Human Rights Ombudsman to Deal with Water

Panorama.am

’14:43 02/06/06

HUMAN RIGHTS OMBUDSMAN TO DEAL WITH WATER

Two days ago a public regulatory committee issued a
decision according to which AMD 172.8 is set per one
cubic meter for water. Consumer rights protection
organizations protest the decision saying that it is
against the rights of consumers and contradict several
international treaties and local laws. According to
Abgar Yeghoyan, Consumer Rights Protection Chairman
and Armen Poghosyan, Head of Consumer Association say
that Water Code and Orhus treaty, Poverty Alienation
Strategic Program and a number of other legal acts are
violated, in particular.

Water supply is mainly regulated by two legal acts –
Water Code and Law on Regulatory Body. According to
the latter, water tariffs are set by the public
regulatory committee whereas this price was set by the
French operator who has received the right for water
use. Neither the experts nor public organizations were
consulted on the optimal rate of water fee. However,
Water State Committee Chairman is sure that Jeneral
Dez O, the French operator, is a leading company in
the world and will meet the obligations put in front
it.

Public organizations have variously tried to receive
the copy of the contract between water state committee
and Jeneral Dez O, however, they failed to get it.
Today, they intend to apply to human rights ombudsman
with a claim against committee’s decision. The
non-profits say they do no apply to court as a first
step because they cannot afford high fees. They
connect their hopes only with round table discussions
and press conferences.

It’s interesting why the non-profits started to
protest out loud the decision only after it was
reached. The committee held a session a month ago
during which the proposed tariff was not approved.
Non-profits only sent a letter to R. Nazaryan and held
one round table well aware that they won’t give any
tangible results./Panorama.am/

The Destruction of Memory: Architecture at War.

q.essay&essay_id=178977

Bombing Away the Past

by Tom Lewis

The Destruction of Memory:
Architecture at War.

By Robert Bevan.
Reaktion Books.
240 pp. $29.95

Reviewed by Tom Lewis

In his great poem “Lapis Lazuli,” William Butler Yeats indirectly
foretold the events that would soon consume the world: “Aeroplane and
Zeppelin will come out,/Pitch like King Billy bomb-balls in/Until the
town lie beaten flat.” Yeats died in 1939, a few months after
publishing his poem and shortly before the world began to realize his
words to a degree unimagined by earlier ages. The poem evokes the
constant destruction throughout history of art and architecture, and
the ceaseless human desire to build again in the face of an unending
parade of “old civilizations put to the sword.” It is this long
history of material and cultural destruction, brought to unprecedented
intensity in the 20th century, that Robert Bevan documents.

To be sure, armies have been destroying cities since the days of the
Old Testament and Homer. But as Bevan demonstrates, science and the
increasing mechanization of the last two centuries have given
combatants the ability to increase vastly the thoroughness (and the
precision) of the devastation. The Destruction of Memory presents a
dark account of how that devastation is brought about, along with a
cogent argument for why it deserves recognition as an atrocity
separate from the human carnage it so often accompanies.

Bevan argues that the destruction of buildings, be they historic,
symbolic, or merely utilitarian, “is often the result of political
imperatives rather than simply military necessity.” Architecture, he
contends, “is not just maimed in the crossfire; it is targeted for
assassination or mass murder.” Significant buildings may be destroyed
as an adjunct to genocide, as propaganda for a cause, as a way of
demoralizing an enemy, or out of simple personal vindictiveness on the
part of the attackers or the victors. Bevan offers a veritable
taxonomy of heritage destruction. He considers genocide and its
attendant “cultural cleansing” in cases from Armenia to Bosnia;
symbolic attacks upon buildings by terror groups, including, of
course, the attacks of 9/11; the carpet-bombing of densely packed
cities such as Hamburg and Dresden in World War II; wholesale cultural
annihilation, as in the attempted Germanification of Warsaw by its
Nazi occupiers in 1944; religiously motivated destruction, such as the
Taliban’s obliteration of the Bamiyan Buddhas in Afghanistan in 2001;
and the brutally dividing walls erected in Berlin, Belfast, and
Israel’s occupied territories, where architecture serves as an
instrument of suppression or exclusion.

Bevan’s grim statistics force readers to confront yet another
dimension of the savagery of our age. In the fighting that accompanied
the dissolution of Yugoslavia in the 1990s, “more than 1,386 historic
buildings in Sarajevo were destroyed or severely damaged. . . . Gazi
Husrev Beg, the central mosque dating from 1530, received 85 direct
hits from the Serbian big guns.” During the 1914-18 world war, the
Turks engaged in atrocities against the Armenians, and “Armenian
churches, monuments, quar – ters, and towns were destroyed in the
process.” The Armenian city of Van “was almost entirely flat – tened.”
After the fall of Warsaw in World War II, “of 957 historic monuments
. . . , 782 were completely demolished and another 141 were partly
destroyed.” The historian Max Hastings found that by the end of
Operation Gomorrah, the Allied air raids against Hamburg in 1943,
“40,385 houses, 275,000 flats, 580 factories, 2,632 shops, 277
schools, 24 hospitals, 58 churches, 83 banks, 12 bridges, 76 public
buildings, and a zoo had been obliterated.” In Stalin’s Russia in the
1930s, where secular iconoclasm ruled, “an estimated 20-30 million
painted icons were destroyed-used for fuel, chopping boards, linings
for mine workings, and crates for vegetables.”

Such numbers do more than just reveal the extent of these cultural
atrocities; they point to an essential aspect of their purpose. As
Bevan shows, “the link between erasing any physical reminder of a
people and its collective memory and the killing of the people
themselves is ineluctable.” Genocide must be thorough. In Sarajevo,
Serbs intended to obliterate the Bosnians’ cultural heritage by
destroying their national library. The national museum met a similar
fate.

Bevan’s account of what befell the Polish capital, Warsaw, in World
War II makes a similar point. After the Nazi occupation of 1939, which
included the mass murder of Polish nobility, clergy, and Jewish
intellectuals, among others, Nazi town planners meant to use the city
as the site of a German garrison. But the Warsaw Uprising against the
Nazis by the Polish underground in 1944 changed German
attitudes. Regarding the city as “one of the biggest abscesses on the
Eastern Front,” Heinrich Himmler set up special forces “to demolish
the city street by street” and ordered the death of all inhabitants,
declaring that “the brain, the intelligence of this Polish nation,
will have been obliterated.” In the end, a quarter of a million people
died and just a third of Warsaw’s buildings remained standing.

Nor did one side hold proprietary rights to wanton destruction in that
war. Bevan writes of the British discovery early in 1942 of “burnable
towns,” densely packed wooden buildings at the heart of the medieval
precincts in many German cities. With the consent of Winston
Churchill’s war cabinet, which after contentious discussion decided
that such attacks would demoralize the German people, the Royal Air
Force, led by their commander, Arthur “Bomber” Harris, leveled the
medieval port city of Lübeck with firebombs. The wooden houses ignited
“more like a fire-lighter than a human habitation,” the commander
recalled. The destruction of Rostock, a city of no strategic value,
followed. In just 17 minutes Harris dropped a thousand tons of bombs
on Würzburg, a cathedral city without industry or defense. Hitler
meanwhile was unleashing violence on Exeter, Bath, Norwich, York,
Canterbury, and Coventry, each a three-star Baedeker city with no
great industrial capacity. Three years later, in February 1945, when
Hitler was near defeat, Harris and the U.S. Army Air Force struck a
final and completely unnecessary blow, visiting a firestorm upon
Dresden, a cultural center.

Harris himself contended that indiscriminate bombing was essential to
winning the war. After all, he wrote later, “a Hun was a Hun.” But his
bombing had little effect upon Germany’s war effort, as the commander
chose to avoid oil depots that were heavily defended. The scale of
destruction produced qualms on the Allied side. “The moment has come,”
Churchill wrote after Dresden, to review the policy of bombing German
cities “simply for the sake of increasing terror.”

>From their own fierce reaction to the bombing of London, the British
should have understood that while such attacks from the air upon
cities might have symbolic value, they have little practical
effect. In what is surely the most famous photograph of wartime
London, the unyielding dome of St. Paul’s Cathedral rises in stark
relief above the smoking ruins of the razed city. Taken during the
Blitz of 1940, it appeared in The Daily Mail above a caption that read
in part, “It symbolises the steadiness of London’s stand against the
enemy: the firmness of Right against Wrong.” It served to inspire
Londoners’ determination in their darkest days. Just last summer,
Bevan notes, a British tabloid published the picture “once again
. . . following terrorist bombings on the London Underground.”

Contemporary terrorists who use the destruction of architecture as a
powerful weapon of propaganda do not always travel with Baedeker
guidebooks. As Osama Bin Laden and his like-minded followers have
shown, modern buildings with little or no significant architectural
merit can make attractive targets because of their symbolic value. The
Twin Towers, the critic Paul Goldberger wrote after their destruction,
“were gargantuan and banal, blandness blown up to a gigantic size.”
Striking at the Pentagon and the World Trade Center, Bevan writes, was
intended to send a message to Islamic militants across the world that
the time to act had come. Americans and others in the Western world
received a different message: Banal as the towers might have been,
they had now become “unintentional monuments.”

Such unintentional monuments become intentional ones in their
rebuilding, for reconstruction must take into account
destruction. Memory must have a place in the new. “History moves
forward,” Bevan observes, “while looking over its shoulder.” But how
much to commemorate? And how? Such questions become the focus of the
final chapters of The Destruction of Memory. Amid the rubble, we
sometimes see lost opportunities to make buildings an affirmative
statement of the human spirit, while at other times we see their power
to restore that spirit. Gazi Husrev Beg, the great mosque in Sarajevo,
survived the Serbian onslaught only to have its interior suffer a 1996
whitewashing that obliterated its spectacular decorations; the
“restoration” funds came from Saudi sources that demanded that an
austere Wahhabi interior replace the richly decorated walls
characteristic of Balkan Islamic architecture. As early as 1945, Poles
began to reconstruct Warsaw. In producing an exact replica of what had
been razed, the builders rescued their old city, but they also created
an amnesia about their recent history. In the great crater that was
the World Trade Center, those who consider rebuilding an act of
resistance are in conflict with those who want to make the site a
permanent memorial to the thousands who died on September 11. The
tension between creation and memorial is all the greater because we
are so near to the horror of the event.

“All things fall and are built again,” Yeats wrote in “Lapis Lazuli,”
“And those that build them again are gay.” The poem suggests that
people will go forward and rebuild with undiminished hope despite the
ever-growing weight of cultural destruction. But we cannot shrug off
the terrible devastation that is so much a part of our contemporary
condition. Better to follow the words inscribed on a plaque attached
to the ruined wall of Sarajevo’s national library: “Remember and
Warn.”

Tom Lewis, a professor of English at Skidmore College, is the author
of The Hudson: A History.

Reprinted from Spring 2006 Wilson Quarterly

This article may not be resold, reprinted, or redistributed for
compensation of any kind without prior written permission from the
author. For further reprint information, please contact Permissions,
The Wilson Quarterly, One Woodrow Wilson Plaza, 1300 Pennsylvania
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Primate commemorates Genocide with Houston community

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

June 2, 2006
___________________

GENOCIDE MEMORIAL AND PARISH ANNIVERSARY FILL WEEKEND IN HOUSTON

Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese of the Armenian Church
of America (Eastern), was in Houston, TX, from April 21 to 23, 2006, to
commemorate the Genocide and mark the 25th anniversary of the consecration
of the St. Kevork Church.

The celebration-filled weekend began Friday with a service of repose for the
souls of Genocide victims. The ecumenical service included remarks from the
Rev. Dr. George Bithos, executive director of the Texas Conference of
Churches; Hubert Vo, Texas state representative; and Annise Parker, the
Houston City Controller.

Saturday morning the Primate met with students and teachers at the parish’s
thriving Armenian School.

“It was exciting to see so many young people learning the language and
customs of their heritage,” the Primate said. “Especially on this weekend,
when we mark the huge losses of the Armenian community, to see young people
carrying our culture forward, it fills one’s heart.”

Saturday evening the Primate blessed young choir members, ordained several
new tbirs, and ordained two sub-deacons: Jeff Burke and Vicken Asadourian.
The blessed choir members are: Sonique Visser, Corinna Visser, Sevan
Dekmezian, Sofia Mnjoyan, Karoun Charkoudian, and Talin Asadourian. The new
tbirs are: Shant Abrilian, Kevork Kasparian, Neena Aivazian, Nairi
Kasparian, Alec Ohanian, Vahe Ouzounian, Michael Kolandjian, Sassoun
Haroutunian, and Garine Abrilian.

On Sunday, more than 300 people filled the church as the Primate celebrated
the Divine Liturgy. During the service he ordained Jeff Burke as a deacon.

The service was followed by the blessing of a new statue of Gomidas
Vartabed. The faithful continued outside to the parish’s khatchkar, where a
requiem service was held in memory of the victims of the 1915 Armenian
Genocide.

The commemoration was followed by a celebration of hope, as the parish
marked its 25th anniversary with a banquet featuring a presentation by
Genocide scholar Sam Totten.

“The day commemorated a dark episode in history, but also illustrated the
sense of hope, the powerful faith, and the indestructible spirit of the
Armenian people,” Archbishop Barsamian said. “We must remember that the
true target of the Turks was the entire Armenian people. They contemplated
the destruction of a whole nation, and they came close to succeeding. Our
commemoration of the Genocide each year is our way of remembering that every
Armenian living in the world today has passed very close to death, through
the experience of a parent or grandparent, and through the experience of our
entire people.”

— 6/2/06

www.armenianchurch.net

NKR has denied burning buildings in Aghdam district

Government of the Nagornyy Karabakh republic has denied burning
buildings in villages of Agdam District

Arminfo, Yerevan
2 Jun 06

Stepanakert, 2 June: The press service of the government of the
Nagornyy Karabakh republic has denied the Azerbaijani media report
that Armenians have allegedly started burning houses, other facilities
and sowing areas in Azerbaijani villages of Agdam District which is
under the control of Nagornyy Karabakh.

“Baku knows very well that these villages were destroyed during the
war launched by Azerbaijan in 1991-1994. At the same time, destruction
is the main result of artillery strikes by the Azerbaijani side. It is
quite clear why Baku recalls this today – prior to a meeting between
the Armenian and Azerbaijani presidents. This is another attempt by
Azerbaijani propaganda to discredit Nagornyy Karabakh in the eyes of
the international community,” the government press service of Nagornyy
Karabakh has told Arminfo.

Asratyan: Houses were destroyed 13 years ago by retreating Azeris

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
June 2 2006

SENOR ASRATYAN: `HOUSES WERE DESTROYED 13 YEARS AGO BY RETREATING
AZERIS’

According to the Spokesman of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic /NKR/
Defense ministry Sub colonel Senor Asratyan, the information
circulated today by the APA Karabakh Bureau on the fact that
`Armenians began setting fires to the houses on the territories they
had occupied in the Azeri Aghdam region villages of Yusifjanly,
Novruzlu, Baghmanlar, Sarijaly and Saybaly’ is `an awkward propaganda
action’.
While commenting on the information on DE FACTO Information-Analytics
Agency’s request, Mr. Asratyan said the information had nothing in
common with reality. In his words, the houses were destroyed 13 years
ago by the Azeri troops `retreating under attack of the Karabakh
army’.
Senor Asratyan also noted the Azeri party’s affirmations that
Armenians had allegedly taken their property from the houses to the
cars first could hardly be taken seriously: `If someone was about to
do it, why should he be waiting for over ten years?’

Youth Union Of Ararat Diocese To Discuss State Of Monuments In Armen

YOUTH UNION OF ARARAT DIOCESE TO DISCUSS STATE OF MONUMENTS IN ARMENIA AND BEYOND ITS BOUNDARIES

Noyan Tapan
Jun 1 2006

YEREVAN, JUNE 1, NOYAN TAPAN. On June 2, the members of the Youth Union
of the Ararat Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church will discuss
the subject “State of the Armenian Historic Monuments in RA and Beyond
Its Boundaries.” As Noyan Tapan was informed from the Diocese’s Press
Service, the guests of the event will be archimandrite Hovakim Manukian
and employee of the Institute of Political Studies under RA President’s
Administration, candidate of historical sciences Hayk Demoyan.

BAKU: President Ilham Aliyev Meets Jacques Chirac Today

PRESIDENT ILHAM ALIYEV MEETS JACQUES CHIRAC TODAY

Today, Azerbaijan
May 30 2006

President Ilham Aliyev today met with France’s President Jacques
Chirac in France.

As APA informs, the discussions focused on international and regional
issues as well as prospects of settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict.

President Aliyev is also due to have talks with President of French
Senate Christian Poncelet during a businesslike dinner party today.

Mr.Aliyev attended the opening of new premises of the Azerbaijan’s
Embassy in France yesterday. He also received president of French
Teknip Group of Companies, representative of Total Company as well
as met with French businessmen.

The Azerbaijani President today also addressed to the NATO
Parliamentary Assembly’s session.

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/26690.html

Armenian New Speaker To Be Elected May 31

ARMENIAN NEW SPEAKER TO BE ELECTED MAY 31

PanARMENIAN.Net
30.05.2006 18:45 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian National Assembly will convene a special
session on May 31 to elect a new Speaker. A respective decision was
signed by Parliamentary Vice-Speaker Tigran Torosyan in compliance with
item 2 of article 19 of the National Assembly Regulations, reports
the Press Service of the Armenian NA. Chairs of Standing Commissions
on Defense, Security and Internal Affairs, as well as Social Issues,
Health and Environment will also be elected at the Armenian National
Assembly special session.

May 29 Artur Baghdassaryan confirmed his retirement from the office of
the Speaker. May 25 the Parliament accepted the retirement of Chair
of the Standing Commission on Defense, Internal Affairs and National
Security Mher Shahgeldyan and Chair of Commission for Social Issues,
Health and Environment Gagik Mkheyan.

They were both members of Orinats Yerkir Party.

RA Representative Was Elected Deputy Chairman

RA REPRESENTATIVE WAS ELECTED DEPUTY CHAIRMAN

A1+
[08:38 pm] 30 May, 2006

Emin Eritsyan, head of the Armenian delegation was elected the deputy
chairman of the European Council Congress and a member of the Bureau
on the first day of the 13th session of the Congress of the European
Council regional and local authorities.

So far this is the highest post in the European structures held by
the Armenian representatives.

French Film Director Marie-Dominique Massol Shoots Film About Armeni

FRENCH FILM DIRECTOR MARIE-DOMINIQUE MASSOL SHOOTS FILM ABOUT ARMENIA

Noyan Tapan
May 30 2006

VANADZOR, MAY 30, NOYAN TAPAN. It’s already the third time that
Marie-Dominique Massol, the Director of the French film directors’
“Cap Monde” organization visits Armenia: the director was in Vanadzor
on May 29. Marie-Dominique Massol is director of 12 films. The film
director touched upon in her films history and culture of Slovakia,
Lithuania, California, New York and a number of other countries and
cities of the world. As the Noyan Tapan correspondent informs from
Vanadzor, Marie-Dominique has a goal to create the 13th film which will
this time tell about Armenia. As the “Cap Monde” organization Director
mentioned, the film will tell about historic-cultural monuments of
Armenia, the Armenian people’s traditions and life. The film will be
ready in October and will be shown in France. The main goal of the
film is to make tourists interested in Armenia. The film director
has already visited Etchmiadzin, and his visit to the Surb Narekatsi
Church of Vanadzor coincided with the ceremony of christening of 2
pupils of the “Masreni” literary-music group.