Sydney: ASIO Bugged Embassies, Not MPs: Ex-Chief

ASIO BUGGED EMBASSIES, NOT MPS: EX-CHIEF
By Paul Osborne

AAP, Australia
Sept 18 2005

A former head of ASIO says a few foreign embassies were routinely
monitored by the spy agency, but MPs’ claims of being bugged themselves
were wrong.

Sir Edward Woodward, chief of the Australian Security Intelligence
Organisation from 1976 to 1981, has made the assertion in his
autobiography, One Brief Interval, to be published next month.

The 77-year-old former royal commissioner says in the memoir that
ASIO, armed with new powers to tap phones, took a keen interest in
foreign embassies on Australian soil.

“The telephones of a few foreign embassies were routinely monitored,
not so much for the contents of their conversations, which would
always be guarded, but in order to help identify the officers of
foreign intelligence services,” he said.

“For example, it was instructive to see or hear which embassy employees
were called in when an apparently urgent coded message was received
in the middle of the night.”

But he said some former members of parliament, including Labor’s Ken
Fry and Tom Uren, had wrongly claimed their phones were tapped.

“There was no possible reason to do so and it would have been a
ridiculous waste of resources,” Sir Edward writes.

Sir Edward said that he also knew of one occasion when a journalist’s
phone was tapped.

“We did once obtain a warrant to intercept the telephone of a
journalist who we knew had taken a number of documents from the office
of a minister for whom he had worked briefly,” he said.

“He had become the recipient of later stolen documents, which he was
using in his publications, and we hoped to identify the thieves.”

But the month-long bugging operation failed to find anything on the
journalist or nab the thieves.

Sir Edward rejected repeated claims that ASIO in the 70s had been
infiltrated by the Russian spy agency, the KGB.

“I could not find any experienced security intelligence officer
in Australia or overseas who was prepared to support such a simple
deduction,” he said.

The former spy chief says ASIO’s main focus in the late 1970s was on
espionage, mainly by agents of the Soviet Union and Eastern European
nations.

However, there were growing concerns about terrorism, most notably
involving supporters of the Popular Front for the Liberation of
Palestine, or Al-Fatah groups.

He said when the Iraqi consulate-general opened in Sydney in July
1978 the first consul-general was a career officer of the Iraqi
Directorate-General of Intelligence and he immediately became involved
with pro-Palestinian groups and individuals.

“The most likely targets for an attack were the premises of other
countries, especially Israel, Egypt and the United States,” the former
judge writes.

ASIO assessed about 40 pro-Palestinians in Australia who were willing
to support terrorist action and helped kick two Al-Fatah activists
out of the country, he said.

But ASIO had been caught by surprise by the assassination of Turkish
consul-general Sarik Ariyak in December 1980 – a crime which has
never been solved.

Sir Edward said he believed it have been the work of an Armenian
terrorist group, Justice Commandos for the Armenian Genocide.

One Brief Interval will be published on October 4 by Miegunyah Press,
an imprint of Melbourne University Publishing.

ANKARA: Ad in Australia draws anger from Turkish community

Ad in Australia draws anger from Turkish community

Source: Australian Insult?

An Australian recyclable paper firm has caused widespread outrage and
anger with an advertisement using four members of the Melbourne
Turkish community. In a picture imitating the famous cover of the
Beatles’ Abbey Road album, the four Turkish men are shown crossing a
street, following eachother on a crosswalk. Underneath, the legend
says “We get enough rubbish from overseas without importing recycled
paper.”

The four men in the picture have complained that they were not told
prior to the photoshoot what would be written underneath the picture.
The firm, called Reflex, has yet to comment on the matter.

One of the four men, 52 year old Ismet Gungordu, who emigrated to
Australia 25 years ago, said he and his friends were tricked: “They
promised us $3,200 all together, and said it would be an entertaining
photo shoot. In around 2 hours, they shot 200 pictures of us. We
thought everything had gone well. Then we saw the ad. They have put
us in a strange position. I don’t know whether there are Armenians or
Greeks who are against Turkey in the ad firm. Whether or not we should
open a court case against them, and what we should do, I am not sure.”

Hurriyet, 16 September 2005

Journal of Turkish Weekly

http://www.turkishweekly.net/news.php?id=19730

On NKR FM A.Melikian’s Meeting with International Crisis Group Org.

ON NKR FOREIGN MINISTER A.MELIKIAN’S MEETING WITH
INTERNATIONAL CRISIS GROUP ORGANIZATION

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 14. ARMINFO. On September 11, in the NKR Permanent
Representation in the RA, Arman Melikian, the NKR Foreign Minister,
received the delegation of the International Crisis Group (ICG)
Non-Governmental Organization headed by Alain Deletroz.

Mr. Deletroz presented the organization’s activity to the NKR Foreign
Minister noting their aim in general to contribute to the peaceful
settlement of international conflicts and war prevention. In this
context, the ICG prepared the report on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict
called “Nagorno Karabakh: Viewing the Conflict from the Ground”.
According to Mr. Deletroz, the report is aimed to render assistance
to the Armenian and Azerbaijani party, as well as the mediators in
finding acceptable solutions around the negotiation table. Mr.
Melikian emphasized the importance of the international community’s
involvement in the process of establishing lasting peace in the
region. He noted that the conflict would be settled only if all the
parties involved would be realistic and clearly realize that the
Nagorno Karabakh Republic and Azerbaijani Republic were the main
parties to the conflict and any effort to present the conflict as a
territorial dispute between Armenia and Azerbaijan could be
interpreted as intentional distortion of the reality.

At the end of the meeting, the head of the ICG delegation handed the
NKR Foreign Minister the text of the report, informing that it would
be published on September 14. Thanking the ICG representatives, Mr.
Melikian assured them that the provisions of the report would be
carefully examined in Stepanakert.

Petersburg Trade Center In Yerevan

PETERSBURG TRADE CENTER IN YEREVAN

A1+
| 14:01:57 | 14-09-2005 | Official |

Today Robert Kocharyan has received the delegation of the Saint
Petersburg governor Valentina Matvienko which has arrived in Armenia
to participate in the events “Days of Saint Petersburg” organized
within the framework of the year of Russia in Armenia.

Mentioning that progress is obvious in Armenia, Valentina Matvienko
said that their aim is not to restore the previous links with Armenia
but also to outline new directions of cooperation which will be
reflected in the program of cooperation between Yerevan and Saint
Petersburg for the coming three years. According to Matvienko, the
parties can cooperate in the fields of education and science.

Mr. Kocharyan and Mrs. Matvienko found the exchange of information
between the sides extremely important. Valentina Matvienko informed
that they intend to open a Petersburg Trade Center in Yerevan.

Will Tbilisi Facilitate An Anti-Aliev Revolution In Azerbaijan?

WILL TBILISI FACILITATE AN ANTI-ALIEV REVOLUTION IN AZERBAIJAN?
By Zaal Anjaparidze

Eurasia Daily Monitor
The Jamestown Foundation
Sept 13 2005

In recent weeks both the Georgian and the Azerbaijani media have
actively speculated whether the government of Georgian President
Mikheil Saakashvili would support a popular revolution in neighboring
Azerbaijan. Some analysts tend to link the recently cooled relations
between Tbilisi and Baku with this issue.

On August 26 Azerbaijan’s State Border Service detained a Georgian
citizen, Merab Jibuti, for illegally crossing the border of
Azerbaijan. Azerbaijani law-enforcement officials claim that Jibuti was
connected with the Azerbaijani opposition youth movement Yeni Fikir
(New Thinking), and he reportedly admitted to attending a secret
meeting with Yeni Fikir leader Ruslan Bashirli and his associates
in Tbilisi on July 28-29. Moreover, Bashirli, who was arrested on
August 3 on charges of plotting a coup in Azerbaijan, met with an
Armenian special services agent in Tbilisi and received cash from him
to organize public unrest in Baku. Against the backdrop of hitherto
good Georgian-Azerbaijani relations, this widely advertised news
could not pass unnoticed.

Before this incident Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliev had told border
service officials on August 17 that he would not spare any money in
improving control over the border with Georgia in order to “preserve
stability in Azerbaijan.” Aliev’s statement was clear evidence of
Baku’s concerns.

On August 29, the Georgian Intelligence Agency confirmed reports by
Georgian and Azerbaijani media outlet that Batu Kutelia, chief of
Georgian intelligence, had visited Azerbaijan and met with Aliev
to discuss bilateral issues, including cooperation between the
Georgian and Azerbaijani special services to ensure the security of
the region. Meanwhile, the Georgian Interior Ministry denied that
Interior Minister Vano Merabishvili had visited Baku on August 15,
while the Azerbaijani media reported that Merabishvili had met with
Aliev. Georgian media speculated that both of these visits were linked
to the investigation of an alleged revolutionary plot in Azerbaijan and
aimed at warming the chilly relations between Aliev and Saakashvili.

Symptomatically, on September 6 Saakashvili openly stated that
Georgia’s top priority is the victory of democracy worldwide.

Therefore Georgia would always support democracy in any region but
would do so within the parameters of the law. Saakashvili made this
announcement when he welcomed home two activists from the Georgian
youth movement Kmara (Enough) after they had been detained in Belarus
for one week for training the Belarusian opposition youth organization
Zubr in methods of civil disobedience. Kmara was modeled after the
Yugoslav youth group Otpor. It was a key player in the Georgian Rose
Revolution and a contributor to the Ukrainian Orange Revolution.

The Azerbaijani media, both pro-governmental and opposition, have
actively speculated about the possibilities of a Western supported
“color revolution” in Azerbaijan and the inevitable replacement of
Aliev by an “Azerbaijani Saakashvili.” Russian analysts have anxiously
noted that the Azerbaijani opposition widely uses the methods tested
during the Rose and Orange Revolutions, hinting at the possible
involvement of Georgian envoys in training the anti-Aliev opposition
(RBK, August 17; Nezavisimaya gazeta, August 29). Some supporters
of Aliev have also accused Tbilisi of clandestinely supporting the
anti-Aliev opposition groups.

Aliev and his entourage likely suspect that Saakashvili might be
willing to sacrifice his friendship with Aliev to cause of global
democracy. Symptomatically, Aliev has so far refused to join
the declaration about a “Commonwealth of Democratic Choice,” that
Saakashvili and his Ukrainian counterpart Viktor Yushchenko signed at
the Georgian health-resort Borjomi on August 12 (see EDM, August 15).

Most Georgian officials and analysts have vehemently excluded any
possibility of Georgia’s involvement in the would-be revolution
in Azerbaijan.

Any support of an anti-Aliev revolution in Azerbaijan looks almost
suicidal for Georgia both politically and economically, taking into
account neighborly relations and Georgia’s dependence on Azerbaijan’s
goodwill regarding the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline and other joint
international energy projects. However, Saakashvili’s opposition
argues that the concerns of Azerbaijani officials over Saakashvili’s
“revolutionary” plans are not groundless, because Saakashvili wants
to curry favor with the West.

Givi Targamadze, chair of the Georgian parliamentary committee
for defense and security, who was an informal consultant for the
Kyrgyz “Tulip Revolution” (see EDM, March 25) said that the Georgian
government “must help and helps indeed” the nationwide public movements
that fight the authoritarian rules “but it is not any kind of force
that plans revolution.” “So far, I don’t see this kind of movement in
Azerbaijan,” he added. Targamadze, a former member of the influential
NGO Liberty Institute, however said that some attempts “on the level
of individual initiative” might take place.

Meanwhile, Levan Ramishvili, director of the Liberty Institute,
said that although Georgian state bodies must not be involved in the
internal processes of Azerbaijan, “The NGOs’ hands are unbound in this
respect.” “We have contacts with certain Azerbaijani NGOs. We share
with them our experience on how to make the changes in a bloodless
way,” he added.

The meeting between Aliev and Saakashvili on the sidelines of the
August 26-27 Commonwealth of Independent States summit in Kazan was
quite cool, sources say. This suggests that, contrary to the claims by
some Georgian officials, the Azerbaijani leadership remains concerned
about the Georgian leadership’s plans regarding the situation in
Azerbaijan.

(Resonance, August 18, 21; , August 26; Civil Georgia,
Turan, Regnum, RBC daily, August 30;Caucasus Press, September 6)

www.ans.az

ICCO repairing Iran’s churches

ICCO repairing Iran’s churches

IranMania News, Iran
Sept 13 2005

Tuesday, September 13, 2005 – ©2005 IranMania.com

LONDON, September 13 (IranMania) – Iran will spend five billion
rials to repair churches across the country. Islamic Culture and
Communications Organization (ICCO) said in a press release that an
annual budget has been allocated to repair churches belonging to
various Christian communities, including the Armenians, in Iran.

Iran?s cultural attache in Armenia Alireza Otoufi said that Iran
accords special importance to Iranian religious minorities and the
government has set aside five billion rials to repair the churches in
the current fiscal year (March 2005-March 2006), Iran Daily reported.

Otoufi explained that the government?s decision to that effect in a
meeting in Yerevan, Armenia with archbishops of Armenian churches in
Tehran, northern Iran and Isfahan.

He said that Iran is the only country that extends annual budget for
repairing churches.

Archbishop of Armenians in Tehran and northern Iran, Siveh Sarkisyan
said that Iran is a unique country and the government and churches
enjoyed excellent relations in the field of dialogue among religions.

Archbishop Sarkisyan appreciated the services of Iranian cultural
attache in Yerevan and said, ?Wherever, we are, we have the same
obligations for promoting religion.?

Bobken Charyan, a bishop of Isfahan archdiocese thanked the Iranian
government for its cooperation with the churches.

Copies from chapters of holy Qur?an were presented as gifts to
the guests.

–Boundary_(ID_SqbZclcw8nVrXzsMwvkeKQ)–

Paranaque parish changes Virgin’s feast day

INQ7, The Phillippines
Sept 11 2005
X-Sender: Asbed Bedrossian <[email protected]>
X-Listprocessor-Version: 8.1 — ListProcessor(tm) by CREN

Parañaque parish changes Virgin’s feast day

First posted 06:33am (Mla time) Sept 11, 2005
By Josephine Darang
Inquirer News Service

Editor’s Note: Published on page E4 of the September 11, 2005 issue
of the Philippine Daily Inquirer

A MAJOR CHANGE OCCURRED IN ST. Andrew Cathedral in La Huerta,
Parañaque. Msgr. Manny Gabriel, rector, deemed it proper to celebrate
the feast day of Nuestra Señora del Buen Suceso (Our Lady of Good
Events) on Aug. 10, instead of Nov. 29, so that the celebration is
concentrated on the Virgin.

The feast day of St. Andrew the Apostle falls on Nov. 30. The
procession brings out both the Virgin and the saint.

The image of the Virgin was enthroned in the church Aug. 10, 1625, by
Fray Juan Guevara from his cell in the convent where she stayed for a
few days.

The story of the Virgin began with Katig, a poor indio, who asked the
sacristan for the dusty image in a corner of the sacristy. Katig
brought the image to his small house, lighting candles to honor her.
When Katig lay dying, he asked Fr. Guevara to take the Virgin and
offer Masses when he died.

At night, singing was heard from the priest’s cell and a strange
light emanated from the image. Fr. Guevara realized the Virgin was
miraculous.

With the bishop’s permission, he brought the image to the church.

The celebration this year began with a nine-day novena of Masses.
Different priests said Mass and gave homilies. The fiesta Mass was
concelebrated by Msgr. Gabriel and other priests at 6 p.m. The gozos
to the Virgin were sung by the Cathedral Choir using the music of the
late National Artist Lucio San Pedro.

The Cofradia de Nuestra del Buen Suceso launched its website
() during the fiesta. It also led the
procession after the Mass.

Candaba fiesta

Our Lady of Mercy Parish in Bahay Pare, Candaba, Pampanga, is
preparing for its fiesta on Sept. 24. Dr. Alvin Balatbat is hermano
mayor.

Masses will be held every hour 5-10 a.m. then 4:30-7 p.m. Pampanga
Archbishop Paciano Aniceto will officiate at the concelebrated Mass
at 10 a.m.

Text 0916-4453842 or call (045)8827313.

Devotees are now praying for the canonical coronation of Our Lady of
Mercy. The fiesta is part of the annual Mercedarian Festival that
commemorates the 787th anniversary of the apparition of the Virgin
Mary in 1218 to St. Peter Nolasco and St. Raymond of Penafort, giving
them scapulars.

Fundraising

Prominent families of Ilocos Norte will have a fundraising dinner
dance at 6:30 p.m., Sept. 24, at William Shaw Pavilion of Wack-Wack
Golf and Country Club. The event also marks the Kannawidan
Foundation’s 12th anniversary.

Leading the fundraising are officers and board members: Justice
Oswaldo D. Agcaoili (ret.), president; Georgia Balmaceda Alviar, vice
president; Minda Acacio Garcia, treasurer; Betty Factora Merritt,
secretary; Lita Marcos Roque, auditor; and Amparo Javier Araullo,
lawyer Ernesto Albano, Nora Castro Bautista, Marylou Carpio Claudio,
Baby Villaluz Doble, Mian Rosales Gancayco, Dr. Fidelis Foronda
Labrador, Baby Valdez Lejano, Col. Willie Nicolas and Linabelle Ramos
Villarica, trustees.

Founding chair Francis Ablan, and past presidents Justice Willie
Agnir (ret.), Rosemarie Balmaceda Lazaro, Rosie Mata Castro, Max
Edralin and Alice Raval Ventura comprise the council of advisers.

Funds will subsidize entrance fees for the Museo Ilocos Norte of
public elementary school children in the province. Guest of honor
Quezon City Mayor Sonny Belmonte traces his roots to Vintar town.
Call 9251462 or 0919-5825556, or 7222272.

Pilgrimage

Arpex Travel is organizing a pilgrimage to the Holy Land Nov. 9-18.
Text 0916-3189813 or 0917-8250817, or call 5253883.

World congress

Sixteen Filipino members of the Oblates of the Benedictine
Congregations of the Philippines led by national spiritual director
Dom Martin de Jesus Gomez, OSB, and national lay coordinator Alex
(Bro. Vincent) Pesigan will leave Sept. 17 for Rome to participate in
the First World Congress of Benedictine Oblates Sept. 19-25.

Delegates are lay people associated with monastic communities in the
country, promising to apply the teachings of Saint Benedict,
especially `Ora et Labora’ (Prayer and Work), in their lives.

Enthronement

The newly restored image of the Lady of Apocalypse was re-enthroned
Sept. 8, birthday of Mama Mary, at the Immaculate Conception
Cathedral in Pasig City with Bishop Francisco San Diego and Fr. Roy
Rosales officiating.

The restoration of Our Lady of the Apocalypse was started in 2004 by
a group from the Cultural Heritage Studies of the University of Santo
Tomas. Professor Maita Reyes, consultant to the Lopez Museum,
supervised the restoration.

Statue

On Aug. 30, a statue of Saint Josemaria Escriva de Balaquer, founder
of Opus Dei, was placed outside the St. Peter’s Basilica in Rome. The
five-meter marble statue is in a niche on the left transept of the
basilica, also known as St. Joseph’s Arm, very close to the entrance
to the sacristy.

The statue is grouped with others of the same size, like those of St.
Gregory the Illuminator, founder of the Armenian Church (by the
Armenian sculptor Khatchik Kazandjian); St. Teresa of the Andes,
Carmelite nun (by the Chilean sculptor Juan Eduardo Fernandez Cox);
and St. Marcellin Champagnat, founder of the Marist Brothers (by the
Costa Rican sculptor Jorge Jimenez Deredia).

St. Josemaria’s statue was carved from a single block of marble by
the Italian sculptor Romano Cosci, who spent more than a year on the
work.

;story_id=49862&col=23

http://news.inq7.net/lifestyle/index.php?index=2&amp
www.cofradiadelbuensuceso.org

Armenia Allocates 200,000 Dollars For Katrina Victims In USA

ARMENIA ALLOCATES 200,000 DOLLARS FOR KATRINA VICTIMS IN USA

Mediamax news agency, Yerevan
8 Sep 05

Yerevan, 8 September: The Armenian government today made a decision
to allocate 200,000 dollars as humanitarian aid to the US population
hit by hurricane [Katrina].

The Armenian Foreign Ministry will organize the process of rendering
assistance, the government’s press service has told Mediamax.

Armenia Expects Record High Grape Crop

ARMENIA EXPECTS RECORD HIGH GRAPE CROP

Armenpress
Sept 8, 2005

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 8, ARMENPRESS: Experts from Armenian agriculture
ministry predict that vine-growing farmers will gather this year
around 190,000 metric tons of grape from some 150,000 hectares. If
their forecasts come true Armenia will collect this year 40,000 tons
more than in 2004.

They also say this year’s crop is healthy with no traces of disease.

Local wineries are ready to procure as much of grape as will come at
an average price of 150 drams per kilo. Last year Armenian wineries
bought a total of 79,000 tons of grape, of which 20,000 tons were
bought by a French-owned Yerevan Brandy Company (YBC). This year YBC
plans to buy 25,000 tons more

Kaan Soyak: Armenian-Turkish Trade Relations Develop Well

KAAN SOYAK: ARMENIAN-TURKISH TRADE RELATIONS DEVELOP WELL

Pan Armenian News
07.09.2005 02:55

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Despite all the difficulties available the
Turkish-Armenian trade relations are developing well. Armenian
and Turkish businessmen cooperate at the Russian and Asian markets,
Turkish-Armenian Business Development Council head Kaan Soyak stated,
APA Azeri news agency reported. In his words, close ties have been
established between the Armenian Diaspora and Turkish business circles
recently and many representatives of the Armenian Diaspora wish to
cooperate with Turkish entrepreneurs. When commenting on the possible
change of public opinion in Turkey Kaan Soyak noted, “The Turkish
society came to know Armenia and its people in a new way. They learned
that Armenians want to leave in peace with Turkey.” In his words,
“Turks became more objective in treating the problems available
between Armenia and Azerbaijan and the erroneous policy of both
states is analyzed by the Turkish press.” “It is accepted that
Russia’s pro-Armenian line was of no benefit, he said. The Turkish
people are for fair settlement of the conflict. The economic hardship
Anatolia faces at present is caused by the blockade of the Armenian
border. Azerbaijan’s responsibility for it is equal to that Armenia
bears,” Kaan Soyak stressed.