“ARF is Opposition in the Authorities

A1+

`ARF IS OPPOSITION IN THE AUTHORITIES’
[07:04 pm] 02 June, 2006

`Kocharyan displayed himself worse than we expected,’ said Hayk
Baboukhanyan, member of the Constitutional Right Union who was a guest
of the club «Mirror». In the second round of the 1998 elections he
supported the present authorities but today is against them. «The
present authorities are illegal, they came to power shedding blood and
continue their illegal activity», the member of the Union explains the
change.

After the resignation of the OYP Hayk Baboukhanyan thinks that the
coalition continues to split up and the ARF has adopted the same
strategy as the OYP. According to him, what is surprising is that on
the one hand the ARF resembles the OYP, and on the other it has
adopted an oppositional attitude in the authorities. He predicts that
the ARF and the Republican party will have collisions. He also thinks
it possible that the OYP may join the opposition.

His opponent, former member of the Armenian Pan-National Movement
Karapet Roubinyan recalled the announcement by Robert Kocharyan that
the creation of the coalition is a new step in the political
development of Armenia. «Even if there are new phenomena, I never
noticed the good results they yielded. And the separation was rather
civilized thanks to mutual efforts», he said. He is convinced that
there were not serious disagreements between those who left the
coalition and those who remained. «In order to reach his aim Arthur
Baghdasaryan must resort to harsher measures».

By the way, Karapet Roubinyan is sure that whatever happens in this
country will be connected with the Armenian Pan-National Movement as
according to him they are the creators of both the good and the bad.

A-320 flight recorders handed over to forensics

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
June 2, 2006 Friday 04:42 PM EST

A-320 flight recorders handed over to forensics

Investigators from the Prosecutor General’s Office have transferred
to experts the flight recorders of a A-320 jet of Armenian Airlines,
which crashed near Sochi on May 3.

“Forensic experts and specialists from the Interstate Aviation
Committee are studying the flight recorders,” a source at the
Prosecutor General’s Office said on Friday. “The DNA tests of bodily
fragments are underway.”

Transport Minister Igor Levitin said earlier that it would take 1.5-2
months to decipher information form the flight recorders. The
commission will have to analyze about 300 parameters. Armenian
experts will take part in the investigation, as the crew spoke
Armenian.

The crash killed 113 people, and over 100 aggrieved parties have been
named in the case. The investigation is being done in close
cooperation with Armenians.

Catholicos of All Armenians Sends Congratulations on May 28

CATHOLICOS OF ALL ARMENIANS SENDS CONGRATULATORY MESSAGE TO ARMENIAN
PEOPLE IN CONNECTION WITH HOLIDAY OF REPUBLIC

ECHMIADZIN, MAY 29, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Catholicos of All
Armenians Karekin II sent a congratulatory message to the whole
Armenian people on the occasion of the Day of Republic. The
Patriarchal message provided to Noyan Tapan from the Press Services of
the Mother See of Holy Echmiadzin, in particular, read: “With fatherly
love we bless each of you in Armenia, Artsakh and Spyurk and
congratulate you on the occasion of the Holiday of Republic. As a
result of the heroic fights of 1918 May, the First Republic of Armenia
was proclaimed as the fulfilment of the age-old hopes of our people
for freedom and independence. The Armenian people who confirmed its
independent statehood with a heroic struggle, inflexible belief in its
independent statehood, is striving for improving its homeland with its
creative work.”

Competition-Olympiad on Armenian History Held in Javakhk

COMPETITION-OLYMPIAD ON ARMENIAN HISTORY HELD IN JAVAKHK

AKHALKALAK, MAY 29, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The final stage of
the competition-olympiad on Armenian history for pupils of Armenian
schools of Javakhk took place in the building of the Akhalkalak Ruben
Ter-Minasian secondary school on May 26. According to the “A-Info”
agency, the main goal of this competition being held for the first
time on the initiative of the Armenian Relief Society Javakhk Fund and
“Akunk” union is to encourage teaching of the Armenian history in
Armenian schools of the region. The matter is that the Ministry of
Education of Georgia prohibited teaching of the Armenian history in
Armenian schools of the country, and this omission is filled by
optional classes. Competition winners were to get their prizes on May
28, the Day of First Republic of Armenia.

Armenian Soldier Killed over Ceasefire Violation

PanARMENIAN.Net

Armenian Soldier Killed over Ceasefire Violation

29.05.2006 13:21 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ May 27 at 9.30 p.m. local time the Azeri side
commenced fire upon the Armenian emplacements in the Noemberyan
region. As RA Defense Minister’s Spokesman Seyran Shahsuvaryan told
PanARMENIAN.Net, master sergeant Levon Adamyan, 1985 year of birth,
was wounded in the chest and died on the way to hospital.

BAKU: Abiyev: Our aim to restore territorial integrity of Azerbaijan

Today, Azerbaijan
May 26 2006

Safar Abiyev: “Our aim is to restore territorial integrity of
Azerbaijan”

26 May 2006 [11:09] – Today.Az

Today Ukraine Armed Forces Main Headquarter Chief general colonel
Sergey Kirichenko has paid an official visit to Baku.

As APA reports, delegation headed by Kirichenko have visited
President Heydar Aliyev’s grave in Honorary Avenue, Martyrs’ Alley.

Defense Minister of Azerbaijan, general-colonel Safar Abiyev has
received delegation headed by Kirichenko.

After gaining independence Azerbaijan and Ukraine cooperated in all
fields, especially in military field, Azerbaijani Defense Minister
informed the guest of existed military-political situation in the
South Caucasus, Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict.

He stated that Armenia has destructive position in the settlement of
the conflict and tries to legalize the occupation of Azerbaijani
lands: “We will not give way to it. Our aim is to restore territorial
integrity of Azerbaijan.”

Kirienko said that he attaches great importance to cooperation
between Ukraine and Azerbaijan.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/26580.html

NATO Ready To Help Armenia In Military Reforms

NATO READY TO HELP ARMENIA IN MILITARY REFORMS

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
May 25 2006

YEREVAN, May 24. /ARKA/. NATO is ready to help Armenia in military
reforms, Special Representative of NATO Secretary General to the
South Caucasus and Central Asia told a press conference.

Commenting on the RA Defense Minister’s statements on the possibility
of completing military reforms before 2015, he pointed out that this
process will take much time. It is difficult to say whether or not
Armenia can complete reforms by 2015, he said.

According to Simons, a great role in this process belongs to the
implementation of IPAP.

All Were Granted A Patent

ALL WERE GRANTED A PATENT

A1+
[11:54 am] 25 May, 2006

The teams “Ararat,” “Shirak” and “Kilikia” were granted patents by
the Patent Board of the Armenian Football Federation (AFF) at the
end of April on condition that they introduce additional documents.

The clubs presented all the necessary documents within the deadline
fixed by the Patent Committee and according to the specialists of
the Patent Board of the Armenian Football Federation (AFF) these
documents meet the criteria of the AFF patent system guidebook.

This fact is especially vital for the Yerevan “Kilikia” which couldn’t
participate in the Intertoto Cup meetings on June without a patent.

Let us remind you that patent procedure has been held on the request
of UEFA in all its member countries in the recent years and the
demands are becoming more and more strict. This procedure has been
held for the third time, and each time a number of clubs counter
certain problems connected with financial and organizational issues.

Tajik Minister, Russian Official Talk CIS Premiers’ Session Agenda

TAJIK MINISTER, RUSSIAN OFFICIAL TALK CIS PREMIERS’ SESSION AGENDA

Asia-Plus news agency website
24 May 06

Dushanbe, 24 May: The agenda of the coming session of CIS prime
ministers was discussed in Dushanbe today [24 May] during a working
meeting between Tajik Foreign Minister Talbak Nazarov and CIS Executive
Secretary Vladimir Rushaylo, a source in the Tajik Foreign Ministry
has told Asia-Plus.

We would recall that the session of the council of heads of government
of the CIS member states will take place in Dushanbe on 25 May. The
agenda includes 25 issues.

The participants will discuss a treaty on setting up an interstate fund
for humanitarian cooperation, a draft convention on border cooperation
and the work of the [CIS] interstate council for hydrometeorology.

In all, 17 documents will be signed without discussion.

[Passage omitted: known details about documents to be signed]

Also expected to be signed are a document on assigning to the Russian
state library, a federal institution, the status of the main body for
cooperation between CIS member states in the field of librarianship,
and a document on assigning to Zhukovskiy Air Force Engineering
Academy the status of the principal training centre for military
metrology specialists of the CIS member states.

The CIS heads of government will also consider [the issues related
to] conducting the next regular session of the council of CIS heads
of government, as well as [appointing] deputies of the executive
secretary and the chair of the council.

At the council’s forthcoming session in Dushanbe Azerbaijan, Armenia,
Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan will be
represented by prime ministers; Russia, Uzbekistan and Ukraine by
deputy prime ministers and Turkmenistan by its ambassador.

All the participants in the session, about 200 of them, will arrive
this afternoon. Tajik President Emomali Rahmonov is expected to receive
the heads of the delegations in the morning of 25 May, ahead of the
session of the council of heads of government of CIS member states.

This afternoon Rushaylo is also expected to meet Rahmonov. The
sides intend to discuss cooperation among CIS member countries and
integration processes within the framework of this structure.

People Are Strange, When You’re A Stranger

PEOPLE ARE STRANGE, WHEN YOU’RE A STRANGER
by Matt Barganier

Antiwar.com, CA
May 23 2006

Living in Iran ain’t exactly a picnic for anybody, especially women,
gays, political dissidents, or those accused of breaking one of the
trillion laws issued weekly by the Islamic Republic. But is life
particularly hard for the native Jewish population? Yes, according to
the major organs of neocon propaganda, who (along with their useful
idiots) have lately been spreading rumors of an incipient Holocaust
in Persia.

Superficially, it seems plausible enough, given the Western media’s
coverage of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad’s statements about
Israel and the Holocaust – coverage that is brought into question by
their initially uncritical acceptance of the yellow badges story. But
the world, as Jim Henley notes, is stranger than we know, and the
status of Jews in Iran is not necessarily as awful as our prejudices
might lead us to assume.

An examination of Internet resources on Iranian Jews yields
complicated, and sometimes contradictory, data. The Jewish Virtual
Library (JVL) takes a generally negative view, though its reliability
is somewhat undercut by its lowballing of the Iranian Jewish population
(they say 10,000, while virtually every other source I have seen
says 25,000 or more). Nonetheless, it provides a useful, though very
condensed, historical sweep of Jews in Iran going back to the 6th
century BC. It notes that pre-Islamic Persians had good relations
with Jews, and though things apparently changed for the worse after
Persia’s Islamization in the 7th century AD, the entry mentions no
major incidents of persecution until the 19th century.

The reign of the Pahlavis is depicted as a sort of golden age that
ended with the revolution of 1979, after which tens of thousands of
Jews fled the country. The entry goes on to document various ways
in which Jews are treated differently than Muslims (suspicions of
disloyalty, special restrictions on travel, etc.), but they strike
me as pretty standard police-state stuff, which in all likelihood
applies in varying degrees to all Iranians.

Perhaps the most telling evidence of persecution from the JVL entry
is the following (emphasis mine):

On the eve of Passover in 1999, 13 Jews from Shiran and Isfahan in
southern Iran were arrested and accused of spying for Israel and the
United States. Those arrested include a rabbi, a ritual slaughterer
and teachers. In September 2000, an Iranian appeals court upheld a
decision to imprison ten of the thirteen Jews accused of spying for
Israel. In the appeals court, ten of the accused were found guilty
of cooperating with Israel and were given prison terms ranging from
two to nine years. Three of the accused were found innocent in the
first trial. In March 2001, one of the imprisoned Jews was released,
a second was freed in January 2002, the remaining eight were set
free in late October 2002. The last five apparently were released on
furlough for an indefinite period, leaving them vulnerable to future
arrest. Three others were reportedly pardoned by Iran’s Supreme Leader,
Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

I’m sorry, but this doesn’t sound like the Third Reich to me. First,
to paraphrase Woody Allen, even paranoid tyrants get spied on. I’m sure
that Israel, for perfectly understandable reasons, has plenty of spies
and other operatives in Iran. I’m equally sure that these particular
fellows were railroaded, given the fact that they were released so
quickly. But that’s the amazing part – three were acquitted right off
the bat, and all had been released, three under direct pardon from the
Aya-freaking-tollah, within a few years of their arrest. The entry
does go on to say that 13 Jews were executed between 1979 and 1998,
but again, a lot of people are executed in Iran for a lot of reasons,
and 13 isn’t genocide.

Now perhaps things have gotten much worse for Iranian Jews since that
1998 entry was written, but the JVL hasn’t felt the need to update
it in the intervening years, which might tell us something. A more
balanced report from that same year appeared in the Christian Science
Monitor, headlined “Jews in Iran Describe a Life of Freedom Despite
Anti-Israel Actions by Tehran.” The whole thing’s worth reading,
but here are some key parts:

One of the most striking of many murals in Iran’s capital, Tehran,
is a towering portrait of Fathi Shkaki, a leader of the militant
Palestinian group, Islamic Jihad. He was assassinated by Israeli agents
in 1995 after he masterminded a series of suicide bombings against
Jewish civilians. A slogan beneath his face hails him as a hero of
the Islamic revolution in Palestine. Yet, stroll a little farther
along Palestine Street and you come to the Abrishami Synagogue,
the biggest of 23 synagogues in Tehran. It is regularly attended
by some 1,000 worshippers. It comes as a surprise to many visitors
to discover that Iran, a country so hostile to Israel and with a
reputation for intolerance, is home to a small but vibrant Jewish
community that is an officially recognized religious minority under
Iran’s 1979 Islamic Constitution. “[Ayatollah Ruhollah] Khomeini
didn’t mix up our community with Israel and Zionism – he saw us as
Iranians,” says Haroun Yashyaei, a film producer and chairman of the
Central Jewish Community in Iran. Like Iran’s Armenian Christians,
Jews are tolerated as “people of the book” and allowed to practice
their religion freely, provided they do not proselytize.

They elect their own deputy to the 270-seat Parliament and enjoy
certain rights of self-administration. Jewish burial and divorce laws
are accepted by Islamic courts. Jews are conscripted into the Army.

“We are one of the oldest Jewish communities in the world,” Mr.

Yashyaei says. “When Muslims came to Iran, we had already been here
for centuries.” “Take it from me, the Jewish community here faces no
difficulties. If some people left after the revolution, maybe it’s
because they were scared,” says Farangis Hassidim, a forceful but
good-humored woman who is charge of the only Jewish hospital in Iran.

She adds: “Our position here is not as bad as people abroad may
think. We practice our religion freely, we have all our festivals,
we have our own schools and kindergartens.” For her, the well-equipped
hospital in central Tehran is a model of religious harmony. “We have
about 200 staff, 30 percent of them Jewish,” she says. “These days,
I’d say about 5 percent of our patients are Jewish, the rest are
Muslims.” A sign outside the hospital reads in Hebrew: “Love thy
neighbor as thyself.” …

Privately, there are grumbles about discrimination, much of it of a
social or bureaucratic nature. Some complain it is impossible for
Jews to get senior positions in Iran Air, the national airline,
or in the national oil company. A woman teacher says she has been
passed by for promotion several times because she is Jewish and now
hopes to emigrate to Los Angeles. A car-parts dealer says Jews have
to wait much longer for travel documents and exit visas. The most
pressing complaint is that, despite many petitions to parliament,
Jewish schools must open on Saturdays, the Jewish Sabbath. …

Why leave? At an antiques shop in central Tehran, Isaac, the elderly
owner, says many Jews who once owned shops along the broad, bustling
avenue have left in the past 20 years. He has not seen his sister
since she emigrated to Israel 16 years ago, but he has no plans
to leave. “The Jewish community has been here for centuries, and
this shop has been in the family for more than 50 years,” he says,
reeling off the famous customers who have visited. “Gen. [Charles]
de Gaulle was here.”

“But look at this,” he adds, brandishing an old black-and-white
photograph of himself with his arm around curvaceous 1950s film star
Gina Lollobrigida, who sports a beehive hairdo. “Really, it’s OK here,
and it’s home,” he says.

Yes, this piece is several years old, but whenever the U.S. government
and media go into a frenzy about how horrible some place or another is,
it’s helpful to read accounts that predate the frenzy and aren’t so
swayed – consciously or unconsciously – by the professionally crafted
propaganda behind it.

A more recent report, from September 2001, provides deeper historical
background than either of the previous pieces, including specific
hardships faced by Iranian Jews over the centuries. I encourage you
to read it, as well as this overview from the Foundation for the
Advancement of Sephardic Studies and Culture. Some choice bits from
the latter:

It is one of the many paradoxes of the Islamic Republic of Iran that
this most virulent anti-Israeli country supports by far the largest
Jewish population of any Muslim country. …

Iran’s Jewish community is confronted by contradictions. Many of
the prayers uttered in synagogue, for instance, refer to the desire
to see Jerusalem again. Yet there is no postal service or telephone
contact with Israel, and any Iranian who dares travel to Israel faces
imprisonment and passport confiscation. “We are Jews, not Zionists.

We are a religious community, not a political one,” [Parvis]
Yashaya said.

Before the revolution, Jews were well-represented among Iran’s business
elite, holding key posts in the oil industry, banking and law, as well
as in the traditional bazaar. The wave of anti-Israeli sentiment that
swept Iran during the revolution, as well as large-scale confiscations
of private wealth, sent thousands of the more affluent Jews fleeing to
the United States or Israel. Those remaining lived in fear of pogroms,
or massacres.

But Khomeini met with the Jewish community upon his return from
exile in Paris and issued a “fatwa” decreeing that the Jews were
to be protected. Similar edicts also protect Iran’s tiny Christian
minority. …

Jewish women, like Muslim women, are required by law to keep their
heads covered, although most eschew the chador for a simple scarf.

But Jews, unlike Muslims, can keep small flasks of home-brewed wine
or arrack to drink within the privacy of their homes – in theory,
for religious purposes. Some Hebrew schools are coed, and men and
women dance with each other at weddings, practices strictly forbidden
for Muslims.

“Sometimes I think they are kinder to the Jews than they are to
themselves. … If we are gathered in a house, and the family is
having a ceremony with wine or the music is playing too loud, if they
find out we are Jews, they don’t bother us so much,” [Nahit] Eliyason
said. “Everywhere in the world there are people who don’t like Jews.

In England, they draw swastikas on Jewish graves. I don’t think that
Iran is more dangerous for Jews than other places.” …

Not everyone in the Jewish community favors liberalization of
Iranian society. Arizel Levihim, 20, a prospective Hebrew teacher,
said Judaism has fared better within the confines of Iran’s strictly
religious society. “I believe it is good for women to keep their
head covered. I think it is good to restrict relations between boys
and girls,” Levihim said. “I agree with the ideals of the Islamic
republic. These are Jewish values too.”

Yep, the world is far more inscrutable than the New York Post or Fox
News would have you believe. After all, it was crazy fundamentalist
misogynist Mahmoud Ahmadinejad who recently pushed (unsuccessfully)
to allow women to attend soccer games. Go figure. And I know I’m
going out on a limb here, but isn’t it just possible that, however
hard their lot, Iran’s Jews prefer the status quo to being bombed
into freedom by the U.S. or Israel?