Tbilisi: Armenian paper cautions “Orange avengers”

Armenian paper cautions “Orange avengers”

The Messenger, Georgia
Feb 11 2005

The Armenian newspaper Aravot (Morning) reports that the government
of Ukraine headed by Victor Yanukovich and Nikolai Azarov decreed
that the ex-president Leonid Kuchma could receive a lifelong pension.
According to the document, the ex-president was set to receive other
perks as well. According to the paper, the Supreme Rada MPs have
supported the request of the future Prime Minister Yulia Timoshenko
to abolish the order regarding the lifelong perks and bodyguard of
the ex-president.

But this is not all, the paper states. Kuchma can find himself behind
bars soon because the Ukrainian parliament also supported a demand
for the arrest of the ex-president.

MPs intend to arrest Kuchma for undisclosed crimes committed during his
tenure. Rumors indicate the MPs are looking into the disappearance
of the journalist Giorgi Gongadze and the beating of Alexander
Yeliashkevich, who fled to the United States and later received
political asylum there.

Both events took place in 2000, and although the opposition, which
is now in power, always accused Kuchma of the murder and beating,
there remains a lack of solid evidence to prove this. In addition,
the former president is accused of illegal use of special technical
means to gather information in exchange for major bribes.

“It is still unknown whether or not Ukrainians will arrest Kuchma.
But it is already known that the General Prosecutor of Ukraine
Sviatoslav Piskun, to whom parliament’s demand was sent, was
dismissed from his position because of Kuchma in 2003. It is known
as well that Yulia Timoshenko was even arrested during the Kuchma
government. However, as it is known, such people are eager to get
back at their offenders,” the paper writes.

Aravot advises that it is rather wise to resist temptation and leave
the ex-president alone to calmly continue his life. “All-knowing Putin
behaved himself in such a way. He did not even allow ex-president of
Russia Yeltsin to be offended when Russian MPs also wanted to get
back at him. Putin did this not only to secure of his own position
after the resignation,” the paper stressed.

The paper stated that if all ex-presidents are arrested soon after
they step down, then only a “fool” would agree to leave his post.
“They will probably declare themselves as lifelong president!” the
paper states. “Now choose yourself what is better for our state: to
have a lifelong president of Armenia Kocharyan without any hope for
democratic change or Kocharyan as well, but on a perpetual pension?”
the paper asks.

Iraqi Armenians: Learning democracy the hard way

Azad Hye, United Arab Emirates
Feb 3 2005

Iraqi Armenians: Learning democracy the hard way

AZAD-HYE (3 February 2005): Last Sunday was a day of hope for Iraq.
Unexpected number of Iraqi marched to cast their votes in the first
ever democratic election in a country that has a history of many
thousand years (just like Armenia). The voters ignored the fact that
balloting stations were declared as attacking targets by insurgents.

Iraqis broke the barrier of fear, which for decades kept them away
from politics. The news of successful Iraqi elections spread all
around the world and mainly to the Arab societies. It is an irony
that the only two free elections in the Arab World were conducted in
places where occupation troops exist: Palestine and Iraq. Some will
wonder if Arabs are really capable of achieving democracy without
foreign intervention. Yet there is another question far more
intriguing: Will the voting process in Iraq stir democratic changes
in the Arab World and in neighboring Iran?

ARMENIAN REALITY IN IRAQ:

Although it is difficult to live in a country where basic security
needs are not fulfilled and the number of minority groups is
dwindling (only in recent ten years, half a million Christians have
migrated from Iraq, reducing their overall figure to less than 700
thousand), still it is worth to learn something from the democratic
process of Sunday’s elections.

To see how far the Iraqi Armenians can be from democratic practices,
we will narrate the story of Father Ararad, which took place last
year.

“To Defrock or not to Defrock?”

To defrock a priest is to deprive him of the right to exercise the
functions of the priestly office. Various religions have different
procedures for doing this. But what is the procedure in our Church?
On 12th January 2004 the following Press Release was issued by the
`Information Services of the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin’:

“His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All
Armenians, issued a Pontifical Order whereby Rev. Fr. Ararat
Hovsepian from the Armenian Diocese of Iraq, has been defrocked. From
this time forward, he shall be called by his baptismal name of Norayr
Hovsepian, and be recognized as a member of the laity. The order
issued on January 9, is based upon information and petitions provided
by the Primate and the National Central Committee of the Diocese,
that the priest has exhibited demeanour and conduct unbecoming of a
clergyman”.

This Pontifical Order does not explain what exactly Rev. Fr. Ararat
Hovsepian did to deserve being defrocked. “Oxford Advanced Learner’s
Dictionary” explains “unbecoming” as “not suiting a particular
person” or “not appropriate or acceptable”. The Press Release
mentions that the Order “is based upon information and petitions
provided by the Primate and the National Central Committee of the
Diocese”. It is interesting to know what kind of investigation has
been carried on to verify the source of this information and whether
it was conducted in professional manner.

Father Ararat (about 38 years old), a graduate of Babel Theological
Faculty in Baghdad (seminar for Christian theological education in
Iraq), aspired, after decades of stagnation, to introduce a new wave
of thinking in the Armenian reality in Baghdad, Believing that the
time has come for some change, he started to print a newsletter,
where he expressed his views about how to improve the community life
and how to introduce new measures of accountability, especially in
the financial field. He also preached openness in discussing vital
issues concerning the youth.

NKR citizens will have right for dual citizenship, NKR FM said

PanArmenian News
Feb 5 2005

NKR CITIZENS WILL HAVE RIGHT FOR DUAL CITIZENSHIP, NKR FM SAID

05.02.2005 15:30

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In compliance with the bill on citizenship of the
Nagorno Karabakh Republic, its citizens will have a right for dual
citizenship, NKR Foreign Minister Arman Melikian stated today. In the
Minister’s words, the law will protect the rights of all citizens
irrespective of their background, racial or ethnic belonging. As
stated by A. Melikian, the NKR has to assume responsibility for the
fates of those Armenians, who were born, lived and were further
expelled from Azerbaijan. The bill provides for granting citizenship
to the mentioned group, which will allow full protection of their
rights, the Minister stated.

Burger Kings: Students offered chance to manage McDonalds in Armenia

Burger Kings: Students offered chance to manage McDonald’s in Armenia

By Arpi Harutyunyan
ArmeniaNow Reporter
5 Feb 2005

It has restaurants in more than 100 countries and soon the Golden Arches of
McDonald’s may be a common sight in Armenia.
With McDonald’s already operating in Georgia and Azerbaijan, Armenia is the
last country in the South Caucasian country without the world famous
hamburgers. Although the first restaurant appears to be a few years away,
selection of its future managers is already going on.

Some of these applications will take students to England
Thirty six students at the Yerevan State University are being offered the
opportunity to get McDonald’s management training in England. They will have
practical training and employment in McDonald’s outlets for two to three
years.
The idea of opening McDonald’s in Armenia belongs to Armenian Britain
businessman Mike Ghazaryan. Last summer Ghazaryan visited Armenia to meet
students at YSU. The company also held a seminar with students to make them
acquainted with the plans for the Armenian market.
“The first McDonald’s complex is expected to open in Yerevan within two to
three years,” says Arsen Karamyan, the president of the YSU graduates union.
“The company informed us that it is planning to open more complexes in
Armenia within five to six years.”
According to arrangements between the YSU and McDonald’s, the graduates
union will present applications from 130-150 senior undergraduate and
graduate students. 36 of them will be selected by test examination and leave
for England this summer.
After training in England, the students will sign contracts and be offered
work either in the Armenian company or in other McDonald’s networks in other
countries.
In three months, the future employees of McDonald’s will be known. Though it
is still unknown whether consumers in Yerevan will like the McDonald’s food,
it is clear that many people would love to become managers for the company.
The average salary in the Armenian network will be over $1000.
“Since I can’t provide for my family with my journalistic work I made up my
mind to apply. Journalism can provide me with only enough for transport and
a packet of cigarettes a day. Of course, I have not dreamed of working for
McDonald’s all my life, but this will give me an opportunity for a good life
in the future,” says Armen Avetisyan, a graduate student at the YSU’s
Department of Journalism.
McDonald’s offer of employment to students at YSU is the first large-scale
contract between Armenian students and a well-known international brand.
Students from all departments are eligible to apply, apart from male
students who have not yet completed their military service. So far, 78
applications have been submitted, mainly from students in the Economy,
Romance-Germanic Philology, Information, and International Relations
Departments.
Applicants must have excellent knowledge of English, computer literacy, an
ability to work in teams and to absorb information quickly, be hard working,
honest and loyal.
“The McDonald’s Company also contacted the Linguistic University after
Brusov but then realized that knowledge of languages alone was not enough.
Students of YSU are noted for intellectual and other abilities, and they
concluded that graduates of the State University can stand working in an
international market,” says Karamyan.
Each year, the YSU has over 2,000 graduates and many remain unable to find a
job in their specialty field.

ANKARA: French Speaker defends referendum over Turkey’s EU bid

French Speaker defends referendum over Turkey’s EU bid

Anatolia news agency
4 Feb 05

ANKARA

French National Assembly President Jean Louis Debre proposed on Friday
that an international independent organization should investigate the
Armenian genocide claims.

Debre, who is visiting Turkey, met Yasar Yakis, chairman of the
Turkish Parliamentary European Union (EU) Adjustment Commission, and
the members of this commission.

[Passage omitted]

The decision of the French parliament to hold a referendum on
accession of new members to the EU after 2007 was also debated in the
meeting.

CHP parliamentarian Oymen said that no referendum was held on any
country that became an EU member before, and noted that this decision
was made against Turkey, and added that it caused disappointment in
Turkey.

When Oymen said that such a procedure would not be carried out for
Romania, Bulgaria and Croatia which would become EU’s new members,
Debre said that referenda were held for some other countries in the
past, and stated that Europe’s borders would change after Turkey
joined the Union. He stressed that it would be useful to learn views
of the French regarding this matter.

Debre, who asked how his country could help Turkey on its road to EU
membership, said that France could either send experts to Turkey to
help this Commission’s initiatives or host members of the Commission
in France to extend support to them.

Jean Louis Debre was received by Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer
earlier today.

Vandals damage monument to Armenians -founders of Russian Budennovsk

PanArmenian News
Feb 3 2005

VANDALS DAMAGED MONUMENT TO ARMENIANS – FOUNDERS OF RUSSIAN
BUDENNOVSK

03.02.2005 16:45

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ As reported by Yerkramas Armenian newspaper being
issued in Krasnodar, vandals damaged a monument to Armenians – the
founders of the city of Budennovsk (Stavropol region). The opening of
the complex to the Founding Fathers of the City of Holy Cross was
held October 17, 2004. The complex is composed of an arch 8 meters in
height, a khachkar (cross-stone) and a stone composition. The Russian
and Armenian sides of the monument were damaged: numbers 1799-2004
were disrupted from the Russian side, and the same figures and almost
the whole of the Surb Khach inscription – from the Armenian. As
written by the newspaper, what happened may be a consequence of
anti-Caucasian moods in general or a sally by satanists. The
newspaper also says that leaders of the local Armenian community,
which has initiated the erection of the monument, now think over the
problem of making the part of the monument, that contains the text,
as they say, “anti-vandal”. The city of Surb Khach (Holy Cross, now
Budennovsk) was founded in 1799 by Armenians and Tats of Armenian
Christian belief – migrants from Karabakh, Derbent and other sites in
compliance with a patent of Russian Emperor Paul I.

Armenia FM cuts short visit to Tbilisi

Itar-Tass, Russia
Feb 3 2005

Armenia FM cuts short visit to Tbilisi

YEREVAN, February 3 (Itar-Tass) – Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan
Oskaryan has cut short his trip to Georgia in connection with the
death of Prime Minister Zurab Zhvaniya, Oskaryan’s spokesman told
Itar-Tass by telephone.

The spokesman, Gamlet Gasparyan, said the minister is getting back
halfway to Tbilisi. The Armenian foreign minister was heading to
Tbilisi for talks with the Georgian leadership. On Friday, he was due
to take pat in the international forum South Caucasus in the 21st
Century: Challenges and Opportunities.

Georgia: Leaders Noncommittal On Meskhetian Repatriation Issue

Radio Free Europe, Czech republic
Jan 27 2005

Georgia: Leaders Remain Noncommittal On Meskhetian Repatriation Issue
By Jean-Christophe Peuch

Meskhetians in Lancaster, Pennsylvania.

The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe this week
reiterated its concern about the fate of the former Soviet Union’s
Meskhetian community, and revived calls for Georgia to urgently
organize their repatriation. Yet, Georgian authorities remain
noncommittal on the issue and continue to argue that conditions are
not yet appropriate for the return of this uprooted Turkic people.

Prague, 27 January 2005 (RFE/RL) — During a debate following his
address to the Strasbourg-based Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe (PACE) yesterday, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili
remained as evasive as his predecessor on his plans to settle the
Meskhetian issue.

“I have great sympathy for the Meskhetians. I believe these people
have gone through great suffering, and I believe Georgia will do
everything so that this issue is settled,” Saakashvili said.

Russia’s pro-government lawmaker Vera Oskina criticized Georgia for
delaying the return of exiled Meskhetians. In response, Saakashvili
blamed Moscow for keeping the ethnic group in administrative limbo.

“In violation of all its international obligations, the Russian
Federation has granted passports and citizenship in huge numbers to
residents of [Georgia’s separatist republics of] Abkhazia and South
Ossetia. But it hasn’t granted a single passport to any of those
Meskhetians who live in Russia,” Saakashvili said.”If we see the end
many years ahead of us, then we can accept and understand this. But
what we cannot accept is that nothing is happening on this issue.
There should be a legal framework. There should be a campaign
[conducted among] the Georgian people so that they accept that [a
solution to the Meskhetian] issue.”

Saakashvili was referring to those Meskhetians who have resettled in
Russia’s southern Krasnodar territory following the pogroms that took
place in 1989 in the Uzbek part of the Ferghana Valley.

Today’s Meskhetians — also known as Meskhis — are the survivors or
descendants of a rural Muslim population of southern Georgia that
Soviet leader Josef Stalin in 1944 ordered deported to Central Asia
along with many other ethnic groups of the Caucasus region. But of
all these exiled peoples, the Meskhetians are the only ones who have
been denied the right to return to their homeland.

Estimates put the number of Meskhetians living in CIS countries at
somewhere between 200,000 and 300,000.

Following the 1989 Ferghana upheaval, tens of thousands of them were
evacuated to other Soviet regions, mainly Azerbaijan and southern
Russia.

Although Meskhetians themselves disagree on whether they descend from
ethnic Turks sent to colonize the South Caucasus, or Christian
Georgians forcibly converted to Islam under Ottoman rule, they are
generally described as “Turks” and perceived as such throughout most
of the former Soviet Union.

This has created particular problems for Russian-based Meskhetians
confronted with the nationalist, pro-Orthodox policy of Krasnodar
Governor Alexander Tkachev. Deprived of any civic rights and
constantly harassed by regional authorities, most of Krasnodar’s
13,500 Meskhetians have decided to emigrate to the United States.

When Georgia joined the Council of Europe in 1999, it pledged to
start repatriating the Meskhetians within the next three years. But
except for some minor paperwork, almost nothing has been done to
facilitate the repatriation, and only a few individuals have been
able to return to Georgia.

Citing the Meskhetians’ alleged Turkic ethnicity, Georgia’s
successive post-Soviet governments have argued that their wholesale
repatriation could create tensions with the country’s large ethnic
Armenian community, which lives in the Meskhetians’ former home
region.

Georgian officials also maintain that the separatist wars of the
early 1990s have triggered a massive inflow of internally displaced
persons (IDPs) from Abkhazia and South Ossetia. They say because of
this, Georgia is financially and logistically unable to handle tens
of thousands of immigrants.

Lawmaker Elene Tevdoradze, who chairs the Georgian parliament’s human
rights committee, earlier this month said the repatriation of
Meskhetians would not start until IDPs are allowed to return to
Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

She also indicated that the government, which is considering drafting
some Meskhetian returnees into the army, is still unsure of their
loyalty to the Georgian state.

“We’ve been thinking about drafting into the army those [Meskhetians]
who really consider themselves citizens of Georgia, Georgians. So far
this is only an idea which, by the way, was first formulated by the
president. But although this is only an idea, we need to adopt a very
careful approach. We’re talking about the army and we must be sure of
those people we’re drafting,” Tevdoradze said.

The Council of Europe this week gave a clear indication that its
patience is beginning to run out.

In a resolution adopted on 24 January after a debate on Georgia’s
progress in honoring its obligations and commitments as a
member-state, the council’s Parliamentary Assembly reiterated its
demand that the Meskhetian issue be swiftly settled.

Matyas Eorsi is PACE’s co-rapporteur on Georgia and the co-author of
the draft report that was debated on 24 January.

In comments made to RFE/RL prior to the debate, the Hungarian
lawmaker said he understood the difficulties posed by the
repatriation of tens of thousands of immigrants. Yet, he said the
Council of Europe would not tolerate any further delay by Georgia in
addressing the Meskhetian issue.

“If we see the end many years ahead of us, then we can accept and
understand this. But what we cannot accept is that nothing is
happening on this issue. There should be a legal framework. There
should be a campaign [conducted among] the Georgian people so that
they accept that [a solution to the Meskhetian] issue is also part of
the justice they seek. If the Georgian people deserve justice — and
I’m sure they do — they should also think about the Meskhetians
because they, too, deserve justice,” Eorsi said.

During the debate, Turkish lawmaker Mevlut Cavusoglu also voiced his
support for the Meskhetian cause.

“We are fully aware of the difficulties Georgia has been facing [in
recent years]. However, we do not believe that such difficulties
constitute an argument for not fulfilling the obligation to
repatriate [the Meskhetians]. Therefore, I think that appropriate
legal, administrative, and political conditions should be created by
the Georgian authorities, without any further delay, for the
repatriation of the Meskhetian community,” Cavusoglu said.

Another Turkish parliamentarian, Murat Mercan, suggested the assembly
set a firm timeframe for the resolution of the Meskhetian issue.

His request was met. A final resolution voted at the end of the
hearings gives Georgia until 2011 to complete the repatriation
process.

Government approves food security concept

ArmenPress
Jan 26 2005

GOVERNMENT APPROVES FOOD SECURITY CONCEPT

YEREVAN, JANUARY 26, ARMENPRESS: The Armenian government approved
on January 25 the “concept of food security”, whereby it wants to
make Armenia meet international standards of self-sufficiency in
agricultural products by 2015. The program envisages that in ten
years Armenia’s agriculture and food processing industry will be able
to secure 75 percent of domestic demand in foodstuffs.
Hrachya Tspnetsian, a senior official from the Agriculture
Ministry, said after the Tuesday government session that Armenia
meets now only 55 of its domestic demand for foodstuff. He added that
the success of food security program depends largely on the
purchasing power of the population. Another goal of the program is to
enable every Armenian to consume at least 2,100 kilocalories a day,
an amount which doctors say is the “physiological minimum.”
Armenia has to import now all consumed sugar, cooking oil and part
of meat, wheat, but imports no fruits, potatoes and other vegetables.
The food security concept was developed by an inter-ministerial
commission. According to national statistical service, monthly
earnings of each member of an urban household make 12,000 drams
(approximately $25) and in rural areas 7,000 drams. Fifty-three
percent of that money comes from wages, 10 percent from sale of
agricultural products, 10.5 percent from state benefits and
allowances and another 22 percent from money remittances from abroad.
An average Armenian family spends two thirds of its budget on food.

PACE resolution on Georgia touches upon Javakhk problems

PanArmenian News
Jan 26 2005

PACE RESOLUTION ON GEORGIA TOUCHES UPON JAVAKHK PROBLEMS

26.01.2005 15:38

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ January 24 PACE session participants adopted a
resolution, which maintains items immediately related to the
Armenian-inhabited Javakhk. As reported by A-info agency, the
resolution urges Georgia to sign and ratify the European Charter on
the languages of the national minorities or regions by September
2005. Let us remind that the new bill on languages in Georgia almost
deprives the national minorities of the possibility of receiving
education in native tongue. Within the same terms Georgia is to
ratify the convention on national minorities’ protection.