Exact Number of Yerevanites Provided 24×7 Water To Be Indicated

EXACT NUMBER OF YEREVAN POPULATION PROVIDED WITH 24-HOUR WATER SUPPLY
TO BE INDICATED THIS YEAR

YEREVAN, JANUARY 26, NOYAN TAPAN. Thanks to pressure registering
meters (loggers) installed in December 2006, it will be possible to
clarify by May 31 of this year what percentage of Yerevan’s population
is provided with a 24-hour water supply. Director General of the
Yerevan Water Company Serge Popoff told NT correspondent that there are
many problems in the sector but the major one is related to old pipes,
which cause 60% of total water losses reaching 80% in the system. S.
Popoff said that in accordance with the company’s agreement obligation,
the total volume of water losses will be reduced to 50% in the 10 years
of lease – by 2016. The director general noted that Yerevan Water,
which leased on June 2006 Yerevan’s water supply and sewerage system
for 10 years, has assumed a number of important obligations, including
ensuring the continuity of water supply and the high quality of
supplied water, as well as improvement of relations with customers. S.
Popoff considered illegal water connections as another important
problem. As a result of several measures aimed at removing these
illegal connections or bringing them to the legal field, 1,400 illegal
water connections were legalized in September, October and November of
last year. It was mentioned that 700 million drams (about 1.9 mln USD)
will be invested in the system this year. A new water quality testing
laboratory will be put into operation in July-August. By late 2008 all
500 pumps in Yerevan yards will be replaced with new automated ones.
Special devices allowing to reveal flow losses will be installed as
well.

Athens: Shock therapy

Kathimerini, Greece
Jan 26 2007

Shock therapy

By Stavros Lygeros

The massive march commemorating murdered journalist Hrant Dink and
his funeral is one of the most hopeful signs ever to come from
Turkey. The slaying was a shock even to a public injected with a good
dose of nationalism. The shock revealed a previously unseen facet of
Turkish society – an ambiguous but no less real one.

The murder was an extreme, but by no means isolated, incident. It
followed the prosecution of Nobel Literature Prize winner Orhan Pamuk
for his words on the Armenian genocide, the attacks against the
Ecumenical Patriarchate and the confiscation of minority property.
Article 301 of the Constitution which restricts freedom of
expression, the para-state of the security service and organized
crime all share the same womb: the deep state ideology.

This was exposed in late 2000 when security forces in Turkey used
their weapons to stop a hunger strike by thousands of inmates.
Thirty-one prisoners were killed and many more were injured but that
did not prevent then prime minister Bulent Ecevit from bragging about
what would be shameful for any civilized being. Ecevit spoke of
victory, as if the fully armed police force could ever have been
defeated by the inmates. What the West saw as an act of barbarity was
in Turkish eyes a demonstration of strength and determination.

The Turkish regime has a penchant for periodic displays of stealth.
This allows it to revive the specter of the ever-threatened albeit
all-powerful state. The need to crush outside threats legitimates the
hegemonic role of the security establishment – and all that
notwithstanding Ankara’s EU ambitions. The task of EU-minded
modernization is left to a great number of intellectuals, sections of
the business class and of the media. It remains to be seen whether
the aftermath of the Dink murder will prove to be a one-off reaction
or a catalyst for a different future.

Los Angeles tackles growing gang violence

Los Angeles tackles growing gang violence

Dan Glaister in Los Angeles
Tuesday January 23, 2007
The Guardian

Their city once spawned the Crips and the Bloods. Now the authorities
of Los Angeles fear the bad old days of gang warfare are returning,
and some warn of a "race war" between Latino and African-American
street gangs.

A series of shootings in an area south of Los Angeles called
Harbor Gateway has outraged residents and prompted action from
city and federal authorities and community groups. In December,
14-year-old Cheryl Green was with friends in Harbor Gateway. The
African-American girl was allegedly shot by members of the Latino
204th Street Gang. Police called it racially motivated because Cheryl
had crossed into an area the gang claimed as territory.

Five days later, nine-year-old Charupha Wongwisetsiri was killed
in her kitchen by a stray bullet from a gang fight in the Angelino
Heights area of the city.

Overall crime rates are falling in the city, but gang-related offences
rose by 14% last year, and by 25% in the city centre.

Last week, the FBI’s director, Robert Mueller, joined the city’s mayor,
Antonio Villaraigosa, and police chief, William Bratton, to announce a
crackdown on gang violence. The same day community activists announced
that a truce had been agreed between the biggest gangs.

But a 34-year-old African-American man was shot by several Latino men,
say witnesses, on Saturday night in his car in Harbor Gateway. "Los
Angeles, for better or worse, is ground zero for modern gang
activities," Mr Mueller said.

There are an estimated 700 gangs with 40,000 members in Los Angeles,
about four for each police officer.

"It’s too big, it’s too entrenched," Malcolm Klein, a gang expert
at the University of Southern California, told AP. "You can reduce
it. But the idea you can somehow eliminate it is ridiculous."

Murderer Of Hrant Dink Was Not Armenian: His Family Refutes Report B

MURDERER OF HRANT DINK WAS NOT ARMENIAN: HIS FAMILY REFUTES REPORT
BY TERCUMAN NEWSPAPER

Yerevan, January 22. ArmInfo. Patriarch of Istanbul and All Turkey
Mesrop Mutafyan has expressed his indignation at the Jan 21 article
of Tercuman newspaper (Turkey) alleging that the murderer of Hrant
Dink Ogun Samast is of Armenian origin.

Lraper newspaper reports Mutafyan to say that the article attempts
to prove that the murderer is not Turk. "This is a result of the
unhealthy mentality of blaming Armenians for all," says Mutafyan
and notes that this is an instance of national discrimination and a
violation of the Turkish Constitution.

To remind, Jan 21 Turkish police arrested 17-year-old Ogun Samast,
who confessed that it was he who killed Dink.

Turkish mass media reports that, following the Tercuman report,
the relatives of Samast spoke on TV and refuted the news that Samast
is Armenian.

Turkish Police Announced Of Arrest Of Hrant Dink’s Killer

TURKISH POLICE ANNOUNCED OF ARREST OF HRANT DINK’S KILLER

Yerevan, January 22. ArmInfo. Yesterday, the Turkish authorities
have announced of arrest of the killer of Agos newspaper’s Editor
Hrant Dink.

As the Turkish Mass Media report, it was a 17-years-old student
of a Lyceum, Ogiun Samast, who has already confessed the crime:
he wanted to revenge him for his publications about the Armenian
Genocide. Presently, the Police is checking if he was a member of
any nationalistic organization and is investigating his possible
participation in the murder of the Italian Catholic priest, killed
in February, 2006. Hrant dink was killed on February. As one of
the journalist’s assistants told the Police, some young man had
dropped in on the Istanbul Editorial office of Agos in the morning
and got interested if the Editor-in-Chief is there. Having got an
affirmative answer, the young man went away. Two hours later, the same
assistant saw that young man in front of the Editorial Office’s entry.
Apparently, the young man was tired of waiting of his victim. "We
were told somebody wants to talk to Hrant Dink and give him an
important information", a member of the Editorial Board of Agos,
Serkis Seropyan, said. "H. Dink went out, then we heard shots". An
employee of a snack-bar, located in front of the Editorial Office,
told the Police about the happened in the street. According to him,
a young man was long shifting from one foot to the other as if he was
waiting for someone. "Then I saw how he quickly approached the man
who appeared in the Editorial Office’s doorway. Then he snapped up the
gun and shot at his head several times", the witness said. After that,
he turned to me and said: "If you tell somebody I will kill you!".

The Police found the traces of Hrant Dink’s killer due to a
video-control camera, installed in front of the entry to the Bank’s
Department near the crime place. The camera had fixed a young man who
was quickly running away, hiding an object under the clothes resembling
a gun. On Saturday, the leading Turkish TV channels have shown the
photo of the suspect. One of the Trabzon dwellers has recognized
his son by the photo and called the Police. Late at Saturday night,
the Police arrested Ogiun Smast at the bus station of Samsun town,
who was leaving for home from Istanbul.

Requiem Service Offered in Holy Etchmiadzin for Hrant Dink

PRESS RELEASE
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Information Services
Address:  Vagharshapat, Republic of Armenia
Contact:  Rev. Fr. Ktrij Devejian
Tel:  +374-10-517163
Fax:  +374-10-517301
E-Mail:  [email protected]
Website: 
January 22, 2007

Requiem Service Offered in Holy Etchmiadzin for Hrant Dink

On Sunday, January 21, a solemn Repose of Souls service was offered in
memory of slain journalist and human rights advocate Hrant Dink in the
Mother Cathedral of Holy Etchmiadzin by His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme
Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians.  Dink, editor of the bilingual
Agos weekly, was brutally assassinated in Istanbul, Turkey on Friday
afternoon, January 19.

During the celebration of the Divine Liturgy, a special sermon was delivered
by Very Rev. Fr. Sahak Mashalian, Assistant Dean of the Gevorkian
Theological Seminary.  Fr. Sahak, originally from Istanbul and a member of
the Brotherhood of Holy Etchmiadzin, spoke on the value of truth and justice
as well as the life and legacy of Hrant Dink.

Present for the Divine Liturgy and Requiem Service were Minister of Foreign
Affairs of the Republic of Armenia Vartan Oskanian, members of the Istanbul
Armenian community, high ranking clergymen and countless faithful.

The funeral service for Hrant Dink will take place in Istanbul at the St.
Mary Mother of God Cathedral of the Armenian Patriarchate of
Constantinople.  His Holiness Karekin II has appointed His Eminence Khajag
Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America
(Eastern), to participate in the funeral and burial services, representing
the Catholicosate of All Armenians and the Brotherhood of Holy Etchmiadzin.

www.armenianchurch.org

Spain: Suspect caught: Arrested the man who killed the journalist

EiTB, Spain
Jan 21 2007

SUSPECT CAUGHT
Arrested the man who killed the Turkish-Armenian journalist
01/21/2007

Police detained the man suspected of killing journalist Hrant Dink in
Turkey, Istanbul Gov. Muammer Guler announced Saturday.

Ogun Samas The suspect was caught on a bus in the Black Sea city of
Samsun after a tip-off from his father, Guler said. He was apparently
on his way back from Istanbul to his home town of Trabzon. Earlier,
police had identified the suspect as Ogun Samas and distributed his
picture to the media.

Guler said the suspect was born in 1990, making him a minor, 16 or 17
years old. He said the suspect was being brought back to Istanbul
along with six other suspects from Trabzon for questioning. The
arrest comes just 32 hours after Dink, an ethnic Armenian and editor
of the bilingual Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos, was killed by a
gunman outside his office in Istanbul, provoking shock and
embarrassment at home and outrage abroad.

Guler said police were investigating whether the suspect acted alone
or had ties to a group.

Fourth Sitting of Armenian-Indian Intergov Commish Held in New Delhi

FOURTH SITTING OF ARMENIAN-INDIAN INTERGOVERNMENTAL COMMISSION HELD IN
NEW DELHI

NEW DELHI, JANUARY 19, NOYAN TAPAN. The fourth sitting of the
Armenian-Indian intergovernmental commission was held in New Delhi on
January 19. The delegation headed by the RA Deputy Foreign Minister
Armen Bayburtian participated in the sitting.

In the spheres of science and education, agreements were reached to
found a center of Hindu teaching at Yerevan State Linguistic
University, as well as to establish direct interuniversity links
between the major higher educational institutions of the two
countries. With the aim of implementing the preparatory stage of work
on creation of the Indian Center of Information Technologies in
Yerevan, a decision was made to organize a visit of the Indian
experts’ delegation to Armenia in the coming months. During the
sitting, the sides also discussed issues related to bilateral
cooperation and long-term programs in trade and industry, agriculture,
finance, health care and other spheres of mutual interest.

According to the RA MFA Press and Information Department,
consultations of the two foreign ministries were held on the same
day. The Armenian Ambassador to India Ashot Kocharian participated in
the meetings.

Families’ lives, lies rooted in the Armenian genocide

San Francisco Chronicle, CA
Jan 20 2007

Families’ lives, lies rooted in the Armenian genocide

Reviewed by Saul Austerlitz

Sunday, January 21, 2007

The Bastard of Istanbul
By Elif Shafak
VIKING; 360 PAGES; $24.95

With her sixth novel, the Turkish writer Elif Shafak has joined the
short list of authors as well known for their purported criminal
offenses as for their books. But unlike her partners in literary
crime Salman Rushdie and Orhan Pamuk, Shafak was far from a household
name in the United States when she was charged in 2005 with "public
denigration of Turkishness" for offensive material in her novel "The
Bastard of Istanbul."
Like Pamuk, though, Shafak has run into trouble with the Turkish
judicial system over her desire to mention the unmentionable: the
1915-1923 Armenian genocide, in which 1.5 million Armenians were
murdered by the Young Turks of the Ottoman Empire. Shafak possesses
the courage to acknowledge the truth — an acknowledgment that’s a
crime in Turkey. The incriminating material shows up early in the
book, when an Armenian uncle castigates a nephew for abandoning his
daughter to the loving embrace of the enemy: "What will that innocent
lamb tell her friends when she grows up? My father is Barsam
Tchakhmakhchian, my great-uncle is Dikran Stamboulian, his father is
Varvant Istanboulian, my name is Armanoush Tchakhmakhchian, all my
family tree has been Something Somethingian, and I am the grandchild
of genocide survivors who lost all their relatives at the hands of
the Turkish butchers in 1915, but I myself have been brainwashed to
deny the genocide because I was raised by some Turk named Mustafa!"

The bond between Turks and Armenians, and the tangled dance of
victimizer and victim, is actually the subject of "The Bastard of
Istanbul." Shafak’s reference to the "Turkish butchers" is far from a
throwaway jab at her country’s penchant for selective memory
(although that, too, would require a great deal of courage); it is
actually the fundamental principle that sets the book’s gears in
motion. Two young women, one Turkish and one Armenian, one living in
Turkey and the other in the United States, find themselves
inextricably drawn together by history and family — two unique
motors of remembrance that share more in common than might be clear
at a glance.

The Armenians and Turks in "Bastard" are separated, more than
anything else, by their relationship to memory. The Turks —
19-year-old Asya Kazanci and her extended family — treat the past as
something to be boxed away and forgotten for the sake of familial
harmony, however tenuous that peace may be. The Armenians —
Armanoush Tchakhmakhchian and her Armenian American relatives —
think of the past as a gruesomely ugly yet precious flower, one that
must be preserved no matter how unpleasant the odor. For the
Armenians, in many ways, the past holds more value than the present.
For the Turks, the present exists at the edge of a bottomless
precipice; look backward and be swallowed by the abyss.

"The Bastard of Istanbul" begins with Zeliha, another young woman,
out on the Istanbul streets, taking in the sights and sounds of a
modern city in motion before audaciously entering a doctor’s office
and loudly demanding an abortion. She ultimately decides not to go
forward with the abortion, however, and the result is Asya, one of
"Bastard’s" two protagonists. For Asya, her large, squabbling family
is a burden, to be escaped at all costs, while for the Armenian
American Armanoush, the Armenian side of her family is an escape from
the constricting embrace of her overprotective native-born mother.
Her preference for ethnic solidarity over white-bread American life
leads Armanoush to embrace her Armenian roots, and eventually to
journey to Istanbul to look for answers. Shafak dives into the
genocide itself, with the story of Armanoush’s relative Hovhannes
Stamboulian, an intellectual and children’s book writer abducted and
killed by the Turkish authorities, but she is uncertain in such
foreign territory (a disease that creeps into "Bastard’s" American
sequences as well), and the subplot is a rare misstep in this
otherwise assured novel.

"The Bastard of Istanbul" details the process of two families, and
two pasts, drawing closer together, with the sins of the family
standing in for the collective sins of a country, and the rebellious
Zeliha serving as an honorary Armenian — a victim forced to stay
silent about the past for the sake of an illusory unity. In addition
to its fictional priorities, Shafak intends her book to serve as a
primer to Turks — an intended change of course for a country
dedicated to forgetting all that was unpleasant or humiliating. For
Shafak, and her amateur Armenian scholar Armanoush, what is most
surprising is the Turkish refusal to take possession of their own
history: "Slowly it dawned on Armanoush that perhaps she was waiting
for an admission of guilt, if not an apology. And yet that apology
had not come, not because they had not felt for her, for it looked as
if they had, but because they had seen no connection between
themselves and the perpetrators of their crimes."

The purposeful ignorance of Shafak’s Turks, born out of a willful
turning away from past familial horrors, becomes a symbol for the
collective Turkish turning away from the horrors of the Armenian
genocide. Shafak is incapable of bringing harmony to such unsettled
matters, even in the pages of a fictional narrative. All she can do,
and does, is shine a light on the past, and keep it shining so that
everyone — Turkish, Armenian, and otherwise — must look.

Saul Austerlitz’s "Money for Nothing: A History of the Music Video
>From the Beatles to the White Stripes" was published in December.

Turkey’s Trouble With Minorities

Washington Post, DC
Jan 20 2007

Turkey’s Trouble With Minorities

Ali Ettefagh – The murder of Hrant Dink in Istanbul by right-wing
extremists may well shatter Turkey’s chances of joining the European
Union.

The killing of the 53-year-old Armenian journalist and the publisher
of a newspaper for the Armenian community merely intended to open
honest discussion about what Winston Churchill called the first
Holocaust of the 20th Century. In late 1970s, the civil war that
ended in a coup was triggered by a very similar murder of a respected
leftist journalist, Abdi Ipekci, by the rightwing "Gray Wolves"
nationalists. Back in 2000, a highly visible Jewish industrialist and
philanthropist was murdered in Istanbul but the matter was stifled as
economic crises overshadowed the matter.

Hran Dink (and 12 other Turkish journalists currently in prison) was
convicted of insulting the ethnic fabric and the "Turkishness" of the
nation, a criminal offence under section 301 of the Turkish Criminal
Code. This is a highly subjective law in Turkey and a topic at the
core of objections by the European Union which insists on fair
treatment of ethnic minorities. The French parliament has demanded
Turkey face its past conduct in respect to the systematic killings of
Armenians back in 1915.

Turkey is certainly in a tough fix: Its EU negotiations are frozen in
their tracks. It has a number of prickly issues and disagreements to
overcome with the EU including the issues of human rights,
recognition of ethnic minorities and the resolution of its no-win
position in Cyprus. Concurrently, it worries about the future of an
Iraqi Kurdistan and its own Kurdish population, some one-third of its
citizens. It has a young population base and close to 100% of its GDP
in national debt. Its private sector continues to bet on a one-way
road of entry into EU as it incurs higher levels of debt. With a
civil war on its border, the Turkish government openly supports and
arms the Turkomen minorities in Kirkuk. And it has other interests in
Bosnia and hostile postures towards Armenia and Serbia.

The sum of such components can further complicate issues in a region
that is revisiting its religious and ethnic roots, dating back to the
times of the Ottoman Empire and the pre-revolutionary Russia. Turkey
must deal with these ghosts in a frank and transparent manner just as
all other secular countries in Europe have done.