GenEd: Winning Collaboration On Armenian Genocide Teacher-Training

PRESS RELEASE

The Genocide Education Project
51 Commonwealth Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94118
(415) 264-4203
[email protected]
www.GenocideEd ucation.org

Contact: Raffi Momjian ([email protected])

WINNING COLLABORATION ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE TEACHER-TRAINING
pr/2006/07_13_2006.htm

San Francisco, CA – The Genocide Education Project and Facing History and
Ourselves continue to build a strong partnership in training U.S. teachers
about the Armenian Genocide. During the past school year the two
organizations assisted each other with four workshops located between
Detroit, Michigan and San Francisco, California. Plans are in the works for
at least three workshops this fall.

The latest event in San Francisco was hosted by Facing History and Ourselves
and served approximately twenty teachers from all over California. The
participants attended a week long institute on the Armenian Genocide on the
KZV Armenian School campus, where they had an opportunity to learn both
effective teaching strategies and hear from lecturers including world
renowned scholar Dr. Richard Hovannisian. The Genocide Education Project
provided a two hour seminar on geopolitical conditions in the 1800s that
fueled the Genocide and also hosted a viewing of the documentary "The
Genocide in Me" by Araz Artinian.

This institute followed two all-day workshops organized by the Genocide
Education Project and sponsored by the Los Angeles Unified School District,
during which Facing History and Ourselves provided a session on moral
decision making and genocide. The workshops in Los Angeles will continue on
a semi-annual basis for two more years.
Coming up in December, The Genocide Education Project will offer a lecture
titled "Teaching about Genocide in the Age of Genocide" at the National
Council for the Social Studies (NCSS) conference in Washington D.C. This
clinic was developed in collaboration with Facing History and Oursleves, the
U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, and the educational organization, Choices,
at Brown University.

The director of the Northern California office for Facing History and
Ourselves, Jack Weinstein, a member of the advisory board for The Genocide
Education Project noted, "I’ve been working with The Genocide Education
Project for over ten years now, and look forward to our continued
collaboration through this relationship." Weinstein continues to stress that
"together, we can reach out to more schools, teachers, and students, further
ensuring that the history and lessons of the Armenian Genocide will be a
part of social studies courses across the country."

For more information about The Genocide Education Projects Upcoming Events
with Facing History and Ourselves please visit:

## ##

The Genocide Education Project is a nonprofit, tax-exempt 501(c)(3)
organization that assists educators in teaching about human rights and
genocide, particularly the Armenian Genocide, by developing and distributing
instructional materials, providing access to teaching resources and
organizing educational workshops.

http://www.genocideeducation.org/
www.TeachGenocide.org
www.teachgenocide.org/workshops_events.

Only Russians Believed Oskanyan’s Thesis About Breeding Tigers In Ca

ONLY RUSSIANS BELIEVED OSKANYAN’S THESIS ABOUT BREEDING TIGERS IN
CAGES FOR 100 YEARS

Lragir.am
14 July 06

The operation of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline would probably
be the first important event after the World Cup if Israel did not
decide to cross the border of Lebanon. Cynical though it may sound,
it is nevertheless good that the operation of BTC was not the first
global event after the World Cup, because our feeling of regret for
being left out of it will not be so very sharp. And we have to confess
that we have such a feeling. After all an annual tens or maybe one
hundred million dollars is not little for a country whose state budget,
even with a two-digit economic growth, hardly counts over one billion
dollars only due to the brazen depreciation of the dollar. And though
the operation of the oil pipeline sparks national dignity and pushes
into "100 years of solitude" (according to Vardan Oskanyan, Armenia
will develop even if it remains in blockade for a hundred years),
it would be nevertheless preferable that Armenia were included in
projects of global importance.

The Armenian government had been attempting to persuade the Armenian
society that the BTC pipeline would not be constructed because
economically it is not favorable. Of course, these statements relied
not only on the economic disadvantage but also the belief that Russia
would hinder the implementation of the project, which clashed with
its interests, acting as a turnpike between Moscow and the region.

But official Yerevan was perhaps in a confusion. If Russia may not
tolerate Yerevan’s steps and prevent Yerevan from doing something,
it does not mean that Russia can do the same with everyone else. The
utmost thing that Russia may bar is transportation of Armenian cargo
via Verin Lars.

It is notable that Russia marked the operation of BTC by deciding
to pour out its fury on Armenia. Of course, the Russians dispatched
Levitin to announce that they did not know that Armenians have no
other route of transportation of cargo otherwise they would have
informed about closing Verin Lars beforehand.

No, probably only the Russians believe Oskanyan’s thesis on breeding
tigers in a cage for 100 years. Or only the Russians took it for
a joke and went on joking. Otherwise, how can the assertion of
Russians that they did not expect that closing Verin Lars would cause
a road problem for Armenia be taken seriously? The impression is that
because of closing the same Verin Lars several months ago the trucks
of Equatorial Guinea with Armenian numbers stopped at the checkpoint
for weeks, and could not come to Armenia or go to Russia.

Similarly Russia may have been unaware that the BTC oil pipeline would
offer significant political and economic dividends to Azerbaijan,
the regional rival of Armenia, otherwise it would not have allowed
the construction of a pipeline, which is against the interests of its
ally. On the other hand, however, the pipeline is not so very bad for
us. This project representing the energy interests of great powers,
namely the United States, is a guarantee of peace and stability in
the region. If they build, it is clear that the United States does
not need the pipes but the oil barrels flowing via these pipes. And
in order to keep the oil flowing they need to guarantee stability
and peace in the region.

In this aspect, the oil pipeline makes Azerbaijan powerful, on the
one hand, but on the other hand, it restrains its power, at least
until they run out of oil. In this context, it is evident that at
the moment the oil pipeline is in the interests of Armenia as well,
and it is good that Russia did not perceive this, for it might made
real efforts to hinder its construction. It is also clear that the
pipeline will be in our interests as long as there is oil in it. In
other words, we do not have a factor of eternity of our interest for
the simple reason that we do not have oil to pump into the pipeline
to prolong peace after the Azerbaijani and Kazakh oil is through.

However, we do not have oil but we have a Diaspora. We should
reconsider the program of the third Armenia-Diaspora forum and instead
of directing the Diasporan money at the development of Armenian
villages we should direct it to Geyhan. Not for the development
of Ceyhan, of course, but at buying all the oil flowing out of the
BTC pipe to pump it back into the pipeline somewhere in Georgia or
Azerbaijan. In order not to keep the oil flowing forever and prevent
Azerbaijan from displaying its power.

HAKOB BADALYAN

Prosecutor Demands 7 Years Of Imprisonment For Opposition Youth Orga

PROSECUTOR DEMANDS 7 YEARS OF IMPRISONMENT FOR OPPOSITION YOUTH
ORGANIZATION LEADER FOR TIES WITH ARMENIAN SPECIAL SERVICES

Yerevan, July 11. ArmInfo. Prosecutor of Azerbaijani court for felony
cases proposed sentencing Leader of Yeni Fikir youth organization
Ruslan Bashirli and his deputies Ramin Tagiyev and Said Nuriev for
different terms in prison for ties with special services of Armenia.

They are sentenced to 7 years of imprisonment in labor-correction
penitentiary, 5 years of high security and three years conditional
term, respectively. INTERFAX reports the defendants are alleged "an
attempt to seize power," "illegal business activity," "tax evasion"
in accordance with the Criminal Code of Azerbaijan.

Nairobi: Artur hit KRA man, inquiry told

Artur hit KRA man, inquiry told
Story by LUCAS BARASA and MUGUMO MUNENE
Publication Date: 7/12/2006

The Nation, Kenya
July 11 2006

One of the Artur brothers punched a bewildered Customs official
and drew two guns to scare a surging crowd at the Jomo Kenyatta
International Airport.

They vowed not to pay duty on closed circuit television (CCTV) cameras
their associates had imported, insulted Customs officials and members
of the public and then forced their way out of the airport.

Once on the road, they put on the sirens on their vehicles to clear
other motorists off the way.

The details of the stand-off with the Customs official, which minutes
later degenerated into gun drama reeled off at the inquiry yesterday,
as officials from the Kenya Revenue Authority took to the witness
stand to tell their recollection of the fateful June 8 evening.

Assisting counsel Dorcus Oduor confers with lawyer Philip Murgor
after the Kiruki commission of inquiry adjourned its sitting at the
KICC in Nairobi yesterday. Photo/Fredrick Omond

It is that drama that culminated in the deportation of the Artur
brothers, and ultimately led to the inquiry.

Grab a badge

A Customs department’s revenue officer, Mr Nelson Ochieng’, told the
commissioners that Mr Artur Margaryan attempted to grab a badge from
a senior officer only named Mr Nambale, touching off the commotion.

At one point, Mr Margaryan threatened to shoot Mr Nambale and destroy
everything in his office if the goods were not released and the guests
left to go, the commission investigating the Armenians’ activities
was told.

The stand-off started when Customs officers asked Mr Margaryan to pay
duty on cameras, whose value they gave as $550 (about Sh40,700). But
they refused.

As Mr Nambale, assisted by Mr Ochieng’ wrestled back the badge from
Mr Margaryan, the Armenian delivered a punch before letting go of the
badge and taking off from the baggage hall exit towards the parking
lot. According to the witness, Mr Margaryan whipped out the two
pistols about two steps away from the baggage hall exit. The brothers,
Mr Ochieng’ added, did not pay duty for the CCTV and other equipment
tabled as evidence before the Commission following a disagreement
with Customs officials.

And a public relations officer working with the Airport Taxi Operators
Association, Ms Teresa Wangui Ndegwa, and whose work station is within
the baggage hall, told the commission that Mr Margaryan had prior to
the commotion made frantic calls on his cell phone.

"My lords, I heard Mr Margaryan speak into his cell phone and say:
‘I’m not going to pay anything. As the commotion ensued, I left my
desk and exited the baggage hall through the staff gate towards the
parking lot. At the parking lot, one of the Artur brothers drew a gun
at the crowd and said: ‘Stupid Africans! The one who wants to fight
can step forward,’" Ms Ndegwa testified.

Mr Ochieng’, the commission’s 20th witness, told of how Mr Margaryan
abused customs officials calling them "Monkeys!" and "You Africans!"

as the rumpus unfolded.

Mr Ochieng’ who has worked at JKIA for 15 years said he reported to
work at 6.30pm on June 8, when Foreign Affairs protocol officer Paul
Latoya accompanied by two duty free supervisors presented a piece of
luggage for clearance.

However, Mr Ochieng’ insisted on seeing the owners of the black
suitcase and two brown bags and demanded that they produce their
passports.

"They were trying to clear the goods without the owners, but I refused
because I wanted to verify if the owner of the luggage was the owner
of the passport as required," Mr Ochieng’ said.

Mr Latoya, the witness said, went and brought one of the Artur brothers
and two others, including a lady, but they declined to have their
luggage opened and said they were "investors of big things and these
are small things."

When the luggage was later opened, it was found to contain seven CCTV
cameras, receivers and cables the passengers said were worth a total
of US$550 (about Sh40,700).

And when asked to produce invoices for the goods, the passengers,
Mr Ochieng’ said, became unruly and "used nasty words".

Mr Ochieng’ said he consulted his boss, a Mr Nambale, who ordered
that the goods be detained until payment of duty, which stood at
about Sh23,000.

Mr Margaryan and his bodyguard, the Commission heard, joined them
as they were discussing payment of duty and asked: "Are you the chap
calling us?"

He then instructed his bodyguard to load the goods onto a trolley,
which was pushed outside the baggage with Mr Nambale and other customs
official in hot pursuit.

A policeman in civilian and Mr Ochieng’, however, came to Mr Nambale’s
rescue and managed to repossess the pass.

Mr Ochieng’ said a huge crowd, which was waiting for passengers,
started shouting as Mr Margaryan left, before he drew two guns from
his pocket "and people got scared."

Mr Ochieng’ said Mr Nambale informed KRA assistant commissioner, Ms
Florence Otori, of the incident who later held a meeting with Trade
and Industry minister Dr Mukhisa Kituyi at the airport.

Chairman Shedrach Kiruki said it was the first time the inquiry had
received evidence that Mr Margaryan whipped out two guns on that
fateful evening.

Lawyer Gibson Kamau Kuria appearing for Ms Winnie Wangui made spirited
attempts in cross-examination to show that the Artur brothers only
acted the way they did in self-defence from a hostile crowd.

The witness denied Dr Kuria’s assertion that he bragged "kumuonyesha
(to teach a lesson)" Mr Margaryan because he (Mr Ochieng’) was a Luo.

He performed his duties as required by KRA and not "as a Luo… or
any other tribe," he said.

Mr Ochieng’, who looked exhausted, could not properly pin-point Mr
Margaryan and Mr Sargsyan in copies of their photographs and airport
passes tabled before the commission.

"I can’t remember because (photographs) in the airport passes look
different," Mr Ochieng’ said in response to a question by the assisting
counsel Dorcas Oduor.

Karabagh participated in signing the cease-fire and has the right to

Karabagh participated in signing the cease-fire and has the right to
participate in the negotiations

Yerkir.am
July 07, 2006

"Nagorno Karabagh Republic is very cautious about deployment of
peacekeeping forces," Foreign Minister of Nagorno Karabagh Republic
Georgi Petrossian stated at a press conference held in Stepanakert.

NKR’s Foreign Minister stressed that the Karabagh side wants to see not
elimination of the consequences of the conflict but settlement. He
further informed that during a visit to the US representatives
of Nagorno Karabagh Republic had voiced their concern regarding
publicizing of the principles of Karabagh settlement by OSCE Minsk
Group Co-Chair Mathew Bryza.

"The recent developments in the settlement process have created a
new situation and it is not yet known in what format the negotiation
process will be restarted. Our position has not changed: Nagorno
Karabagh participated in the signing of the cease-fire, therefore,
it has the right to participate in the negotiation process where its
fate is being decided," the Minister stressed as reported by De Facto
Press Agency.

RA Ambassador To Egypt Meets With Spiritual Leader Of Sunni Follower

RA AMBASSADOR TO EGYPT MEETS WITH SPIRITUAL LEADER OF SUNNI FOLLOWERS

CAIRO, JULY 10, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. Armenia geopolitically
and historically has become part of the Near East region and the
economic, political and cultural events taking place there had a direct
impact on Armenia. RA Ambassador to Egypt Ruben Karapetian declared
this at the July 6 meeting with the spiritual leader of Islamic sunni,
All-Azkhar Imam Sheikh Sayed Tantaui.

In connection with the current level of Armenian-Egyptian relations
Karapetian said that they are built on the principles of friendship
and confidence.

Sheikh Tantaui in his turn appreciated Armenia’s readiness to deepen
cooperation with the Islamic world and assured that he will support
this cooperation as far as possible.

According to RA Foreign Ministry Press Service, during the conversation
RA Ambassador also presented the prehistory of the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict emphasizing that the problem has not a religious character
and is based on a nation’s right of self-determination.

Russian VimpelCom cell giant 2005 net profit rises 130%

Russian VimpelCom cell giant 2005 net profit rises 130%
14:56 | 07/ 07/ 2006

RIA Novosti, Russia
July 7 2006

MOSCOW, July 7 (RAIA Novosti) – VimpelCom (RTS: VIMP) said Friday
its net profit calculated according to Russian accounting standards
increased by 130% to 16.73 billion rubles ($621.66 million) in 2005
year-on-year.

Russia’s second largest mobile phone operator said its 2005 revenues
had risen three times to 72.89 bln rubles ($2.71 billion), and the
gross profit increased by 190% to 51.72 bln rubles ($1.92 billion)
year-on-year.

The VimpelCom group includes cell phone operators in Russia, Kazakhstan
and, following recent acquisitions, in Ukraine, Tajikistan and
Uzbekistan. The group is licensed to provide mobile phone operations
to a region home to 232 million people, and covers 94% of Russia’s
population in 78 out of 88 regions.

VimpelCom is listed in the Russian Industrial Leaders Index (RUXX)
– a composite economic index of 20 Russian companies with financial
instruments (shares and depository receipts) placed on bourses,
including the New York Stock Exchange, the London Stock Exchange,
the Nasdaq and AMEX.

The company, which operates under the Beeline trademark in Russia,
said in June it would be among four bidders for a 90% stake in Armenian
telecom company ArmenTel, which with about 330,000 users as of late
March 2006 counts just over a tenth of the country’s population as
its clients. The winner of the tender is expected to be announced
after July 20.

The announcement came in the wake of a recent demand for 1.91 billion
rubles ($70.5 million) in back taxes for 2003-2004 by Russia’s tax
authorities. The demand included 1.5 bln rubles ($55.5 mln) in tax
arrears, as well as 405 mln rubles ($15 mln) in fines and penalties.

VimpelCom said it would contest the results of tax authorities’
checks for 2003-2004. The company said its tax records showed it had
over-paid for 2003 and 2004 by 796 mln rubles ($29.44 mln), and that
it had sent its demands to the tax authorities.

The authorities accepted the company’s claim, the statement said,
and informed VimpelCom that it would refund 795 mln rubles ($29.4 mln).

Dialogue and Debate at World Religious Summit

Russia Profile, Russia
July 7 2006

Dialogue and Debate at World Religious Summit
By Andrei Zolotov, Jr.
Russia Profile

For Metropolitan Kirill (Gundyaev) of Smolensk and Kaliningrad,
who has run the Russian Orthodox Church’s Department of External
Church Relations for the past 17 years, it was one of the highlights
of his career. More than 200 religious figures from 49 countries
convened in Moscow this week for what was called the World Summit
of Religious Leaders. For almost three days, patriarchs, cardinals,
muftis, rabbis, ayatollahs, bishops and Buddhist monks took turns
making their presentations on the approach their communities take to
global challenges.

This summit, one of the highest-level religious conferences of the past
decade, was not the only non-governmental meeting in Russia ahead of
the G8 summit in St. Petersburg next week. President Vladimir Putin
had to divide his time between the religious summit, a gathering of
international NGO representatives called Civil G8 and a meeting of
trade union leaders, all trying to send their particular message to
the club of the world’s mightiest political leaders.

Putin put forward the main idea of the religious summit in the most
concise form: to attempt to develop an alternative to the clash of
civilizations, mainly in the field of Christian-Muslim relations,
and to present Russia as a possible arena for such discussion.

"Attempts are being made to split the world along religious or ethnic
lines, driving the wedge first and foremost between the Christian and
Muslim communities," Putin said in his address to the meeting. "A
clash of civilizations is being de facto imposed on the world, and
we have to realize fully what kind of catastrophic consequences such
a confrontation may lead to."

The summit also marks a change in the general feelings about interfaith
relations among the Russian Orthodox hierarchy. The "ecumenical
winter" of the 1990s is largely over, and the leadership of the Moscow
Patriarchate has found it possible to ignore anti-ecumenical protests
among its flock while formulating a decidedly non-theological, moral
values-based agenda for inter-Christian and interfaith relations,
aimed at consolidating traditionalist forces around the world in
opposition to secular liberal globalization.

On the last day of the summit, the religious leaders issued a
pre-drafted statement that was visibly different from predominant
Western discourse and echoed some ideas promoted recently by
Metropolitan Kirill.

"We need to build a world order which combines democracy – as the
way of harmonizing different interests and allowing for people’s
participation in national and global decision-making – with respect to
the moral feeling, way of life, various legal and political systems,
and national and religious traditions of the people," the summit’s
message said. "The world should have many poles and many systems,
meeting the requirements of all individuals and nations rather than
matching lifeless and oversimplified ideological patterns."

In response to a number of recent conflicts between religious and
secular forces, the message called for an "end to any insult to
religious feelings and defilement of texts, symbols, names or places
held sacred by believers."

The declaration also emphasized the importance of human rights
as a concern for religious leaders, but within the confines of a
religious re-interpretation of human rights, similar to the one
announced at a national forum organized by the Russian Orthodox
Church in April. "Our experience shows that without an ethical core,
without understanding our duties, no society or country is exempt
from conflict and collapse," the message said.

While most of the declaration is dedicated to moral principles, such
as the absolute value of human life from conception to natural death,
it also deals with issues of ecology, responsible use of natural
resources and fair distribution of wealth. The document also called
for a dialogue with the adherents of non-religious views.

In the run-up to the summit, much of the media discussion in the
Russian press focused on the absence of Pope Benedict XVI, the Dalai
Lama and Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople. Apart from the
fact that the pope and the Dalai Lama do not attend conferences over
which they don’t preside, Metropolitan Kirill told reporters ahead
of the meeting that it would be wrong to combine two significant
"historical" events – the interfaith summit and the pope’s first visit
to Russia. In a sign of the highly political nature of the meeting,
he also said that the Dalai Lama was not invited because the Russian
Foreign Ministry would likely deny him a visa as a result of Russia’s
increasingly friendly relationship with China. Orthodox patriarchs
more senior than the Patriarch of Moscow were not invited because of
the need for Patriarch Alexy II to preside the meeting, he said.

Yet in a sign of marked improvement in relations between the Russian
Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches, Pope Benedict sent a message
and a delegation to Moscow, including five important cardinals.
During the summit, Patriarch Alexy and Metropolitan Kirill held
bilateral meetings with the Vatican delegation as well as with a number
of other prominent summit participants, such as the Orthodox leaders of
Georgia and Romania, the heads of the Armenian and Ethiopian churches,
the chief mufti of Syria and Rabbi Arthur Schneier from New York.

Also conspicuously absent were any representatives from the major
American and Korean Protestant groups. The Protestant community was
represented largely by established Russian and European Protestant
leaders.

One of the obvious tensions at the conference was between Jewish
leaders and Iran’s leading ayatollah for interfaith relations,
Muhammad Ali Muhammad Taskhiri. At the opening ceremony, Israel’s
Chief Ashkenazi Rabbi Yona Metzger was looking at Taskhiri as he said
– with an obvious reference to Iran’s president Mahmud Ahmadinezhad:
"There are leaders in the world who deny the Holocaust and speak of
genocide against themselves only, and it is our duty to tell these
people that not a single person in the world has the right to say
that another country should disappear."

At the final press conference, Taskhiri said that he can have dialogue
with Judaism, but not with Zionism. "If you mean dialogue between Iran
and Israel, I see nothing in common here on which to base a dialogue,"
he said.

Much attention was dedicated to the discussion of religious extremism,
and the consensus – if any – appeared to be that religious education is
the only antidote to fanaticism. "One of the reasons behind extremism
is ignorance of religious tradition," said Metropolitan Kirill. "An
absence of positive knowledge about religion allows dishonest people
to encourage people to embrace extremist views."

Muslim speakers also emphasized the economic and political origins
of extremism.

"It is not religion at all that causes terrorism and extremism," said
Mufti Ravil Gainutdin, chairman of the Council of Muftis of Russia.
"Religious feelings are fueled to boiling point only against the
background of social and economic problems, and it usually happens
in the service of someone’s concrete political interests."

It remained unclear whether, without the pretext of the G8, such a
group would meet again. Some speakers suggested founding a platform
for regular exchange among religious leaders. Opinions differed on
whether it should be fashioned along the lines of the United Nations
or timed with G8 meetings and thus initiated by the churches of the
country that hosts the G8 summit.

Although the sessions represented a series of often pro forma speeches
and some participants were seen drifting off, the forum was also
a sight of lively conversations among colorfully dressed religious
leaders of different confessions.

The Russian daily newspaper Gazeta commented that the summit was a
result of a convergence of the Russian Orthodox Church’s political
interests and the Kremlin’s public relations policy. "The Church
understands that religious leaders have colossal influence in the
world. The Kremlin spin doctors are convinced that a gathering of
different kinds of clergy is a brilliant PR move," the newspaper said.

Maxim Shevchenko, a television anchor and leading expert on politics
and religion, said that the summit was the best manifestation so far of
Metropolitan Kirill’s concept of Russia "as a repository of traditional
values vis-a-vis the secular liberal West," and that it improved the
geopolitical standing of both Russia and the Russian Orthodox Church.

"Metropolitan Kirill doesn’t need PR," Shevchenko said in an
interview. "He is a real politician – one of the few real politicians
in Russia. He has an inner conviction that he is making history."

Staff member Alyona Dushka contributed to this report.

Matthew Bryza: Ambassador Should Follow The Policy Of President and

MATTHEW BRYZA: AMBASSADOR SHOULD FOLLOW THE POLICY OF PRESIDENT AND
PRESIDENT BUSH’S POLICY ON MASS KILLINGS OF ARMENIANS IS VERY DISTINCT

YEREVAN, JULY 7, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. "New U.S. Ambassador
Richard Hoagland will come to Armenia immediately after being
approved, I think in one or two weeks," said OSCE Minsk Group
American Co-Chairman Matthew Bryza in an interview with Haykakan
Zhamanak newspaper. He also mentioned, that Hoagland "is very warm,
very attentive personality, who is deeply acquainted with the history
of Caucasus".

As for Ambassador John Evans, then, according to Bryza, "he is a
wonderful person, an excellent Ambassador and our partner appreciated
by all of us here." He added that it’s not fair to say that the
Ambassador was recalled: "People also say that he is discharged from
the diplomatical service. It’s not true. Generally each Ambassador
serves the President, and that means that he must follow the policy
carried on by the President. And President Bush’s policy on that
terrible events, the mass killings of Armenians is very distinct, as he
mentiones about it every year in his address", said Bryza. According
to him, if someone does not agree with the policy of the President,
he can make his own decisions, though they should not be expressed
in public. "We all serve the President, and it is our task to support
his policy. Of course, our task is also to give him advice, but when
the thing concerns our statements in public, then we are obliged to
support the policy of the President", announced the American diplomat.