senior officials and lawmakers in Washington.