Service Tariffs Grow By 0.4% In Armenia In April

SERVICE TARIFFS GROW BY 0.4% IN ARMENIA IN APRIL

Noyan Tapan
May 03 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 3, NOYAN TAPAN. A 0.4% increase was registered in the
tariffs of services provided to the Armenian population in April on
March 2006, which was mainly conditioned by a 1.3% increase in the
tariffs of housing and municipal services (in connection with the
increase in the natural gas tariffs on April 10), as well as by a 1.6%
growth in the prices of services in the sphere of culture. According
to the RA National Statistical Service, a 0.1-3.4% tariff growth was
registered in consumer, medical, transport, public catering services,
while recreational service tariffs declined by 0.6%. The tariffs of
legal, banking and educational services remained unchanged in April
on the previous month.

Azerbaijan Is Much Obliged To The USA

AZERBAIJAN IS MUCH OBLIGED TO THE USA
by Irada Alekperova, Alexei Slobodin
Translated by A. Ignatkin

Source: Vremya Novostei, April 28, 2006, p. 5
Agency WPS
DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
May 3, 2006 Wednesday

…But It Isn’t Going To Participate In An Operation Against Iran

AN UPDATE ON PRESIDENT ILHAM ALIYEV’S VISIT TO WASHINGTON; Wrapping
up his first visit to the United States, President Ilham Aliyev of
Azerbaijan will meet with US President George W. Bush today. Aliyev
met with Vice President Dick Cheney and Deputy Secretary of State
Robert Zoellick. On Wednesday, Aliyev addressed the Council on
Foreign Relations.

Wrapping up his first visit to the United States, President Ilham
Aliyev of Azerbaijan will meet with US President George W. Bush
today. Aliyev met with Vice President Dick Cheney and Deputy Secretary
of State Robert Zoellick. On Wednesday, the first day of the visit,
Aliyev met with US Representatives and addressed the Council on
Foreign Relations. Along with bilateral relations and war on terrorism,
his speech concerned regional problems with an emphasis on Iran and
Nagorno-Karabakh, and security of energy exports and transportation
projects in the basins of the Caspian and Black seas.

Before the Azeri president’s arrival, a White House press release
announced that “the United States regards Azerbaijan as a key ally
in this strategically vital region of the world” and “an invaluable
partner assisting with Iran.” No matter how seriously the human
rights community is concerned about human rights in Azerbaijan, it
was clear that the US authorities weren’t going to raise the matter of
“the democracy shortage in Azerbaijan” during the talks.

“It was extremely important for Baku to make its worries and concerns
known to the US Administration,” said political scientist Rasim
Musabekov. “It stands to reason, however, that it was important for
the United States too, if it had invited Aliyev to Washington.”

Aliyev, a graduate from the Moscow State Institute of International
Relations (run by the Soviet Foreign Ministry at the time),
delivered his speech in English. Aliyev said that “Baku regards
relations with the United States as a strategic priority” and added
that cooperation between the two countries encompassed all spheres,
including military. Aliyev said that it was time to put an end to
“any and all speculations” on Baku’s participation “in the potential
operations in Iran nearby.” Aliyev reminded the Council on Foreign
Relations that nearly 30 million ethnic Azeris live in Iran, whose
population amounts to 70 million. And besides, Azerbaijan and Iran
signed an agreement pledging not to provide the territories for
“any threats with regard to the partner.”

Aliyev implied that Baku would make a fine intermediary in the Iranian
nuclear crisis. “If it is the opinion of the international community
that our participation is a must, then it may be discussed,” he
said. Defense Minister of Iran Mustafa Mohammed Nadjar had visited Baku
last week. “President Aliyev may tell the US authorities the correct
direction in the matter of American-Iranian relations,” he said.

Political scientist Ilgar Mamedov from Baku believes that Aliyev’s
whole visit to Washington is centered around Iran. According to
Mamedov, “the United States needed to gauge Azerbaijan’s reaction
to possible economic and political sanctions or a military operation
against Iran.”

“In return for concurrence with economic sanctions, Baku is bound to
try and secure help from America in the return of at least some of
the Armenian-occupied territories on the border with Iran,” Mamedov
said. “After all, absence of Baku’s control over these territories
will certainly render the sanctions ineffective.”

Addressing the Council on Foreign Relations, Aliyev emphasized
that territorial integrity of his country (“acknowledged by all but
Armenia”) is not to be questioned or discussed. However, Azerbaijan
is prepared to offer Nagorno-Karabakh “extensive rights of an
autonomy.” Aliyev hopes that the United States “as a world power and
one of the chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group will facilitate resolution
of the conflict.”

The Azeri visitor complimented the hosts by saying that Azerbaijan
would have never developed its energy sector without help from
America. He said that Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan and Baku-Tbilisi-Erzerum
pipelines were “mostly regional” at first and urged the United States
and European Union to “join” the future energy projects.

Fikret Sadykhov, Director of the Center of Political Information
(Baku) believes that the invitation may be considered without undue
delays because “energy security problems in the southern part of the
Caucasus do worry the American political establishment nowadays.”

When in the United States, Aliyev praised relations with Moscow and
said that “they do not depend on any external factors.” When asked
what he thinks of the assumption that Baku and Moscow are vying for
influence in the post-Soviet zone, Aliyev replied, “Aspiring for the
role of an ‘island of stability,’ Azerbaijan considers itself a region
of cooperation, not confrontation.”

12th Sitting Of USATF Starts Work In Yerevan

12th SITTING OF USATF STARTS WORK IN YEREVAN

Noyan Tapan
May 02 2006

YEREVAN, MAY 2, NOYAN TAPAN. The 12th sitting of the US-Armenia Task
Force (USATF) started its work in Yerevan on May 2. The sitting is
chaired by the RA Minister of Finance and Economy Vardan Khachatrian
and the US Coordinator for Europe and Eurasia Tom Adams. The
sitting participants will discuss issues of bilateral interest,
present the process of programs implemented up to now within the
framework of cooperation and clarify issues related to the programmed
measures. According to the press service of the RA Ministry of Finance
and Economy, the measures to encourage Armenia’s economic development,
democratic reforms, issues related to the Millennium Challenge Program,
the macroeconomic policy and long-term development promotion programs,
as well as tax and customs sector reforms are on the agenda of
the USATF’s sitting. Problems of agriculature, science, education,
the judicial and energy sectors, the fight against terrorism and
other programs of mutual importance will also be discussed during
the sitting.

Plane Crashes In Russia With 100 Aboard

PLANE CRASHES IN RUSSIA WITH 100 ABOARD

AP
Wednesday May 3, 2006 2:46 AM

MOSCOW (AP) – An Armenian passenger jet with 100 people aboard crashed
early Wednesday off the Black Sea coast shortly before it was to land
in the Russian city of Sochi, Russian news agencies reported.

Wreckage from the plane was found not far from the shoreline, the
ITAR-Tass news agency reported, quoting Russian Emergency Situations
spokesman Viktor Beltsov. The Interfax news agency reported that
rescue teams at the site pulled the body of a woman from the sea.

The Airbus A-320, which belonged to the Armenian airline Armavia,
disappeared from radar screens at about 2:15 a.m. local time, the
RIA-Novosti agency reported. It was flying from the Armenian capital
Yerevan to Sochi, a resort city on the Black Sea in southern Russia,
and was carrying 92 passengers – including five children – and eight
crew members, ITAR-Tass reported.

Rescuers found parts of the plane nearly four miles from the shore,
along with empty lifejackets – an indication that passengers had no
time to put them on, ITAR-Tass quoted an unidentified local emergency
official as saying. The rescuers were working in a driving rain,
Russian news agencies reported.

His Holiness Karekin II Visits Special-Care Orphange In Nor Kharberd

HIS HOLINESS KAREKIN II VISITS SPECIAL-CARE ORPHANAGE IN NOR KHARBERD

AZG Armenian Daily
03/05/2006

On the afternoon of Sunday, April 9, His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme
Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, visited the special-care
orphanage in the city of Nor Kharberd. His Holiness brought his
Pontifical blessings and fatherly love to the 240 mentally and
physically handicapped children residing in the orphanage who do not
have the opportunity to attend church services on a regular basis.

Upon his arrival in Nor Kharberd, His Holiness was greeted by
Minister of Labor and Social Services Aghvan Vartanian; the Dean of
the orphanage, Mr.

Haroutiun Balasanian; and the dedicated staff of the center. They
accompanied His Holiness as he first visited the bedrooms of those
children who could not be moved due to medical reasons. The Catholicos
offered a prayer and gave his blessing to all of the children as he
presented each one with a small cross.

On the occasion of the visit of the Pontiff of All Armenians, a special
program had been prepared by the children of the Armenian Church Youth
Center of Nor Nork, operating under the auspices of the Mother See of
Holy Etchmiadzin and the AGBU. The dean of the orphanage welcomed the
Catholicos and his accompanying clergymen, stating that their visit and
blessings would help the children withstand their physical ailments and
emotional pain with greater courage. In appreciation for the musical
and dance program presented by the Youth Center, the children of the
orphanage also presented a program filled with songs and music.

His Holiness addressed his message of blessing to the children and
stated, “We wanted to visit the Nor Kharberd Orphanage because we
know that our dear children living here do not have the opportunity
to come and visit our churches and participate in our services. We
came to bring with us our love for you and our blessings from Holy
Etchmiadzin and to tell you, our boys and girls, that we love you,
we are grateful and proud of you.”

His Holiness also addressed his message of appreciation to the dean
and the staff of the center, noting, “We all know that the message
of Christ is the message of love. We know that God created the world
through His love and that guided by that same love, He sent His Only
Begotten Son to save the world. As St.

Paul says, ‘Love never fails’, and as we know from our faith – Love
conquers all.”, stated His Holiness, asking for God to strengthen the
staff and volunteers of the orphanage, granting them unending love
and patience, so that they may transmit the warmth of their spirits to
the children and lighten the burdens placed upon these innocent souls.

At the conclusion of the visit, His Holiness offered a service
for blessing children prepared especially for this day. Prior to
His Holiness’ departure, the children of the Nor Nork Youth Center
distributed presents which they had prepared for the children of the
Nor Kharberd Orphanage.

5-7 Percent Of Armenia’s Polulation Uses Internet

5-7 PERCENT OF ARMENIA’S POPULATION USES INTERNET

AZG Armenian Daily
03/05/2006

The number of Internet users in Armenia is 5-7 among 100
people. According to the data of Housekeeping Survey, the index
for Internet users in Yerevan is 18%, 8% for other cities and 3 %
for villages. While speaking of Armenia and the region as a whole,
the word-combination “internet user” is very relative.

It’s impossible to figure out the number of people using the Internet
at workplace in state or private organizations or at home. A single
subscriber can connect to different providers, yet a family can use
the service of only one provider. Either way, the number of Internet
users among 3 million of Armenian population remains 150.000.

SYSTEM OF A DOWN Raise Awareness Of Sudanese Genocide

SYSTEM OF A DOWN RAISE AWARENESS OF SUDANESE GENOCIDE

Blabbermouth.net, NY
May 2 2006

SYSTEM OF A DOWN is committed to raising awareness of all human
rights issues, including the current genocide crisis going on
the Darfur region of Western Sudan. mtvU has launched a online
campaign at to help spread information about the
genocide. Through a partnership with the Reebok Human Rights Foundation
and the International Crisis Group, mtvU awarded a development deal
to group of student digital activists to create an online viral video
game which will put players in the shoes of the 2.5 million refugees
who are fighting for survival every day in Darfur.

Commented SYSTEM OF A DOWN frontman Serj Tankian: “MTV has been one
of the early screamers on the Darfur Genocide at a time when no one
was really paying any attention to it in the press. By calling it a
genocide and not doing anything about it, our government is setting a
standard for intervention only in cases of economic gain. I just met
with a number of Democratic and Republican Congressmen and a Senator
to talk about the need to have the U.S. Congress formally recognize
the Armenian Genocide by Turkey in 1915. Part of the conversation was
spent in explaining that genocide denial will lead to other genocide
as in Darfur and the need for our government to use its leverage
financially and otherwise in Africa to make sure that Khartoum gets the
message that this will no longer be tolerated, along with encouraging
the United Nations to immediately place an active, effective peace
keeping contingent of troops in the Darfur region of Sudan.”

www.darfurisdying.com

His Holiness Karekin II Visits Special-Care Orphanage in Nor Kharber

PRESS RELEASE
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Information Services
Address: Vagharshapat, Republic of Armenia
Contact: Rev. Fr. Ktrij Devejian
Tel: (374 10) 517 163
Fax: (374 10) 517 301
E-Mail: [email protected]
Website:
April 30, 2006

His Holiness Karekin II Visits Special-Care Orphanage in Nor Kharberd

On the afternoon of Sunday, April 9, His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme
Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, visited the special-care
orphanage in the city of Nor Kharberd. His Holiness brought his
Pontifical blessings and fatherly love to the 240 mentally and
physically handicapped children residing in the orphanage who do not
have the opportunity to attend church services on a regular basis.

Upon his arrival in Nor Kharberd, His Holiness was greeted by
Minister of Labor and Social Services Aghvan Vartanian; the Dean of
the orphanage, Mr. Haroutiun Balasanian; and the dedicated staff of
the center. They accompanied His Holiness as he first visited the
bedrooms of those children who could not be moved due to medical
reasons. The Catholicos offered a prayer and gave his blessing to
all of the children as he presented each one with a small cross.

On the occasion of the visit of the Pontiff of All Armenians, a special
program had been prepared by the children of the Armenian Church Youth
Center of Nor Nork, operating under the auspices of the Mother See of
Holy Etchmiadzin and the AGBU. The dean of the orphanage welcomed the
Catholicos and his accompanying clergymen, stating that their visit and
blessings would help the children withstand their physical ailments and
emotional pain with greater courage. In appreciation for the musical
and dance program presented by the Youth Center, the children of the
orphanage also presented a program filled with songs and music.

His Holiness addressed his message of blessing to the children and
stated, “We wanted to visit the Nor Kharberd Orphanage because we
know that our dear children living here do not have the opportunity
to come and visit our churches and participate in our services. We
came to bring with us our love for you and our blessings from Holy
Etchmiadzin and to tell you, our boys and girls, that we love you,
we are grateful and proud of you.”

His Holiness also addressed his message of appreciation to the dean
and the staff of the center, noting, “We all know that the message
of Christ is the message of love. We know that God created the world
through His love and that guided by that same love, He sent His
Only Begotten Son to save the world. As St. Paul says, ‘Love never
fails’, and as we know from our faith – Love conquers all.”, stated
His Holiness, asking for God to strengthen the staff and volunteers
of the orphanage, granting them unending love and patience, so that
they may transmit the warmth of their spirits to the children and
lighten the burdens placed upon these innocent souls.

At the conclusion of the visit, His Holiness offered a service
for blessing children prepared especially for this day. Prior to
His Holiness’ departure, the children of the Nor Nork Youth Center
distributed presents which they had prepared for the children of the
Nor Kharberd Orphanage.

##

www.armenianchurch.org

Safrastyan: Struggle for Recognition should move to intl legal field

Ruben Safrastyan: The struggle for Genocide recognition should be
transfered to the international legal field

ArmRadio.am
29.04.2006 15:43

`It is the proper time to transfer the struggle for the Armenian
Genocide recognition from the political sphere to the international
legal field and, why not, think about reimbursement,’ said head of the
Department of Turkey at the RA Academy of Sciences, Doctor Ruben
Safrastyan.

According to him, the Armenian government should undertake the
resolution of this issue via forming all-Armenian commissions, which
will decide upon the forms of compensation and choose the legal
structures, which must be applied to.

See no evil

North Shore Sunday, MA
April 29 2006

See no evil

By Barbara Taormina/ Staff Writer
Friday, April 28, 2006 – Updated: 07:01 PM EST

People might not always know how to define genocide, but they know it
when they see it.

And yet, there have always been problems with the Armenian
genocide, a brutal stretch of early 20th century history during which
1.5 million Armenians were beaten, shot, hung and herded on long
death marches into the Syrian desert by a Turkish government bent on
seizing a strategic piece of land and creating a Pan-Turkish empire.

Armenian genocide

The Turks talk back

The Turks say it never happened. They admit the Armenians
suffered a huge death toll between 1915 and 1918, but they say the
deaths were due to a civil rebellion and the vast destruction left in
the wake of World War I. Despite the photographs, the news reports,
the eyewitness accounts and the stories of survivors, the Turks have
fought the charge of genocide since the United Nations accepted the
term and declared it an international crime in 1948.

Those denials were stepped up last week as Armenians the world
over held commemorative services to mark the 91st anniversary of the
genocide and to remember those who died and those who survived. And
in Massachusetts, people are watching the debate on the Armenian
genocide play out on a local, state and federal level.

Apo Torosyan, an Armenian artist and filmmaker who now lives in
Peabody, says Turkey has buried the truth of what happened to the
Armenians because they don’t want the national stigma.

“They are trying to cover up their shame,” says Torosyan, whose
grandparents died of starvation during the genocide. “I would be very
ashamed. This was a very systematic murder.”

Torosyan and others also feel the Turkish government is
determined not to acknowledge anything that could leave it open to a
flood of lawsuits seeking billions of dollars in reparations.

And because Turkey now plays a strategic role in a turbulent part
of the world, few people, particularly those in the U.S. government,
want to rock the boat by demanding that Turkey accept responsibility.

Torosyan understands that politics have dictated how the story of
the Armenian genocide is being told. But like others, he believes
denial is the final act of any genocide. And like others he believes
the truth about Armenia and those who died will eventually be
acknowledged and accepted.

The politics of denial

As a kid, Mary Foley remembers people she didn’t know would
sometimes visit her home to talk with her parents.

“My mother used to tell me go into the bedroom and play,” recalls
Foley, the sister of former Peabody Mayor Peter Torigian

As she grew older, Foley realized the visitors were Armenian
immigrants looking for clues or scraps of information about people
who may have escaped Turkey and survived the genocide.

Foley’s father left Armenia for the United States in 1912, the
year before the killings and deportations started. Her mother, who
was a child at the time, lost her family and managed to survive with
the help of Turkish families who took in and hid Armenian orphans.

But those Turks who helped took a huge risk, says Foley. Homes
were searched and if any Armenians were found, the entire household
would be killed.

Years later, when she was 94 and suffering from Alzheimer’s
disease, Foley says her mother would sometimes call out in Armenian,
“They came, they came, they came.” The tears would roll down her
cheeks as she relived the terror of hiding from Turkish death squads.

“These aren’t stories that people can make up,” says Foley. “How
could the Turks deny these things happened?”

But Foley knows that politics have interfered with the way
history is being remembered and told. For years, American political
leaders have been walking a fine line between acknowledging the
suffering of the Armenians and placating the Turkish government by
going easy on the blame. It’s a difficult balancing act.

Just ask Deval Patrick, a Democratic candidate for governor, who
took a visible seat at an Armenian memorial service at the State
House last week. Patrick made sure he had time to attend after the
Boston Herald reported he had ties to lobbyist Bernie Robinson, whose
Washington-based firm, the Livingston Group, has been working for the
Republic of Turkey on its campaign to deny or downplay the Armenian
genocide.

According to the watchdog group Public Citizen, the Turks have paid
the Livingston Group more than $9 million to fight a congressional
amendment recognizing the Armenian genocide and to help steer $1
billion in U.S. aid to Turkey, even though American troops are barred
from using Turkish soil as a staging area for Iraq.

Patrick’s Democratic opponent Tom Reilly wasted no time racking
up a few political miles with the incident.

“Anyone who would try and undermine the history and the truth of
what happened to the Armenian population, I certainly would be
disappointed in that. I certainly would not want to have anything to
do with that,” Reilly said.

On a national level, the Armenian sidestepping has been
bi-partisan. Both presidents Bill Clinton and George Bush have
refused to sign on to the Armenian Genocide Resolution, which would
formally recognize the suffering of the Armenians.

“There are congressmen and senators who support the Armenian
people,” says Foley. “But on the whole, America likes to ignore it
because the Turks have been allies for many years.”

Not only did the United States have military bases in Turkey
during the Cold War, the country’s strategic location and its role as
a moderate Muslim country make it a critical ally to American
interests in the Middle East.

“It’s wrong, but no one want to make enemies of the Turks,” says
Foley.

And while the American stand against acknowledging the Armenian
genocide is difficult, Torosyan says it’s not only the national
response that Armenians find troubling.

Israel, which also depends on alliance with Turkey, has also
refused to formally recognize the genocide, says Torosyan.

The Israeli position has been that the question of the Armenians
should be left to the historians, not the politicians.

Spinning the story

Denying or rewriting history takes some effort, but it seems the
Turks are doing their best and succeeding, at least inside of Turkey.

“This history has been fabricated by the Turkish government,”
says Torosyan. “Their history has been written by the politicians,
not the historians. They are rewriting history to their own benefit,
not to the benefit of humanity.”

According to Torosyan, the Turkish government archives have been
purged and all documents that trace the official program of
deportation and killing are gone.

“It’s like a jigsaw puzzle where all the pieces in the middle are
missing,” says Torosyan. “There are a few pieces on the sides, but
that’s all that’s left.”

As for events that captured the world’s attention, the Turkish
government has done its best to spin them. For example, the Turks say
episodes during which Armenian professionals and intellectuals were
rounded up and killed were a necessary step to quell an internal
rebellion.

The Turks also brush off the post-war trials of those who led the
Armenian genocide. Although several key Turkish leaders were tried
and executed for their role in the Armenian genocide, the Turks now
say those trials were political showmanship, the result of political
infighting between the pre- and post-war government.

And the Turks don’t appear satisfied with rewriting just their
own history books.

Late last year, the Assembly of Turkish American Associations, a
student and two teachers sued the Massachusetts Board of Education,
claiming it had censored history and interfered with the right of
speech. The state has curriculum guidelines for teaching students
about human rights and genocide. But it has refused to include in its
material links to Turkish government-sponsored Web sites that deny
the Armenian genocide.

According to Harvey Silverglate, a Boston civil rights lawyer
representing the plaintiffs, the suit isn’t about being on one side
or the other – it’s about censorship. Silverglate says students
should be able to look at different historical sources and come to
their own conclusions about what happened to the Armenians.

Members of the state board of education have argued that the Web
sites in question are not academic sites.

Torosyan agrees and says those Web sites are just Turkish
propaganda. He believes the information that has survived speaks for
itself.

“Denials are denials,” he says. “You could never have a
curriculum that denies the Holocaust. People have a right to speak up
and not tell lies and not tell man-made history.”

But Torosyan, who is a member of the International Association of
Genocide Scholars, is also doing his part to contribute to the
history through his artwork and through two short films, “Discovering
My Father’s Village – Edinick” and “Witness,” both of which feature
survivors of the Armenian genocide and an analysis of events.

The Turkish government hasn’t taken kindly to those who buck
their trend of retelling the story. In recent years, there have been
several high-profile cases of writers and journalists who have been
imprisoned for publishing accounts of the Armenian genocide.

Torosyan, who had a display of his artwork at the annual memorial
service in Peabody for Holocaust survivors this week, explained the
cost of telling his stories to those who stopped by his exhibit.

“This,” he said as he pointed to copies of his films, “is why I
can never go back.”

Boston Herald report Kevin Rothstein contributed to this story.
E-Mail Barbara Taormina at [email protected].