Mammadyarov & Rice discussed US role in NK settlement

MAMMADYAROV AND RICE DISCUSSED U.S. ROLE IN KARABAKH SETTLEMENT

PanArmenian News Network
Aug 3 2005

03.08.2005 03:43

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Yesterday Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
Mammadyarov, who is on visit to the U.S. at present, met with U.S.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to discuss the development of
the Azerbaijan-U.S. relations, Karabakh conflict and the role of
the United States in its settlement, energy projects of the Caspian
basin, parliamentary election campaign, current situation in the
Caucasus and some other issues. Meetings in the U.S. government,
Pentagon and the National Security Council are as well scheduled.
Elmar Mammadyarov will take part in the round table debates to be held
with the participation of representatives of the National Democracy
Institute, International Republican Institute of and a number of NGOs.

Eastern Prelacy: Crossroads E-Newsletter – 07/28/2005

PRESS RELEASE
Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
138 East 39th Street
New York, NY 10016
Tel: 212-689-7810
Fax: 212-689-7168
e-mail: [email protected]
Website:
Contact: Iris Papazian

CROSSROADS July 28, 2005

PRELACY CLERGY GO TO CAMP
It has been a time-honored tradition for members of the clergy from the
Eastern Prelacy to attend sessions at Camp Haiastan in Franklin,
Massachusetts, to offer religious education classes and to make the campers
aware of the teachings and mission of the Armenian Church.
This year three clergymen and one person currently studying for the
priesthood have been assigned to attend the Camp during different sessions.
They are: V. Rev. Fr. Taniel Garabedian, Rev. Fr. Vartan Kassabian, Rev. Fr.
Aram Stepanian, and Deacon Nishan Baljian.
Archbishop Oshagan recalls that during his student days in the United
States he was assigned to the Camp by the then Prelate, Archbishop Karekin
Sarkissian. Srpazan recalls that those days over a period of several summers
produced some of the most memorable experiences of his service.

VICAR GENERAL AND AREC DIRECTOR WILL LEAD
SUMMER PROGRAM FOR ORPHANS IN ARMENIA
V. Rev. Anoushavan Tanielian, Vicar General, and Dn. Shant Kazanjian,
Director of the Armenian Religious Education Council (AREC), will travel to
Armenia next week where from August 8 to 18, they will conduct a Christian
Educational Program for fifty of the more than 800 orphans currently
sponsored through the Prelacy’s Orphan Sponsorship Program. The program,
which will take place in Dzaghgatsor, Armenia, will provide religious
education for the youngsters as well as a camping environment that includes
recreational activities.

STEERING COMMITTEE MEETS THROUGH SUMMER
TO PLAN VISIT OF ARAM I TO EASTERN PRELACY
The Steering Committee, under the presidency of Archbishop Oshagan and
chairmanship of Dr. George Dermksian, is meeting throughout the summer
months to plan every detail of the visit of Catholicos Aram I to the Eastern
Prelacy. His Holiness has been visiting all of the dioceses under the
jurisdiction of the Cilician See to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the
reestablishment of the Holy See’s Seminary in Antelias, Lebanon. The
Catholicos’s visit to the Eastern Prelacy will begin October 19 and continue
through to October 30. During this time he will attend commemorative events
and private meetings in New York, New Jersey, Washington, Boston, and
Chicago.

CILICIAN SEE PARTICIPATES IN WSCF GENERAL ASSEMBLY
The annual general assembly of the World Student Christian Federation
(WSCF) in the Middle East took place in Cairo early this month.
Representatives from Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Sudan and Egypt participated.
Carla Khijoian, a member of the Executive Committee of WSCF and the
Student Association of the Armenian Church, participated in the conference
on behalf of the Catholicate of Cilicia.
A conference entitled “Women in the East and Honor Crimes” followed the
assembly. Several lecturers and professionals in various fields spoke about
the concept of honor in the Middle East and its immediate relation to women.
The participants stressed the importance of educating the women of the East
about their rights.

4,000 FAITHFUL PARTICIPATE IN PILGRIMAGE TO ST. TADEH
More than 4,000 Armenians participated in the annual three-day
pilgrimage to St. Tadeh (Thaddeus) Monastery in Iran, July 7-9, under the
patronage of the Catholicate of Cilicia, and the supervision of the Primate
of the Diocese, V. Rev. Fr. Neshan Topuzian. The Monastery is built on the
tomb of St. Thaddeus, one of two apostles who brought Christianity to
Armenia. During the pilgrimage the faithful lived in tents on the monastery
grounds, attended services, and participated in festivities.

EPHESUS COMMEMORATED ON AUGUST 6
The Holy Fathers of the Council of Ephesus (AD 431) are remembered in
the Armenian Church next Saturday, August 6.
Ephesus, the third general council, was convened upon the order of
Emperor Theodosius II to settle the Nestorian heresy. A large number of
high-ranking church leaders attended, headed by Patriarch Cyril of
Alexandria. The principle decision of the Council was the condemnation of
Nestorius. The Council excommunicated Nestorius and condemned his heresy,
affirmed the Nicene Creed, approved the title of Theotokos (God-bearer) as a
title for the Virgin Mary.
The Armenian Church accepted the canons and decisions of the Council and
set a feast day in the church calendar, on the Saturday of the “Barekendan”
of the Assumption.
The Armenian Church recognizes the first three councils: Nicaea (325),
Constantinople (381), and Ephesus (431), and has designated special days in
the liturgical calendar for all three.

ONE WEEK HIATUS FOR CROSSROADS
Please make a note that Crossroads will not be published next Thursday,
August 4. Our next issue will be transmitted on Thursday, August 11.

EVERYONE TALKS ABOUT THE WEATHER. . .
This past week just about everyone complained about the intense heat and
humidity here on the east coast, reminding us of this anonymous little
ditty:
As a rule, a man [and woman] is a fool;
When it’s hot, he wants it cool;
When it’s cool, he wants it hot-
Always wanting what is not.

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

August 8-18-Christian Educational Program in Armenia for the Prelacy
sponsored orphans (ages 12 and 13), at Dzaghgatsor, conducted by V. Rev. Fr.
Anoushavan Tanielian, Vicar General and Dn. Shant Kazanjian, Director of the
Armenian Religious Education Council (AREC).

August 27-National Educators’ Seminar sponsored by the Armenian National
Education Committee (ANEC), at Sts. Vartanantz Church, Ridgefield, NJ.

September 18-Banquet to celebrate the 25th anniversary of the consecration
of Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church, Worcester, Massachusetts, and
honor the Church Godfathers. His Eminence Archbishop Oshagan will deliver
the keynote address. For more information, 508-852-2414.

September 25-35th anniversary of St. Gregory Armenian Church of North
Andover, Massachusetts, presided over by His Eminence Archbishop Oshagan.
For more information, 978-685-5038.

October 19-November 1-Visit of His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great
House of Cilicia, to the Eastern Prelacy, commemorating the 75th anniversary
of the establishment of the Cilician Seminary in Antelias, Lebanon.

October 28-29-Mashtots Conference celebrating the 1600th anniversary of the
founding of the Armenian alphabet, at Harvard University. Jointly sponsored
by the Eastern Prelacy and Harvard University Mashtots Chair, Department of
Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations.

November 11-13-Mini-Datev program for the Midwest parishes.

March 17-19, 2006-Sunday School Teachers’ Conference at the Wonderland
Conference and Retreat Center in Sharon, MA.

Parishes of the Eastern Prelacy are invited to send information about their
major events to be included in the calendar. Send to:
[email protected]

Visit our website at

http://www.armenianprelacy.org
www.armenianprelacy.org

Armenia repays its debts in due time

ArmenPress, Armenia
July 27 2005

ARMENIA REPAYS ITS DEBTS IN DUE TIME

YEREVAN, JULY 27, ARMENPRESS: Armenian state budget released 4.5
billion drams in the first six months of the year to pay public
debts, meeting actually its six month targets. A press release by the
finance and economy ministry said 2.4 billion drams were spent to
cover the domestic and 2.1 billion external debts.
The ministry said the government spend 3 percent less money in
2005 first six months against the same time span of last year to
repay its debts, but spent at the same time 110 million drams more to
repay domestic debt. The government also released 3 billion drams to
respect its external liabilities before EBRD, IBRD, IDA and to US
government.

Can the new economy be organized?

Dow Jones & Company Inc.
July 27 2005

CAN THE NEW ECONOMY be organized?

The splintering of the AFL-CIO this week was prompted largely by the
fact that the U.S. economy has changed — with the service sector
growing and manufacturing declining — but the labor movement hasn’t.

Andy Stern, a leader of the dissident unions and president of the
Service Employees International Union, is betting that by targeting
the 92% of the service-industries workers who aren’t unionized and
offering them a compelling message, he can effect that change.
Employers — and skeptics — believe the infighting will make workers
even more disenchanted with the labor groups and underscore the
unions’ declining clout.

The climate isn’t very hopeful. Union membership has fallen steadily
in recent decades, particularly in industries that have seen rapid
growth. Industries with a long tradition of unionization — including
auto manufacturing, airlines and grocery chains — now are saddled
with huge legacy costs for pensions and health-care benefits and are
vulnerable to nonunion competitors. The United Auto Workers, despite
repeated attempts, has had very little success organizing the U.S.
auto assembly plants of foreign car manufacturers such as Honda Motor
Co.

For many workers today, unions seem unable to offer protection
against the powerful forces of globalization and technology, which
have sent many factory and even white-collar jobs overseas. At the
same time, corporate managements with their sophisticated human-
resources departments, employee-assistance programs and “cafeteria”
benefit choices have successfully countered union claims that workers
could do better if they were organized under a bargaining unit.

High-technology industries have proven especially hard for unions to
crack. With most manufacturing done overseas, U.S. technology workers
generally don’t think of themselves as union material. Many are
focused on earning stock options and other rewards for performance
instead of the wage increases and health insurance that unions
typically seek.

When unions have dug in, the victories often have been pyrrhic.
Grocery-store workers used to enjoy generous benefits, including
health-care coverage at no additional cost and wages of almost $18 an
hour. For decades, grocers complied because their competitors had
unionized workers that demanded the same compensation. But in the
past decade, Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and other nonunionized discount
chains have significantly expanded their food offerings. Traditional
supermarket chains have rushed to cut labor costs, demanding that
workers pay for part of their health-care premiums and top out at
lower wages.

The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union fought
back in 2003; 60,000 Southern California grocery workers went on
strike or were locked out for more than four months. Safeway Inc.,
Kroger Co. and Albertson’s Inc. suffered massive sales losses. And
the union gained little ground. New workers lost free health-care
coverage and the top pay scale for incoming food clerks fell to
$15.10 an hour from $17.90. Grocers still are seeking to cut labor
expenses, which account for about two-thirds of their operating
costs.

In an interview, Mr. Stern said he realizes the difficulties of
organizing workers from disparate industries and says one of his
goals is to create different kinds of unions. “First of all, we have
to be sophisticated: The 1930s adversarial type unionism isn’t going
to apply to nurses and reporters and child-care workers,” he said.
“We need to create a lot of different models of unions.”

For example, white-collar contract employees who move from job to job
are concerned with how to get and keep benefits. Nurses are worried
about staffing and quality of care. Building security guards are more
interested in wages.

Among the initiatives Mr. Stern’s union is studying are 401(k)-type
retirement plans that wouldn’t be tied to a particular employer and
job-education programs, both of which could help employees as they
move from job to job in an increasingly flexible economy.

Labor experts say employers shouldn’t underestimate Mr. Stern. The
Teamsters, the SEIU and three of their partners in the dissident
Change to Win Coalition have been responsible for more than half of
the new members brought into the AFL-CIO in the past 10 years, says
Mike Asensio, head of the national labor-relations practice at law
firm Baker & Hostetler LLP in Columbus, Ohio. They also represented
more than half of the petitions filed with National Labor Relations
Board to represent employees, he said.

“This is a wakeup call for labor and employers. Tomorrow there will
be more organizing efforts and fights at the bargaining table,” says
Philip Rosen, chairman of the labor-practice group at Jackson-Lewis
LLP in New York.

“Some people think [the union split] is good for business, but not
for us,” said a Texas hotel entrepreneur who didn’t want to be
identified for fear of becoming the target of labor organizers. He
worries that service unions now will step up organizing and that
local unions will feel greater pressure to carve out their own power
base.

Leading the way is likely to be SEIU, whose rise parallels that of
Mr. Stern, who became one of the youngest local presidents in the
movement in 1977, when at age 27 he was elected to head the SEIU’s
Pennsylvania Local 668.

Under Mr. Stern, unions have had some luck organizing janitors and
home health-care workers, particularly on the coasts. His union in
particular has had success using a combination of community-based,
political and public-relations tactics to sign up workers.

Among Mr. Stern’s efforts to modernize union organizing has been his
move to tap the power of the Internet through the Web site
purpleocean.org. There, SEIU tries to reach out to members and
nonmembers alike, preaching the need to expand health-care coverage
and other protection for 21st-century workers.

The SEIU also has shown a willingness to use some unorthodox tactics.
In one instance, a group of janitors in Washington, D.C., attempting
to organize, wore red T-shirts and whipped out Coke cans filled with
ball bearings just across the street from a popular restaurant not
far from the White House.

Mr. Stern also has had success organizing fragmented industries. The
union had only about 1,000 janitors in the Newark, N.J., area and had
done little to keep pace as corporate flight from Manhattan led to a
boom of new offices in New Jersey. Mr. Stern knew he couldn’t run a
typical recruitment drive, targeting one janitorial contracting
company at a time: In this fragmented industry, any that agreed to
higher pay would be quickly undercut by nonunion rivals. So SEIU
tackled whole markets at once.

In 11 New Jersey counties, it told contractors that they wouldn’t
have to raise pay until the SEIU got 55% of those in their area to go
along. The union then mounted strikes and rallies by would-be members
and took other actions to try to force contractors to comply. The
first 55% trigger point was reached in 2001, and the union contracts
took effect. By the end of this year, the SEIU will represent about
70% of northern New Jersey janitors, whose pay now ranges up to
$11.75 an hour, plus benefits.

To bolster recruiting, Mr. Stern has moved many headquarters staff
members out to the field. He has focused on recruiting immigrants,
including those from Russia, Armenia and South America.

In 1999, the SEIU organized 74,000 home health-care workers in Los
Angeles County, Calif., alone. The majority of physicians that have
affiliated with unions have done so with the SEIU. As part of that
campaign, it pushed for legislation to protect health-care workers
from being exposed to AIDS or hepatitis from needle sticks and
organized meetings with members of Congress to protest the long hours
worked by nurses and their lagging pay. One proposal was that
hospitals would be required to consult with nurses in setting
staffing levels and would be forbidden from making overtime
mandatory.

One of its locals in Ohio, which is driving the unionization of
nonprofit hospitals, recently released a study challenging Ohio’s
nonprofit hospitals to justify their tax-exempt status, saying they
have grown hugely profitable. The move was aimed at indirectly
benefitting workers by giving them a stronger bargaining stance.

“What you see today is pockets of workers in various industries that
have been difficult to organize, from retail to health care, despite
the fact that there seems to be a strong case that can be made for
union representation in those industries,” said Marick F. Masters, a
professor of business administration at the University of Pittsburgh.

To gain more clout, some experts say the union needs to offer
affiliate memberships, which would give members all union benefits
except for collective bargaining or grievance protections. The
American Federation of Teachers has done so for years, offering
associate members publications and insurance and union credit-card
programs, inviting them to meetings and to participate in lobbying.

Indeed, Lawrence Katz, a Harvard University labor economist, says
surveys show there is “a pent up demand for unions among workers,” a
suggestion that either unions are failing to capitalize on potential
demand or the combination of government policy and employer
resistance is taking its toll. “There is a view,” he adds, “that
people want something that looks more like a voice in the workplace
— and less like collective bargaining and conflict with management.”

Back at the Chicago convention hall yesterday, minus the delegates
and officers from the SEIU and Teamsters, AFL-CIO’s executive council
tried to put on a good face on the situation as they sat on a two-
tiered dais before a royal blue background. “I think these guys
realize they’ve been dealt a serious blow,” said George Spence, an
aircraft mechanic with American Airlines in Chicago and member of the
Transport Workers Union, Local 563. “I think they’re trying to remain
upbeat.” One delegate from Kansas City approached the microphone and
said, “As dysfunctional as we may be right now, we’re a family.”

24 Canadian-Armenians involved in reconstruction of church

ARKA News Agency
July 26 2005

24 REPS OF ARMENIAN COMMUNITY IN CANADA INVOLVED IN RECONSTRUCTION OF
CHURCH OF SAINT BLESSED VIRGIN IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, July 26. /ARKA/. Twenty-four young Armenians from Canada are
involved in the reconstruction of the Church of Saint Blessed Virgin
in Armenia. Head of the Canadian diocese of the Armenian Apostolic
Church Bagrat Galstanyan reported that the work is being carried out
under Canadian youth mission to Armenia program launched by the
diocese 12 years ago. According to him, about 400 young people from
Canada have visited Armenia to take part in the reconstruction of
educational institutions and churches. Galstanyan stressed that the
visits are of great importance for young people that grew up in a
different cultural environment. According to him, they discover
Armenia for themselves and come to realize that it is their country.
He claimed that this feeling accompanies them all their life and will
influence their future families and activities. The goal of the
program is not leaving a building constructed at a high level, but
taking a spiritual building to Canada, he said. He added that each
group returns to Canada “more Armenianized and Christianized.”
Armenia is a wonderful country, where each plot of land is
besprinkled with the blood of saints and martyrs, and the young
people step on it with trepidation, Galstanyan said. He pointed out
that the group members live in ordinary village families to feel the
pulse of life in Armenia. He added that the Armenian community in
Canada provides its support to the program.
The Church of Saint Blessed Virgin in the village of Artimet,
Echmiadzin region, Armenia, was constructed in 1876 and was destroyed
suing the following years. In 1970, the church was reconstructed due
to the efforts of a family that lived in the village. During the last
year it has fallen into decay. P.T. -0-

New Armenian Church To Be Built In Ekaterinburg

NEW ARMENIAN CHURCH TO BE BUILT IN EKATERINBURG

EKATERINBURG, JULY 22, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. A new Armenian
church will open near the crossroads of the streets of Belinsky and
Tveritin, in Ekaterinburg arleady late in 2005. According to the
“Regnum” information agency, the local Armenian community, the largest
one in the Urals, gathered the money for the construction. Few dozens
of thousands of Armenians live in the region of Sverdlovsk at present.

BAKU: Armenia violates ceasefire in northwest region

Armenia violates ceasefire in northwest region

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
July 21 2005

Baku, July 20, AssA-Irada — Armenian military units, from their
positions in the occupied area called “Gulchuluk Sovkhozu” in Aghdam
District, northwest Azerbaijan, fired at the positions of Azerbaijani
troops and Chiragly village of the same district with submachine guns
and machine guns from 00.10 until 00.40 on Wednesday, according to
local TV reports. No casualties are reported.

The Ministry of Defense did not confirm the reports.*

UES Buys Armenian Grid

UES Buys Armenian Grid

The Moscow Times, Russia
July 21 2005

Electricity monopoly Unified Energy Systems has received the right
to run Electricity Networks of Armenia, the Armenian national grid
company said Wednesday.

The $73 million deal was signed between UES and Britain’s Midland
Resources Holding, which bought the debt-ridden grid in 2002.

Due to a translation error, UES had erroneously reported in its 2004
financial statements at the end of June that it had paid the $73
million to buy the company, rather than the right to manage it and
receive its profits, UES said. (AP)

Courage plentiful in Iraq (by Howard Kaloogian)

Courage plentiful in Iraq

North County Times (North San Diego and Southwest Riverside County)
Tuesday, July 12, 2005

By Howard Kaloogian

BAGHDAD, Iraq —- Courage. You know it when you see it.

“Speaking truth to power” is thought of as courageous. Lt. General Abdul
Qader Jassim told Saddam Hussein that the Iraqi army could not withstand
the coalition forces arrayed against it in the mid ’90s. Then he spent
the next 7 years, 4 months and 10 days in an Iraqi prison until being
liberated by American troops in Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Today he is the head of the Iraqi army. We met him in Baghdad. He talked
to us through an interpreter whose hands appeared scared from chemical
torture.

He described life in Iraq under Saddam as peaceful if you were part of
the regime. Otherwise it held no hope and no future for the average Iraqi.

He described how Saddam trained terrorists and sent them into Lebanon
and Israel and elsewhere; some are now returning to Iraq. He also
believed there were 4,000 terrorists in Iraq before the coalition invasion.

We would ask about “the insurgents” and he would correct us: We were
asking about terrorists who kill and maim Iraqi citizens. Terrorists
want to make people believe they will never be safe.

Jassim is building an army to defeat them and protect his country. In
terms of raw numbers, there are now more Iraqi security forces in the
country than coalition troops.

Col. Ben Hodges, director of Joint Operations, described his plan to
train that Iraqi army and rotate it into the responsibilities currently
held by the coalition forces. We met in Camp Victory on the grounds of
Saddam’s Water Palace.

So far, he has closed 18 coalition bases throughout Iraq, giving
security responsibility for those territories fully to the Iraqi army.
There are 91 bases yet to go.

Benchmarks along the way toward complete Iraqi control include the
referendum on the constitution this October followed by the December
election of its representatives. But the terrorists learned from the
January election that those events would push them away from power.

Everyone is bracing for more terrorist activity, more disruption of
daily life and more indiscriminate death. Who is the enemy? Both men
agreed, its Al Qaeda in Iraq. The same enemy that exploded bombs in the
London transportation system; the same enemy that attacked America on 9/11.

Securing the borders so that terrorists don’t continue to return to
their training ground is another benchmark of Iraqi sovereignty.
Smugglers on those borders have been moving goods and people for
thousands of years. To end it now the Directorate of Border Enforcement
is staffing forts to keep the uninvited out.

Col. Hodges has trouble understanding anyone who claims to support the
troops but not the war; he does not believe that possible. The negative
characterization from some in America that this process of transfer
isn’t happening fast enough, or not at all, that it’s a “quagmire”
doesn’t seem to impact the Army, but he believes it does give support
and hope to the enemy.

What will it take to overcome all these challenges? Courage. The Iraqi
and Coalition forces have it in abundance. Tomorrow we will test our
courage as we go out on patrol.

—- Former Assemblyman Howard Kaloogian lives in San Marcos. He is
visiting Iraq with a group of radio talk show hosts.

http://www.nctimes.com/articles/2005/07/13/opinion/commentary/17_28_497_12_05.txt

Azeri FM and OSCE MG Co-Chairs to Continue Their Meeting

AZERI FM AND OSCE MG CO-CHAIRS TO CONTINUE THEIR MEETING TODAY

YEREVAN, JULY 12. ARMINFO. Azeri FM Elmar Mamedyarov will continue
today his Monday meeting with OSCE MG co-chairs Stephen Mann (US),
Yuri Merzlyakov (Russia) and Bernard Fassier (France) who arrived in
Baku SUnday.

Azertag reports that during the Monday meeting the co-chairs said
that the key objective of their visit to the region is to hold
consultations before the Aug Kazan meeting of the Armenian and Azeri
presidents with a view to make closer the positions of the
conflicting parties.

The sides exchanged opinions on a number of issues of the Prague
Process and stressed the necessity of intensifying the peace process.

To remind, the co-chairs will come to Yerevan Wednesday.