Armenian community in Lebanon is well organized

Armenian community in Lebanon is well organized

Interview conducted
by Karine MANGASSARIAN

Yerkir.am
July 28, 2006

Editor in Chief of "Aztag" Newspaper in Beirut Shahan Gantaharian
told us about the situation with the Armenian community in Lebanon
and the organization of assistance for the refugees.

Q: What can you tell us about the developments of the last several
days? A: The war started by Israel against Lebanon has been going on
for fifteen days. The war has brought tremendous destruction and the
damage it has caused is estimated at billions of dollars. The military
actions of the last several days were concentrated in the southern
border territories. There are serious clashes between Hezbollah
and the Israeli army. Israel has bombed the military units of the
Lebanese army dislocated to the North of Beirut and the broadcasting
station of Radio Lebanon. It is not yet known whether they bombed
it from the air or from the Israeli military ships located near the
Lebanon shore. There is no information as to the number of dead or
injured. The perspective for a cease fire is still very vague since
the preconditions the sides put forward are very different.

Q: We were informed that an inter-party meeting was held in Beirut that
sent an appeal to the Armenian community. What issues were discussed
at this meeting? A: The Armenian community in Lebanon is organizing
assistance to the refugees. An inter-party meeting was held on Monday
in which representatives of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation
Party, Ramkavar Liberal Party and Social-Democrat Hnchakian Party
participated. At the end of the meeting the parties came up with an
appeal to the Armenian community to stay united around the Armenian
political parties.

On July 25 the delegation of ARF’s Central Committee in Lebanon
visited Vehapar Aram I, the Armenian Ambassador to Lebanon Vahan
Ter-Ghevondian and the leaders of the Armenian Catholic and Evangelical
Churches. Consultations were held during these meetings and issues
of development and revitalization of the Armenian community life
were discussed. Ambassador Vahan Ter-Ghevondian informed Azdak that
Armenia will provide humanitarian assistance to Lebanon, mostly
medicines. The Armenian assistance will reach Aleppo on July 28 and
will be transported to Lebanon from there.

Q: What is the situation with assistance to the refugees?
A: The coordination body established by ARF continues to work
intensively organizing assistance. There are many problems awaiting
solution. People listen to the calls made by this body and have their
contribution to the organization of humanitarian works. Armenian and
foreign media are constantly in touch with Azdak newspaper. They have
noted that the dynamic updates on Azdak’s website are very important
for them. I would like to inform that we have already published on our
website the video materials prepared by Yerkir Media’s Lebanon office
and ARF’s office. These materials mostly tell about the assistance
programs implemented in the community.

Canberra: Evacuation was massive undertaking

Evacuation was massive undertaking

Canberra Times (Australia)
July 30, 2006 Sunday
Final Edition

THE Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade knew it had a
worse-than-normal crisis on its hands when the news that the Israelis
had bombed Beirut International Airport came through on Thursday,
July 13.

Over the next few days, department officers worked frantically around
the clock preparing the largest evacuation in Australia’s recent
history. The complexity and size of the task has been lost in the
sea of early reports of panic- stricken Australians trying to flee
the carnage. The evacuation was bigger than that for the 2004 Boxing
Day tsunami, the Bali bombings or May’s East Timor airlift.

Between 20,000 to 25,000 Australians were estimated to be in Lebanon
when the Israelis attacked. Those in Lebanon flooded the embassy and
friends and relatives sought DFAT help.

An Armenian junior dance troupe, stranded by the conflict, was among
the first to attract attention. With 45 young performers and 36
parents and supervisors, the troupe took refuge in its Beirut hotel
as the bombs rained down.

The troupe had to be a government priority, and it was. With the
airport down, and no ferry available, buses were the only option.

By Monday the troupe was out of Lebanon, albeit via a roundabout route
that took it north into Syria and then back south to the Jordanian
capital, Amman.

With Damascus, the Syrian capital, choked in congestion, the Amman
choice proved wise. The troupe was home on Thursday, July 21, a week
after the first bombs fell on the airport.

By Thursday of last week, 4515 Australians had been evacuated from
Lebanon, 3767 on Australian chartered vessels, 582 on ferries chartered
by other governments (350 by the British and 200 by the Greek navy)
and 166 on government-organised road convoys. In addition, Australian
chartered vessels evacuated 1236 foreign nationals.

The head of DFAT’s consular division, Rod Smith, observes that in
one day they lost the airports, the port was blocked and the main
overland route to Syria was bombed. With some understatement he says,
"This severely limited our options."

The evacuation of 4500 people was an enormous undertaking, he says.
"It’s never been done before."

The morning after the airport bombing, DFAT opened its crisis centre
and the first meeting of the inter-departmental emergency taskforce
was convened.

The first emergency response team of half a dozen officers left
Canberra on Saturday headed for Beirut. A small team was sent from
Cairo to Damascus and others went to Larnaca in Cyprus and Mersin
and Adana in Turkey.

Over the weekend, DFAT carried out detailed work on the evacuation,
expecting the first large-scale sea move by chartered ferry on
Wednesday.

But in a war zone things do not always go according to plan. With
governments around the world bidding for boats, the Turkish ferry that
was booked did not arrive, leaving Australians and many people of other
nationalities stranded on the docks. Nevertheless, on Wednesday and
Thursday, with the help of other governments, hundreds of Australians
got out.

In the end the sea operation that was planned for Wednesday started
on Friday and continued until Tuesday of last week.

The Mediterranean is not Australia’s back yard, as it is for France
or Greece. Australia does not have a naval presence there and had no
instant resources to call upon.

Closer to home, over the past few years Australia has managed the
evacuation of its nationals and all foreigners from crises in the
Solomon Islands, East Timor and Bali.

Over about the same period of time as the Lebanese evacuation,
Australian defence personnel evacuated 1000 people, including foreign
nationals from 30 different countries, from East Timor. The first
Bali evacuation did not have anywhere near the numbers as the Lebanese
evacuation but did have the added problem of handling severely injured
and burnt people.

In Lebanon, the United States used a helicopter air bridge to put
people into their missions and back-loaded it with US citizens they
wanted to evacuate.

The first Australian emergency response team got into Beirut thanks
to a British air bridge.

Contrary to popular opinion, the embassy stayed open to the public
for all but one day – Friday, July 14 – when it was closed to the
public for security reasons. However, even with this public closure
the ambassador and her small team were at their post, writing cables
and sending back reports.

Normally the Beirut embassy is staffed by three DFAT, three Department
of Immigration and Multicultural Affairs and one Australian Federal
Police officer, plus locally engaged staff.

Since July 15, the Government has deployed 228 additional staff
overseas to assist with the evacuation.

The Beirut embassy got 31 extra, DFAT 14 extra, the AFP two, and
Defence 15.

In Canberra, more than 450 staff have been working on the crisis.

Immigration Department spokesman Sandi Logan says staff worked 18-hour
days keeping the embassy counters open.

Television captured the images of passengers disembarking from the
ferries in Turkey suffering terribly from seasickness. But what they
did not reveal is that the Immigration Department officers had had a
double dose, having travelled on the vessel to Beirut and returning
on it to Mersin.

The war added greatly to the complexity of embassy work.

People arrived without appropriate documents. So many people turned
up without passports that emergency passport stock had to be shipped
into Beirut.

The computerised passport system enabled identity verification but
there were other complications. Immigration was confronted by people
with their fiancee or their spouse, whom they had married in recent
months. They wanted visas issued for their partner immediately,
a request that could not always be met.

Logan says in some instances clients demanded to see the ambassador
and made "a bit of a scene at the counter area". The handful who could
not be granted visas left the office with an understanding that the
department could not break the law.

The South of Lebanon, which was being most heavily targeted by Israel,
presented particular difficulties. But a convoy of buses and taxis
was organised to Sidon.

Staff from Canberra and Beirut worked the telephones engaging taxis
to pick people up from their houses in surrounding villages to join
the convoy.

It was never going to be good enough to get people out of Lebanon
and leave them stranded in another country. As a result DFAT, which
was aided in its logistics operation by Defence personnel, managed
an airlift from Cyprus and Turkey, sometimes via Frankfurt. This was
organised despite stiff competition for charters and landing slots
from other countries trying to do the same for their citizens.

In its efforts DFAT was supported by Centrelink, the Emergency
Management Authority, the Department of Community Services, Families
and Indigenous Affairs, the AFP, Defence and Qantas. At last count
close to 4000 people had made it back to Australia.

Regional Problems Resolution Depends on Development of Economic Ties

PanARMENIAN.Net

Regional Problems Resolution Depends on Development of Economic Ties
28.07.2006 17:51 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Resolution of regional problems depends on the
development of economic ties, Turkish expert Burcu Gültekin stated in
Yerevan. In her words, Turkey possesses experience in establishing
such ties between the conflicting sides. `We have formed Ankara
Economic Forum jointly with Turkey, Israel and Palestine. This was a
success not only in Israel but also in Gaza Strip. A similar project
may be launched in the South Caucasus as well. The most important
thing is to start with small moves. We cannot wait until peace is
established, but we can hasten it by carrying out business projects,’
she remarked.

The Turkish expert said though the Near East and South Caucasus are
different regions, this example can be tested. `We are thinking how to
apply our experience in Armenia, Georgia and Azerbaijan,’ Burcu
Gültekin said.

Opposition party still under lock and key

EurasiaNet
July 28, 2006

OPPOSITION PARTY STILL UNDER LOCK AND KEY

Marianna Grigoryan 7/28/06

Armenia’s opposition Heritage Party has been blocked from entering
its rented offices as part of an ongoing property dispute that party
sympathizers say is politically motivated.

Party representatives were blocked on July 21 from reentering their
office in Yerevan’s Paronian Theater of Musical Comedy after a
three-and-a-half month court battle that had appeared to end in their
favor. The theater’s management had sealed the door in early March as
allegedly part of the transfer of the theater to state ownership.
Since then, the party’s documents, seal, all computer equipment, and
telephones have remained under lock and key.

A June 26 court ruling that found the closure illegal prompted Party
members to believe they could return to their office. But marshals
from the Ministry of Justice’s Service for Execution of Mandatory
Acts (SEMA) resealed the office last week after saying that the
ruling did not specify that the party could begin work again in the
space. The officials stated that they planned to take the office
contents to SEMA in the meantime.

Party lawyers are disputing the interpretation of the ruling, while
party members and political analysts consider that what happened is
more than a property dispute.

The Heritage Party was founded in 2003 by Raffi Hovannisian, foreign
minister from 1991 to 1992, and the only Diaspora figure in the
Armenian opposition. (Hovannisian was born in Fresno, California.)
The party claims to have more than 5,000 members.

In an earlier interview with EurasiaNet this year, Hovannisian said
that he is convinced that Armenian President Robert Kocharian had
ordered that his party’s office be shut. The offices of
Prosecutor-General Aghvan Hovsepian and Police Chief Hayk Harutiunian
have affirmed that no crime was committed by closing Heritage’s
office, although an investigation is ongoing into the confiscation of
the party’s computer databases.

Some analysts say that Hovannisian’s popularity rating is high enough
to pose a real threat to the authorities in the next parliamentary
and presidential elections.

"In recent years, there have been many cases when the authorities
interfered with opposition parties, confiscated their property,
created numerous problems for them [by] disorganizing their
activities," said parliamentarian and National Democratic Party
Chairman Arshak Sadoyan. "The authorities’ handwriting . . . is well
known to everyone. This way, the authorities are trying either to
subdue the opposition or clear the way, or to frighten others so that
they stop making active efforts."

According to Suren Sureniants, a political analyst and board member
of the opposition Hanrapetutiun (Republic) Party, the government
began to view Heritage’s activities with concern after Hovannisian
"publicly caused certain unpleasant things for Kocharian and his
entourage."

Before the November 2005 constitutional referendum, Hovannisian
called on voters to protest the vote in Yerevan’s Freedom Square.
Upon leaving the country later that month, he was reportedly searched
by national security service workers who explained that they were
looking for documents that contained state secrets.

Associates contend that the pressure on Hoyannisian increased
considerably after the party leader read out 21 questions for
President Kocharian at a November 9, 2005 opposition rally. The
document, titled "A Civil Request for a Public Account" quizzed
"acting" President Kocharian on whether he had killed a man during
the 1988-1994 war with Azerbaijan over the disputed enclave of
Nagorno-Karabakh, and on the details of his relatives’ property
holdings, among other topics.

The presidential administration responded that the questionnaire was
not worth a response, but in the months following, pro-government
media outlets began to circulate discrediting reports that accused
Hovannisian of espionage. Public television also took aim at
Hovannisian’s wife, alleging that that funds raised in the United
States for a local chapter of the non-profit youth education
organization Junior Achievement, run by his wife, had been used to
fund the political activities of her husband and the organization of
public rallies.

Sympathizers maintain that the tussle over the Heritage Party’s
office space is just the latest installment in the government’s
campaign against Hovannisian.

Theater Director Karapet Shahbazian, however, has ruled out any
political motives for closing the Party’s office. "I told them I must
hand over the property to the state, but they refused to leave, and I
put on the second lock," Shahbazian said. Hovannisian had a five-year
lease with the theater, signed in 2002.

Meanwhile, the party leader maintains that he will fight on. "All I
need in this country is a small tent," he commented to EurasiaNet.
"But recent experience shows that even a tent causes fear."

Editor’s Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a reporter for the
Armenianow.com weekly in Yerevan.

ANKARA: Government Urged to Conform to European Court’s Rulings on F

Government urged to conform to European Court’s rulings on Freedom of expression

Turkey26 July 2006

As Turkey often violates freedom of expression, Reporters Without
Borders today hailed yesterday’s ruling by the European Court of
Human Rights that it breached article 10 of the European Convention
on Human Rights, concerning free expression, by prosecuting the editor
and owner of a pro-Kurdish daily.

The court ruled that Turkey should not have convicted the journalists
for an article in 2000 about the trial of Abdullah Ocalan, leader
of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK-Kongral Gel), or for
publishing a letter he wrote, as they "did not exhort the use of
violence or incite armed resistance or rebellion,"

Reporters Without Borders said: "The court’s decision highlights
the difficulties journalists face in Turkey. They cannot discuss the
Kurdish issue freely without being accused of collaborating with the
PKK-Kongral Gel armed separatists. The Turkish government does not
tolerate criticism and has just adopted a new anti-terrorism law that
will considerably broaden the sanctions against the press."

The organisation added: "Turkey must find a compromise between its
security concerns and the need to respect press freedom by referring
to European Court of Human Rights case law."

The two journalists are Cihan Capan, the editor of the pro-Kurdish
daily Ozgur Bakis, and Halis Dogan, its owner. Both were fined in
2000. Capan also received a 13-month prison sentenced which he has
never served. Several issues of the newspaper were seized in the
course of 2000 and the newspaper was also ordered to pay heavy fines
under different laws including the anti-terrorism law.

The European Court of Human Rights yesterday ordered Turkey to pay
Capan and Dogan 5,000 and 7,000 euros respectively in compensation.

Reporters Without Borders defends imprisoned journalists and press
freedom throughout the world. It has nine national sections
(Austria, Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Sweden
and Switzerland). It has representatives in Bangkok, London, New
York, Tokyo and Washington. And it has more than 120 correspondents
worldwide.

© Reporters Without Borders 2006

–Boundary_(ID_C4lgdALiMWzKIX/rxZV3vQ)–

IAC Concludes that Plane Crew and Pilots were Guilty for May 3 Crash

IAC CONCLUDES THAT PLANE CREW AND PILOTS WERE GUILTY FOR MAY 3 CRASH OF A-320 AIRBUS

AZG Armenian Daily #141, 28/07/2006

A-320 Air Crash

As a result of the investigation of the causes for the A-320
"Armavia" liner May 3 crash, it became clear that the airplane,
which was carrying out an automatic process of landing, was on the
exact landing line when, by the air controller instruction, caused
by the meteorological conditions, the plane crew stopped landing
and started the right turn with climb at the height of about 340
m. This is said in the official conclusion of the Intergovernmental
Aviation Committee. According to the conclusion, the pilot-in-command
switched off the autopilot system during the right turn and, after
a short period of climb under conditions of horizontal position loss
by the airplane, he put the liner in a landing position again. Under
conditions of such inadequate actions of the captain, there could
be no proper control by the second pilot taking into account the
landing parameters: steering incline, height, speed. Further actions
of the crew were dictated by signals of the warning system about the
threat of approaching the land, they were not coordinated and not
aimed at the airplane withdrawal from the landing regime. According
to IAC, no wrecks were fixed in the airplane engines and systems,
it was responding to both the autopilot commands and to the crew
instructions and the quantity of aviation fuel was quite enough for
successful completion of the flight.

According to IAC, the crash happened May 3 at 2:13 AM by Moscow time.

The investigation was carried out in compliance with the rules of
the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), the Interstate
Agreement, signed between the 12 states, including Armenia and Russia.

During investigation, all the documents concerning the airplane,
the screw and the airplane-maintaining services, underwent study. The
Commission has also prepared recommendations for prevention of such
air-crashes in the future, it is noted in the conclusion. It’s worth
mentioning that Mikhail Baghdasarov, the owner of "Armavia" company,
stated in the interview to "Liberty" Radio Station that he disagrees
with the conclusion of IAC and is going to appeal against that as soon
as he returns to Armenia. He is currently at a hospital in Germany.

By Marietta Khachatrian

Ukrainian-US military computer exercise ends

Ukrainian-US military computer exercise ends

Interfax-Ukraine news agency
25 Jul 06

Kiev, 25 July: The Rapid Trident-2006 joint Ukrainian-US computer-aided
command and staff exercise, which was held at the Centre for Simulation Modelling
of the National Defence Academy of Ukraine, has ended, the [Ukrainian]
Defence Ministry’s press service said today.

In addition to Ukrainian and US servicemen, exercise participants included
nearly 300 servicemen from 16 NATO member-states and partners, including
Albania, Austria, Canada, Lithuania, Germany, Sweden, Poland, Macedonia, the Czech
Republic, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Armenia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and
Moldova. Representatives of the Red Cross and the OSCE joined the exercise as
observers.

The Ukrainian army was represented at the training by the 95th detached
airborne brigade and the Centre for Simulation Modelling. The USA was represented
by the National Guard of California and Florida.

The computer manoeuvres, which were held in the spirit of NATO’s Partnership
for Peace, included the preparation and conduct of a mission, in which a
multinational brigade of the coalition forces had to preserve peace in its focus
area. Its main goal was to improve interaction between the staffs and units,
make practical use of the lessons learnt from peacekeeping operations and
previous exercises and to improve understanding and cooperation between the
servicemen of different countries.

"The USA is grateful to Ukraine for jointly organizing the exercises such as
Rapid Trident that have been held over the past 12 years," the deputy
commander of the US Army Europe, Gary Speer, said.

259 People Evacuated from Lebanon to Armenia

259 People Evacuated from Lebanon to Armenia

PanARMENIAN.Net
26.07.2006 13:36 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ 259 people, half of them Armenian citizens, have
been evacuated from Lebanon so far, RA MFA Acting Spokesman Vladimir
Karapetian told a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter. In his words, planes
of Armavia national carrier made four flights from Aleppo (Syria)
to Yerevan. 54 people arrived in Armenia from Tel Aviv (Israel). "We
have received no other appeals from Armenian citizens or Armenians
in Israel yet," Karapetian remarked.

To note, the Armenian community of Lebanon numbers some 120 thousand
people, most of them living in Beirut.

Kenya Opposition Boss’S Coup Confession Stirs Row

Kenya opposition boss’s coup confession stirs row

Reuters AlertNet, UK
July 24, 2006

NAIROBI, July 24 (Reuters) – An admission by Kenya’s harshest
government critic that he backed a coup attempt against then President
Daniel arap Moi has rocked the country’s already turbulent political
scene a year ahead of a 2007 election.

A new biography of opposition leader Raila Odinga, 59, reveals he was
involved in plotting the 1982 coup attempt during which hundreds died
and Nairobi was looted.

Odinga’s confirmation of that has outraged his foes, who called for
him to be arrested for treason. But it has delighted supporters,
confirming their view of Odinga as just the revolutionary firebrand
needed to shake up Kenya’s scandal-plagued political scene.

"By 1982, the Moi regime had become a one-party absolute despotism
with a long train of abuses," said Deputy Information Minister Koigi
wa Wamwere, applauding Odinga.

"This made peaceful change of government impossible; a military coup
inevitable," added Wamwere, who like Odinga was imprisoned under Moi.

According to the book — titled "Raila Odinga: an enigma in
Kenyan politics" and picturing a lion on the front — he set up a
communications centre at an apartment in Nairobi where he monitored
events on behalf of the plotters.

Moi survived the attempt to oust him.

Reacting to the book, Moi said it revealed Odinga’s true nature and
urged Kenyans to be wary of "the man from the lake", referring to
his origins near Lake Victoria.

Odinga, who intends to vie for the country’s presidency next year,
is widely credited with orchestrating President Mwai Kibaki’s 2002
election win, which ended Moi’s 24-year reign.

STEEPED IN CONTROVERSY

But the relationship turned sour during a constitutional referendum
campaign late last year when Odinga campaigned against a new
constitution backed by Kibaki.

The result was a humiliating defeat for Kibaki who later sacked Odinga
as his roads and public works minister.

Kibaki’s government has since been plagued by high-level graft
scandals, a police raid on Kenya’s second largest media house and an
embarrassing airport security alert involving two Armenian brothers
said to be under official protection.

As a vocal critic of Moi, Odinga was jailed on and off during a period
of eight years, a fate shared by many of the ex-president’s critics. He
then stunned opposition colleagues by forming a coalition with Moi’s
Kenya African National Union party in 2002, but led a walkout six
months later.

The fiery son of a famous Kenyan opposition campaigner derives his
main support from his western Luo tribe and slum dwellers in the
capital Nairobi.

"The air force plotters were mainly from the Luo ethnic group unhappy
with the political developments which had marginalised the Luos in
the affairs of the nation," says the book by Nigerian author Babafemi
A. Badejo.

Odinga is running third in popularity ahead of next year’s presidential
poll, according to the most recent survey. Analysts said it was too
soon to tell if the book would help or hinder.

Odinga faces a stiff challenge from Kalonzo Musyoka — running second
for the presidency according to opinion polls — to win the nomination
of their Liberal Democratic Party (LDP).

Russian Experts Have Completed Decoding Data from Armavia

Russian Experts Have Completed Decoding Data from Armavia

Aviation Week & Space Technology
July 17, 2006

Russian experts have completed decoding data from the Airbus A320
operated by Armenia-based Armavia, which crashed on landing at the
Sochi airport on May 3, killing all 113 on board (AW&ST May 8, p.
39). The experts say the data show the aircraft, its systems and
engines were working normally and there was an adequate fuel reserve.
During the last minute of the flight, the aircraft was operating with
the autopilot switched off.