ANCA Welcomes Kate Nahapetian to Washington, DC Staff

Armenian National Committee of America
888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: (202) 775-1918
Fax: (202) 775-5648
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet:

PRESS RELEASE
February 25, 2005
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

ANCA WELCOMES KATE NAHAPETIAN TO WASHINGTON, DC STAFF

— Former U.S. Department of Justice Policy Analyst to Lead
Government Relations Efforts

WASHINGTON, DC – Accomplished lawyer and human rights activist Kate
Nahapetian joined the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA)
Washington, DC staff this week as Government Affairs Director of
the grassroots advocacy organization’s national headquarters.

“Kate is a powerful addition to the ANCA professional staff. We
are tremendously pleased that she will be bringing her considerable
legal skills, boundless energy, determination and creativity to the
vital work of advancing the Armenian American community’s
government affairs priorities,” said ANCA Chairman Ken Hachikian.
“Along with our board, chapters, activists and supporters across
the United States, I want to warmly welcome Kate to the ANCA’s
Washington, DC team, and to say how much all of us look forward to
working with her in the months and years to come.”

Kate Nahapetian graduated magna cum laude with a degree in
International Studies from American University and received a J.D.
with a focus on international and human rights law from the
University of California at Berkeley School of Law.

She has worked on asylum and migration issues at the Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace and the German Council on Foreign
Policy in Berlin. She was also a legislative correspondent for
Senator Joseph Biden and received a Konrad Adenauer Foundation
Fellowship to pursue graduate studies in Germany. At Mental
Disability Rights International, she was instrumental in starting a
project in Armenia to help develop community-based care for people
with mental disabilities. In addition, Kate documented cases of
torture in Chile for the prosecution against General Augusto
Pinochet and has published two articles on international law. Upon
graduating from law school, Kate litigated complex class actions at
Milberg Weiss Bershad Hynes and Lerach before working as a Policy
Analyst with the Community Relations Service of the U.S. Department
of Justice, which mediates ethnic and racial conflicts in the
United States.

An active participant and leader in Armenian American community
life, growing up, Kate spent summers at AYF Camp Haiastan. During
her undergraduate years, she was a member of the Armenian Youth
Federation Washington Ani Chapter and participated in the Armenian
Relief Society’s Summer Studies program. In 1991, she helped
develop the ANCA Congressional election strategy as part of the
ANCA Leo Sarkisian Internship program. She continued her activism
with the ANC, through participation in the San Francisco, San Diego
and Washington, DC chapters.

“I am very excited about coming on board and becoming part of our
efforts to represent the Armenian American voice in the nation’s
capital,” stated Kate Nahapetian. “There are great challenges ahead
and I look forward to working with our grassroots network of
dedicated activists to continue moving our shared priorities
forward.”

www.anca.org

Kocharian: negotiations with Azerbaijan over NK more intensive

Associated Press Worldstream
February 26, 2005 Saturday 12:11 PM Eastern Time

Armenian president says negotiations with Azerbaijan over disputed
enclave more intensive

YEREVAN, Armenia

Negotiations between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the disputed enclave
of Nagorno-Karabakh are in an intensive period, which could lead to a
final resolution, the Armenian president said in an interview
published Saturday.

President Robert Kocharian also insisted officials from the enclave
take part in the talks, which have been led by the Organization for
Security and Cooperation in Europe. Azerbaijan has refused to
negotiate with the regional leaders.

“The negotiating process is becoming more intensive, and there is a
slight hope for a result,” Kocharian said in the interview with the
Voice of Armenia newspaper.

“As long as no practical solution to the Nagorno-Karabakh problem has
been found, people will keep saying the negotiating process is at a
dead end,” Kocharian was quoted as saying. “Such conflicts can’t be
settled quickly.”

Nagorno-Karabakh has been de-facto independent since 1994, when a
cease-fire ended a war that killed 30,000 people and drove a million
from their homes. Tension remains high, however, and disputes over
the enclave and additional territory have prevented the two countries
from settling the conflict.

Nagorno-Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian government is not recognized
internationally. The enclave is geographically surrounded by
Azerbaijan’s territory. Armenian forces also control a large amount
of surrounding territory, including land that links the enclave with
Armenia.

Paris hosts concert with star singer Charles Aznavour

Paris hosts concert for reporters missing in Iraq

PARIS, Feb 14 (Reuters) – Around 30 singers put on a free concert in
Paris on Monday in a show of support for a French female journalist
and her Iraqi translator, missing in Iraq and believed to have been
kidnapped.

Florence Aubenas of France’s Liberation daily newspaper has not been
seen since leaving a Baghdad hotel on Jan. 5 in the company of her
translator, Hussein Hanoun Al Saidi. Iraqi President Ghazi al-Yawar
said last month she had been kidnapped.

Liberation, which organised the concert with Paris-based media rights
watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF), said the event was also in
support of Italian journalist Guiliana Sgrena, who was kidnapped in
Baghdad on Feb. 4.

Star singer Charles Aznavour, who topped the concert’s billing, said
he hoped Aubenas could be freed.

“We must talk about this, and bit by bit we’ll make those people
holding her feel ashamed and perhaps we’ll give them some humanity to
give us back what they have taken,” said Aznavour.

Foreign Minister Michel Barnier said last Tuesday that France was
doing everything possible to secure Aubenas’ release.

He gave no details on what measures France was taking on behalf of
Aubenas and Saidi but said their case was different from that of two
French journalists kidnapped last August and released on Dec. 21.

France strongly opposed the U.S.-led war on Iraq in 2003.

Since Aubenas’ disappearance, President Jacques Chirac has asked
French journalists not to travel to Iraq. French journalists’
organisations have attempted to keep Aubenas’ name in the public eye
with a series of events.

More than 120 foreigners have been kidnapped in Iraq since last
April. Many have been freed but about a third have been killed. The
snatching of Sgrena outside a Baghdad mosque was the first kidnapping
of a foreigner since elections on Jan. 30.

02/14/05 16:25 ET

Assembly, AGBU & WD Honor Righteous Nations & Orgs on 90th Anniv.

Armenian Assembly of America
122 C Street, NW, Suite 350
Washington, DC 20001
Phone: 202-393-3434
Fax: 202-638-4904
Email: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE
February 24, 2005
CONTACT: Ross Vartian
Email: [email protected]
Cell: (202) 669-7231

Armenian Assembly, AGBU and the Western Diocese Honor Righteous
Nations and Organizations as Part of 90th Anniversary Armenian
Genocide Events

Los Angeles, CA – More than 270 community leaders and supporters
participated today in a national tribute honoring countries that took
action while the Armenian Genocide was being carried out or later
affirmed the facts of history. A last-minute campaign waged by Turkey
to sabotage and prevent the remembrance ceremony failed.

The “International Refuge, Relief and Recognition Tribute,” part of a
series of local, national, and international events designed to
commemorate and raise awareness of the 90th anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide, took on added significance last week when some
nations that agreed to receive the honor and attend the luncheon
tribute withdrew their participation in the face of Turkish demands
and intimidation.

The Armenian Assembly, Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) and
the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church, as event organizers joined
with the community in saluting those countries for either raising
awareness of this crime, for taking resolute steps to end the
genocidal process, for providing relief to the survivors or for
affirming the historical truth. Organizers and guests gave thanks to
all nations and organizations that helped save lives, but particularly
to those that attended today despite the Turkish government’s
campaign.

Among the countries honored today were: Argentina, Belgium, Bulgaria,
Canada, Cyprus, Denmark, Egypt, Ethiopia, France, Georgia, Germany,
Greece, Italy, Jordan, Lebanon, Netherlands, Norway, Romania, Russia,
Slovakia, Sweden, Switzerland, Syria, United Kingdom, Uruguay, and the
United States. The Vatican and the Near East Foundation were also
recognized.

“Some nations who had initially committed to participate in this
recognition commemoration withdrew in the face Turkish pressure. This
solves nothing,” Assembly Board of Directors Chairman Anthony
Barsamian said in his remarks. “The dead are not honored for their
sacrifice. The actions of the righteous are not recalled. And
ironically, the descendants of the victimizers are not allowed to come
to terms with the truth.”

Special guests included former California Governor and Honorary
Chairman George Deukmejian, Los Angeles Mayor James Hahn, Los Angeles
County District Attorney Robert Philibosian as master of ceremonies,
former Consul General of the Republic of Armenia Gagik Kirakosian,
American Red Cross of Greater Los Angeles’ President Rod Hagenbuch and
Chief Deputy Director for Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger Lisa
Kalustian.

Governor Schwarzenegger, for his part, marked the occasion with a
letter to event organizers which said in part: “I salute your efforts
to honor those courageous individuals, organizations and countries who
did not turn their heads but attempted to provide relief and refuge to
their neighbors. Thank you for your commitment to the democratic
principles that make ours a great nation.”

Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA), a staunch supporter of Armenian-American
issues, also extended her best wishes for the event via a letter which
said: “Although I cannot be with you today, please know that I am
there in spirit,” the Senator wrote. “I want you to know that I will
continue to support official recognition of the Armenian Genocide as
long as I am in the U.S. Senate.”

Barsamian, in his speech, applauded the efforts of the U.S. in
attempting to prevent the genocide while again calling on America’s
formal and irrevocable reaffirmation of the truth. “There is
inevitability to universal affirmation of the Armenian Genocide and
America cannot be an exception.”

Barsamian also noted by way of example that U.S. Ambassador to Armenia
John Evans repeatedly categorized the events of 1915 as the “Armenian
Genocide” during his recent public meetings with Armenian-American
communities throughout the country. Evans’ remarks are in keeping
with contemporaneous declarations of Presidents Ronald Regan in 1981
and that of George Bush who employed the textbook definition of
genocide in 2001 and 2004.

Furthermore, Evans’ characterization conforms to the publicly stated
conclusions of over 120 renowned Holocaust and Genocide scholars on
the “incontestable fact of the Armenian Genocide,” and that of the
International Center for Transitional Justice on the use of the term
Armenian Genocide, which stated that: “The Events, viewed
collectively, can thus be said to include all of the elements of the
crime of genocide as defined in the Convention, and legal scholars as
well as historians, politicians, journalists and other people would be
justified in continuing to so describe them.”

The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness
of Armenian issues. It is a 501 (c) (3) tax-exempt membership
organization.

###

NR#2005-015

Editor’s Note: Below please find the full text of Assembly Board of
Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian’s remarks at the “International
Refuge, Relief and Recognition Tribute”

February 24, 2005

Your Eminence, Reverend clergy, Your Excellencies, Ladies and
Gentlemen,

This remembrance and recognition highlights two issues of critical
importance to the horrific recurrence of Genocide and the apparent
impotence of the world to stop this crime against us all.

First, the history of genocide must remain inviolable and periodically
affirmed regardless of political discomfort or cost so that we may
learn its lessons.

Second, the actions of 3rd parties are vital to raising awareness
about the crime as soon as it becomes known, to taking resolute steps
to end the genocidal process, to bring to account the perpetrators, to
provide comfort to the survivors, and to forever remember all
instances of genocide.

This is why the Armenian Assembly joined with the AGBU and the Diocese
to remember those nations and organizations that took action while the
Armenian Genocide was being carried out and subsequently. Armenians
remain deeply indebted to all who refused the easy path of
indifference and inaction. You saved lives, you affirmed the truth,
and you bore witness so that the world would be better equipped to act
on the meaning of “Never Again”.

As Voltaire said, “to the living we owe respect, to the dead we owe
the truth”.

As is evident today, the Republic of Turkey refuses to accept the
judgment of history that the Ottoman Turkish government committed
genocide against its Armenian minority. Instead, Turkey attempts to
impose its revisionism on a civilized world that knows better, but
occasionally succumbs to Turkish demands and intimidation by
refraining from affirming the truth. Nations who had initially
committed to participate in this recognition commemoration withdrew in
the face of such Turkish pressure. This solves nothing. The dead are
not honored for their sacrifice. The actions of the righteous are not
recalled. And ironically, the descendants of the victimizers are not
allowed to come to terms with the truth.

Nevertheless, we pause today and throughout this 90th commemorative
year to give thanks to all nations and organizations that came to our
aid – but particularly to those that attended today despite the
Turkish government’s campaign to stop you.

For Turkey’s state sponsored denial effort, having this event is a
defeat. This is a good day for the truth.

As Armenian-Americans, we recall with special appreciation the leading
role of the United States in attempting to prevent the Armenian
Genocide and in aiding those that survived. As Armenian-Americans, we
look to the United States to continue this proud chapter of American
history by reaffirming the facts of this most calamitous chapter of
Armenian history. There is an inevitability to universal affirmation
of the Armenian Genocide, and America has not and will not be an
exception.

A case in point is the recently concluded visit of U.S. Ambassador to
Armenia John Evans with major Armenian-American communities across the
country. In his public commentaries, Ambassador Evans repeatedly
employed the words “Armenian Genocide” to properly characterize the
attempted annihilation of our people by Ottoman Turkey.

This is in keeping with President Regan’s proclamation of April 22,
1981 where he stated in part, “like the genocide of the Armenians
before it, and the genocide of the Cambodians which followed it – and
like too many other persecutions of too many other people – the
lessons of the Holocaust must never be forgotten”…

And also with the thrust of President Bush’s 2001 to 2004 April 24
messages that set forth the textbook definition of genocide without
using the word. Ambassador Evans completed the thought.

The Ambassador’s characterization also is in keeping with the public
declarations of over 120 renowned Holocaust and Genocide scholars
regarding “the incontestable fact of the Armenian Genocide”.

Further, Ambassador Evans’ characterization conforms to the summary
conclusion of the International Center for Transitional Justice on the
use of the term Armenian Genocide. ICTJ stated that “the Events,
viewed collectively, can thus be said to include all of the elements
of the crime of genocide as defined in the Convention, and legal
scholars as well as historians, politicians, journalists and other
people would be justified in continuing to so describe them.”

The Armenian-American community will not rest until the United States
formally and irrevocably reaffirms the Armenian Genocide. By so
doing, we forever advance the special role of the United States in
genocide prevention.

Today, we are here to honor 17 nations who have joined the movement
towards universal affirmation of the Armenian Genocide. You have
appropriately remembered this instance of man’s inhumanity to man.
You have stepped forward to combat denial and revisionism. We will
never forget your solidarity.

www.armenianassembly.org

“Karabakh Always Armenian,” Says Historian at AGBU Lecture

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone 212.319.6383 x.118
Fax 212.319.6507
Email [email protected]
Website

Thursday, February 24, 2005

“KARABAKH ALWAYS ARMENIAN,” SAYS HISTORIAN AT AGBU LECTURE
Bournoutian Talk Provides Hard Data, Facts

By J. K. Hovhannes

New York, NY – One crucial component in consolidating the Armenian
position in the Karabakh conflict between Armenians and Azeris is
providing evidence of the continuous and overwhelming majority
Armenian presence in Karabakh since ancient times. And this, the
historian and author George Bournoutian presented in a lively and
convincing lecture on February 3, 2005 at the AGBU Central Office in
Manhattan.

Bournoutian set himself two difficult criteria during his hour-long
lecture. On the one hand, he limited his sources, both primary and
otherwise, to non-Armenian authors to assure impartiality and to
debunk Azeri claims of partisanship. On the other hand, he steered
clear of the present day politics of the region and the various plans
and road maps put forward to solve the crisis.

“I will leave that to the political scientists, rather I’ll present
the historical data and let you judge for yourself the legitimacy of
Armenian and Azeri claims to Nagorno Karabakh,” Bournoutian said at
the start of his talk.

Dr. George Bournoutian, who was introduced by Betty Cherkezian of the
AGBU New York Special Events Committee (NYSEC), is currently professor
of East European and Middle Eastern History at Iona College and has
taught Armenian and Iranian history at several major universities
across the country. He is the author of fourteen books, including the
best-seller “A Concise History of the Armenian People”, and the recent
scholarly but readable “Two Chronicles of Karabakh.” Professor
Bournoutian is also a member of the New Jersey Commission on
Education.

Bournoutian was invited to deliver his lecture by AGBU NYSEC. The
group, a ten-member team, plans at least five events during the year
that deal with cultural, historical, artistic and educational
activities. Past events have included a private tour of the treasures
of Alexander the Great at the Onassis Foundation; guided tours of
Central Park and Caramoor; a tour of the Kips Bay Decorators
Showhouse; and a previous lecture by Professor Bournoutian, entitled
Armenian History 101.

To a rapt standing-room-only audience at a specially set up conference
room at the AGBU Central Office, Professor Bournoutian presented
historical and chronological data from a variety of non-Armenian
credible sources, all corroborated by quotations from his meticulous
research, validating the legitimacy of the Armenian presence in
Karabakh. Copies of two detailed maps of the South Caucasus region
were given to the attendees to follow up the intricate and sometimes
complicated flux of history that spanned many ages and involved a
dozen or so major ethnic and religious groups.

During the talk, which he peppered with anecdotes and livened up with
humor, Bournoutian highlighted five main eras covering the history of
the region: The classical Greek-Roman-Persian period until the 6th
century; the Arab-Moslem era extending between the 7th and 11th
centuries; the Mongol-Seljuk-Turkic period; the
Iranian-Russian-Ottoman period until the end of the 19th century; and
the Soviet era until the break-up in 1990 of the USSR and the
subsequent declaration of Karabakh of its independence.

Dr. Bournoutian stated emphatically that, based on the historical
record gleaned from official archives, linguistic studies, chronicles
and documents, all non-Armenian, at no time in the past fifteen
centuries have Nagorno Karabakh and Zangezur lost their Armenian
character and majority population, even though some regions of
Karabakh east of the river Kur and the riparian lowlands surrounding
it experienced population shifts.

The lecture was followed by a buffet-style Armenian luncheon with wine
and dessert. The hall was decorated tastefully by intricate
one-of-a-kind handcrafted articles, all of them on sale and created by
students from the three AGBU-sponsored Children Centers in Armenia. A
brief video projection during lunch illustrated upbeat scenes from the
three Centers in Arapkir, Nork and Malatya, which provide after school
instruction in the arts, culture, religion, literature and athletics
to over 3,500 youngsters.

The next event for AGBU NYSEC is a tour of the recently redesigned
Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) on Thursday, April 7, 2005. For more
information, please call, 212.319.6383, or email, [email protected].

www.agbu.org

WCC’s Commemoration of 90th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

Consejo Mundial de Iglesias (Comunicados de prensa), Switzerland
Feb 23 2005

In a series of public statements and recommendations approved one day
before the end of its 15-22 February meeting in Geneva, the World
Council of Churches (WCC) central committee covered a wide range of
issues.

[parts omitted]

April 24, 2005 – Commemoration of 90th anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide

The Public Issues committee of the WCC central committee recommended
to the organization’s general secretary “to propose to all member
churches to make Sunday April 24 a day of memory of the Armenian
Genocide and to consider further appropriate actions”. That day is
the 90th anniversary of the tragic massacre of one-and-a-half-million
Armenians in Turkey and the deportation of another million from their
homeland.

“From the Christian perspective, the path towards justice and
reconciliation requires the recognition of the crime committed as a
sine qua non condition for the healing of memories and the
possibility of forgiveness”, stated the Public Issues committee.

New audit finds near-total compliance with policies on sex abuse

New audit finds near-total compliance with policies on sex abuse
By Agostino Bono, Catholic News Service

Catholic News Service
Feb 18 2005

WASHINGTON (CNS) — An independent audit released Feb. 18 in
Washington reported that 96 percent of the 195 U.S. dioceses and
Eastern-rite eparchies were implementing every applicable article of
the U.S. bishops’ policies to prevent clergy sex abuse of minors as
of Dec. 31.

Despite the almost-total compliance, “continued external oversight and
evaluation (are) essential” since compliance “may improve or diminish
over time,” said the audit report for 2004 prepared by the bishops’
Office of Child and Youth Protection.

An audit “does not ensure that all offenders or potential offenders
have been appropriately removed from ministry,” it added.

The 50-page report said that in 2004 there were 1,092 new allegations
of child sex abuse made against 756 diocesan and religious priests
and deacons, with most of the alleged abuse taking place in 1965-74.
It said 73 percent of the accused, prior to the allegation, had been
removed from ministry or were dead or missing. No breakdown of priests
and deacons was given.

Half of the new allegations were against clergy who had been previously
accused. Males accounted for 78 percent of the 1,083 accusers.

During 2004, the U.S. church spent $158 million for sex abuse
related activities, with more than $106 million paid in settlements
to victims, the report said. The figures include money spent by
religious orders. When added to other published figures, the U.S.
church has now spent about $1 billion in child sex abuse related
costs since the beginning of 1950.

The statistics are contained in the 2004 annual report on the
implementation of the “Charter for the Protection of Children and
Young People”; the report was released at a press conference at
the National Press Club. The child protection office prepared the
report for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and the National
Review Board, appointed by the bishops to monitor compliance with
the charter. The all-lay review board approved the report before it
was sent to the USCCB.

The charter was approved by the bishops in 2002 and calls for an
annual compliance report.

“There is undoubtedly progress still to be made,” said Bishop William
S. Skylstad of Spokane, Wash., USCCB president, in a cover letter to
the report.

“Much of what dioceses face today is the result of past abusive
behavior — often long past — and procedures are in place to deal
with and put a stop to new instances of abuse that may be reported,”
he said.

The data on new allegations and spending came from a separately
commissioned study done by the Center for Applied Research in the
Apostolate, known as CARA and based at Georgetown University in
Washington, and incorporated into the final report by the bishops’
child protection office.

The report also includes recommendations for improving policies.
These include developing a mediation system for the resolution of
allegations and an annual report by each diocese and eparchy with
information about new allegations and costs.

This was the second year in a row that on-site audits were done in
dioceses, with much of the data based on self-reporting by church
officials. While the charter requires the child protection office to
issue annual compliance reports, it does not stipulate how to gather
the data for the report.

Other figures from the 2004 report include:

— 3,277 victims and some of their relatives received outreach services
from dioceses.

— 43 priests were laicized.

— 66 priests and two deacons were directed to lead a life of prayer
and penance.

— 56 allegations received before 2004 were judged false in 2004.

— 57 of the allegations made in 2004 were judged false.

The audit also reported major inroads in conducting background
checks of clergy, lay employees and lay volunteers coming into
regular contact with children. Important strides were also made in
implementing “safe environment” education programs to prevent abuse.
The background checks and education programs are considered crucial
to long-term efforts to prevent child sex abuse.

Some of the safe environment findings include:

— Almost 84 percent of the 34,514 diocesan priests received safe
environment education.

— More than 82 percent of the church’s 13,663 deacons took safe
environment courses.

— More than 1.4 million adults and more than 3.1 million children,
over half the minors in Catholic schools and religious education
classes, have taken safe environment courses.

— 97 percent of the 203,393 Catholic educators have taken safe
environment courses.

— 82.5 percent of the 203,343 other church employees required to
take safe environment courses have had the training.

— 73 percent of 1 million church volunteers received safe environment
training.

Background checks have been conducted on 92 percent of the 34,874
diocesan priests needing them. All 13,559 deacons subject to background
checks have been screened.

More than 97 percent of the 185,924 Catholic school educators have
had background checks. More than 85 percent of the 207,817 other
church lay employees have been screened. And almost 79 percent of
the 978,172 church volunteers have had background checks.

The report said that background screenings and evaluations also take
place for priesthood candidates in the 112 seminaries run by the
dioceses and eparchies audited.

The report is based on audits of 194 of the 195 U.S. dioceses and
eparchies conducted by the Gavin Group Inc. of Boston and on data
collected by CARA from dioceses, eparchies and religious orders.

Only the Diocese of Lincoln, Neb., did not participate in the
compliance audits. No reason was given in the report. It noted that
participation in an on-site audit was voluntary. The Lincoln Diocese
was judged noncompliant with article 8 of the charter, which calls
for participation in an audit process.

Of the 194 dioceses and eparchies audited, only seven were not
compliant with one or more of the charter’s 17 articles on Dec. 31.

This is a significant advance from the 2003 report, when 19 of the
191 dioceses and eparchies audited were not compliant with aspects
of the charter.

Compliance was judged in two steps. First was the on-site audit,
which judged the situation since the 2003 audit. Dioceses not in
compliance with aspects of the charter were given “required actions”
to remedy the situation and had until the end of the year to take
the actions. Initially, 50 dioceses received “required actions”
with 43 taking the necessary actions by the end of 2004.

The report warned, however, that compliance audits do not measure
the quality or effectiveness of the programs.

Regarding allegations and spending, CARA received responses from
181 dioceses and eparchies, representing 93 percent of the total,
and from 158 religious communities representing 71 percent of the
total U.S. male religious population.

Spending figures showed that 32 percent of the $140 million spent
by dioceses and eparchies was covered by insurance and 12 percent of
the $18 million spent by religious orders was covered by insurance.

The report said that the new allegations generally parallel the
patterns of gender and age reported in the massive “nature and scope”
study of clergy child sex abuse from 1950 to 2002 released last year
by the National Review Board.

The “nature and scope” study conducted by the John Jay College of
Criminal Justice in New York reported that 81 percent of the accusers
were males while the 2004 audit showed that 78 percent were males.
The John Jay study reported that 59 percent of the accusers were
between 10 and 14 years old when the abuse began while the 2004
figures reported that 55 percent were in the same age group.

Recommendations in the 2004 report for improving sex abuse prevention
programs include:

— Informing people if a lawyer is being used by the diocese or
eparchy to receive allegations and providing an alternative person
for people uncomfortable talking to a lawyer.

— Special outreach to clergy and religious who have been victims of
sexual abuse.

— Developing practices for monitoring priests and deacons at risk
as offenders.

The report notes that the church needs to continually develop new
prevention initiatives because full implementation of current policies
“will not ensure that no child will ever be abused again in a church
environment.”

It asks Catholics to be “unwavering in our commitment to ensuring
the accountability of all Catholic bishops of the United States to
their people in the future and to the safety of all our children.”

The seven dioceses and eparchies not in compliance on Dec. 31 all
failed to implement safe environment programs. Some also were cited
for other failures. The seven are: Armenian Catholic Exarchate of the
U.S.A. and Canada, headquartered in New York; Diocese of Burlington,
Vt.; Chaldean Eparchy of St. Peter the Apostle, headquartered in
El Cajon, Calif.; Diocese of Fresno, Calif.; Melkite Eparchy of
Newton, Mass.; Diocese of Wheeling-Charleston, W. Va.; and Diocese
of Youngstown, Ohio.

Aggression against CSTO member state considered as against organizat

AGGRESSION AGAINST CSTO MEMBER STATE CONSIDERED AS AGAINST ORGANIZATION

PanArmenian News
Feb 17 2005

17.02.2005 14:11

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Aggression against any CSTO (Collective Security
Treaty Organization) member state is considered as aggression against
the organization, CSTO Secretary General Nikolay Bordyuzha stated.
“Within the framework of the passed Treaty on Collective Security,
in case of aggression against one of the Organization member states,
the rest of the states consider it as aggression against themselves
with all the ensuing consequences,” he said. Including, as specified
by the Secretary General, any type of assistance may be provided
to the country in question if needed. However he emphasized that
the Organization is inclined towards the political solution of any
problems. “The history teaches us that any steps of armed nature are
easy to undertake, but it is virtually not possible to localize the
problem after that. It develops into bloodshed thus we are oriented
to the political solution of the question,” N. Bordyuzha said. He
also stated that the CSTO is open to all those wishing to join it if
the political course of the state and political leadership of those
countries are in line with the principles, which the organization
advocates. “We are ready to consider the accession of any state to the
organization,” he said. When commenting on the situation in the South
Caucasus from the point of view of obvious division of geo-political
preferences: Armenia as a CSTO member and Georgia and Azerbaijan,
which obviously gravitate towards the NATO, N. Bordyuzha depicted it
as a sovereign right of every state. “If those countries link their
future with securing themselves with the NATO, it is their sovereign
right. It means that they think it is better for them,” he said.

MERGER OF EQUALS ON TRIAL: Kerkorian-DCX case in limbo a year later

MERGER OF EQUALS ON TRIAL: Kerkorian-DCX case in limbo a year later
*BY SARAH A. WEBSTER*

DETROIT FREE PRESS BUSINESS WRITER

/February 16, 2005/

Time, it seems, does not heal all wounds.

*TIMELINE*
Key dates in the dispute between DaimlerChrysler AG and billionaire Kirk
Kerkorian:

May 7, 1998: Chrysler Corp. and Daimler-Benz AG announce plans for a
merger of equals. Billionaire investor Kirk Kerkorian also enters into a
contract with the automakers, promising to vote his Chrysler shares in
favor of the deal.

Aug. 6, 1998: Daimler and Chrysler send a proxy statement and prospectus
of the merger to shareholders. It notes that Chrysler’s largest
shareholder, Kerkorian, has already pledged his support.

Sept. 18, 1998: Chrysler shareholders approve the merger.

Nov. 17, 1998: The deal closes, and DaimlerChrysler is born. For each
share of Chrysler, holders of the automaker’s stock receive 62 percent
of a share in the new company.

Jan. 6, 1999: DaimlerChrysler shares reach an all-time high of $105 a share.

Oct. 30, 2000: The Financial Times publishes an interview with
DaimlerChrysler CEO Juergen Schrempp, in which the former Daimler
chairman appears to boast about how he planned to make Chrysler a
division all along but had to go about it in a “roundabout way” for
“psychological reasons.”

Nov. 17, 2000: Chrysler President James Holden is fired, and former
Daimler executive Dieter Zetsche takes his place.

Nov. 27, 2000: Kerkorian files a lawsuit against DaimlerChrysler and
Schrempp, alleging the merger was a takeover that cheated him out of a
higher price. Other shareholders also file suit on the same grounds,
eventually forming a class action.

Aug. 22, 2003: DaimlerChrysler reaches a $300-million settlement
agreement with shareholders in the class action, but not with Kerkorian.

Dec. 1, 2003: A trial in the case between Kerkorian and DaimlerChrysler
begins.

Dec. 16, 2003: The trial goes into recess after DaimlerChrysler lawyers
discover more than 60 pages of confidential notes detailing the merger
that were not properly disclosed to Kerkorian’s legal team.

Feb. 9, 2004: The trial resumes, with key witnesses, such as Schrempp,
recalled to the stand.

Feb. 11, 2004: The trial in the case ends.

By Sarah A. Webster

It’s been more than a year since the high-stakes trial ended between
billionaire casino magnate Kirk Kerkorian and DaimlerChrysler AG
Chairman Juergen Schrempp.

The controversy erupted in 2000 after the Financial Times recorded
an interview with the confident Schrempp, in which he says that he
never meant for the 1998 combination of the German Daimler-Benz AG
and the American icon Chrysler Corp. to be the “merger of equals”
he promised investors.

Kerkorian promptly sued, calling the union a takeover and alleging
that Schrempp’s misrepresentation cheated him out of an acquisition
premium that Daimler should have paid for his Chrysler stock.

“It’s about deceit and fraud,” the angry billionaire has insisted.

Despite a nearly five-year legal war over the $36-billion transatlantic
deal, the two sides — neither of which wanted to talk for this report
— show no signs of settling or reconciling. Nor is there a sign of
an imminent ruling by Judge Joseph J. Farnan Jr., who oversaw the
dramatic trial that had only 13 days of testimony but stretched over
three months.

The trial began in a federal court in Wilmington, Del., in December
2003. But it was interrupted with the surprise discovery of previously
misplaced internal Chrysler documents that Kerkorian’s lawyer, Terry
Christensen, called “a road map to what went on.”

DaimlerChrysler should have turned the documents over to Kerkorian’s
lawyers before the trial started, but they were reportedly misplaced
by a copying company, prompting the judge to stop the trial and
investigate whether the automaker might have deliberately concealed the
documents. The court eventually concluded that two copying companies
in different cities “probably mishandled” the documents and did not
punish the automaker.

The trial, which called heavyweights such as Kerkorian, Schrempp and
former Chrysler Corp. Chairman Robert Eaton to the stand, eventually
ended Feb. 11, 2004, with the last documents filed in the case in May.

DaimlerChrysler officials previously told investors that they expected
Farnan to rule on the case before the end of 2004. But the company
has stopped guessing when a ruling might come.

During a recent conference call with journalists, Chrysler Group CEO
Dieter Zetsche, who replaced former Chrysler President James Holden
in 2000, said he could not predict what impact a ruling might have
on the company.

“I can’t speculate on the effect because I don’t know when” a ruling
might come, Zetsche said.

Because this was a bench trial, or one with no jury, Farnan must
determine whether anyone is guilty of wrongdoing and whether Kerkorian,
now 87, suffered any damages.

Kerkorian is asking for about $1 billion in damages because he alleges
Schrempp, now 60, and other Daimler-Benz officials lied to him that
the deal would be a merger of equals. In so doing, he says the German
officials cheated him and other investors out of a premium usually
paid in takeovers.

Mergers between companies tend to garner less of a premium, if one
is paid at all. But experts testified during the trial that premiums
range all over the map in mergers and acquisitions and they often
depend on the details of the deal.

On the tape that served as a critical piece of evidence in the trial,
Schrempp, the former chairman of Daimler-Benz, explained how he planned
to make Chrysler a division all along but had to go about it in a
“roundabout way” for “psychological reasons.”

The notion that the merger was actually a takeover also was the subject
of a 2000 book, “Taken for a Ride: How Daimler-Benz Drove Off with
Chrysler,” written by Bill Vlasic and Bradley Stertz, which detailed
inner machinations within the companies that seemed to support the
idea of a secret takeover masterminded by Schrempp.

In 2003, DaimlerChrysler settled a class action with a group of former
Chrysler Corp. investors for $300 million over the allegations. But
Daimler officials maintained they did nothing wrong and that Kerkorian,
who was Chrysler Corp.’s largest shareholder at the time of the deal,
was better informed about the terms than most investors. The automaker
says Kerkorian is a savvy businessman who is entitled to nothing.

Peter Henning, a professor at Wayne State University Law School,
said that he is somewhat surprised that Farnan has taken so long to
rule on the case.

“It may well be a signal that he’s struggling over one of the issues,”
Henning said.

On the other hand, Henning noted that a year is not such a long time
for a ruling in a complex securities case such as this. The judge has a
lot of information, much of it complicated and conflicting, to digest.

What’s more, this isn’t a high-priority dispute, like a criminal case
where a defendant is waiting around in a prison cell. At its core,
this is a civil battle between two wealthy companies, DaimlerChrysler
AG and Kerkorian’s Tracinda Corp., both of which can afford legions of
high-powered lawyers. The legal bills related to this case, according
to various sources, surpassed $50 million last year.

“This is not one of those cases where justice delayed is justice
denied,” Henning said. “This is a case about money.”

Henning noted that any damages Farnan might award will likely come
with accumulated interest from the time of the damage.

The judge also may be taking his time to craft a careful ruling
that will withstand an appeal, since whatever side loses is likely
to appeal. While a jury wouldn’t have had to explain the reason for
its ruling, Henning noted, “The judge has to.”

It’s unclear where this dispute might rank on the judge’s priority
list. Many federal judges have lengthy backlogs of court cases.

Some auto reporters have nicknamed Farnan “Slow Joe” for his handling
of this high-profile dispute. But a federal report last year showed
Farnan had 16 cases on his docket that were more than 3 years old,
not nearly as bad as some of his peers. By comparison, several federal
judges have more than 80 cases more than 3 years old on their dockets.

/Contact SARAH A. WEBSTER at 313-222-5394 or [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>./

*Copyright © 2005 Detroit Free Press Inc.*

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Giant slalom championship postponed by television strike

Globe and Mail, Canada
Feb 9 2005

Giant slalom championship postponed by television strike

Associated Press E-mail this Article

Bormio, Italy — The men’s giant slalom race scheduled for Wednesday
at the alpine skiing world championships was postponed less than an
hour before it was to start due to a strike by Italian television
workers.

“Due to the lack of TV coverage, the European Broadcasting Union, in
accordance with the International Ski Federation (FIS), decided to
postpone the race,” organizers said in a statement.

The strike was organized by workers for RAI, Italian state TV.

Organizers said the race would be rescheduled for Thursday, which was
previously reserved as an off day, although FIS had not yet issued
its formal decision. The championships are due to end Sunday and
three other races are scheduled for Friday, Saturday and Sunday.

“I’m disappointed, angry and frustrated,” said FIS general secretary
Sarah Lewis. “Everything was ready to go — 156 athletes, fan clubs
had travelled specially to be there. The giant slalom is always one
of the most exciting events.”

Fans in the finish area attacked a RAI truck upon learning of the
strike and police had to intervene.

It appeared that some of the bigger skiing nations were informed of
the strike ahead of time and did not go up to the course. However,
several athletes from nations like Senegal, Armenia and Hungary were
seen skiing down the course in a state of bewilderment.

Strikes are a common occurrence in Italy, although they are usually
confined to domestic issues and events. The alpine world
championships are the biggest event in skiing outside the Olympics
and the protest was not a good sign in view of the next Winter Games
in nearby Turin, scheduled to begin a year from Thursday.

Turin 2006 officials were planning a presentation in Bormio later
Wednesday.

“The biggest loser today is ski racing,” U.S. head coach Phil
McNichol said. “Racing is at an all-time low, we’re trying to get a
stronger foothold in TV and yet we can’t hold a world championships
race because of television. It’s extremely disappointing.”

The last major cancellation at the world championships came when the
1995 edition was postponed until 1996 due to a lack of snow in Sierra
Nevada, Spain.

“It’s typical. It fits the world championships,” said Austrian skier
Benjamin Raich, one of the giant slalom favourites.

Thomas Grandi of Banff, Alta. was also among the contenders for a
podium spot. He has won two World Cup giant slalom races this season
and currently sits second in the GS point standings.

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