The kids are all right

THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT
by Christopher Hutsul, Toronto Star

The Toronto Star, Canada
August 14, 2005 Sunday

Sako Ghanaghounian saunters through Kensington Market with his chin up,
a good 15 paces ahead of his mom and dad. En route from his home on
Kensington Ave. to daycare on Bellevue Ave. on a hot summer morning,
the five-year-old greets his friends with the grace of a nobleman. They
all know his name.

“Buenos dias, Tony,” says Sako without stopping.

“Buenos dias, Sako,” responds the fruit vendor, jostling pineapples.

Heading northbound, Sako sidesteps two drunks outside a bar, presses
his face against the window of the butcher shop, waves at Rita, then
steps into the bakery for his usual morning snack – a spinach bagel.

He breezes through waves of fish smell, tromping with sandalled feet
on sidewalks slick with brown stuff leaking from garbage bags and the
occasional oily mash of errant vegetables. He plunks himself down at
Louie’s coffee shop, where Ozzie pours him a tall cup of tap water,
just as he does every morning.

The children who grow up here, the princes and princesses of
Kensington, the market rats, experience a childhood as unique as the
market itself.

What was once a Jewish market, a place to buy poultry and dry goods,
has become a melee of cultures and lifestyles. The pioneers of this
place were the owners of the trendy T-shirt shops, hipster furniture
stores and punk-rock watering holes. Now artists and hippies share
the sidewalks with bullhorn-wielding socialists and teenaged bargain
hunters. This is a village where rich and poor, chic and crazy,
young and old, bump bumpers and bike wheels, finding, miraculously,
a way to get along.

Sako, for instance, was there when market residents and vendors
protested the opening of a Nike-owned store on Augusta Ave. a few
years ago. Residents believed the store’s presence compromised the
independent spirit of the market, and took issue with the company’s
questionable labour practices. Sako was too young to know what was
going on, but his mother, sociologist Mai Phan, wanted to immerse
him in the spirit of activism that flavours market life.

There are other eclectic neighbourhoods in the city, to be sure,
but none could claim to be quite as socially and culturally diverse
as Kensington – especially by day, when merchants from a variety of
backgrounds take to their stores in a community already rich with
Portuguese, Chinese and Vietnamese residents. The Danforth, Chinatown
and Little Italy – all vibrant neighbourhoods – are ethnic cliques
by comparison. Kensington Market, nestled between busy streets,
is emblematic of Canada’s vision of a cultural mosaic.

Love it or hate it, the market captures our imagination, and occupies
a sense of Toronto folklore, past and present. In her novel The Way
the Crow Flies, Ann-Marie MacDonald describes Kensington Market as
experienced by a child.

“The sights and the sounds envelop her, she is comforted by the
ramshackle opulence of it all,” writes MacDonald. “Feathers lilt up
with the breeze of passing feet, narrow streets are gridlocked with
cars at the mercy of pedestrians as disregarding as pigeons. Madeline
looks up; buds are on the trees and the thousand market smells have
begun to blossom too in the warmth of the April noon…”

The market, as described here, is not the cleanest place to raise
a child. In fact, it’s filthy. It isn’t the most restful either.
Rather, it’s hectic day and night and the air is filled with hoots
and honking. It probably isn’t even the safest place. There’s crack
cocaine and petty theft and heavy street traffic.

It would be no place for a child – if not for the colour, the energy,
the art and the diversity.

I spent some time with people who grew up here or who raise children
here to gain an understanding of what the world looks like when home
is Toronto’s famous Kensington Market.

Michele Gould and her daughter, Maizy, couldn’t have picked a worse
time to move into the market. In the days of Toronto’s infamous
garbage strike the market was at its rankest.

Maizy’s folks had moved into the market in 2002 not because they
loved it, but because it made good business sense. Maizy’s dad had
just opened a hair salon on St. Patrick St. and figured if rent
got too steep, he could move the salon into the main floor of their
Kensington Ave. home.

Early on, when Maizy was a baby, it seemed like a mistake.

“When I first moved here, I asked Paul, ‘Why did you drag me to the
armpit of Toronto?'” says Michele. “The whole place (stank).”

But the garbage strike ended, Maizy grew up, and Michele became
acquainted with the merchants. The guys at Casa Acoreana always snuck
Maizy a cookie, and Tony at the fruit market always greeted her with
a shiny apple. Michele’s trepidation melted away. She began to get
the feeling that people were looking out for her family. It reminded
her of the small Newfoundland town she’d grown up in.

“It started to sink in slowly. Little things … like how every Friday
my neighbours and I would gather on our porch for a barbecue to make
as much noise as we could because we had to rival the noise coming
from the Last Temptation,” a local bar, she says laughing. “I think
it’s really cool.”

So does Maizy. The rambunctious little four-year-old kid with an
untameable head of blonde hair lives in a community of artists and
therefore sees the world as a place for expression. For role models
Maizy has to go no farther than Rain, who lives on the ground floor.
Twentysomething Rain, eternally stylish, is an interpretive dancer,
visual artist and fixture at the city’s coolest art parties. Among
other things, she makes small doughnuts out of fabric. She’s idolized
by young Maizy.

“Whenever Maizy plays dress-up, she runs down to Rain’s apartment,”
says Michele. “She wants to show off her outfit.”

And there’s no shortage of other kids to hang out with. There’s
Sako next door, and Molly across the street. Up the way lives Jason,
the rugged tyke whose parents run a fruit shop.

“He’s kind of the street boss,” laughs Michele.

Next year, Maizy will have to venture outside the market. She’s
enrolled in school that has a French immersion program. There’s a
chance they could move.

“I ran the idea of selling the house by her, and she was freaking out,”
says Michele. “She loves it here and never wants to leave.”

That makes Michele uncomfortable. She knows her daughter feels safe
and loved in this neighbourhood, but would hate for it to become a
crutch. “I see some of the kids who have grown up in the market and
never left. So I wonder sometimes if Kensington kids become Kensington
adults. I wonder if it’s actually opening doors or closing them.”

Seth Scriver – a man known better in some circles simply as Seth –
graduated from Kensington kid to Kensington adult when he returned
from a stint at art school in Halifax a couple of years ago. Today,
the 27-year-old lives across the street from his childhood home.

The decision to settle here doesn’t seem to have closed doors for
Scriver. He is a celebrated artist and illustrator, and a sock-puppet
maker. In his drawings and paintings, hairy critters, bulbous monsters
and googly-eyed amoeba frolic in sparse landscapes. This is what you
might draw after spending your life in the midst of the characters who
roam the streets of Kensington. A suited white man is more likely to
turn heads here than squeegee kids with foot-high Mohawks, dreadlocked,
and the caped guy who looks like Gandalf The Grey.

“I was definitely influenced by the people walking around in the
market and the people who came into my parents’ store,” says Seth,
who is friendly and soft-spoken.

Like other kids here, Seth spent his summers in the eighties helping
out in his parents’ store, in his case, the vintage shop Courage My
Love. It wasn’t child labour, just part of his daily chores.

He roamed free in the market with his older sister. They busked at the
corner of Baldwin St. and Kensington Ave., and spent their earnings
on plantain cakes from a Jamaican shop. They played baseball in the
alleyways, mostly with Chinese kids. Seth didn’t actually realize
that he wasn’t Chinese until he was older.

He remembers seeing more animals in the area back then: chickens,
rabbits and other live things for sale.

Plus, there were musicians, painters and craftsmen from around the
world. There was also graffiti.

“I grew up with graffiti all around me and I just thought it was a part
of everyday life, so one day, I just started adding my own,” says Seth.

The graffiti led to drawing and painting, and, eventually, a blossoming
career.

“If I’d lived anywhere else, I don’t think I would have been the same
artist,” he smiles.

For a young Oswald Pavao, the world was split in two. There was
Kensington Market, and everything outside Kensington Market.

Pavao takes a break from his office – the espresso kiosk at the
corner of Augusta and Baldwin – to reflect on a childhood that began
in Portugal, and unfolded in the heart of the market in the late ’60s.

He was 2 when his family left Portugal. They gravitated to Kensington
Market, where they established Casa Acoreana, which has become a
staple of the market, famous for its coffee, bulk candy and spices.
While his parents tended the shop, Pavao explored.

“I tried all the food,” he laughs. “My favourite were the potato
latkes. I couldn’t get enough of those. And the debrezini sausages,
I’d never have that back home.”

The story of his arrival to Kensington from a foreign land is a common
one. After the original Jewish community that established the market in
the early 1900s began to gravitate north in the ’50s, the area became
a kind of ethnic revolving door, accommodating immigrants – Italians,
Ukrainians, Portuguese, Vietnamese and people from Caribbean nations
– as they arrived in waves from their homelands. Today, the market’s
diversity reflects the various cultures that have made their way here
since the mid-century.

But none of that mattered to a young Pavao, who saw the market as a
playground. His mother knew that at any given time, he’d be playing
floor hockey at St. Christopher House, or a game called “Hot Beans”
in the park. (The game required a player to chase his opponents,
attempting to whip them in the pants with a previously hidden belt
before they reached a safety zone). At Christmas, he and his buddies
went door to door collecting canned goods for the food bank. He
did these things with children from a range of ethnic backgrounds –
Chinese, Jewish, black – never knowing that racism existed.

“Everybody treated everybody with respect,” says Pavao. “To see that at
a young age makes you colour-blind. You could try to tell a kid that
grows up there that there’s a difference, and he won’t see it because
he’s colour-blind. This is peaceful. This is like heaven on earth.”

Pavao realized at some point that the diversity and openness he
experienced in his day-to-day life didn’t always extend beyond the
borders of the market.

“We didn’t have an image that we had to live up to,” he says. “You
didn’t have to be a certain way or act a certain way. We could just
say, hey this is who I am. You don’t like the way I dress, that’s
fine, that’s your problem. “It’s just a different atmosphere out in
the real world. Out there, sometimes you go to say hi to someone in
the morning and they look like they’re going to punch your eyes out.
Or I’d hear the N-word, and I’d think, give it a rest. Those are
things that I don’t see here.”

Scott Schieman, a professor of sociology at University of Toronto,
would agree.

“Kids who grow up here would be more tolerant because of the exposure
to diversity,” says Schieman, “and because they’re used to sharing
space with all different types of people.”

Though the market has Jewish roots, it’s taken the form of a kind of
culinary United Nations in recent years. Cultures ranging from Lebanese
to Ethiopian to Mexican to Vietnamese to Armenian are represented here.

Schieman lives near the market, but not in it. He studies
neighbourhoods and their effect on people’s well-being. He says the
market is a vibrant, stimulating place to grow up. Schieman says
the market is also unique in its physical structure and economics.
Whereas other busy parts of town, like the Beaches or Annex, have
busy thoroughfares (Queen St. E., Bloor St.) as their focal points,
Kensington Market is a network of narrow streets, tucked away from
the thoroughfare. All of which gives the impression of a village.

It’s the energy in the streets that makes the market special, says
Schieman. People are less private here. They spill out of their tiny
homes, let life unfold on the streets.

“Sociologists have for a long time been interested in the way a
city’s composition and structure influence the quality of the social
relationships. And it always comes back to, when people are out on
streets, they’re connecting with other people …”

Schieman believes the market’s cultural climate has allowed independent
businesses to flourish, which has led to tight bonds and a heightened
sense of community.

“Rather than going into a Wal-Mart where people don’t know you,
you’re making ties with neighbours and friends, establishing bonds,”
says Schieman.

Despite the blissfulness of Maizy’s childhood and that of her friends,
this neighbourhood is hardly problem-free. Kensington Market is a
gritty place. Fatima Alves, who has worked with kids in the market
over the past 30 years, has seen it all.

It’s naptime in the day care room at St. Stephens Community Centre,
so Alves speaks softly. She doesn’t want to rouse the resting children.

Leafing through a book of old photographs, she leans over to show
me the black-and-white picture of a small fruit shack. “This was my
uncle’s store,” she tells me. “I used to love coming to the market
to visit him. I always felt special here.”

As the child-care director for the centre, Alves has worked with
generations of children, and says the market offers both challenges
and rewards. “These children have a neighbourhood focus … and they
have street smarts.”

Street smarts are important for children here.

It isn’t a place to roam free. Alves stopped taking the kids to tiny
Sonya Park – which is more of a narrow indentation between homes than
a green space – on Oxford St two years ago because there were too many
drunks sprawled out on the playground equipment. You couldn’t play
there without bumping into a homeless person. Now they visit Bellevue
Park, which is larger, but still a gathering spot for homeless people,
squeegee kids and drunks.

“We find it’s hard to get the park sometimes,” says Alves. “It belongs
to everyone, not just us, so a lot of things go on that we’re not
crazy about. There have been some times that we’ve had to leave
earlier than we wanted to.”

These challenges aren’t restricted to the park. One time, they
spotted a man who appeared to be mentally ill outside the day care,
masturbating on a bench. They put a flowerpot in the window to obscure
the view.

“It’s such a diverse neighbourhood that occasionally you get weird
things happening,” says Alves. “But you can’t get too uptight
about it.”

“This is the focal point of the market,” says Toronto Police Sgt.
Daryle Gerry, hopping off his patrol bicycle in Bellevue Park. “You
get all different groups in here. You get children playing, homeless
people hanging out in the corner drinking wine. You get artists,
musicians, people smoking pot …”

Just as he says this, a shirtless, bearded man across the park starts
hollering obscenities at no one in particular. Gerry excuses himself
to tend to the man.

“You get some guys like that,” says Gerry, upon returning from an
attempt to pacify the man. “He obviously has mental problems.”

Gerry has been patrolling the area for five years. He’s says there’s
been a drop in the presence of crack cocaine in the area since they
shut down a crack house a few months ago. Save for petty theft,
there’s little crime in the area. He says it’s a safe place to live,
as long as you don’t mind the odd encounter with characters like the
yeller – not to mention the scent of marijuana.

“Sometimes you have to put up with foul language and criminal activity
in the park, but I’d say it’s a safe place. It has its moments,
just like any other place.”

At 4, Sako has already seen so much – the beauty of cultural diversity
and art, and the struggles of homelessness and mental illness. It’s
all on display in the market, and all a mother can do is try her best
to explain what these things are as they arise.

“I don’t think I could have been as good a mother in another
environment,” says Mai Phan, Sako’s mother, sitting on her front stoop,
which the family shares with a vintage clothes store. “The market
provides an opportunity to teach Sako about life and different kinds
of people … and how to avoid certain things without being scared
of them.

“You can talk to a child about drugs or crazy people or homelessness,
but if you talk about it abstractly, if it’s something they don’t see,
they’re going to be afraid of it.

“If they see it with their own eyes, they’re less fearful – it’s less
intimidating. You can talk about those things honestly.”

Maizy’s mother, Michele, feels the market works both ways. “She gets
tons and tons of love from lots of people, but I sometimes worry that
she’s seeing too much. I’ve seen people doing crack behind the house.
It bothers me, but at the same time, that’s just life. There’s a
balance. I know that people around me care for Maizy and look out
for her, and not every neighbourhood is like that.”

Mai knows when Sako is older, he will face a world outside the market
that’s tenser, more homogenized and less colourful.

“If this is his first reference point, then the suburban lifestyle
will be an eye-opener for him,” says Mai, who grew up in Etobicoke.
“For those of us who didn’t grow up here, this is novel. But for them,
this is normal.

“I’m confident this is the best place we could could have found for
Sako to get him started. Anywhere we go from now, he has that strong
foundation, he could adapt to anywhere. He won’t be afraid of people
or new situations, he likes trying knew things … It has a lot to
do with the fact that we have lived here.”

On an early evening stroll to the ice cream shop, Sako delivers his
final round of hellos to the merchants of his neighbourhood. They’re
closing shop, sweeping the sidewalks, and drawing the shutters.

“Buenos dias, Tony,” says Sako to the fruit vendor.

“No, Sako,” says Tony. “It’s buenas noches. That means good evening.”

For the prince of this village, it’s a good evening indeed.

Kensington “You can talk to a child about drugs or crazy people
or homelessness. If they see it with their own eyes, they’re less
fearful.”

– Sako’s mother, Mai Phan

Kensington “I’m confident this is the best place we could have found
for Sako to get him started.”

Mai Phan, Sako’s mom

Montreal: CYMA Participants in the Republic of ARTSAKH

PRESS OFFICE
Armenian Holy Apostolic Church Canadian Diocese
Contact; Deacon Hagop Arslanian, Assistant to the Primate
615 Stuart Avenue, Outremont Quebec H2V 3H2
Tel; 514-276-9479, Fax; 514-276-9960
Email; [email protected]
Website;
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *

CYMA Participants in the Republic of ARTSAKH

It is with immense spiritual joy that we inform our faithful that CYMA
2005 participants are doing well in Armenia and continuing their
mission, rebuilding a ruined Church in the village of Atarbekian, in
the vicinity of Etchmiadzin. The ruined Saint Asdvadzadzin -Holy
Mother of God- was built in 1876. CYMA 2005 participants organize
daily camp for about 60 children from the village of Aratashen. From
August 29 through September 2, 2005 CYMA participants visited the
Republic of ARTSAKH. On their way to Nakorno-Karabagh they visited
Khor Virap, Jermuk and Noravank.

His Eminence Archbishop Bargev Martirossian, Primate of the Diocese pf
Artsakh greeted and welcomed the youth in karabagh. Our primate, His
Eminence Bishop Bagrat Galstanian thanked Abp Martirossian for
receiving and encouraging the youth. The CYMA participants also had
the chance to visit the parliament building and meet His Excellency
Ashot Ghulyan, the President of the Parliament. In Gantsasar Serpazan
Galstanian officiated over the baptismal service of Raffi Numan, one
of the CYMA 2005 participants from Calgary. The youth also visited
Shoushi, Stepanakert, Askeran, Ghochalou and Akhtam. On their way back
to Armenia the visited the Shake Falls.

Next week, they will pay tribute to the victims of the war od Nakorno
Karabagh 1991-1994 visiting Yerablour. On Monday morning, they will
visit the Madenataran and the Nork Hayortats Doun.

* * *

High-ranking Canadian Clergy Accept Invitation for Talks with
Catholicos of All Armenians in Armenia

For the first time ever, a delegation of four Canadian ecumenical
leaders, led by the Primate of the Canadian Diocese of the Armenian
Apostolic Orthodox Church, will discuss challenges facing Christian
churches in Canada with His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and
Catholicos of All Armenians at the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin in
Armenia this month.

By invitation of His Holiness Karekin II,

His Eminence Archbishop Andrew Hutchison,
Primate of the Anglican National Church of Canada

His Eminence Metropolitan Archbishop Sotirios,
Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Canada

His Eminence Archbishop Brendan O’Brien,
President of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops

Prof. Dr. Richard Schneider,
President of the Canadian Council of Churches

will travel to Armenia Aug. 24 with His Eminence Bishop Bagrat
Galstanian, Primate of the Canadian Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic
Orthodox Church, where for one week, they will discuss future
prospects of the role and mission of Christian churches and
cooperation between the Eastern and Western churches with the Armenian
Catholicos. They will also have the opportunity to visit with
government officials of Armenia. The unprecedented initiative to bring
Canadian church leaders to Armenia was undertaken by His Eminence
Bishop Galstanian and his assistant Deacon Hagop Arslanian.

The Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin is the pre-eminent center of
authority in the worldwide Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church.
Located near Yerevan, the capital city of the Republic of Armenia, it
includes The Mother Cathedral of the entire Armenian Church, the
residence of the Catholicos, a monastery, the Gevorgian Theological
Seminary and a museum that houses the religious artifacts and
treasures of the Armenian Church.

The Cathedral dates to the 4th century, and is considered to be the
oldest Christian cathedral in the world. In its capacity as the
residence of the Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians,
the Pontiff of the Armenian Church, Holy Etchmiadzin is known as the
“Catholicate of All Armenians.” Holy Etchmiadzin became the seat of
the Catholicate of the entire Armenian nation in the 4th century,
following the conversion of King Tiridates III to Christianity by
St. Gregory the Illuminator in AD 301.

This historic pilgrimage date was chosen to coincide with celebrations
commemorating the 1600th anniversary of the invention of the Armenian
alphabet, which takes place Aug. 24 to Sept. 1, 2005. The trip will
provide an opportunity to the delegation to participate in the
anniversary. The delegation returns to Canada Sept. 1.

In preparation for this noteworthy visit to the Mother See of Holy
Etchmiadzin, Canadian church leaders have been meeting since September
2004.

* * *

Join the Diocesan Summer Camp “An Experience to Remember”

We are pleased to offer this wonderful overnight camp, August 8 – 13,
2005 at Echo Lake, Frontenac County (approximately 50 km NW of
Kingston, Ontario.) This is a Christian-based facility consisting of
several acres of wooded property, together with sandy beach for
relaxing and swimming, a fireside area overlooking the lake and sports
fields.

Come enjoy our overnight summer youth program (open to children 8 to
14 years old), consisting of land and water sports activities, arts
and crafts, music and religious education, and wonderful snacks and
home cooked meals prepared by our In-house Chef. Our new Counsellor in
Training (CIT) program provides an opportunity for young adults (15-17
years old) to develop leadership skills and friendships in the context
of Christian camping. Our capable, trained staff of counsellors and
staff are sure to make the children’s experience a safe, fun and
memorable one.

Here are some stats about 2005 Campers & CIT’s as of today. We have 9
CIT’s and 86 campers registered. The following numbers are Campers &
CIT’s combined: from Ontario (excluding Ottawa) – 69, Quebec & Ottawa
– 23, Vancouver, B.C. – 3 (so far) There are 54 boys & 41girls, 8 to
10 yrs old – 36 campers, 11 to 14 yrs olds – 50 campers, 15 to 18 yr
olds – 9 CIT’s

Campers come from the following cities – Ajax, Markham, Mississauga,
Scarborough/Toronto/North York, Ottawa. Laval, Montreal, Pickering,
Richmond Hill, Thornhill, St Catherines, Whitby, Woodbridge,
Vancouver, Oakville.

www.armenianchurch.ca

Azeri pro-government parties demand closure of opposition party

Azeri pro-government parties demand closure of opposition party

Turan news agency
7 Aug 05

BAKU

The People’s Front of Azerbaijan Party [PFAP] must be closed due to
funding from foreign sources, this was the keynote of speeches made by
MPs from pro-government parties at the headquarters of the New
Azerbaijan Party today.

“Our fears that a number of opposition parties are funded by foreign
sources have been confirmed. After the broadcasting of the video
report in which Ali Karimli’s close associate received handouts from
the Armenian special services, this became indisputable,” the
executive secretary of the ruling party, Ali Ahmadov, said.

He described as dangerous the fact that the opposition is being
financed by certain circles of foreign states because in return, they
want them to be involved in activities against the state. He said that
this probably happened in the past as well, otherwise, where do
opposition parties get “luxurious offices, cars and telephones” from,
Ahmadov said.

The deputy speaker of parliament, Ziyafat Asgarov, was franker. He
called the leader of the PFAP, Ali Karimli, “the main organizer of the
crime”. “The PFAP’s ideology is the overthrow of constitutional order
in Azerbaijan. For this reason, this party must be closed. And there
is no need to pay heed to international reaction,” Asgarov said with
courage.

MP Eldar Ibrahimli urged the law-enforcement agencies to take measures
against the “traitors of the fatherland”. He even regretted that the
death penalty has been abolished in Azerbaijan.

The meeting also proposed holding nationwide discussions in order to
publicly censure the actions of Basirli and Karimli. It was also
suggested that this issue should be put on the agenda of the
parliament’s autumn session.

The meeting also noted that foreign countries, including the USA,
cannot interfere in Azerbaijan’s affairs under the guise of democracy.

Istanbul: Pilgrimage to Antioch Postponed to September

Lraper Church Bulletin 08/08/2005
Contact: Deacon Vagharshag Seropyan
Armenian Patriarchate
TR-34130 Kumkapi, Istanbul
T: +90 (212) 517-0970, 517-0971
F: +90 (212) 516-4833, 458-1365
[email protected]
<;

PILGRIMAGE TO ANTIOCH POSTPONED TO SEPTEMBER

The Chancellery of the Patriarchal See anounced this morning that the
pilgrimage to Vakifkoy on the slope of Musadag in Antioch (Antakya,
Hatay) has been postponed. The visit to Antioch and Vakifkoy will take
place on the weekend of 24 and 25 September, when the Second Meeting of
Civilisations In Hatay-Antioch will begin, at the invitation of the
Governor of Hatay, His Excellency Abdulkadir Sari.

http://www.lraper.org/&gt
www.lraper.org

Ara Abrahamyan assisted release of Russian sailors from Nigeria

ARA ABRAHAMYAN ASSISTED RELEASE OF RUSSIAN SAILORS FROM NIGERIA PRISON

PanArmenian News Network
Aug 6 2005

06.08.2005 04:02 — /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The release of Russian sailors
from Nigerian prison is the outcome of “common efforts of diplomats
and public figures,” Chairman of the Union of Armenians of Russia
Ara Abrahamyan stated. In his words, the same tactics, as that of
liberation of 6 Armenian pilots from Equato-Guinean prison was used
when releasing Russian sailors from Nigerian prison. “It was pleasant
to hear that the Nigerian court agreed to release Russian sailors
owing to Russian Embassy guarantees. This is good luck and an outcome
of our common efforts,” A. Abrahamyan noted. It should be reminded
that a crew of Russian sailors, who served on a Greek company tanker,
was arrested by Nigerian authorities in autumn 2003 and were charged
of oil contraband, reported IA Regnum.

Armenia concerned over regional railway project

Armenia concerned over regional railway project

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Aug 3 2005

Baku, August 2, AssA-Irada — Armenian officials have expressed strong
concerns over the planned construction of the Gars-Akhalkalaki railway
within a regional railway project.

Armenian news agencies quoted Minister for Transport Andranik Manukian
as saying that the project is allegedly unsuitable not only for
Armenia but also the entire region.

Manukian termed the construction of the Gars-Tbilisi-Baku railway
through Gumru (Armenia) more appropriate and apparently wants his
country to get out of self-isolation in an indirect way. “By all
means, we try to convince the parties interested in building the
Gars-Akhalkalaki railway that the project is inefficient,” he said.

Manukian said that the project has allegedly not been approved as a
part of the TRACECA route, unlike the Gars-Gumru road.

“Armenia will be able to receive cargoes through the Gars-Gumru route
the day after the opening of the Armenian-Turkish border.” Manukian
also said that the Armenian side is ready to forward proposals on
favorable transit tariffs to Turkey.

Azerbaijani, Turkish and Georgian presidents signed a declaration
establishing the Gars-Tbilisi-Baku international transport corridor
in Baku on May 25, 2005. The project envisions constructing the
Gars-Akhalkalaki railway.

68 km of the railway worth $500 million goes through Turkey and 30
km via Georgia. The railway is to be commissioned late in 2008.

The three countries’ transport ministers are expected to gather late
in August to discuss the railway construction.*

Baze all-Armenian youth festival starts in Armenia

BAZE ALL-ARMENIAN YOUTH FESTIVAL STARTS IN ARMENIA

PanArmenian News Network
Aug 1 2005

01.08.2005 06:12

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The ceremony of opening Baze (Falcon) All-Armenian
Youth and Student Festival was held in Yerevan July 30. Some
2 thousand young people take part in the festival. “We note the
importance of unification of the youth of Armenia and the Diaspora
as a factor of organizing and exposing the common national potential.
Thus we follow the process with much attention. I am glad the festival
gradually extends its geography, including more and more Armenian
communities and new participants. I am sure that the diversity and
richness of the festival program will provide an opportunity to its
participants to demonstrate their knowledge and capacities, as well
as make new acquaintances and get new impressions. I wish Baze a
high flight and merry and cognitive days to festival participants,”
says the message of Armenian President Robert Kocharian addressed to
festival participants. The festival will close August 5.

Boxing: Darchinyan’s title defence against Jimenez rescheduled

Doghouse Boxing, Canada
July 30 2005

DoghouseBoxing Speaks with Vic Darchinyan
Darchinyan’s title defence against Jimenez rescheduled for August

Interview by Anthony Cocks, Site Editor (July 30, 2005)

IBF flyweight champion Vic Darchinyan has had his title defence
against Jair Jimenez postponed after the rugged 26-year-old Columbian
encountered visa problems that would have prevented him from arriving
in Australia until three days before the bout.

Originally scheduled to take place on July 27th, the d-Rush promoted
card will now go ahead on August 24th at the Sydney Entertainment
Centre in Darchinyan’s adopted hometown of Sydney, Australia.

Speaking exclusively to Doghouse Boxing shortly before the
postponement was announced, Darchinyan said he was looking forward to
the fight and revealed his plans to unify the division if he succeeds
in defeating Jimenez.

`What I can say about him is he’s a very good strong fighter,’ said
Darchinyan, 23-0 (18), of Jimenez. `I saw his tapes, a very good
power puncher, a busy fighter and he can punch and punch for twelve
rounds. He’s a good hard fighter.’

IBF #9 Jimenez, who lost back to back fights to Gerson Guerrero in
his last two outings while fighting at super flyweight, returns to
his natural weight class to face the power punching Armenian-born
Australian. Billy Hussein, who co-trains Darchinyan with former three
division champion Jeff Fenech, believes that Jimenez’s two recent
losses are deceptive.

`He’s a well balanced, good walk up fighter, but he’s going to be
shorter than Vic,’ explained Hussein. `In his two fights against
Gerson Guerrero he was beaten both times, but he fought at super
flyweight. It’s going to be a hard fight for Vic. This guy is a good
puncher, he’s a good style of fighter and he comes to fight.

`They would’ve watched Vic fight Pacheco as they’re both from
Columbia. They wouldn’t have taken this fight if they unless they
believed they could beat Vic. This guy is a good up and coming
fighter and Vic’s got to be on his game to win.’

Despite his two recent losses, Jimenez, 22-4-1 (16), is a world class
fighter who will be determined to wrest the title from Darchinyan. In
2002 Jimenez lost a razor thin majority decision for the WBO interim
flyweight championship to Adonis Rivas, who subsequently lost his
title to reigning champion Omar Narvaez.

`In the ring we will show who is the stronger, better puncher, who is
better,’ said Darchinyan. `But what I can say about him it will be an
exciting fight because he loves to fight and there will be support
for this fight and support for me.’

The postponement of the fight is an obvious setback for Darchinyan,
who added the IBO title to his IBF strap with an 8th round TKO of
South African Mzukisi Sikali in his last fight. According to Hussein,
this had been Darchinyan’s best preparation since his first attempt
at a world title challenge to then-champion Irene Pacheco, a fight
that ironically was also postponed due to Hurricane Frances.

`He’s had a real good preparation,’ said Hussein, who also co-trains
his world ranked brothers Nedal `Skinny’ Hussein and Hussein Hussein.
`He has boxed guys like Lovemore Ndou, Hussy, Ahmed Elomar and Billy
`The Kid’ Dib. He’s done a lot of sparring for this fight and he’s in
great shape. It’s different to the last defence when he fought
against Sakali. This is probably the best preparation he’s had since
the first Pacheco fight, which was postponed. He’s got his head
screwed on and he wants to defend his title on home soil.’

While Hussein has been working hard on developing Darchinyan into a
more well rounded boxer, the 2000 Olympian’s strong suit will always
be his bone crunching power.

`Vic hits so hard for a flyweight,’ admitted Hussein. `His power
punching intimidates a lot of fighters. They actually fight
differently when they fight Vic. Jair Jimenez is good at cutting off
the ring, but he’s not so great when he gets hit to the body and
that’s one thing we’re going to attack, his body.

`Vic’s a good power puncher. Let’s see how he responds when Vic does
hit him with a good shot or two. And with Vic being a southpaw it is
going to make things even harder for Jimenez.’

Darchinyan agrees with Hussein’s assessment and says that once he
starts landing with his heavy hands on the challenger the course of
the fight is bound to change.

`I know I’m very strong for anyone in my weight and when I start
punching I think he is going to really understand my power and he
can’t do things that he could do with all these other guys,’ said
Darchinyan.

Since winning the IBF title with an impressive 11th round stoppage of
formerly unbeaten Columbian Irene Pacheco last year, Hussein says
that the 29-year-old southpaw has improved in leaps and bounds.

`Without doubt,’ agreed Hussein. `The biggest difference is his
confidence. He knows that he can blow any flyweight, super flyweight
or bantamweight out. He believes in his power so much that we’ve been
trying to ease him back on that and keep teaching him the technique
and skills and reminding him that these are the little things you’ve
got to do right. As a person he’s a great person and as a fighter I
think he’s going to be a great fighter. I think he can unify the
flyweight division, not a problem.’

As far as Darchinyan’s future plans go, it looks like a mandatory
defence against Ireland’s Damaen Kelly is next in line before a
potentially explosive bout with WBA flyweight champion Lorenzo Parra,
25-0 (17), in 2006.

`I think we’ve got to make a mandatory defence against Damaen Kelly
of Ireland next,’ said Hussein. `Hopefully once we get through this
we will fight Damaen Kelly towards the end of the year. Lorenzo Parra
is going to fight Brahim Asloum from France and I think the winners
will eventually meet each other by March next year. Our aim is to
fight Parra or whoever wins that next fight.’

The 26-year-old Venezuelan is regarded by some pundits as the best in
the division, but Darchinyan is convinced that he has the tools to
defeat the unbeaten power puncher and stake his claim as the best in
the world in the 112 pound weight class.

`I would like to fight for the WBA title against Lorenzo Parra
because he’s recognized as a big power puncher in America,’ said
Darchinyan of his future plans.

`That’s why I want to fight him. I want to show that I am the best
mover, the best fighter and that I can beat him. I want to prove I’m
the best in any division. The best mover, the best puncher and the
best fighter.’

The d-Rush promoted card will be shown live in Australia on Sky
Channel and Main Event pay-per-view on August 24th from 7:30pm and
will also feature rising star Billy Dib defending his IBO Asia
Pacific super featherweight title against American southpaw Shamir
Reyes, unbeaten Ahmed Elomar squaring off against Matt Powell for the
vacant IBO Asia Pacific featherweight title, cruiserweight Adam
Lovelock doing battle with Jarrad Treloar and heavyweight Mark de
Mori against an opponent to be named.

ANKARA: Turkey to give diplomatic note to Switzerland

Turkish Press
July 28 2005

Press Scan

RADIKAL (LEFT)

————–

TURKEY TO GIVE A DIPLOMATIC NOTE TO SWITZERLAND

Turkish Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) will give a diplomatic note
to Switzerland for detention of Labor Party (IP) leader Dogu Perincek.
Namik Tan, spokesman of the MFA, said that Turkey’s attitude would
depend on the move of the Swiss prosecutor. Perincek was detained in
Winterthur city of Switzerland last week since he said, ”Armenian
genocide is nothing but an international lie” at a news conference.
He was released after being interrogated.

Landmark flight travels from Azerbaijan to North Cyprus without stop

Agence France Presse
July 27 2005

Landmark flight travels from Azerbaijan to North Cyprus without
stopping in Turkey

BAKU: An Azerbaijani airliner headed to North Cyprus Wednesday on the
first direct commercial flight to the breakaway state in three
decades, the Baku-based privately owned carrier said. “A group of
businessmen will depart from Baku at 9 p.m. on a chartered flight,”
said Imair legal advisor Cavid Heydarli.

Airline officials have said they may begin regular flights between
Baku and north Nicosia’s Tymbou (Ercan in Turkish) airport as early
as September.

The break-away Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), proclaimed
in 1983, has been entirely dependent on Turkey for its air links to
the outside world.

All flights serving Ercan or North Cyprus’s second airport of
Lefkoniko (Gecitkale) near the eastern city of Famagusta have
previously made an obligatory stopover in Turkey, the only country to
recognize the TRNC.

The decision to launch direct flights between Baku and Northern Cyprus
was announced by Azeri President Ilham Aliyev on June 30 in talks with
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan as part of a bid to set up
ties with North Cyprus.

In addition to direct flights, Azerbaijan, a key ally of Turkey, also
announced last month that it would start accepting Turkish Cypriot
passports, becoming only the second state after Turkey to do so.

In order to travel abroad, Turkish Cypriots need to acquire
internationally accepted passports – some get them from Turkey,
others from former colonial power Britain.

Other Turkish Cypriots have obtained passports from the
internationally recognized Cyprus government, derided as a Greek
Cypriot administration by both Ankara and the Turkish Cypriots.

Both Azerbaijani moves have been hailed by Turkish Cypriot leaders as
steps that will serve to break the international isolation of their
state, which depends heavily on Turkey for survival.

Turkish Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali Talat and other TRNC politicians
will meet the Azeri delegation, who will also hold talks with Turkish
Cypriot businessmen before leaving the island on Sunday.

Baku’s decisions appear to have angered Greece, the Cyprus
government’s main foreign backer.

Following Imair’s announcement that it would open the air link
earlier this month, moves by a Greek telecommunications operator to
establish a partnership with an operator in Azerbaijan’s rival
Armenia have been viewed by the Azeri press as retaliation.

A story headlined: “Greece answers Azerbaijan for Northern Cyprus” by
the Trend news agency on July 22 detailed a partnership agreement
between Greece’s Intrakom and an Armenian provider that operates in
the contested Nagorno Karabakh enclave of Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan and Armenia fought a war for control over mainly
ethnic-Armenian Nagorno Karabakh in the early 1990s.

Armenian forces took control of the region but its status has yet to
be settled and it is still internationally recognized as part of
Azerbaijan.

Azerbaijan views the activity of foreign entities in Karabakh as a
violation of its sovereignty over the territory, an argument that is
backed by authorities in Ankara.

Like North Cyprus, the unrecognized Nagorno Karabakh republic faces
international isolation and has few links to the outside world save
through Armenia.

Cyprus has been divided since 1974 when Turkish troops invaded its
northern region in response to an Athens-backed military coup seeking
to unite the island with Greece. – AFP