NKR President Received Philanthropists From The U.S.

NKR PRESIDENT RECEIVED PHILANTHROPISTS FROM U.S.

Defacto Agency, Armenia
Sept 28 2007

September 27 Nagorno-Karabagh Republic President Bako Sahakian received
Jasmen Boniatsian and Karen Benisyants, philanthropists from the U. S.,
who were realizing various projects in Artsakh.

According to the information DE FACTO received at the Central
Department of Information under NKR President, the state’s head
had highly estimated the philanthropists’ work and underscored the
importance of realization of programs targeted at Artsakh villages’
development. The interlocutors made a point of imparting a new impetus
to works directed at Artsakh’s recognition by the world.

Sergey Shahverdian, Director of the Agency for the Development of NKR
Tourism, and David Ishkhanian, National Heritage Fund coordinator,
took part in the meeting.

Vardan Oskanian Highly Evaluates Results Of Armenian Diplomats’ Meet

VARDAN OSKANIAN HIGHLY EVALUATES RESULTS OF ARMENIAN DIPLOMATS’ MEETING
Author: Petrosian Susanna Editor: Eghian Robert

Noyan Tapan News Agency, Armenia
Sept 27 2007

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 27, NOYAN TAPAN. "Rather efficient and serious
discussions around a number of important issues have been held today,"
RA Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian gave such an estimation to the
September 27 meeting of RA Foreign Ministry’s central staff and RA
diplomatic representatives.

According to him, the situation formed in the region was discussed,
profound analysis related to a number of important developments was
made at the meeting, in particular, what impact these developments
can have on the region and Armenia. The Minister said that more than
10 developments, including Russia-U.S. current relations, NATO and
EU expansion were spoken about.

V. Oskanian said that a number of issues related to development
of bilateral relations, icluding in the cultural sphere, were also
discussed during the meeting. According to him, cultural diplomacy
is an important means of presenting Armenia abroad. "Culture has been
unequivocally chosen as the means, with which we can present Armenia.

And there are good examples, such as the Year of Armenia in France,
in Russia. A decision to expand this activity has been made."

The Minister attached a special importance to the commissions given
to all employees of that system on the Nagorno Karabakh problem.

According to V. Oskanian, that problem requires Armenian diplomats’
consistent work in all countries.

Former U.S. Secretaries Of State Oppose Armenian Genocide Resolution

FORMER U.S. SECRETARIES OF STATE OPPOSE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

PanARMENIAN.Net
27.09.2007 12:27 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Fearing an imminent vote on the Armenian Genocide
Resolution (H.Res.106), Turkey’s multi-million dollar lobbyists have
solicited the assistance of eight former U.S. Secretaries of State
in seeking to derail this human rights legislation, reported the
Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA.)

"Facing a growing bipartisan Congressional majority demanding
passage of the Armenian Genocide Resolution, Turkey’s lobbyists –
out of desperation and a never ending desire to squeeze more billing
dollars out of Ankara – have turned to the very architects of our
government’s failed policy of appeasing Turkey," said Aram Hamparian,
Executive Director of the ANCA.

"Sadly, successive U.S. administrations have found themselves lacking
the moral courage to end the cycle of genocide – from Cambodia, to
Rwanda and, today in Darfur – precisely because of their legacy of
caving in to, rather than confronting genocidal regimes."

"We are, as Americans, especially troubled that, in warning Congress
not to make a simple anti-genocide statement for fear of upsetting
Turkey, these officials would outsource our nation’s moral conscience
to a foreign government," added Hamparian.

In their September 25th jointly-signed letter, former Secretaries of
State Madeleine Albright, James Baker III, Warren Christopher, Laurence
Eagleburger, Alexander Haig, Jr., Henry Kissinger, Colin Powell,
and George Schultz, urged Speaker Pelosi to, "prevent the resolution
from reaching the House Floor," thereby denying House Members an
opportunity to vote their conscience on the Armenian Genocide. The
former State Department officials expressed concern that passage of
the resolution "could endanger our national security interests in
the region, including our troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, and damage
efforts to promote reconciliation between Armenia and Turkey."

Introduced on January 30th by Rep. Adam Schiff along with
Representative George Radanovich (R-CA), Congressional Armenian
Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Joe Knollenberg (R-MI),
Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-CA), Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA) and Rep. Thaddeus
McCotter (R-MI), the Armenian Genocide resolution calls upon the
President to ensure that the foreign policy of the United States
reflects appropriate understanding and sensitivity concerning issues
related to human rights, ethnic cleansing, and genocide documented
in the United States record relating to the Armenian Genocide. The
resolution is cosponsored by 226 Members of Congress from 39 states.

A similar resolution in the Senate (S.Res.106), introduced by
Assistant Majority Leader Dick Durbin (D-IL) and Sen. John Ensign
(R-NV) currently has 31 cosponsors, including Senate Majority Leader
Harry Reid (D-NV) and presidential candidate Hillary Clinton (D-NY).

RA Prime Minister Serge Sargsyan Meets Russian Public Figures

RA PRIME MINISTER SERGE SARGSYAN MEETS RUSSIAN PUBLIC FIGURES

PanARMENIAN.Net
27.09.2007 14:02 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ During his first formal visit to Russia as a Prime
Minister of Armenia, Serge Sargsyan met with the leaders of the
Russian Association of Friendship and Cooperation with Armenia (RAFCA).

The RAFCA press office reported that the Armenian Prime Minister
marked out the importance of cooperation for strengthening friendly
ties and gave a high estimation to the events held in the framework
of the Year of the Russian Language.

Serge Sargsyan endorsed the idea of erecting a monument to
Russian-Armenian friendship and implementing a number of joint
projects.

Nerses Yeritsyan, the Minister of Trade and Economic Development,
Mikael Harutyunyan, the Minister of Defense and Armen Smbatyan,
the RA Ambassador to Russia, were also present at the meeting.

Ter-Petrosian Will Run For President, Say Allies

TER-PETROSIAN WILL RUN FOR PRESIDENT, SAY ALLIES
By Astghik Bedevian

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Sept 26 2007

Political allies of Levon Ter-Petrosian were confident on Wednesday
that Armenia’s former president will after all decide to participate
in the approaching presidential elections. They also brushed aside
President Robert Kocharian’s warning that Ter-Petrosian should stay
away from politics or face renewed scrutiny of his controversial
track record.

"Levon Ter-Petrosian’s nomination [as a presidential candidate]
is irreversible. That is, it will definitely happen," said Ararat
Zurabian, chairman of the Armenian Pan-National Movement (HHSh), the
former ruling party of the ex-president is the unofficial top leader.

"As the first president said, he has not yet made a final decision
[to contest the vote,]" Zurabian told reporters. "But I believe things
are moving towards that decision."

In his first public speech in nearly a decade, Ter-Petrosian told
hundreds of supporters that he has still not decided whether to
seek a return to power. Still, his blistering attack on Armenia’s
"corrupt and criminal" leadership prompted suggestions that he is
leaning towards a presidential run.

Aram Sarkisian, whose radical opposition Hanrapetutyun party also
strongly backs Ter-Petrosian, made a similar point in an interview with
RFE/RL. He claimed that Ter-Petrosian, who led Armenia to independence
in 1991, is popular enough to return to power.

"Our contacts with the public show that a huge section of
Armenia’s population thinks that if a prudent, pragmatic person like
Ter-Petrosian … decides to stand, he will win," said Sarkisian. "I
am convinced that the day after the statement by the first president
[on his nomination] scores of people will converge on the Yerevan
square with flags," he added.

Kocharian on Tuesday rejected Ter-Petrosian’s accusations and
warned that his predecessor will become an "ordinary opposition
politician" and risk a barrage of criticism if he chooses to stand
in the presidential ballot. He said Armenians would be "reminded"
of many shortcomings which they still associate with Ter-Petrosian’s
1990-1998 rule.

"All questions will get appropriate answers," commented Zurabian.

"If they thought that their predecessors committed crimes they were
obliged to go to court and hold those people accountable," Sarkisian
said for his part.

Both the HHSh and Hanrapetutyun regard Ter-Petrosian as the only
politician capable of thwarting a planned handover of power from
Kocharian to Prime Minister Serzh Sarkisian. They hope that other
major opposition groups will also rally around the ex-president. But so
far only one of them, the People’s Party (HZhK) of Stepan Demirchian,
has been ready to consider doing that.

Demirchian, who was Kocharian’s main challenger in the last
presidential election, denied on Wednesday some Ter-Petrosian
associates’ claims that his endorsement of the ex-president is
a forgone conclusion. "As long as the first president has not
announced his nomination, the HZhK can not decide to support him,"
he told RFE/RL.

Still, Demirchian made it clear that he has a high regard for
Ter-Petrosian while agreeing with much of the criticism of Armenia’s
former leadership. "Let us not forget that the country was at war
then," he said. "There were mistakes, very negative phenomena,
manifestations of irresponsibility and impunity. But those negative
phenomena are now much more deeply rooted in our life."

Armenia’s Dashink Merges With Ramgavar Azadagan Party

ARMENIA’S DASHINK MERGES WITH RAMGAVAR AZADAGAN PARTY

Armenian newspaper 168 Zham
11 Sep 07
Yerevan

The Armenian Dashink Party, led by the former defence minister of
Nagornyy Karabakh, Samvel Babayan, has dissolved and joined the
Ramgavar Azadagan (Liberal-Democratic) Party (based in Lebanon),
168 Zham newspaper reports. Babayan set up the Dashink Party in 2005
after being pardoned before the end of his 14-year imprisonment for
an alleged assassination attempt on the life of Nagornyy Karabakh’s
former president Arkadiy Ghukasyan.

There are reports that Samvel Babayan will become the leader of
Ramgavar Azadagan, however Ramgavar Azadagan officials do not comment
on this information, 168 Zham reports.

According to 168 Zham, Ramgavar Azadagan Party decided to move
its leadership to Armenia and Samvel Babayan will represent the
Armenian branch of the party in the party’s supreme body, which has
representatives from its international branches.

Armenians won no medals

A1+

ARMENIANS WON NO MEDAL
[09:16 pm] 21 September, 2007

The Armenian free-style wrestlers were unable to
demonstrate their abilities at the Baku World
Wrestling Championship. They will return to Armenia
empty-handed in comparison with the Greco-Roman style
wrestlers who won a bronze medal and two Olympiad
tickets.

Turkey’s representative Hakan Kokhin won over Armenian
Edgar Enokyan at the 96-kg category.

Another Armenian Ruslan Basiev (120 kg) won over his
Indian rival at the 1/16th semifinals and was beaten
by Kazakh Mutalimov at the 1/8th semifinals.

Zambia: Levy Leaves for U.S., Salutes Colleagues

AllAfrica.com, Washington

Zambia: Levy Leaves for U.S., Salutes Colleagues

The Times of Zambia (Ndola)

20 September 2007
Posted to the web 20 September 2007

Ndola

PRESIDENT Mwanawasa is today expected to leave for the United States
of America (USA) to attend the United Nations (UN) Assembly.

State House special assistant for Press and public relations, John
Musukuma confirmed the planned departure in an interview in Lusaka
yesterday.

Meanwhile, Mr Mwanawasa has sent a message of congratulations to his
Nigerian, Malta, Mali, Armenia and Guinea Bissau counterparts on the
anniversary of their national days.

In his message of congratulation to his Nigerian counterpart, Alhaji
Umaru Musa Yar’Adua, Mr Mwanawasa said Zambia acknowledged the warm
relations that existed between the two countries and reiterated the
desire to further enhance the relations for the mutual benefit of the
two countries.

To his Malta counterpart, Edward Fenech-Adam, Mr Mwanawasa said the
relations between the two countries were deep-rooted and date back to
1964 when the countries gained independence from the British
Government.

He said Zambia and Malta shared one platform in the Commonwealth of
the nations and hoped the two countries would continue to cooperate
for the mutual benefit of the two countries.

Mr Mwanawasa further sent a message of congratulations to Mali
President Amadou Toumani Toure. He commended Mali’s efforts in scoring
successes in the area of good governance and looked forward to
strengthened relations.

In a message to Gueinea Bissau President Jao Bernardo Viera, Mr
Mwanawasa congratulated that country’s on the national day, which
falls on Sptember24.

President Mwanawasa further sent a message of congratulation to his
Armenia counterpart Robert Kocharian on that country’s national day,
which falls on September21.

And Mr Mwanawasa has sent a message of congratulation to
President-elect of Turkey President Abdullah Gul and wished him every
success as he assumed the leadership.

No Place for Hate breaks its silence Friday

No Place for Hate breaks its silence Friday

By Ian B. Murphy/Staff Writer
GateHouse News Service
New! Thu Sep 20, 2007, 05:43 AM EDT

Lexington –

To date, Lexington’s No Place for Hate committee has not formally
addressed the Anti-Defamation League’s (ADL) partial acknowledgement
of the Armenian genocide by the Ottoman Turks in the World War I era,
or the ADL’s stance on a resolution in Congress to designate the
genocide as such.

That will change Friday morning, when Lexington’s No Place for Hate
committee meets for the first time since their summer adjournment in
June. The committee, made of more than a dozen citizens and members
>From various community organizations, will hear from Armenian
residents who want the committee to cut its ties with the ADL.

In the last month, several surrounding communities including Belmont,
Arlington and Newton have either suspended or severed their ties with
the ADL’s No Place for Hate program because of the ADL’s stance.

"Until the ADL advocates recognition for the Armenian genocide in the
U.S. congress, I would advocate severing ties," said Roger Hagopian,
an Armenian-American resident who has lived in Lexington for 16 years.
"This is something that should be acknowledged."

Hagopian, an amateur filmmaker that has created several documentaries
on the subject, is a member of a group of Armenian-Americans living in
Lexington that feel the No Place for Hate program’s affiliation with
the ADL are no longer appropriate. They recognize the great work that
No Place for Hate has done in town, but cannot reconcile the ADL’s
position on the genocide.

"They really have done great work over the years," said Michael
Kouchakdjian, another Armenian-American resident. "The problem is not
with No Place For Hate. … It’s just that link [to the ADL] that has
really given rise to the hypocrisy. I would have expected the No Place
for Hate committee, once this issue came up, to quickly do an
evaluation and see that the link with ADL is inappropriate considering
the mission of the committee and do something about that."

Jill Smilow, the committee’s chairman, said the group’s response has
not been quick because it does not want to rush to judgment. According
to Smilow, the committee has been communicating internally and
gathering as much information as possible.

"There is a lot of conversation and questions going back and forth
[between the committee]," said Smilow. "We’re trying to be deliberate
to figure out how best to have dialogue [with community members], and
how to respond, and to do what’s right for our community."

Smilow is also on the regional board of directors for the ADL. She
said people should look at the fact that the New England regional ADL
has acknowledged the genocide, a move that got its director, Andrew
Tarsay, fired (he was later reinstated after much public pressure on
the ADL). She also said other communities, such as Duxbury, have
reaffirmed their support for the No Place for Hate program.

Smilow doesn’t believe that ADL’s national policy needs to affect how
Lexington’s No Place For Hate committee conducts its business.

"The idea that there is the sort of death grip on all of us from
national ADL is false," said Smilow. "I don’t feel it. What I do feel
is the need to hear from our Armenian residents. I’m grateful for the
Armenians in Watertown who brought this to the forefront. On the flip
side, I’m so sad that there isn’t No Place For Hate in their community
[anymore]."

Without speaking for the rest of the group, Smilow felt Lexington’s
committee could provide a forum for community discussion and education
about the Armenian genocide.

"At the heart of it is this incredible moral issue, and that to me the
most important thing is that in Lexington our community understands
why this is such an issue and why it hurts our Armenian-American
neighbors," she said.

Hagopian has tried to educate Lexington about the genocide through his
films. Last April, he showed a documentary called "Memory Fragments
>From the Armenian Genocide" to a group of 500 students at Lexington
High School.

Hagopian and Kouchakdjian both appreciate that the regional ADL has
acknowledged the genocide, and that Tarsay is to be commended for his
stand against the national position. However both still feel that any
connection to a national organization that denies the genocide is
unacceptable.

"I am very pleased with the support we have received from the Jewish
community and beyond on this issue," said Hagopian. "[But the ADL] is
not willing to go far enough and put themselves on a line where the
country of Turkey can see them as a supporter of recognition of this
in front the Congress. Tarsay is a good man, but the regional group is
tied to ADL, and the organization has not gone far enough."

Kouchakdjian feels that No Place for Hate in Lexington can continue
with its successes without its connection to the ADL.

"[Lexington has] got so many good people, and it’s such a progressive
town," he said. "I’m not sure what ADL supplies here. It’s not
organizations, it’s people [that do the good work]."

The group will meet at 8 a.m. Friday, Sept. 21 in the Selectmen’s
Meeting Room at Town Hall.

Source: 63108

http://www.townonline.com/lexington/homepage/x4283

Group Opposes ADL Involvement

GROUP OPPOSES ADL INVOLVEMENT

Arlington Advocate, MA
GateHouse News Service
Thu Sep 20, 2007, 12:00 AM EDT

Arlington, Mass. – We are among several residents of Arlington of
different religions and ethnicities who strongly support a town program
to fight bigotry and make our community a place where diversity is
welcome, but who have opposed Anti-Defamation League sponsorship of
such a program from the time public announcement was made about plans
to bring No Place for Hate here more than eight months ago.

We are encouraged by the suspension or reconsideration of the program
in Watertown, Arlington, Belmont, Newton and other nearby communities
pending full ADL acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide and support
for a congressional resolution to that effect. And we applaud our
Armenian sisters and brothers for their principled and powerful
political stand on this issue.

But our concerns with the Anti-Defamation League are far broader,
although many of them are rooted in the organization’s support for
Israeli positions, actions and alliances.

Since it was founded in 1913, ADL has played an important role in
fighting anti-Semitism and other forms of discrimination. Many are
familiar with ADL’s anti-hate work and bridge-building to religious
and ethnic communities, especially in New England.

However, over the last 30 years the ADL has also allied itself with
right-wing forces in our country, silenced dissent on matters related
to Israel and blacklisted and defamed progressive voices expressing
views that are not in keeping with its own, particularly on Israel and
Palestine. Journalists and researchers who publish in the mainstream
press have documented this.

As residents who care about our town and want to help create a welcome
and open community, we say that ADL is not an appropriate co-sponsor
for an official local program.

Here are some of our reasons.

1) ADL blacklists, defames and silences the voices of academics,
progressive Jews, Arabs, Muslims, and other critics of Israeli
policy. As noted on the Jewish Voice for Peace Web site, "The ADL’s
stated mission is to protect the rights of Jews and fight bigotry
wherever it appears. But the ADL has created an environment of fear and
intimidation, in which thousands of American Jews are systematically
silenced."

In 1984 and in 1995-96, the Middle East Studies Association of North
America, the major academic and professional association setting
the standards for scholarship on the Middle East, condemned ADL’s
blacklisting of critics of Israeli policy. ADL continues to harass
academics critical of Israeli policy and American foreign policy in
the Middle East.

Arab, Muslim, and Jewish voices in the academy are especially
targeted. ADL has destroyed the careers and reputations of academics
by disseminating falsehoods about their views.

Since the 1970s, national ADL leaders have written about what they call
the "new anti-Semitism," which renders any serious critic of Israel
an anti-Semite or "self-hating Jew." In 2006, ADL condemned Amnesty
International and Human Rights Watch reports on the Israeli-Hezbollah
war, calling Amnesty’s report "bigoted, biased and borderline
anti-Semitic" and castigating Human Rights Watch for "immorality at
the highest level." More recently, ADL strongly criticized former
President Jimmy Carter for employing "the old canard and conspiracy
theory of Jewish control" and more broadly challenged his integrity
for his book, "Palestine: Peace Not Apartheid." Only two weeks ago
in an NPR interview, ADL National Director Abe Foxman condemned
Harvard Professor Stephen Walt and University of Chicago Professor
John Mearsheimer for their new book on the Israel lobby by employing
analogies to Hitler and Stalin.

2) ADL conducts illegal surveillance. In the 1980s and 1990s, ADL
conducted illegal surveillance of more than 950 groups and nearly
10,000 activists. Targeted groups included NAACP, Asian-American
Law Caucus, Artists Against Apartheid, Farm Workers Union, ACLU,
Mother Jones magazine, National Lawyers Guild, American-Arab
Anti-Discrimination Committee, Greenpeace, Act Up, Action for Animals,
United Auto Workers and the American Indian Movement. ADL operatives
shared information on anti-apartheid organizing in the U.S. with
South Africa’s Afrikaner government.

In the 1990s several lawsuits were filed against the ADL in San
Francisco. In 1999 Federal Judge Richard Paez issued an injunction
permanently enjoining ADL from engaging in further illegal spying on
Arab-American, anti-apartheid and civil rights activists and requiring
ADL to show evidence of adherence to this injunction. Since the 1990s,
several other cases against ADL have made or are making their way
through the courts.

The ADL’s history of surveillance dates back to the 1940s when ADL
spied on leftists and communists. The ADL also shared this information
with The House Committee on Un-American Activities and the FBI.

3) ADL opposes affirmative action. In the 1970s ADL was an
early staunch leader in the national fight against affirmative
action. In 1978, ADL head Nathan Perlmutter called for a ban on all
race-based criteria for university admissions. In 2003, in support
of anti-affirmative action plaintiffs, ADL filed an amicus brief to
the Supreme Court in a case involving race-based admissions at the
University of Michigan.

The Town of Arlington has a firm commitment to affirmative action, as
embodied in our Affirmative Action Advisory Committee. This is a sharp
contrast with the position taken by the ADL on affirmative action.

4) ADL advocates for war in the Middle East. Since the 1980s ADL
has aligned with right-wing forces in the U.S. and abroad. In 2002,
ADL was one of the groups advocating for the invasion of Iraq and it
has long maintained a hawkish stance on U.S. military action in the
region, currently beating the drums to promote U.S. war on Iran.

For these reasons, in addition to the national organization’s
long-standing refusal to fully acknowledge the Armenian Genocide,
we believe that ADL is not an appropriate sponsor of a program on
teaching openness to diverse perspectives. We ask our Arlington
friends and neighbors: If you were a member of any of the groups
targeted by the ADL, would you want the organization to be sponsor
of an anti-discrimination program in your town?