Hayastan All-Armenian Fund Implements Drinking-Water Project In Mart

HAYASTAN ALL-ARMENIAN FUND IMPLEMENTS DRINKING-WATER PROJECT IN MARTUNI REGION’S SOS VILLAGE

armradio.am
01.02.2010 12:21

The Hayastan All-Armenian Fund continues to make headway in the
construction of a drinking-water network in Sos, a village in Artsakh’s
Martuni Region, as well as the refurbishment of the community’s
broken water reservoir. The project, launched in October 2009, is
co-sponsored by the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund’s French affiliate
and the government of Artsakh.

"The well being of the Artsakh population is at the center of our
humanitarian action, with special emphasize on children-related and
water supply projects," comments Pierre Terzian, chairman of the
Hayastan All-Armenian Fund French affiliate.

Already the construction of the 7.6-kilometer internal
water-distribution network is complete. The next and final phase
of the project, slated to start in February 2010, will comprise the
renovation of the main water reservoir and construction of the smaller
distribution reservoirs.

"Unfortunately numerous rural communities throughout Artsakh and
Armenia still lack reliable access to water," said Ara Vardanyan,
executive director of the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund. "We are extremely
gratified that, with the project in Sos, yet another community will
have resolved its water crisis."

Igor Ghahramyan, mayor of Sos, said that the residents of the ancient
village obtain much of their water supply from a single local well,
which is in grave disrepair and whose water is not safe for drinking.

"Water is the most vital element connecting villagers to the land,
and only after solving the water problem can they begin to address
other issues facing the community," Ghahramyan added.

The Hayastan All-Armenian Fund continues to carry out a number of
vital development projects in the Martuni Region. In 2009 it completed
water-network projects in the villages of Berdashen and Spitakashen.

Currently the fund is implementing school-building initiatives in
the communities of Gishi and Chartar, and in the summer of 2009 it
completed the construction of a new school in Spitakashen.

ANTELIAS: Theological Dialogue b/w Catholic & Oriental Churches cont

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Director
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Watch our latest videos on YouTube here:

THE THEOLOGICAL DIALOGUE BETWEEN THE CATHOLIC CHURCH
AND THE ORIENTAL ORTHODOX CHURCHES CONTINUE IN ANTELIAS

During the past two days the representatives of the Catholic and Oriental
Orthodox Churches have been discussing their churches’ reception of the
decisions of the early ecumenical councils, the impact this reception had on
eucharistic communion and the role of Rome.

Archbishop Yeznik Bedrossian, Armenian Orthodox Church, and Father Levon
Zekian, Armenian Catholic Church, presented papers on the topic by citing
Armenian sources. H.E. Metropolitan Bishoy of Damiette presented the Coptic
position by citing Coptic sources. The floor was then opened for plenary
discussion and clarification.

In the second part of the dialogue, Father Mathew Velanikar of the Malankara
Orthodox Syrian church spoke of his church’s reception of the early
ecumenical council, and Dr. Ditmer Winkler presented a paper on the position
of the churches in the Persian Empire. Following the presentations and
discussions, Father Johan Mathew from the Malankara Church explained the
reasons why his church had accepted the first three ecumenical councils.

The meeting of the Theological Dialogue Commission ended with a press
conference, participated in by the two co-moderators, H.E. Walter Cardinal
Kasper and H.E. Metropolitan Bishoy, along with Bishop Nareg Alemezian. In
the evening, the participants were invited to dinner by Mor Theophilus
George Saliba, Metropolitan of Mount Lebanon, at the Syrian Orthodox
Archbishopric.

##
View the photos here:
tos/Photos435.htm#8
*****
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the Ecumenical
activities of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician
Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is located in
Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/
http://www.youtube.com/user/HolySeeOfCilicia
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/v04/doc/Pho
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org

The Islamic case for religious liberty

Cyprus Mail

The Islamic case for religious liberty

By Mustafa Akyol Published on January 30, 2010

ECUMENICAL Patriarch Bartholomew of the Orthodox Church recently said
on American TV that he feels `crucified’ in Turkey, upsetting many
Turks. Sadly, his Holiness is right. Yet his complaint is not with
Islam but with the secular Turkish Republic.

The Turkish state has kept the Halki Seminary, the only institution
able to train Orthodox priests, closed since 1971. Even the
Patriarch’s title `ecumenical’ is lashed out at by some Turkish
authorities and their nationalist supporters. Every year,
international reports on religious freedom point to such pressures on
the Patriarchate with concern, and they are right to do so. But why
does Turkey do all this? What is the source of the problem?

Things were better long ago. The first Turkish ruler to reign over the
Ecumenical Patriarchate was Mehmed II, the Ottoman Sultan who
conquered Constantinople in 1453. In line with the Islamic tradition
of accepting the `People of the Book,’ the young sultan granted
amnesty to the patriarchate. He also gave the institution many
privileges and authorities, no less than that which existed under the
Byzantine emperors. Armenians and Jews later enjoyed the same
autonomies.

In the 19th century, the non-Muslim peoples of the empire also
achieved the rights of equal citizenship with Muslims. That’s why the
late Ottoman bureaucracy and the Ottoman Parliament included a great
number of Greeks, Armenians and Jews – something you never see in
republican Turkey. The Halki Seminary, opened in 1844, is a relic from
that bygone age of pluralism.

Nationalism is what destroyed this Pax Ottomana. It affected the
peoples of the empire one by one, including, towards the end, the
Turks. Many conflicts took place between the latter and the rest, and
the great empire’s colossal collapse left a bitter taste in the mouths
of all. The Armenians, who suffered the worst tragedy in 1915, never
forgot nor forgave.

What the Turks remember, however, was the perceived `treason’ of the
other components of the empire, especially that of the Ecumenical
Patriarchate. The latter had cheered the Greek armies when they
invaded western Anatolia in 1919. From that point on, the
Patriarchate, in the eyes of many Turks, became a `fifth column.’

When Mustafa Kemal Atatürk founded the Republic in 1923, he defined
the Patriarchate as `a centre of perfidy.’ As an alternative, he
promoted a rival `Turkish Orthodox Patriarchate,’ which became a
bastion of ultra-nationalist ideology. (Some members of this
artificial `Patriarchate’ are currently on trial in the so-called
Ergenekon case, a covert network of officers and civilians accused at
conspiring to stage a military coup against the current Turkish
government.)

Over the years, Atatürk’s ideas evolved into an official ideology
called `Kemalism,’ which had two main pillars: a self-styled
secularism that bans anything but `the secular way of life,’ and a
fierce nationalism that defies anything it deems `non-Turkish.’

The Ecumenical Patriarchate, as both a religious and `non-Turkish’
institution, fits in neither category. Hence, throughout the
Republican regime, and especially at times of military dominance, it
faced official pressure and confiscation of property, as did all other
non-Muslim and Muslim religious institutions.

So part of the problem is the curse of history. But you can either
trap yourself inside history or take lessons from it and move on. To
date, unfortunately, Turkey’s nationalists, within both state and
society, have opted for the former option.

If one cause of the repression of the Ecumenical Patriarchate is
nationalism, though, the other one is the other pillar of the Kemalist
ideology: secularism. Turkey’ draconian laws on `national education’
ban any sort of religious education unless it is strictly controlled
by the state. The real motive behind this is the regime’s distaste for
Islam. The Ecumenical Patriarchate, as a foreign observer observes,
only receives `collateral damage.’

A telling manifestation of this was seen recently in a live discussion
on CNNTurk, the Turkish counterpart of the international news channel.
A deputy from the CHP, the staunchly Kemalist People’s Republican
Party, Muharrem Ince, who opposed the reopening of the Halki Seminary
became angry. `Do you know who most wants to open the seminary in this
country,’ he loudly asked. `The Islamists! They want this, because
they want to open Islamic schools as well.’

Yes, this is indeed the position increasingly adopted by Turkey’s
Islamic opinion leaders – who are striving not for jihad or an
`Islamic state,’ but just a modest preservation of tradition. They
realise that religious freedom must be championed for all. And they
have a good frame of reference in the pluralism of the Ottomans.

This more liberal approach to non-Muslims can be observed in today’s
AKP (Justice and Development Party) government, in power since 2002.
Although labelled as `Islamist’ by its opponents, the AKP has been
much more willing to liberalise Turkey than its secular counterparts,
most of which are zealously nationalist. The Annual Report of the
United States Commission on International Religious Freedom makes this
point nicely:

`In November 2006, the [AKP dominated] Turkish parliament, as part of
the reforms related to possible EU accession, passed a new law
governing Lausanne religious minority foundations, easing procedures
to establish foundations and allowing non-Turkish citizens in Turkey
to open them… Then President Ahmet Necdet Sezer [a staunch Kemalist],
however, vetoed the legislation. In February 2008, the parliament
passed a similar law on the return of property confiscated from
non-Muslim minorities… President Gül signed the legislation, which
was also supported by Prime Minister Erdogan, but was vehemently
opposed by Turkish nationalists on the grounds that the law granted
too many rights to minority communities.’

The Ecumenical Patriarch himself acknowledged in a recent interview
that the AKP has shown goodwill on this issue. His All Holiness also
said that the real obstacle is probably `the deep state’ – a reference
to Turkey’s Kemalist state establishment that considers itself above
any elected government and democratic law.

* Mustafa Akyol is an Istanbul-based political commentator and the
author of the forthcoming The Islamic Case for Liberty

Hayk Babukhanyan: Armenia Should Set March 1 As A Deadline For Ratif

HAYK BABUKHANYAN: ARMENIA SHOULD SET MARCH 1 AS A DEADLINE FOR RATIFICATION
Karen Ghazaryan

"Radiolur"
29.01.2010 17:42

Turkey’s behavior after the decision of the Armenian Constitutional
Court evidences that it is attempting to drag the process of
ratification of the protocols and use the time to seize concessions
in the Karabakh settlement process, President of the Constitutional
Right Union Hayk Babukhanyan told a press conference today.

"I think Armenia does not have to accept the rules of that game and
should set March 1 as a deadline for ratification," he said.

According to Hayk Babukhanyan’s assessment, Turkey will drag out the
process until April 23 in order to seize concessions in the Karabakh
settlement process, and will ratify the protocols on the eve of April
24 as a winning party.

"If Turkey fails to ratify the protocols by March 1, Armenia has to
recall its signature and speak in the language of preconditions with
Turkey," he said. According to Hayk Babukhanyan, the preconditions
should include recognition of the Armenian Genocide, material
reimbursement and return of the territories annexed to Turkey in
1918-1920.

Opening Of Upper Lars Checkpoint Advantageous For Armenia: Georgian

OPENING OF UPPER LARS CHECKPOINT ADVANTAGEOUS FOR ARMENIA: GEORGIAN PM

Tert.am
17:37 ~U 26.01.10

"Russia has placed restrictions in a number of areas. The opening
of that border is going to be advantageous for Armenia. Russia has
to remove those restrictions," said Prime Minister of Georgia Nika
Gilauri, referring to the Upper Lars checkpoint.

As previously reported, in December 2009, Georgia’s Deputy Minister
of Foreign Affairs Nino Kalandadze had made a statement that Moscow
and Tbilisi had struck an agreement on re-opening the Kazbeki-Upper
Lars checkpoint. It is expected that the border crossing will re-open
in early March.

PACE Will Do Its Best To Resolve Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict: New PACE

PACE WILL DO ITS BEST TO RESOLVE NAGORNO-KARABAKH CONFLICT: NEW PACE PRESIDENT

Tert.am
11:06 â~@¢ 26.01.10

The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) will do
its best to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, new PACE president
Mevlut CavuÅ~_oglu said during his first press conference, Turkish
press reports.

"PACE will spend efforts to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. The
resolution of that conflict is important for peace and stability in
the region," CavuÅ~_oglu has said.

Speaking about Turkey-EU relations, he stressed that the EU should
provide more support to Turkey and encourage it in terms of EU
accession.

In CavuÅ~_oglu’s words, currently the Turkish authorities decisively
continue and will continue activities aimed at making reforms in
Turkey.

Discussing Nagorno-Karabakh’s Participation In Negotiations Is Alrea

DISCUSSING NAGORNO-KARABAKH’S PARTICIPATION IN NEGOTIATIONS IS ALREADY AN ACHIEVEMENT: ANALYST

Tert.am
16:00 ~U 26.01.10

Political analyst Ruben Hakobyan considers the discussion of
Nagorno-Karabakh’s participation in yesterday’s meeting in Sochi
with the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs to be a certain achievement. "I
consider Nagorno-Karabakh’s participation in any way to be positive,
since that will change the rules of the game," he said, while speaking
to journalists today.

According to the analyst, if the Nagorno-Karabakh issue is resolved,
the Armenian-Turkish border will open in and of itself. The guarantee
in Armenian-Turkish relations, according to Hakobyan, is the U.S.,
while in the Nagorno-Karabakh issue, it’s Russia. Furthermore,
yesterday’s meeting showed that Russia "is a little bit more of a
co-chair than the others [U.S., France]," said Hakobyan.

The analyst also added that in the last two decades, Armenia’s inner
political life, as well as just about everything else, has been tied
with the Nagorno-Karabakh issue.

Financial Ombudsman Proclaims Six Companies As Best Partners

FINANCIAL OMBUDSMAN PROCLAIMS SIX COMPANIES AS BEST PARTNERS

ArmInfo
25.01.2010

ArmInfo. Financial Ombudsman of Armenia Piruz Sargsyan has announced
the names of Best Partner organizations: ACBA-Credit Agricole
Bank, VTA Bank (Armenia), Yunibank, INGO Armenia insurance company,
Express Credit credit company and Valge lombard, Sargsyan says that
the criteria were activeness of participation in seminars, quickness
of response to the ombudsman’s decisions, etc.. It was a hard choice
as there are many active partners among financial organizations.

The Office of Financial Ombudsman was established by the Central
Bank of Armenia for solving property conflicts between financial
organizations and their individual clients. The office started its
activities Jan 24 2009 and has examined almost 400 applications
ever since.

Haiti Emergency Aid Conference Opens In Montreal

HAITI EMERGENCY AID CONFERENCE OPENS IN MONTREAL

AZG DAILY
26-01-2010

International

MONTREAL (AFP) – Top world officials gathered in Montreal on Monday
for emergency talks to hash out plans to rebuild Haiti, nearly two
weeks after a killer earthquake devastated the impoverished nation.

Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive, Canadian Prime Minister
Stephen Harper, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and officials
from the United Nations were among those taking part.

Canada is eager to assert its role in coordinating the emergency
response to the January 12 disaster, which left more than 150,000
dead and hundreds of thousands others homeless, hungry and wounded.

"Know that Canada, the group of friends of Haiti and the international
community and non-governmental groups are pledging our support during
this period of crisis and beyond," Canada’s Foreign Minister Lawrence
Cannon told Bellerive.

French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, founder of the international
charity Doctors Without Borders, was also participating in the six-hour
closed-door talks.

The ministers were discussing how to streamline delivery of food,
water, drugs and medical supplies to the swelling number of
people living in makeshift camps around the shattered capital of
Port-au-Prince.

Speaking here Sunday, Bellerive urged Haitians living abroad to
actively participate in rebuilding the country.

"There is no other solution today but the Haitian diaspora’s
integration in the reconstruction effort," he said.

Washington has taken a frontline role in the disaster relief effort,
sending in tens of thousands of troops and rescue teams and anchoring
a hospital ship offshore to treat injured Haitians.

Television and Internet images of the destitute and dying — as the
able-bodied search amid the tangled steel and concrete rubble of the
capital — have triggered a worldwide outpouring of donations.

Donor countries are seeking to use the groundswell of support for
Haiti as an opportunity to transform a country that has historically
faced grinding poverty, political corruption and bloodshed.

Diplomats have raised the possibility of a kind of Marshall Plan for
the island nation, similar to the US-led postwar reconstruction of
Europe, which would take decades and require a colossal commitment
of resources and money.

Experts have warned that hundreds of thousands of Haitians will be
living off foreign aid and in temporary housing for years to come
during the slow reconstruction process. Thousands have been left
disabled.

In Ottawa, Cannon spoke of Canada’s intention to "fully support Prime
Minister Jean-Max Bellerive’s commitment to move beyond reconstruction
to rebuild a new Haiti."

The conservative government is keen to shore up political support
for Canada’s role in assisting Haiti as it faces growing protests
at home for its decision to prorogue parliament until March while it
deals with the Haiti crisis.

"Prime Minister Stephen Harper is fully engaged in the humanitarian
response to this devastating earthquake, and has set in motion a rapid,
comprehensive and determined disaster-relief effort on behalf of the
government of Canada," Cannon said.

Foreign ministers and other officials from Brazil, Chile, Peru,
Uruguay, Mexico, Costa Rica, the Dominican Republic, Japan and Spain
were also set to participate in the emergency meeting.

They were joined by officials from the European Union, the Organization
of American States, the Inter-American Development Bank, the World
Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

Japan said it would pledge 70 million dollars in aid to Haiti and
deploy as many as 300 peacekeepers to the UN mission there.

Venezuela, Nicaragua and Bolivia, leftist regimes that have criticized
the presence US troops on Haiti soil, did not participate in the
conference. But their foreign ministers met in Caracas Sunday to
discuss their own assistance program.

The Montreal talks were expected to lay the groundwork for a
full-fledged donors conference on Haiti in the coming weeks.

Disgusting Or Criminal?

DISGUSTING OR CRIMINAL?
James Hakobyan

Lragir.am
25/01/10

On January 22, meeting with the members of the Supervisory Chamber and
speaking about the impermissibility of abuse, Serge Sargsyan stated
that an official wasting the public means has to get the public pity.

"Much can be forgiven to officials, but an official who "touches"
public means is the most disgusting person for the society", said
Serge Sargsyan.

At first instance, it seems quite a just and strict assessment for
the phenomenon of wasting public means. But when you try to assess
this evaluation from the point of law and right, the image comes out
to be different.

What means to be disgusting for the society? And what if we say that
the society does not feel disgust towards such an official. So what?

The disgust of the society cannot be a measurement for assessing a
criminal. There is only one measurement-the law. And an official who
"touches" public means is a criminal "touching" public means is a
crime which is to be punished by the law.

Notable, that the government, making the public’s disgust a
measurement of assessing a crime, takes up its favorite way to put
the responsibility on the public. Since the society does not feel
disgust towards these officials, they calmly abuse public means. Let
the society feel disgust towards the officials for them to be ashamed
of misusing.

This is from the series when it is the society to sell its votes during
elections, and not the governmental groups to buy them, or it is the
society to be responsible for the corruption because it gives bribes,
and not the officials who take them.

The society’s behavior, its self-conscience, legal perception, and
values are very important for the administration of a country. But
when all this is not on a necessary level to get the necessary level,
the quality of administration is to be changed, but not to say that the
society is to be changed. Consequently, not the love or the disgust of
the society is to be proclaimed the measurement for administration,
but the law is to be made such. For lawful atmosphere the disgust of
the society is not necessary to be a measurement. In such a case, the
disgust will just be reciprocal and that is all. Such an atmosphere
is to be created when a criminal will feel disgust towards the crime
because it will bring them to rather "disgusting" conditions of life.