BAKU: Most young people support military action to liberate lands

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
March 17 2005

Most young people support military action to liberate occupied land

Baku, March 16, AssA-Irada

54.4% of young Azerbaijanis support settling the Upper Garabagh
conflict through military action, 30.2% peacefully, and 1.8% using
the pressure of international organizations, says a report on the
`News from young people’ public opinion poll conducted by the
National Youth Organizations Council.
4.8% of respondents said they do not believe in the conflict
resolution, while 2.6% had difficulty answering the question, and
6.2% made other proposals.
The poll was conducted among 1,500 people aged between 16 and 35. 500
respondents participated in the first stage of the poll covering
Baku. The poll showed that young people are mainly concerned with the
problems relating to education, unemployment, and financial
constraints.
The next stage of the poll will be held in Azerbaijani regions in
April.*

Health Ministry Officials’ statements contradict Ministry Statistics

STATEMENTS OF OFFICIALS OF MINISTRY OF HEALTH OF ARMENIA CONTRADICT
STATISTICS OF THEIR OFFICE

YEREVAN, MARCH 15. ARMINFO. No lethal outcomes because of infectious
diseases were registered in maternity hospital of Armenia during the
last ten years, Head of the Department of Protection of Health of
mother and child of Ministry of Health of the Republic of Armenia
Karine Saribekian informed ARMINFO. She mentioned that no lethal case
because of infectious diseases were registered in hospitals thanks to
new measures on sanitary-epidemiological conditions in the hospitals.

At the same time, according to statistical data of the ministry of
Health provided to ARMINFO, 1,638 cases of infection of newborn
children were registered in hospitals in 2003, 32 of these children
died. 43 children died from infectious diseases in 2002.

Saakashvili leaves Armenian clergy’s letter unanswered

ArmenPress
March 15 2005

SAAKASHVILI LEAVES ARMENIAN CLERGY’S LETTER UNANSWERED

YEREVAN, MARCH 15, ARMENPRESS: Archimandrite Abgar Hovakimian, who
is the deputy head of the Armenian Church Diocese in Georgia, told
Armenpress a letter the Prelacy sent to Georgian president
Saakashvili requesting his intervention to stop further desecration
of Armenian churches and other historical monuments across Georgia
has not been responded yet. The letter also asked for a clear cut
status for the Armenian Prelacy in Georgia demanding that Armenian
churches be handed over to its management.
He said though the problem was discussed during a last week visit
to Yerevan by Georgian prime minister Zurab Noghaideli, however, a
final solution is expected to come from a meeting between the
religious leaders of Armenians and Georgians. He said Armenian
cultural and historical monuments supervised by Georgian culture
ministry are overlooked and cited a recent incident when Armenian
gravestones in the yard of Norashen Armenian church in Tbilisi were
replaced with Georgian gravestones. Days earlier Armenian cross
stones were destroyed at Gremi church complex. He said Surb Nshan
church in Akhaltsikha remains closed, while monuments there are being
destroyed.
The headquarters of the Armenian Church in Etchmiadzin told
Armenpress this problem is in their focus and they are taking steps
to attract Georgian authorities and clergy’s attention to this
problem.

Velvet revolution inevitable in Armenia – opposition leader

Velvet revolution inevitable in Armenia – opposition leader

Iravunk, Yerevan
11 Mar 05

Armenian opposition leader Vazgen Manukyan has said that a velvet
revolution is inevitable in Armenia. In his interview with Iravunk
newspaper, he stressed that a referendum and elections will be held in
Armenia soon, after which people will speak about changing the
government. Either the government should try to change something in
cooperation with other forces or the people will revolt one day,
Manukyan said. At the same time, he added that he does not see any
force that would be able to come to power and take specific steps. The
following is an excerpt from Piruza Meliksetyan report by Armenian
newspaper Iravunk on 11 March headlined “They are constantly trying to
fool external forces, but are fooled themselves”. Subheadings have
been inserted editorially:

An interview with the leader of the National Democratic Union, Vazgen
Manukyan.

Foreign policy is an important factor

[Correspondent] Being a member of the Justice bloc, why did the
National Democratic Union leader join the trio [Vazgen Manukyan, Ashot
Manucharyan, the political secretary of the Union of Socialists Forces
and Intelligentsia, and Paruyr Ayrikyan, the leader of the
Self-Determination Association]?

[Manukyan] These two units have been formed in different ways and for
different goals. Justice was formed during the presidential run-off of
2003 between Robert Kocharyan and Stepan Demirchyan. Having registered
unprecedented violations in the first round, we naturally joined the
people and supported Stepan Demirchyan in the run-off.

[Passage omitted: Justice bloc won seats in parliamentary elections]

But there are also foreign policy and the Karabakh problem. Foreign
policy is not only the government’s business. It is a very important
factor in society and is conducted at different levels at the same
time. Armenia has no mechanisms of conducting its foreign
policy. There is even no relevant council in the country let alone
wider structures. That is why those feeling responsibility for foreign
policy have united not in parties, but in persons in an attempt to
create certain mechanisms and to raise certain issues.

[Passage omitted: The Justice bloc has proved to be wise enough to
take this trio calmly without unnecessary suspicion]

People in opposition to government

[Manukyan] Today the government is trying to prove that there is no
opposition in its true sense in Armenia. They think that if there are
no rallies and no clashes, there is no opposition. Meanwhile, I know
that a great number of Armenians are in opposition to what the
government is presently doing in the economy and politics. They are in
opposition to illegality and corruption. They are blaming the
government and calling it illegal. If people are in opposition,
naturally the parties that have been fighting together with them in
the past years are also in opposition.

[Correspondent] By saying there is no opposition, the government might
mean the ways in which this opposition is expressed.

[Manukyan] There are the following ways of expressing opposition:

a) in the parliament (which the opposition is boycotting for known
reasons);

b) rallies;

c) discussions, press conferences and interviews.

Rallies will take place soon. But this is not only for the opposition
(and not only by chanting “Government, go away!”), but also for the
government itself to search for ways out. Presidents come and go –
Kocharyan is in power today but will go tomorrow – but the parties
which have already been in politics for many years and want to stay
there in the years to come should be trying to find some
solutions. Hostility is not a way out. The parties of the ruling
coalition should also be interested in developing the country. They
also want to have power, but they should know that everything has its
price.

[Passage omitted: Manukyan denies that he was recently offered the
post of prime minister. Asked if government reshuffles can bring some
substantial improvements in terms of democracy, Manukyan said that he
gives priority to an effective constitution, qualified civil servants
and active public involvement]

Velvet revolution inevitable

[Correspondent] Speaking of democracy in the light of recent coloured
revolutions, many Armenian politicians say that unlike the Georgians
or Ukrainians, the Armenian opposition has failed to achieve tangible
results.

[Manukyan] Let’s not forget that the first attempt to stage a velvet
revolution was made in Armenia in 1996 because of the Karabakh
problem. It is true that there were broken cordons and shootings, but
in content it was a velvet revolution. Velvet is a nice term, but in
reality the illegal regime was trying to retain power while masses
were fighting to bring their own people to power. It was quite
natural. Simply in Georgia and Ukraine there were external forces who
tried to find a compromise and warned the ruling regimes against
applying force. I believe that the external forces want the
post-Soviet republics to be non-criminal and democratic. The
democratic West is interested in these countries as they will
integrate into the West sooner or later. And I would very much like
this to happen in Armenia without external interference. This will be
difficult to avoid, but I think that the example of Georgia and
Ukraine will show Armenia how to act in the future.

[Correspondent] So you think there will be such developments in
Armenia?

[Manukyan] I think this is inevitable. We will soon hold a referendum
and elections, and whether you like it or not, the people will speak
about changing the government, too.

[Passage omitted: Asked if there will be drastic changes by 2008,
Manukyan says that this is quite possible. What is impossible is to
change something in one or two months as the opposition is saying now]

Unnatural situation

[Manukyan] Today I cannot see any programme that could make Armenia
prosperous and democratic in, say, some six specific steps. I see no
such way now. But this unnatural situation cannot continue for
long. There are different ways: either seeing the crisis the
government itself will try to change something in cooperation with
other forces or the people will revolt one day. But those saying that
this will happen in one or two months are just expressing their wish.

[Correspondent] Do you think that the government change is enough?

[Manukyan] The National Democratic Union believes that the government
change is too little for having the country we want to have and for
fulfilling the task that has been set.

[Correspondent] Do you see any force in the country who can take power
and take some specific steps?

[Manukyan] No, I don’t.

[Correspondent] You said that this unnatural situation will not last
long. Don’t you think that the government will shortly try to change
this situation by reproducing itself through a revolution from above?

[Manukyan] There are two ways: either the government will try to cheat
its own people and external forces, which will be difficult to
do. They are constantly trying to fool external forces, but are fooled
themselves. The people, too, feels and quickly reacts to what is
natural and not. So deceit is not a way out. The other way is very
unlikely – the government will take serious steps to lead us out of
this situation.

[Passage omitted: The world is developing very quickly and our
internal processes are failing to keep pace, Manukyan concluded]

BAKU: Azeri soldier reportedly wounded in Armenian gunfire

Azeri soldier reportedly wounded in Armenian gunfire

ANS TV, Baku
13 Mar 05

Armenian armed forces stationed in Agdam’s occupied Qarvand village
fired at Azeri positions in Ciraqli village of the same district at
0500 [0100 gmt] on 13 March.

The ANS Karabakh bureau has quoted Ciraqli residents as saying that
Nuraddin Suleymanov, an Azeri soldier drafted from Saatli District,
was wounded in the Armenian gunfire.

The [Azerbaijani] Ministry of Defence has neither confirmed nor denied
the report.

Venice Commission To Express Opinion About RA Law “On Rallies” AndDr

VENICE COMMISSION TO EXPRESS OPINION ABOUT RA LAW “ON RALLIES” AND
DRAFT ELECTORAL CODE REFORMS AT MARCH 11-12 SESSION

STRASBOURG, March 10 (Noyan Tapan). The CE Venice Commission will
express its opinion about RA law “On Rallies” and draft Electoral
Code reforms at the March 11-12 plenary session in Venice. According
to the Venice Commission, the constitutional situation in Bosnia
and Herzegovina and the powers of the High Representative, judicial
reform in Georgia and the status of South Ossetia, media freedom in
Italy are among the items on the agenda of the plenary session. The
Deputy Minister of Justice of Georgia, Mr Konstantin Vardzelashvili,
will inform the Commission on further developments on the status
of South Ossetia, following the recent visit of the Commission to
Georgia. In addition, the Commission will adopt its opinion on the
latest draft constitutional amendments relating to the reform of the
judiciary in Georgia.

Armenian serviceman killed in Azeri truce violation – agency

Armenian serviceman killed in Azeri truce violation – agency

Noyan Tapan news agency, Yerevan
11 Mar 05

Idzhevan, 11 March: An Armenian serviceman who served under contract
was killed on 9 March by fire from the Azerbaijan side on the defence
positions near the village of Berkaber of Tavush Region near the
Dzhogaz water reservoir. Our Noyan Tapan correspondent managed to
find out that the killed serviceman was from Vanadzor.

The Berkaber village administration has reported that the Azerbaijani
side has been firing more frequently at the Armenian defence positions
of late, sometimes in the direction of Berkaber as well, especially
at nights.

On this day – March 12

Advertiser Adelaide, Australia
Sunday Times.au, Australia
The Mercury, Australia
Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia
March 12 2005

On this day
March 12

1992 – A ceasefire is shattered when the city of Agdam comes under
heavy shelling that kills 25 people in the battle over the Armenian
enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.

641 AD – Chinese Princess Wen Cheng goes to Tibet to marry the
Tibetan ruler and the marriage becomes the basis for China’s claim to
sovereignty over the region.
1609 – Bermuda becomes a British colony.
1789 – The post office is established in the United States.
1799 – Austria declares war on France.
1814 – British troops under Wellington capture Bordeaux in France.
1848 – Revolution breaks out in Vienna with university
demonstrations.
1849 – In India, the Sikhs surrender to the British at Rawalpindi.
1854 – Britain and France conclude alliance with Turkey against
Russia; In Sydney, James O’Farrell attempts to shoot visiting Duke of
Edinburgh, Prince Alfred, in the back.
1868 – Britain annexes Basutoland, South Africa.
1894 – Coca-Cola is sold in bottles for the first time.
1907 – At Toulon, France, the battleship Iena explodes, killing at
least 118 men.
1912 – Juliette Gordon Low founds the Girl Guides, which later
becomes the Girl Scouts of America.
1913 – Canberra becomes the capital of Australia when the foundation
stone of the Federal Parliament building is laid.
1925 – Death of Sun Yat-sen, Chinese revolutionary leader.
1930 – Mahatma Gandhi opens civil disobedience campaign in India
against British.
1932 – The so-called Swedish Match King, Ivar Kreuger, commits
suicide in Paris, leaving behind a financial empire that turns out to
be worthless.
1939 – Pope Pius XII is formally crowned in ceremonies at the
Vatican.
1940 – Finland signs a peace treaty with the Soviet Union in World
War II, ending the 14-week war which the Russians won by sheer weight
of numbers.
1945 – Anne Frank, the Dutch Jewish teenager who kept a diary of her
wartime experiences, dies in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in
Germany, aged 15.
1947 – US President Harry Truman establishes what becomes known as
the Truman Doctrine to help Greece and Turkey resist Communism.
1966 – General Suharto is sworn in as acting president of Indonesia
after President Sukarno is stripped of authority.
1968 – Indian Ocean island Mauritius, a British colony, proclaims its
independence.
1969 – Beatle Paul McCartney marries Linda Eastman in London.
1971 – Syrian Premier Hafez al-Assad is elected president in a
national referendum.
1972 – Britain and China agree to exchange ambassadors, 22 years
after London first recognised the Peking government.
1978 – In the first round of French parliamentary elections, the Left
claims an absolute majority for the first time in French history.
1979 – In Grenada, Prime Minister Sir Erik Gairy and his government
are overthrown and replaced by Maurice Bishop of the New Jewel
Movement.
1984 – Nationwide strike of British miners begins.
1988 – South African government bans church-led opposition group
headed by Archbishop Desmond Tutu as “threat to public safety”.
1989 – Students and workers demanding overthrow of President Roh
Tae-woo battle riot police in Seoul, Korea.
1992 – A ceasefire is shattered when the city of Agdam comes under
heavy shelling that kills 25 people in the battle over the Armenian
enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh.
1993 – At least 200 people are killed and 1,100 injured when a series
of bombs explode in Bombay, India; Janet Reno is sworn in as
America’s first female attorney general.
1994 – Church of England breaks with 460 years of male dominance when
it ordains its first female priests in Bristol Cathedral.
1995 – Melinda Gainsford becomes the first Australian to win a world
sprint title in more than 30 years, in the world indoor 200m.
1996 – China begins new war games in the Taiwan Strait in a show of
force that uses jets and warships to drive home its warning to Taiwan
not to seek independence.
1997 – Burundi authorities arrest five people, including two
soldiers, after they attempted to kill Burundian leader Major Pierre
Buyoya.
1999 – US-born violinist and music teacher Sir Yehudi Menuhin dies in
Berlin.
1999 – Confidential medical records about the Queen and other members
of the royal family are found by a man walking his dog on a riverbank
in south-western Scotland.
2000 – Attackers wound leading Iranian reformist Saeed Hajjarian, a
close confidant of President Mohammad Khatami, shooting him once in
the face. He was the focus of hardliners’ anger after the reformist
sweep of parliamentary elections; In one of the most significant acts
of his papacy, Pope John Paul asks forgiveness for the many past sins
of his Church, including its treatment of Jews, heretics and women.
2001 – A US Navy jet mistakenly drops a bomb on a group of military
personnel at a bombing range in Kuwait, killing five Americans and
one New Zealander.
2001 – Thousands of Iraqis begin military training when President
Saddam Hussein orders the formation of 21 military units. As many as
seven million have volunteered to fight with the Palestinians against
Israel.
2002 – The UN Security Council approves a US-sponsored resolution
endorsing a Palestinian state for the first time.
2003 – Serbian Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic dies after being struck
by two bullets as he walked from his car to a government building in
Belgrade.
2004 – Iran abruptly freezes further UN inspections of its nuclear
program for six weeks, throwing into turmoil international attempts
to verify Tehran’s claims that it is developing atomic power and not
weapons.

Some 5,000 Prostitutes Underwent Medical Examination and TreatmentUn

SOME 5,000 PROSTITUTES UNDERWENT MEDICAL EXAMINATION AND TREATMENT
UNDER PROGRAM MEDECINS SANS FRONTIERES OF BELGIUM IN VILLAGE OF
BAGRATASHEN, TAVUSH REGION, ARMENIA

YEREVAN, MARCH 10. ARMINFO. Some 5,000 prostitutes underwent medical
examination and treatment under the program Medecins Sans Frontieres
(MSF) of Belgium in the village of Bagratashen, Tavush region,
Armenia, Press Secretary of MSF Mission to Armenia Pyotr Maghdashyan
informs ARMINFO.

According to the source, the program implemented since 2002 was aimed
at improvement of the situation with diseases transmitted through
sexual intercourse and is designed for five years. Maghdashyan
said that MSF provides both prostitutes and local residents with
free contraceptives and holds examinations of sexually transmitted
diseases. An anonymous source informs ARMINFO that in the village
of Bagratashen bordering with Georgia the trade with “live goods” is
rather active. Souteneurs recruit the local “butterflies” transporting
them to Turkey and United Arab Emirates for prostitution.

UCLA Armenian Genocide Conference, April 1-3

PRESS RELEASE

UCLA AEF Chair in Armenian History
Contact: Prof. Richard Hovannisian
Tel: 310-825-3375
Email: [email protected]

MARCH 9, 2005

UCLA INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE GENOCIDE AFTER NINE DECADES,
APRIL 1-3, 2005

UCLA­An international conference, ~SAfter Nine Decades ~V The
Enduring Legacy of the Armenian Genocide,~T will be held in Pasadena
and on the UCLA campus from Friday evening, April 1, to Sunday
afternoon, April 3. The conference is sponsored by the Armenian
Educational Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian History in
cooperation with the UCLA International Institute, Center for Near
Eastern Studies, and Center for European and Eurasian Studies. The
conference organizer is A.E.F. Chair Holder Richard G. Hovannisian,
who explained: ~SThe Armenian Genocide set the prototype of
premeditated mass killing in the twentieth century, and there is much
to be learned from the enduring legacy of that crime.~T Participants
include scholars from Argentina, Armenia, France, Lebanon, Syria, and
from throughout the United States.

Friday Session in Armenian

The opening session on Friday evening, April 1, from 7:30 to 9:30
p.m., will be conducted in the Armenian language and will feature
Nora Arissian (Damascus University), Karen Khachatryan (History
Institute, Erevan), Marc Nichanian (Wesleyan University), and Raffi
K. Hovannisian (ACNIS, Erevan). The Armenian session will be held in
the AGBU Manoogian Center at 2495 E. Mountain Street (at Altadena
Drive) in Pasadena.

Saturday Sessions in English on UCLA Campus

The Saturday sessions, April 2, will take place in Moore Hall 100 on
the UCLA campus from 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. The theme for the first
Saturday morning session, 9:30 to 11:00 a.m., is ~SRethinking Aspects
of the Armenian Genocide,~T with presentations by Richard Hovannisian
(UCLA), Henry Theriault (Worcester State College), Suzanne Moranian
(AIWA, Boston), and Michael Papazian (Berry College, Georgia).

The second session, 11:20 a.m. to 1:00 p.m., focuses on ~SThe
Armenian Genocide in Comparative Perspective~T with Katia Peltekian
(American University of Beirut), Anahit Khosroyeva (History
Institute, Erevan), Speros Vryonis, Jr. (UCLA and New York
University, Emeritus), and Tigran Matossian (Museum-Institute of the
Armenian Genocide, Erevan).

A lunch hour illustrated talk on the Armenian Genocide memorial
complex at Del Zor will be given by its architect, Sarkis
Balmanoukian.

The first Saturday afternoon session, 2:15 to 4:00 p.m., is on
~SGenocide Education, Human Rights, and Prevention,~T and includes
Nicole Vartanian (Washington, D.C.), Adam Strom (Facing History and
Ourselves, Brookline), Sara Cohen (Washington, D.C.), and Hagop
Gulludjian (UCLA).

The second Saturday afternoon session, 4:20 to 6:00 p.m., features
~SArtistic Responses to Genocide,~T with illustrated talks by Jean
Murachanian (UCLA), Ramela G. Abbamontian (UCLA), Jack Der Sarkissian
(Kaiser Permanente Medical Group), and
Hrag Varjabedian (University of Wisconsin-Madison).

Sunday Afternoon Sessions on Memory and Reconciliation

The Sunday afternoon sessions from 1:30 to 6:00 p.m. will shift to
the Court of Sciences 50 (Young Hall), with two sessions. The first
session, 1:30-3:15 p.m., examines ~SHistory and Memory~T with Barlow
Der Mugrdechian (Fresno State), Marc Mamigonian (NAASR, Boston),
Rubina Peroomian (UCLA), and Philippe Vedelier (National Center for
Scientific Research, Lyon, France).

The second and last session, 3:40-5:30 p.m. moves to the contemporary
issue of ~SProspects for Dialogue and Reconciliation,~T with
presentations by Elazar Barkan (Claremont Graduate University), Bedross
Der Matossian (Columbia University), Fatma Muge Gocek (University
of Michigan-Ann Arbor), and Simon Payaslian (Clark University). A
discussion period will follow.

A display of Armenian Memorial Monuments worldwide featuring the
photographs of Hrair ~SHawk~T Khatcherian of Quebec will be mounted
by Richard and Anne Elizabeth Elbrecht of Davis, California.

The conference is open to the public at no charge. Parking is
available in structure no 2, at the entrance to UCLA on Hilgard
Avenue at Westholme Avenue. A map of the UCLA campus may be found at
and the conference program may be viewed at
For additional information, contact Professor
Richard Hovannisian at [email protected] or by telephone at
310-825-3375.

–Boundary_(ID_HaJfBxDOiKKyQAHXeEEljA)–

www.ucla.edu/map/
www.uclaarmenian.org.