AAA: President Bush Signs Omnibus Spending Bill

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
December 9, 2004
CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
Email: [email protected]

PRESIDENT BUSH SIGNS OMNIBUS SPENDING BILL
Reinstates Military Aid Parity between Armenia and Azerbaijan

Washington, DC – The Armenian Assembly hailed yesterday’s enactment of
the Fiscal Year 2005 Omnibus Spending Bill, reinstating security aid
parity to Armenia and Azerbaijan by allocating $8.75 million in
military financing to both countries. This action foils the
Administration’s attempt at the beginning of the year to provide Baku
with a $6 million increase over Yerevan.

“The Assembly welcomes the enactment of this measure which puts
Armenia and Azerbaijan on equal footing,” said Board of Directors
Chairman Anthony Barsamian. “The Administration’s budget request to
Congress could have weakened U.S. credibility as an impartial and
leading mediator in the Karabakh peace process and could have resulted
in a resumption of hostilities, with potentially dire consequences for
U.S. economic and national security interests.”

“We are therefore pleased by this action and salute our network of
grassroots activists who worked side-by-side with the Assembly in
urging Congress to reaffirm military aid parity and to maintain the
highest levels of funding for Armenia and Karabakh.”

The legislation also allocates “not less than” $75 million in economic
aid to Armenia and $3 million in humanitarian aid to Nagorno Karabakh.
The U.S. continues to be the only nation in the world to provide aid
to Karabakh.

The House and Senate foreign operations expenditures were combined in
a final conference report which was included in the Omnibus Spending
Bill and passed by both Chambers before being enacted by President
Bush.

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#2004-105

www.armenianassembly.org

Yerevan Press Club Weekly Newsletter – 12/09/2004

YEREVAN PRESS CLUB WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

DECEMBER 3-9, 2004

HIGHLIGHTS:

SEVENTH “PRESS-CLUB” SHOW

CRIMINAL PROCEEDINGS INSTITUTED ON THE IGNITION OF “HAIKAKAN ZHAMANAK” CAR

SEVENTH “PRESS-CLUB” SHOW

On December 6 on the evening air of the Second Armenian TV Channel the
seventh “Press Club” show was issued. The cycle is organized by Yerevan
Press Club under “Strengthening Democracy in South Caucasus by Free
Expression” project, implemented jointly with “Article 19” international
organization with the support of Open Society Institute.

The heads of the leading media and journalistic associations of Armenia
discussed the issue of informational security. The other subject was the
situation in Ukraine after the second round of presidential elections that
had been at the focus of Armenian media attention.

CRIMINAL PROCEEDINGS INSTITUTED ON THE IGNITION OF “HAIKAKAN ZHAMANAK” CAR

On December 3 the Public Relations and Information Department of the RA
General Prosecutor’s Office informed that on December 2 the criminal
proceedings on the ignition of the car, owned by “Haikakan Zhamanak” daily
and used by the Chief Editor Nikol Pashinian, were instituted. As it has
been reported, the ignition occurred on the evening of November 22 and,
according to the forensic fire examination, was the open source of flame.
The Chief Editor of “Haikakan Zhamanak” himself qualified the incident to be
intentional and directed against him personally (see details in YPC Weekly
Newsletter, November 26 – December 2, 2004).

The proceedings are instituted by items 1 and 2 of Part 2, Article 185 of
the RA Criminal Code (“Intentional destruction or spoilage of property”).
These clauses stipulated punishment of up to 4 years’ imprisonment for an
action, committed by arson, explosion or other publicly dangerous way and
inflicting a major damage. The investigation is conducted by the
Investigation Division of the Yerevan Police.

When reprinting or using the information above, reference to the Yerevan
Press Club is required.

You are welcome to send any comment and feedback about the Newsletter to:
[email protected]

Subscription for the Newsletter is free. To subscribe or unsubscribe from
this mailing list, please send a message to: [email protected]

Editor of YPC Newsletter – Elina POGHOSBEKIAN
____________________________________________
Yerevan Press Club
9B, Ghazar Parpetsi str.
375007, Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (+ 374 1) 53 00 67; 53 35 41; 53 76 62
Fax: (+374 1) 53 56 61
E-mail: [email protected]
Web Site:

www.ypc.am

AYF/ANC Reach Out to Educators at National Social Studies Conference

Armenian National Committee of Greater Washington
Washington AYF “Ani” Chapter
4906 Flint Drive
Bethesda, MD 20816

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
December 7, 2004
Contact: Arsineh Khachikian
Email: [email protected]

AYF/ANC Educate over 1,000 Educators about the Armenian Genocide
at National Social Studies Conference in Baltimore, MD

Baltimore, MD- Armenian National Committee and Armenian Youth
Federation activists once again spoke with over a thousand social
studies teachers and handed out over hundreds of educational
packets about the Armenian Genocide at the 84th National Council for
the Social Studies (NCSS) annual conference held at the Baltimore,
MD Convention Center on November 20 & 21.

During the two-day conference, teachers attended a variety of
educational panels and workshops. The conference and exhibit show
attracting over 4000 NCSS members, making it one of the largest
social studies conferences across the nation. Members of the
Greater Washington, DC ANC and AYF as well as the Chicago AYF were
among the 300 exhibitors present at the trade show. For the second
time in as many years, the ANC/AYF participation was made possible
through a generous grant by the Armenian Youth Foundation.

The ANC/AYF booth at the exhibit primarily focused on educating
history teachers about the Armenian Genocide and informing them of
the available resources to help them include this vital topic in
their lesson plans. Over 1000 teachers avidly approached the booth
gathering materials including a folder with information about the
Armenian Genocide provided by Richard Kloian, Director of the
Armenian Genocide Resource Center (AGRC). Several teachers engaged
in conversation with ANC, AYF and history teachers helping with the
booth asking a variety of questions including where to get
additional materials, maps and books about the Armenian Genocide.
Others simply asked what more they can do to help stop the denial
and several teachers commented that they were happy to see the
Armenian Genocide has not been forgotten.

Making the conference a huge success was a postcard campaign
encouraging teachers to log onto TeachGenocide.org, a website
created by ANC of San Francisco as part of its Genocide Education
Project. The website, created specifically for teachers, allows
them to download teaching guides, maps, videos and primary
documents related to the Armenian Genocide as well as the
comprehensive 190-page lesson plans created specifically for public
schools by the ANC-SF and sponsored by the San Francisco Unified
School District.

Also on the website, is information about Facing History and
Ourselves new resource guide: Crimes Against Humanity and
Civilization: The Genocide of the Armenians. This new resource
book gives teachers the opportunity to help their students
understand the dilemmas as well as failure of the international
community to protect Armenians and to later prosecute the
criminals. Furthermore instructional posters on the Armenian
Genocide are now available for viewing and free download on the
site.

The booth was eye-catching with enlarged documents of New York
Times articles from 1915, pictures from Armin T. Wegner’s
collections of genocide victims and maps showing the routes of
deportation and areas in present day Turkey where most Armenians
perished between the years 1915-23. The booth also had a
continuous video playing of various genocide films including Peter
Jennings April 1999 segment on the Armenian Genocide, PBS
documentary on the Armenian Genocide from the Great War Series, and
the BBC Broadcast Armenia: The Betrayed. The booth also had a sign
up sheet asking teachers to tally their state they teach the
Armenian Genocide. Over 30 states were marked including such
states as Alabama, North Carolina and even Hawaii.
Founded in 1921, the NCSS has grown to be the largest association
in the country-devoted entirely to social studies education. The
NCSS engages and supports “educators in strengthening and
advocating social studies.”

This year’s theme of the conference was “Democracy and Diversity:
Social Studies in Action.” The conference focused on “democracy in
a culturally diverse United States, highlight efforts by groups and
individuals to establish and promote democracy in other parts of
the world, and draw attention to the tragedies that seem to be part
of the human experience as peoples across the globe attempt to find
niches that offer peace, freedom, and opportunity to improve their
circumstances in the world.”

AYF/ANC activist Karine Birazian commented on the impact of the
weekend as follows: “This is the second year that we were
exhibitors at the NCSS conference and once again it was a huge
success. Many teachers from all over the United States and Canada
approached the booth, taking information about the Armenian
Genocide as well as signing up sheets to receive additional
information. It was such a great feeling to know that we were
making a difference. We were giving them to tools they need to
incorporate the Armenian Genocide in their classrooms. We are
looking forward to attending the conference in Kansas City next
year as well as even having an educational panel about the Armenian
Genocide.

Ronald Levitsky a board member of NCSS as well as a social studies
teacher at Sunset Ridge School in Northfield, IL actively promotes
genocide awareness at his campus. Levitsky states: “Who today
still speaks of the massacre of the Armenians?” Hitler’s infamous
words uttered in 1939 helped to justify the genocide he was already
perpetrating on the Jews. Yet, with the horrors of Cambodia,
Rwanda, Bosnia, Kosovo, and Darfur, will students learn only that
genocide is inevitable? Samantha Power, author of A Problem From
Hell, speaks of “upstanders” — those few individuals who,
throughout history, fight against genocide. Educators need to
teach about the Armenian Genocide so that, through awareness and
the strengthening of moral conviction, our students will become
“upstanders” and the words “Never again,” can finally become a
reality.”

In closing, AYF Washington Ani Chapter chairwoman Tsoghig
Margossian noted that “overall, this weekend was a huge success in
that our efforts to promote genocide awareness were spread amongst
educators across the country. None of this would have been possible
without the help of Richard Kloian from the Armenian Genocide
Resource Center who supplied us with information made available to
the teachers. We would also like to thank Raffi Momjian and the
members from the ANC of San Francisco who supplied us with the
curriculum materials, as well as the ANC Eastern Regional
headquarters for their invaluable support, and the local members of
the Armenian community of Washington, DC. Finally a special thanks
to the Armenian Youth Foundation, without whose generous grant,
participation at this conference would not have been possible. We
look forward to working with all these activists and organizations
in the future to attend similar conferences and to expand our
genocide awareness efforts.”

#####

BAKU: OSCE mission to visit Azerbaijan’s occupied lands

OSCE mission to visit Azerbaijan’s occupied lands

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Dec 8 2004

The OSCE mission is expected to visit the occupied lands of Azerbaijan
with a view to scrutinizing illegal settlement of Armenians. The
issue was discussed in a meeting of Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign
ministers Elmar Mammadyarov and Vardan Oskanian with participation
of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs, which was recently held within the
forum of the OSCE member states’ foreign ministers in Sofia, Bulgaria.

The parties exchanged views on the status and prospects of settlement
of the Upper Garabagh conflict and agreed to continue talks in the
format of Prague meetings.

The Sofia meeting comes as the fifth one on settlement of the Upper
Garabagh conflict held between the Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign
ministers.*

F18News: Azerbaijan – “We don’t need Baptists here,” shoutsobstructi

FORUM 18 NEWS SERVICE, Oslo, Norway

The right to believe, to worship and witness
The right to change one’s belief or religion
The right to join together and express one’s belief

=================================================

Wednesday 8 December 2004
AZERBAIJAN: “WE DON’T NEED BAPTISTS HERE,” SHOUTS OBSTRUCTIVE OFFICIAL

“We don’t need any Baptists here,” Najiba Mamedova, the notary of
Azerbaijan’s north-western Zakatala [Zaqatala] region shouted at Forum 18
News Service, asked why she has for more than a year refused to notarise
the signatures on the registration application of a local Baptist
congregation. “We don’t want a second Karabakh,” Najiba Mamedova
screamed, adding “Who financed you? Go to them,” before throwing
Forum 18 out of her office and threatening to call the police. The church’s
pastor, Hamid Shabanov, told Forum 18 that “She always spoke to us
like that.” The church began applying for registration in 1994, making
it the religious community which has been denied registration in Azerbaijan
for the longest period. The head of the Aliabad administration, Gasim
Orujov, has refused to allow the Baptists to build a church in the village.
“There is Islam here and we have our mosque,” he told Forum 18.

AZERBAIJAN: “WE DON’T NEED BAPTISTS HERE,” SHOUTS OBSTRUCTIVE OFFICIAL

By Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service

“We don’t need any Baptists here,” the notary of Azerbaijan’s
north-western Zakatala [Zaqatala] region shouted at Forum 18 News Service
on 27 November when it tried to find out why for more than a year she had
refused to notarise the signatures on the registration application by a
local Baptist congregation. “We don’t want a second Karabakh,”
Najiba Mamedova screamed, referring to the Armenian-populated region that
broke away from Azerbaijani control more than a decade ago in a brutal war.
“Who financed you? Go to them,” she added before throwing Forum
18 out of her office in Zakatala’s court building and threatening to call
the police. “She always spoke to us like that,” the church’s
pastor, Hamid Shabanov, who had witnessed Mamedova’s response, told Forum
18 sadly.

Shabanov’s church – one of three Baptist congregations in the village
of Aliabad, two of which are members of the Azerbaijani Baptist Union
– lodged its latest registration application for notarisation with
Mamedova some fourteen months ago, but she has consistently refused to
process it, church members complain. Without the notarised signatures of
the church’s founding members the application cannot be processed and the
congregation cannot get legal status.

The church began applying for registration in 1994, making it the religious
community which has been denied registration in Azerbaijan for the longest
period.

Ali Abasov, a professor at the National Academy of Sciences and president
of the Azerbaijani branch of the International Religious Liberty
Association, said he could well understand how the authorities in a place
like Aliabad could “illegally obstruct” the registration of a
minority religious community. “It is a question of ten minutes at the
notary’s office,” he told Forum 18 in the capital Baku on 29 November.
“Officials should do their job in accordance with the law.”

“It is wrong for the notary to refuse to notarise the documents,”
Azer Sharafli, head of the general department of the State Committee for
Work with Religious Organisations, told Forum 18 in his office in Baku on
24 November. “It’s their job to do so.” He said although his
committee is in charge of the registration of religious organisations, it
is not its responsibility if other officials refuse to do their job.
“No-one appealed to us,” he claimed. He said if the Baptists have
any complaint they should take their case to court.

“If all the paperwork is in order, notarisation is a question of no
more than 30 minutes maximum, that’s my view,” the head of the Aliabad
administration, Gasim Orujov, told Forum 18 under outsized portraits of
President Ilham Aliev and his late father Heidar Aliev in his office in the
village on 27 November. Although no fan of the Baptists, he said he was
unable to tell if the authorities want to register the Baptists or not.
“It’s not my responsibility. I won’t interfere.”

Orujov readily admitted that the Baptists – like believers of any
other faith – have the full right to practise their religion.
“There’s democracy here.” He claimed to be ready to give the
Baptists any documents they require to complete the registration process.
However, he resolutely refused to allow them to build a church in the
village. “There is Islam here and we have our mosque,” he told
Forum 18, gesturing to the nearby minaret. “People wouldn’t allow a
church nearby. There would be conflict.” (He did not mention that
Aliabad used to have a Georgian Orthodox church, which was closed during
the Soviet period.)

Orujov brushed aside suggestions that one group of citizens cannot prevent
another group of citizens exercising their rights. “Can we allow a
church to be built after they have been here for only ten years?” he
asked. “Let them pray at home.” Told that registered places of
worship of a wide variety of faiths exist in Baku he responded: “Baku
has people of many faiths and different backgrounds – it’s OK for
churches to exist there.”

For more background information see Forum 18’s Azerbaijan religious freedom
survey at

A printer-friendly map of Azerbaijan is available at
las/index.html?Parent=asia&Rootmap=azerba
(END)

© Forum 18 News Service. All rights reserved.

You may reproduce or quote this article provided that credit is given to
F18News

Past and current Forum 18 information can be found at

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http://www.forum18.org/
http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id=92
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http://www.forum18.org/
http://www.forum18.org/

Tbilisi: OSCE Vows to Work Intensively on Conflict Resolution Issues

OSCE Vows to Work Intensively on Conflict Resolution Issues

Civil Georgia, Georgia
Dec 7 2004

Solomon Passy, the OSCE Chairman-in-Office and the Bulgarian Foreign
Minister, said in his closing statement at the OSCE Ministerial Council
in Sofia on December 7, that the organization will work intensively
to solve the conflicts in the post-Soviet space.

“In the months and years ahead, we will continue to work
intensively to achieve lasting settlements in Georgia, Moldova and
Nagorno-Karabakh. Courageous decisions will be required from all the
parties concerned and the OSCE must remain fully engaged,” Solomon
Passy said.

In his remarks to the Ministerial Council, U.S. Secretary of State
Colin Powell said on December 7 that “a new push from the OSCE” is
needed to solve frozen conflicts.

Naira Melkumian Is Sure That 90% Out Of 11 Mln Dollars Promised Duri

NAIRA MELKUMIAN IS SURE THAT 90% OUT OF 11 MLN DOLLARS PROMISED DURING
“TELETHON-2004” TO BE COLLECTED

YEREVAN, December 6 (Noyan Tapan). The “Telethon-2004”, which was held
in Los Angeles on November 25, deserved its name of the arrangement of
All-Armenian significance owing to the provision of the participation
of different circles of the population of the Diaspora, Armenia and
Nagorno Karabakh in fundraising for the construction of the North-South
highway in Nagorno Karabakh. Executive Director of the Pan-Armenian
“Hayastan” (“Armenia”) Fund said about it during the December 3
press conference. Mrs. Melkumian noticed that the high result of
the fundraising is conditioned by the well-organized work of the
team, in which the “Hayastan” Fund’s local bodies of the European
countries and the US played their decisive role. Naira Melkumian
particularly emphasized the work of the local body of the US Eastern
Coast, owing to which the donation of a total of 5 mln, 700 thousand
dollars were provided. Armenia and the NKR provided more than 1 mln,
100 thousand dollars, and it is also quite a high index in comparison
with the previous marathons. Luis-Simon Manukian (2 mln dollars),
Eduardo Ernekian (1.5 mln dollars), Hrair Hovnanian (1 mln dollars),
Gevorg Hovnanian (1 mln dollars), Sargis Hakobian (1 mln dollars),
Caroline Mugar (500,000 dollars) and Ara Abrahamian (250,000 dollars)
are the largest grantors. N. Melkumian also noticed that in contrast
to the previous years, it is decided that this year the funds collected
for the programs having other special purposes will be separated from
the sum donated for the construction of the “North-South” highway. The
promises of 11 mln dollars were given only for the implementation of
this program. Naira Melkumian reported that the promise of donations
for other purposeful programs were also given during the telethon. So,
among the purposeful programs the local body of the US Western Coast
provided donations of 2 mln, 222 thousand dollars this year. 1 mln,
320 thousand out of them are allocated for the construction of the
highway. The Executive Director of the “Hayastan” Fund gave assurance
that 90% out of the promised sum will be collected. She also said that,
in fact, 600,000 dollars have already been transferred. It was also
noticed that 78 kilometers of the highway are left until completion,
and a total of 12.5 mln dollars are necessary for it. The construction
of this sector of the highway will begin in March, 2005.

Ayoon wa Azan (Intimate Search)

Dar Al-Hayat, Saudi Arabia
Dec 3 2004

Ayoon wa Azan (Intimate Search)
Jihad Al Khazen Al-Hayat 2004/12/3

The annual hunting trip to Hungary included a friend who carries a
Lebanese passport, which is problematic enough. Nevertheless, when he
applied for a Hungarian visa at their embassy in London, the wrong
visa was stamped on his passport (the visa was for a girl named
Isabelle, with her photograph on it – same as many of the current
visas). He was lucky enough to notice the error and returned to the
embassy where the visa was canceled and was given one with his name
and picture.

At Budapest Airport, we all headed off together with our British,
Canadian, Saudi, and Jordanian passports. We waited for an hour
before our friend could join us. Because he was Lebanese, the
passport control employee got suspicious, which later increased at
the sight of the annulled visa. Our friend was not released until the
Foreign Ministry was contacted and thankfully we arrived on a working
day; otherwise, he would have missed the entire hunting trip.

On our way out, my friend described the event as trivial compared to
his experience at New York’s airport; he also has a U.S. visa, which
he regularly renews since most of his business is there. Upon getting
his latest renewal, he realized that the place of birth was
registered: Iraq – although he was born in Bourj Hammoud (Lebanon);
he returned to the embassy where the visa was annulled and replaced
with a new one.

The result was hours of investigation in New York, coupled with an
intimate strip search; although his passport showed that he has been
to the U.S. many times a year over the past few years. Moreover, the
annulled visa clearly stated: annulled without fault of passport
bearer. However, my Armenian-Lebanese friend looks guilty, much like
most of my friends. If I doubt him, then the Hungarian and American
security are excused.

Day after day, I hear of horror stories around the world’s airports,
specifically the United States, following the enforcement of strict
measures in fear of terrorism. Personally, I was not harassed, in
spite of my name. Furthermore, it seems that the British passport
makes me an accomplice in the war on terror, which allows me peaceful
passage.

In any case, this is all an introduction. What inspired me to write
about the topic is last week’s article by The New York Times
columnist Maureen Dowd entitled “Hiding Breast Bombs.” In it she
discussed the embarrassment or occasional humiliation experienced by
the female American travelers while undergoing intimate strip
searches, sometimes at the hands of a Transportation Security
Administration (TSA) male screener. It seems that the laws in America
were even stricter since last September in response to the attacks on
the Russian plane by the two Chechen female suicide bombers a few
weeks earlier.

Body search around the breasts is easier than other parts –
inappropriate for publications. Furthermore, The Times Joe Sharky
chronicled the experiences of women’s experiences of the “breast
exam:” a 71 year-old woman was subjected to the breast pat-down in
the search for explosives. Singer and actress Patti LuPone got barred
from her flight for resisting taking off her shirt because she was
wearing nothing underneath. Perhaps the TSA screeners have an excuse
since; some explosive materials are fluid in nature and cannot be
detected through X-Ray machines, which gives rise to the need to look
for them anywhere that they could be concealed. I once saw the
picture of an Israeli soldier inspecting the breast of a veiled
Palestinian woman carrying two infants; I thought it was enough
provocation for them to carry out operations against Israel when they
grow up.

When Maureen Dowd (an American) is strip searched in America, it
makes the inspection of an Armenian-Lebanese friend with his thick
moustache and Middle Eastern features like all terrorists, the best
thing that can happen to him in New York. At least, the men at
customs did not refer to him as Isabelle; like we did in Hungary.

The friend was a victim of error; our neighbor in London was the
victim of a “correction” attempt; upon her arrival in New York, while
on vacation with her husband and children, the well-informed customs
officer asked the woman while inspecting her British passport: Born
in Damascus? You are Iraqi. Welcome. The friend replied: Damascus,
Syria. The officer insisted on Damascus being in Iraq. Rather than
keeping quite to find a pro-unity of Arabs customs employee in
America, our friend insisted on the correction and ended up in a
three hour investigation in a glass room.

Back in the day, we used to travel without being frisked. In the
1960s however, plane hijacking began, and we started being searched.
At first, the planes were highjacked to Cuba. Our ‘brothers’ took to
the idea, and it became the fad in all countries.

Highjacking is easier than detonation. Before the two Chechen females
incident, a man had attempted to blow up a plane with an explosive
hidden in his shoe; as a result, we started to remove our shoes,
which calls for our socks to have no holes.

While the most I had personally experienced is removing my jacket,
shoes and belt, I know people who did all this but were still refused
entry to the United States; either for name similarities, or for
doubting that the visitor intends to immigrate – not to visit as he
claims.

Today, there are new laws against illegal immigration or an
intensification of the ones that already exists in Europe, the United
States, and many other countries. If these laws were to be enforced
retroactively, the whites would return to Europe and America will be
handed back to the Red Indians.

I do not expect this to happen any time soon. Nevertheless, I do
expect the continuity of harassing all the travelers, men and women,
with the fuel surcharge, resulting in the United States expecting 586
million air passengers this year – a record figure – with an $80
billion loss for the airlines.

The financial losses and harassment due to the airport searches is
nothing compared to life endangerment by terrorists. In spite of all
this, I find that there are some who support terrorism or invent
excuses for it.

Since I am no Hercules, I prefer harassment with safety. All the
same, some security measures make no sense; such as patting down an
elderly woman, or focusing on an annulled visa of a friend who is in
a party of seven carrying 15 hunting rifles, some of which are
automatic.

Some of us travel on business, i.e. not by choice. Others, travel on
holiday, to whom I say if he/she really looks like the passport
picture, then he/she is really sick and is better off not getting on
the plane.

Travel documents are no longer restricted to humans. We have a cat
and a dog and have obtained two British passports for them, because
the family spends the summer in the south of France. Pet passports
are a microchip under the neck’s skin, and when the specialized
device decodes it all of the cat or dog’s details appear – including
the name, age, weight, residence, and medical records.

The dog is loyal is to its owner, not the house; hence it travels
with us to France. However, the cat’s loyalty goes to the house
rather than its owner; therefore it usually stays in London – so as
not to run away in France. Since our dog is friendly, it would
welcome any search to prove its innocence. The cat, on the other
hand, is vicious; I could imagine it bury its claws in the inspector,
as he deserves.

I read of an Englishman proud of his cat’s possession of a British
passport, while Mohamad Al Fayed cannot get one. When a man owns
Harrods, why would he want to travel?

Another Green Zone in Malatsia Sebastia Community

ARMENIA TREE PROJECT
57/5 Arshakunyats Street
Yerevan, Armenia 375026
Telephone: (374 1) 44-74-01

CREATED ANOTHER GREEN ZONE IN MALATSIA SEBASTIA COMMUNITY: THE ITALIAN
EMBASSY TO INAUGURATE THE FIRST IN THE HISTORY OF ARMENIA
`ITALIAN-ARMENIAN MEETING POINT PARK’

Over the past three years, the Embassy of Italy in Armenia and the
Armenia Tree Project (ATP) environmental organization have been
successfully collaborating on the creation of a unique `Italian
Armenia Meeting Point Park’. This new green zone is located in the
southwest district of Malatsia-Sebastia Community site and occupies a
1,000 square meter territory. Since 2001 three tree plantings have
been initiated and held at this area by the Italian Embassy together
with ATP. More than total 200 fruit and decorative trees survived due
to the high 90 % survival rate ATP achieves today. Above all, the
`newborn’ park will supply the Malatsia-Sebastia Community residents
with oxygen, shade, noise reduction and beautiful blossoming of trees
in springtime. The Italian Embassy in Armenia and ATP organized and
held similar tree plantings also in 2001, 2002 and the last one in
2004, which resulted in the establishment of the first in the history
of Armenia `Italian Armenian Meeting Point Park’.

The Inauguration ceremony will take place on December 1, 2004. The
Ambassador of Italy to Armenia, Marco Clemente, and Mrs.Clemente are
to open this noteworthy event by planting a tree as a symbolization of
friendly and flourishing relationships between these two countries –
Italy and Armenia. There’s a hope that this initiation undertaken with
such an enthusiasm and love will play a big role in both, the
political and environmental life in Armenia.

The inauguration ceremony is scheduled to begin at 11 a.m.

Transportation for Mass Media is provided.

For more information, please, contact Bella Avetisyan
at the Armenia Tree Project
Tel.: 44 74 01, 44 74 02 (242 – extension number)

or

Naira Ghazaryan at the Embassy of Italy in Armenia
Tel.: 54 23 35, 54 23 36 (110 – extension number)