BAKU: OSCE PA special envoy in Baku

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Nov 29 2004

OSCE PA special envoy in Baku

Goran Lennmarker, the special envoy of the OSCE Parliamentary
Assembly (PA)
on the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict, has arrived in Baku.
Lennmarker is expected to discuss disputable provisions mentioned on
his report on the Upper Garabagh conflict with the Azerbaijani
government.
The OSCE PA special envoy told journalists at the airport that he has
arrived in Baku from Armenia where he held talks over seeking ways
for settling the conflict.
It is possible for the conflicting sides to find ways for a positive
resolution of the conflict, Lennmarker added.*

BAKU: Azeri authorities shifting “propaganda” spending from papers t

Azeri authorities shifting “propaganda” spending from papers to TV – daily

Azadliq, Baku
26 Nov 04

Text of Matlab report by Azerbaijani newspaper Azadliq on 26
November headlined “The authorities are preparing to dispose of the
‘excessive burden'” and subheaded “Money spent on some newspapers
will be channelled into TV stations. Newspaper editors are to find
patrons among affluent state officials”

In the wake of the 1998 presidential election, the Azerbaijani
government took under its wing a number of opposition and independent
newspapers. They also created numerous other newspapers. During
the 2000 parliamentary election, the government possessed around 10
“independent” newspapers, but did not stop at that and continued the
process until the 2003 presidential election.

Those newspapers were given bizarre names, had offices equipped
with new technologies and were well-funded. There was a directive
to display those newspapers at the front of the state-owned kiosks,
along with the state-run newspapers. Only one thing was wanted
from the “independent” newspapers in return for all these favours:
“Produce quality newspapers, brief the public on the government’s
achievements efficiently and seek to erode the public’s support for
the opposition.” However, the newspapers did not live up to these
expectations. This means that the existence of those newspapers has
only resulted in a waste of money.

Apparently, the government ideologues are unwilling to continue their
policy of wasting money. In the near future, some pro-government
newspapers which did not live up to the expectations will have their
funding cut, according to a report that we have received from a source
within the authorities. The preliminary list of those newspapers
includes Palitra, Paritet, Kaspiy and Azad Azarbaycan. Reportedly, the
editors of those newspapers have already been told that the funding
will stop. The ideologues do not want the newspapers to close down
and so advised the editors to resolve the issue on their own. The
editors were advised to apply to various affluent state officials
and to continue their work under their patronage.

It is said that since Markaz, Hafta Ici, Bizim Asr and Xalq Cabhasi
newspapers are sponsored by certain people and act as mouthpieces
of certain state officials, their publication is not expected to
stop. Despite their lack of readership, Sas newspaper, which was
the first to defend [the late President] Heydar Aliyev, and Yeni
Azarbaycan newspaper, which is the organ of the NAP [the ruling New
Azerbaijan Party], will always be supported by the ruling elite.

The source also said that the ideologues want to channel the money
previously spent on newspapers which are no longer wanted into private
TV stations that are directly controlled by the authorities. It is
said that reporters at those TV stations have always disliked the
fact that they are paid less than the correspondents of the aforesaid
newspapers. Taking this into account, the government pundits want to
spend the money allocated for the mass media on TV stations that are
a more effective tool of propaganda.

Thanksgiving Day Telethon Raises Over $11 Million

Armenia Fund, Inc
111 Jackson Street
Glendale, CA 91205
818.243.6222

Contact: Sarkis Kotanjian
[email protected]

PRESS RELEASE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

November 26, 2004

Armenia Fund’s Annual Thanksgiving Day Telethon Raises Over $11Million

Glendale, CA (November 26) – Armenia Fund, Inc. (AFI) set a fundraising
record on Thanksgiving Day by raising over $11 million (final total
pending) during its live, 12-hour international broadcast event –
Telethon 2004 Make It Happen.

Airing Thursday, November 25 from 8:00 a.m. to 8:00 pm, the telethon
raised funds to complete the crucial North-South “Backbone” Highway and
provide for vital infrastructure projects in Armenia and Karabakh. “We
are truly grateful for the support and commitment the international
Armenian community has shown. Telethon 2004 was a grassroots,
world-wide community effort that will help secure a prosperous future
for Armenia and Karabakh,” said Maria Mehranian, chairperson, AFI.

Telethon 2004 was broadcast to over 45 million households in 24
cities throughout the United States and Canada, as well as to major
capitols and cities in Europe, South America, the Middle East, the
CIS and Armenia.

Detailed information/photos/interviews about Telethon 2004 will
be released. For more information call 818.243.6222 or visit

Armenia Fund, Inc., a non-profit 501(c)(3) tax-exempt corporation,
is the US West coast affiliate of the “Hayastan” All-Armenia Fund
(HAAF). Established in 1994 to facilitate humanitarian assistance
to Armenia and Karabakh, HAAF has administered over $100 million in
humanitarian, rehabilitation and construction aid through the united
efforts of Armenian communities internationally.

###

www.armeniafund.org
www.armeniafund.org.

Denver: Detained Armenians grapple with despair

Detained Armenians grapple with despair
By Kevin Simpson, Denver Post Staff Writer

Denver Post, CO
Nov 25 2004

Battling boredom, tears and uncertainty, four Armenian family members
said Wednesday that they struggle to believe their quest to remain
in the U.S. will end happily after nearly three weeks in immigration
lockup.

Their case mirrors thousands of others, say authorities, but with one
notable exception – the Sargsyans have the town of Ridgway mobilized
behind them.

“Everybody says it’s going to be fine, told us we’re going to get out
in a week, then two weeks,” said 20-year-old Gevorg Sargsyan. “It’s
already been 19 or 20 days, and we’re still locked up. Every time
your heart is broken, you get to be more unrealistic of what’s
happening. Seeing brick walls all day long, not getting the smell of
fresh air, doesn’t get your hopes up in any way.”

Despite efforts to be granted “parole status” after being adopted by
the U.S. citizen who married one of their sisters, Gevorg and his
18-year-old brother, Hayk, remain in the same legal limbo as their
father, Ruben, and older sister, Meri.

Final orders have been issued on all four, which means they could be
deported to Armenia at any time, says U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement officials.

Friends and townsfolk from Ridgway have demonstrated at the Aurora
detention facility in support of the Sargsyans, but immigration
authorities say the law is clear.

Meanwhile, the men bunk in an open area designed for about 45 people.
Meri lives with about 10 other women in a separate space.

Gevorg has checked out a book from the facility’s library, a novel
set in Nazi Germany.

“I’m kind of numb,” he said. “I don’t feel anything anymore. The last
17 days seem like 20 years. I used to own a car, have an apartment,
take tests, write papers – now all that seems like a fantasy.”

Gevorg, a chemical engineering student at the University of Colorado
at Boulder, said he’s had visits from two college instructors and a
high school teacher. All left him problems in math and logic to solve.

Hayk would have graduated from high school this spring.

Meri, 28, taught and played piano for San Juan Presbyterian Church
before she and the others were detained. Kids from the church Sunday
school sent her cards that have given her some comfort amid what she
regards as an impersonal system.

“They don’t care who you are,” she said, on the verge of tears.

Two family members have immigration cases still pending amid a tangle
of shifting relationships and legal wrangling.

Family matriarch Susan Sargsyan appealed her deportation order and
awaits a new hearing.

Her daughter, Nvart, married a U.S. citizen in 1999 and has been
granted permanent residence, although immigration authorities have
appealed that ruling.

Nvart’s ex-husband, an American named Vaughn Huckfeldt, met and
married her overseas and then provided family members student visas.

When Nvart divorced him, he reported the family to immigration
authorities, who charged that the Sargsyans fraudulently entered
the country.

That triggered what has become a protracted battle to stay in the U.S.

Attorney Jeff Joseph continues to pursue legal avenues to keep the
Sargsyans in the U.S., but he acknowledges that the situation is
taking a toll on the detainees.

“For someone who’s never been in jail, never been under arrest,
it’s terribly demoralizing,” Joseph said.

Act on ‘never again’

Act on ‘never again’
By Lee Bycel

Los Angeles Daily News
Nov 24 2004

The Rwandan genocide, the Armenian genocide, the Holocaust – in the
wake of these and other catastrophes of the 20th century, we have
vowed, “Never again.” The phrase is resolute and absolute.

But it can also be empty. It prescribes nothing. In terms of action
and commitment, it is silent. And silence – to say nothing and do
nothing while the innocent perish – is genocide’s prescription.

The term “genocide” was coined exactly 60 years ago by Raphael Lemkin,
in “Axis Rule in Occupied Europe,” published in November 1944 with the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He defined the term as
“a coordinated plan of different actions aiming at the destruction
of essential foundations of the life of national groups, with the
aim of annihilating the groups themselves.”

Whether the ongoing catastrophe in Darfur, Sudan, will rise (or sink)
to that definition, history will judge. It will judge our silence
as well.

I recently returned from a humanitarian mission to three refugee camps
in Chad, on the border of Darfur. These camps teem with people who have
somehow survived unfathomable suffering: husbands and fathers murdered;
wives and daughters raped; death from malaria, cholera and dysentery;
villages and lives burned to ashes. Life in the refugee camps is its
own hell, thick with the trauma and travail of those whose living eyes
can still see the dead. The camps bear witness to the darkest regions
of human degradation. There, the words “Never again” are a tragic,
empty echo.

The refugees in Chad and Darfur are abstractions when you see them
in the newspaper, but they are quite real in person, and not much
different from you and me. They happen to be victims of ethnic
cleansing and terror. They happen to have no resources. But they
yearn, as we do, for the warmth of a smile, for the touch of a caring
hand. What we consider the requirements of life are unimaginable
luxuries to them. They are desperate for our help. If only we were
as desperate to help them.

Unless the words “never again” are translated into action, their
echo is painfully hollow. Action on this scale can seem hopeless,
but we are not helpless: writing letters, making contributions,
getting involved in advocacy groups – these activities are near to
hand, and they multiply powerfully. Not everyone can give their whole
lives to such work, like the remarkable volunteers from around the
world I was privileged to meet in Chad. But that does not prevent a
more personal transformation on the part of each of us.

When we recognize that our humanity is inextricably linked to theirs,
the refugees of Darfur are no longer an abstraction that fades from
view. Awareness of their existence fosters an examination of our own.
It changes our approach to life, what we consume, what we think we
need and deserve. “Never again” is ultimately a personal challenge:
What can I do to erase Lemkin’s “genocide” from the dictionary?

Nor should we forget that “Never again” speaks to our self-interest.
Neglect of the dispossessed and disenfranchised can have devastating
consequences: political instability, deepening ethnic conflicts,
devastating famines and wars – any of which can rapidly darken our
own skies. All of humanity, the most and least fortunate alike, sleep
under the same sky, wake to the same sun, and cherish the same hopes
for their children.

“Never again” is an urgent call to each of us. Will we answer?

— Rabbi Lee Bycel, a Tarzana resident, is former dean of Hebrew
Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion. He moderates leadership
seminars at The Aspen Institute.

BAKU: Azerbaijan wants UN to adopt new resolution on Karabakh,leader

Azerbaijan wants UN to adopt new resolution on Karabakh, leader says

Trend news agency
22 Nov 04

Baku, 22 November: Azerbaijan’s initiative to put the issue of the
“Situation on occupied Azerbaijani territories” on the agenda of the
UN General Assembly is aimed at the adoption of a new resolution,
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev told journalists today.

“Of course, we will not confine ourselves to discussions only. We
want a new resolution to be adopted. A draft resolution has already
been prepared. The Foreign Ministry has held serious consultations
with different countries. We are trying to increase the number of
countries supporting us and I am sure that the resolution will play
an important role in this,” the Azerbaijani president said.

Aliyev described as flippant the Armenian side’s statement that if
the UN adopts a resolution, Azerbaijan will have to hold negotiations
directly with Nagornyy Karabakh.

“Armenia is a party to the conflict and we have already held
negotiations with it. If Azerbaijan is left one-to-one with Nagornyy
Karabakh, we will be able to resolve the issue even more quickly in
other ways. If Armenia wants us to hold talks directly with Karabakh,
then it should depart from the process, withdraw its troops from
the occupied territories and stop allocating funds from its budget,”
Aliyev stressed.

“We don’t think that another organization can replace the OSCE Minsk
Group which is dealing with the problem,” the president said. At the
same time, the participation of other international organizations,
including the UN and the Council of Europe, will not impede the
settlement process and will even “help our common cause”.

Telethon will raise funds to complete highway

Around the Valley
Telethon will raise funds to complete highway

Fresno Bee, CA
Nov 22 2004

Armenia Fund Inc. will broadcast its annual Thanksgiving fund-raising
event, Telethon 2004 Make it Happen, from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Thursday
on Fresno’s KJEO Channel 32 and Comcast Channel 14.

The 12-hour event will raise funds to complete the remaining 56 miles
of the North-South “Backbone” Highway in Karabakh.

Upon completion, the 105-mile highway will link 150 towns and villages,
providing crucial economic, trade and development opportunities.

The telethon also is aimed to provide continued assistance in health
care, education and infrastructure development in the Republic
of Armenia.

Details: (800) 888-8897 or on the Internet at

www.armeniafund.org.

BAKU: Terror fears in Yerevan schools

Terror fears in Yerevan schools

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Nov 22 2004

At about noon on Friday, a report was delivered that a terror act would
be committed in the Chekhov secondary school of Yerevan. The Armenian
Ministry of Emergencies said that teachers and schoolchildren were
distanced from the school immediately after the threat came. The
individual responsible for this did not indicate the goal or the
nature of the allegedly planned terrorist act. There have been no
reports on any explosives planted in the school.

Armenia’s Interior Ministry did not rule out that such cases may occur
in other schools of the city. The Armenian minister has therefore
ordered tightening of the police force.*

No bomb found after warning at school near US embassy in Armenia

No bomb found after warning at school near US embassy in Armenia

Armenian Radio First Programme, Yerevan
19 Nov 04

[Presenter] The propaganda of terror is again being spread in
Yerevan. Last time unknown people spread information that an
earthquake was expected, even giving the exact time, whereas this time
they have reported that a bomb has been placed in one of Yerevan’s
schools.

This causes anxiety and unrest among the people. What is the purpose
of the terror propaganda is not yet known. We asked the head of the
public information department of the Armenian Directorate for
Emergency Situations, Nikolay Grigoryan, to answer our question.

[Nikolay Grigoryan] The Yerevan Police Department received a call at
1040 [0640 gmt] that an explosive device had been placed at Yerevan’s
Chekhov School. The director of the Chekhov School, Gayane
Sarukhanyan, reported that at 1043 [0643 gmt] an unknown man called
and said that a terrorist act was expected at Chekhov School at 1200
sharp [0800 gmt]. The man who called the school asked the school
headmistress to take the news seriously. After the call, a joint plan
and emergency measures of the Directorate for Emergency Situations,
the police and health organizations were put into operation.

Teachers and pupils were fully evacuated at 1125 [0725 gmt]. The
law-enforcement agencies and dog-handlers are working at the scene and
have not found any explosive device. Apart from this, all the rescue
team, ambulances and operational employees are at the scene and they
are carrying on their work.

This is not the first and won’t be the last terror call. Generally
such calls have very severe and grave consequences.

I would like to give a warning that similar calls and warnings can be
verified only by the official information of the government
authorities. All this is rumours and gossip aimed at spreading fear
and anxiety among people.

Online Forum for Educators and Students to Discuss The Genocide

November 18, 2004

Armenian Genocide Resource Center
5400 McBryde Ave
Richmond, CA 94805
(510) 965-0152
Contact: Richard Kloian

ONLINE FORUM – LESSONS FROM THE PAST: THE ARMENIAN
GENOCIDE,HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTION AND HUMAN RIGHTS

December 1-3, 2004

Facing History and Ourselves will host a global online conversation
for educators, scholars, and university and graduate students focusing
on the difficult choices individuals, groups, and nations have
confronted – and continue to struggle with – in the face of genocide.

The forum will build upon the issues explored in Facing History and
Ourselves’ newest resource book, Crimes Against Humanity and
Civilization: The Genocide of the Armenians, as well as examine the
work of contemporary human rights activists and scholars who challenge
indifference and believe that prevention of genocide is possible.

Facing History and Ourselves staff will facilitate this three-day
online forum with the participation of leading human rights and
Armenian Genocide scholars, including Chair of Modern Armenian History
at the University of California, Los Angeles, Richard Hovannisian.
Smith College Professor and human rights activist Eric Reeves, a
frequent writer and commentator on the genocide in Sudan will also
join us along with Helen Fein, the executive director of the Institute
for the Study of Genocide and the International Association of
Genocide Scholars. The online forum is free of charge, Interested
individuals can RSVP online.

For more information, please go to

http://www.facinghistory.org/agforum