Acts Of Protest In Tehran

ACTS OF PROTEST IN TEHRAN

armradio.am
22.07.2009 18:18

Acts of protest were held in Tehran connected with the policy and
indifference of the Iranian authorities after the crash of the Caspian
Airlines plane en route to Yerevan, which took the lives of 168 people
on board.

Participants of the rally handed letters to the parliament and
government of the country, the mass media and the representation of
the Caspian Airlines.

Forty-eight victims of the accident were representatives of the
Armenian community of Iran, another six were citizens of the Republic
of Armenia.

The law-enforcement bodies tried to prevent the protests. Reporter
of the "Yerkir Media" TV Company was arrested and was released in a
few hours after a number of complaints, Photolure agency reported.

Trying To Come To Terms With Mass Slaughter

TRYING TO COME TO TERMS WITH MASS SLAUGHTER

CBC.ca
-anniversary.html
July 21 2009
Canada

Genocide Museum

They call Rwanda the "land of a thousand hills." But sometimes it
can feel like the land of a thousand questions.

For one, how is it possible that these apparently gentle, quiet
people could massacre — in the most brutal manner imaginable —
more than 800,000 of their friends, neighbours and colleagues over
the course of just three months?

And how can they now coexist, side-by-side, building the "new Rwanda"?

Yes, the Rwandan genocide is 15 years behind us this month. But
that doesn’t feel like such a long time in the history of something
so horrible.

To seek some answers, I went with some colleagues to the Genocide
Museum in the capital, Kigali.

It is a fairly new, modest building, surrounded by memorial gardens. On
the main floor is a highly detailed and well-presented chronology of
the genocide, its history, context and aftermath.

It contains some video testimony from survivors and the families of
victims as well as some graphic photos of corpses.

It also exhibits some damning descriptions of how the world turned
its back on Rwanda during the genocide.

Where was the UN?

Rather than come to Rwanda’s aid, the UN actually pulled its troops
out of this central African country at the height of the massacre,
leaving its presiding officer, Canadian general Romeo Dallaire,
hung out to dry.

Canadian Gen. Romeo Dallaire, a traumatic moment in his life, which
led to a near breakdown. Dallaire, now a senator, has said that
he could have stopped the slaughter with just 5,000 troops and the
proper mandate.

Instead, the UN decreased his force from 2,500 to just 250 helpless
peacekeepers, who were forced to stand by and watch the genocide
unfold.

One of the posters in the museum notes that the number of European
troops that came to help evacuate Westerners in that spring and summer
would have been enough to stop the genocide — had they stayed.

The French come under particular attack, since they arrived near the
very end and their attempt to set up a so-called safe zone in the
country, under a controversial mission called Operation Turquoise,
appears to have helped some of the Hutu killers escape.

The most moving part of the museum is the final room, filled with large
blow-up pictures of some of the many children who died in the genocide.

It lists their names, favourite pastimes and hobbies, and the manner
in which they were killed: decapitated with a machete, speared,
smashed against a wall.

It is difficult to read and I skip most of them.

Not alone On the second floor is an exhibit dedicated to the other
genocides of the 20th century: the Armenian genocide, the Holocaust,
the Khmer Rouge slaughter of one-quarter of the population of Cambodia,
and the Bosnian wars of the 1990s.

It is a brilliant idea — to show that this kind of unspeakable horror
is not just a product of some kind of primitive, African savagery. But
rather a product of man’s inhumanity to man, of which no group has
a monopoly.

It leaves a strong and lasting impression, as well as a sense of
despair.

To understand more about what happened here, we go on another day to
the Genocide Memorial at Murambi, about a half-hour drive from Butare,
where we are living.

There are many of these memorials around the country, but this one
marks the location of one of the largest single massacres of 1994. As
many as 50,000 Tutsis sought refuge here, during the height of the
killings, at a technical college on a hillside.

Rwanda, in east-central Africa. They were surrounded by the Hutu army
and a Hutu militia, known as the Interahamwe.

For the sheltering Tutsis, their food and water was cut off for two
weeks. And then the militia and soldiers moved in to kill — 50,000
men, women and children slaughtered in a day.

Rooms of skeletons The memorial consists of room after room in
the college filled with skeletons, carefully placed on large white
wooden tables.

The bodies have been coated with lime to preserve them and they glisten
white in the light. The smell of the odour-control balls in the rooms
is overwhelming.

But what you notice most are the number of tiny bodies — babies,
children, teens — many with smashed skulls.

They have all been exhumed from the mass graves on the site and placed
in the rooms where they were slaughtered. The impact is overwhelming
and incomprehensible.

Behind the college is a grassy area with a sign that reads: "Here
the French troops played volley (ball) during Operation Turquoise."

The sign is just metres away from a huge mass grave and you can’t
help but conclude these soldiers must have known what had gone on at
that spot.

They must have seen the blood in the rooms. The graves would have
been fresh.

A wife remembers We were taken on a tour of the rooms by a woman
who works there, herself a survivor of the massacre. She tells us,
in French, that her husband, a Tutsi, saved her life.

She is a Hutu, who was married to a Tutsi. When the militia came to
kill them, her husband showed them her identity card, which identified
her as a Hutu — and they made her run away with the baby on her back.

Then they murdered her husband and her other two young children.

She tells us that she works here at the memorial as a duty to the
memory of her family.

She is unemotional and direct. She does this every day. We come
away numb.

Collective responsibility One of the many writers on Rwanda that I
have read in recent weeks noted that the genocide could have been
much more efficient.

Image from a TV camera capture the aftermath of slaughter in the
summer of 1994. (CBC) After all, the Rwandan army (entirely Hutu)
was very well armed, by the French, with the latest weaponry.

But instead of shooting Tutsis and moderate Hutus, the militia killed
them with primitive weapons — machetes, spears, hoes, clubs —
one at a time.

The idea, it was said, was to involve as many people as possible in
the killings, to spread the blame and the responsibility.

That might explain why more than one million Hutus fled the country
when the Tutsi-led Rwandan Patriotic Front invaded and stopped the
genocide.

What now?

At this point, it seems, Rwanda is still coming to grips with the
aftermath of the killings.

In 2001, the government established a system of community courts,
known as Gacacas, to try those responsible.

The crimes range from robbery and looting to rape and murder. There are
12,000 of these courts in a country of only eight million people and
the result is that those who are judging know the accused very well.

At the Gacacas, sentences have been handed out, although many people
who expressed guilt were pardoned and allowed to return to their
communities.

The president of Rwanda, Paul Kagame, has said that if they
incarcerated all the people involved in the genocide, they would have
no country left.

The leaders of the genocide are being tried at the International
Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, in Arusha, Tanzania. But the process
there is painfully slow.

In fact, only last week was the former governor of Kigali convicted
of genocide, murder and rape, and sentenced to life. It had taken 15
years to bring him to justice.

The government of Rwanda is also frustrated with the European countries
that refuse to extradite alleged Hutu killers who have been given
asylum in their countries. Britain is one of them.

But it applauds Canada for recently convicting a Montreal man for
his involvement in the massacre.

When you drive in the countryside, you often see groups of men in
pink jumpsuits, working in the fields beside the highways. They are
"genocidaires," men who have been convicted of crimes related to
the genocide and are now in prison. We are prohibited from taking
their pictures.

We ask people here if something like this could happen again.

They say yes — if the Hutu majority takes power again. That seems
unlikely. The Tutsi minority now controls the government and the
military and they are committed to the idea of erasing ethnic
identities.

They want a country where everyone is just a Rwandan. It is a noble
ideal, but is it realistic? We can only hope.

http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2009/07/21/f-rwanda

Any Attempt To Return Karabakh May Lead To War

ANY ATTEMPT TO RETURN KARABAKH MAY LEAD TO WAR

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
21.07.2009 17:33 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The essence of Madrid Principles is that they contain
both pro-Armenian and pro-Azerbaijani clauses, ACNIS Director Richard
Giragosyan told a news conference in Yerevan. "It should be born in
mind that the principles were drawn up by mediators dealing with NKR
conflict, without Yerevan and Baku’s involvement in the process. What
concerns me most of all is that Armenia may have weaker positions
during talks," Armenian expert stressed, accounting for such weakness
by country’s internal situation.

It is Moscow rather than Baku that poses a real threat to Armenia at
present, Giragosyan noted. "Russia is establishing closer ties with
Azerbaijan in an attempt to prove that it will take fairer stance on
Karabakh conflict settlement. The principal threat may derive from our
friends, and Armenia must be ready for any new challenges," he said.

With regard to NKR self-determination, the expert finds that OSCE
MG is well-aware that any attempt to return Karabakh to Azerbaijan
may lead to war. "In short, it is out of the question. Such attempts
contain threats, and not only. The issue of NKR’s self-determination
and status is partially resolved. The real question at present is
whether Karabakh can be independent or it wants to be annexed to
Armenia. That’s something to be determined by Stepanakert," the
expert stated

EU Troika Delegation Due In Armenia

EU TROIKA DELEGATION DUE IN ARMENIA

armradio.am
20.07.2009 11:03

European Union’s Troika delegation headed by Carl Bildt, the Minister
of Foreign Affairs of the Kingdom of Sweden, will arrive in Armenia
on July 20.

Within the framework of the visit members of the delegation are
expected to meet Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan and Foreign Minister
Edward Nalbandian.

The meeting with Minister Nalbandian will be followed by a joint
press conference.

Accompanying Mr. Bildt on the Troika will be European Commission
representatives Karel Kovanda (Deputy Director-General and Political
Director) and John Kjaer (Head of Unit), Peter Semneby (EU Special
Representative) and Paolo Barroso Simoes (Council Secretariat). Spain’s
Ambassador on Special Mission to Central Asia, Santiago Chamorro,
will represent the next country to hold the EU Presidency

Victims Of Iranian Air Disaster Sent Home

Post Chronicle
July 19 2009

Victims Of Iranian Air Disaster Sent Home
by Staff

The bodies of 152 people killed in the crash of an Iranian airliner
have been returned to their families, an Iranian state broadcaster
reported Sunday.

In all, 168 people died in Wednesday’s crash of the Russian-made
Tupolev Tu-154 plane north of Tehran.

The bodies of 152 aboard the plane have been given to their families,
while the bodies of five Armenian passengers have been given to their
country’s officials, authorities said. The whereabouts of the rest of
the passengers and crew were unknown.

Eight Russian experts have joined Iranian investigators in searching
for clues to the crash of Caspian Airlines Flight 7908, lead
investigator Ahmad Majidi told the government-run Islamic Republic of
Iran Broadcasting, IRIB.

Russian and Iranian investigators were examining three flight
recorders recovered from the crash scene, Majidi said. Fragments of
the plane have been moved to special laboratories in Tehran for
examination, he added.

The plane crashed 16 minutes after takeoff in farm land in a village
in Takestan region of the Qazvin province. (c) UPI

s/article_212245085.shtml

http://www.postchronicle.com/news/breakingnew

Sisters are the last of Sarkies clan in Singapore

The Malaysian Insider
July 19 2009

Sisters are the last of Sarkies clan in Singapore

SINGAPORE, July 19 ‘ They share the same surname as the folks
behind the iconic Raffles Hotel, but few Singaporeans today seem to
know who the Sarkies are.

`They will ask me: `Where are you from? Are you
Indian?” said Loretta Sarkies, 68, a psychic.

The Sarkies clan here is now down to two sisters ‘ she and her younger
sister Jessie, 62.

Their grandfather, Arathoon Martin Sarkies, was the cousin of the
three Armenian Sarkies brothers who founded the Beach Road hotel in
1887.

Last week, The Sunday Times reported on a dispute over who built the
hotel, which is now owned by Fairmont Raffles Hotels International.

A descendant of the prominent Alsagoff family, Syed Muhammad Ghadaffi
Alsagoff, 35, had come out to say that it was his great-great-great
grandfather Syed Ahmed who owned the building, and not the Sarkies, as
some books and newspaper articles have routinely reported.

Prompted by the article, Jessie Sarkies contacted The Sunday Times to
say that she and her sister are the last remaining Sarkies here.

Their names appear in New Zealand author Nadia Wright’s 2003 book,
Respected Citizens: The History Of Armenians In Singapore And
Malaysia. In the book, Wright said two of the Sarkies brothers’
cousins ‘ including Arathoon ‘ also came to Singapore. But only
Arathoon Sarkies made it his home.

Jessie Sarkies, a home-based food caterer, said she does not know much
about her family’s involvement in the hotel. The sisters’ granduncles
‘ the Sarkies brothers behind the hotel ‘ and grandfather Arathoon
Sarkies had died way before they were born. `My father would tell us
his uncles were behind Raffles Hotel but that was about it,’ said
Jessie Sarkies. Her father was the only son of Arathoon Sarkies, who
also had four daughters.

The sisters, however, have a set of postcards of the hotel from their
grandfather. It is now being exhibited in the Raffles Hotel Museum.

Arathoon Sarkies was himself a prominent Armenian figure in
Singapore’s early history.

His firm ‘ Sarkies, Johannes & Company ‘ which he founded with his
brother Lucas and a Eleazar Johannes, was also in the hotel trade.

It took over the Adelphi Hotel in 1903 and made it one of the major
hotels here in the 1900s.

Things ran smoothly for Arathoon Sarkies’ company until it collapsed
suddenly in 1908. He was declared a bankrupt.

After he was discharged from bankruptcy in 1910, he swore off the
hotel trade and went into the rubber plantation business. He ran a
385ha plantation on one of the Rhio islands before he became bankrupt
again in 1929. He died in 1932.

Incidentally, the Adelphi Hotel ‘ which had been sold to another
company ‘ closed in 1973. The Adelphi building now occupies the site.

Arathoon Sarkies had five children from two marriages. Loretta Sarkies
and her sister Jessie are the children of his only son, James, who
served as vice-president of the Armenian Church of St Gregory’s board
of trustees in the 1960s and 1970s. He and his wife, Mae Didier, a
French woman, also have two adopted daughters, Ruby and Susan, who are
Chinese.

Sarkies Road in Bukit Timah was named after Regina Sarkies, Arathoon
Sarkies’ wife, in 1923.

She owned the family’s 1.2ha property along that road. It has since
been sold.

In their 30s, the sisters became more involved in the Armenian
community and were invited to lunch and dinner parties hosted at the
Raffles Hotel.

One of the more memorable ones was a lunch party to celebrate the
150th anniversary of the Armenian Church of St Gregory.

`It was exciting because Armenians from all over the world were
invited to the event,’ said Jessie Sarkies. `We met our father’s
cousin, also a Sarkies, who is now based in Washington.’ There are
about 30 Armenians left in Singapore now.

Although the sisters are married, they insist on keeping the Sarkies
surname.

`We are very proud of our name because there aren’t any other Sarkies
left in Singapore now,’ said Loretta Sarkies, who was the first
runner-up of the Mrs Senior Singapore pageant in 2001.

She has three daughters from her first marriage to a Dutch-Eurasian
man, Simon Aroozoo, who died in 1991. She is now married to Michael
Tan, who is retired.

Her sister Jessie, who was president of the Armenian Church of St
Gregory’s board of trustees in 1987, is married to Patrick Theseira, a
Eurasian who is currently unemployed. They have no children. ‘ The
Straits Times

p/features/32713-sisters-are-the-last-of-sarkies-c lan-in-singapore

http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/index.ph

Armenia, Azerbaijan Should Make Concessions On Territory – OSCE Chie

ARMENIA, AZERBAIJAN SHOULD MAKE CONCESSIONS ON TERRITORY – OSCE CHIEF

RIA Novosti
17:3417/07/2009

BAKU, July 17 (RIA Novosti) – The OSCE secretary general said on
Friday that Armenia and Azerbaijan should make concessions based
on the principles set out by the Minsk Group to settle the Nagorny
Karabakh conflict.

The co-chairs of the Minsk Group, the United States, Russia and France,
which are mediating the territorial dispute between Baku and Yerevan,
said during the G8 meeting in L’Aquila earlier this month they would
submit a revised set of proposals on the disputed region of Nagorny
Karabakh to Armenia and Azerbaijan.

"The principles declared in L’Aquila by leaders of the states
co-chairing the OSCE’s Minsk Group should be acceptable to both
parties in the conflict, and they should move towards rapprochement
on the basis of these principles," Marc Perrin de Brichambaut said
at a news conference in Baku.

"I believe today’s Moscow meeting between the Azerbaijani and Armenian
presidents, Ilham Aliyev and Serzh Sargsyan, is an important step,"
he added.

The presidents were to hold bilateral talks in Moscow on Friday before
trilateral discussions including Russian President Dmitry Medvedev
on Saturday.

Nagorny Karabakh, a region in Azerbaijan with a largely Armenian
population, has been a source of conflict between the former Soviet
republics since the late 1980s. The province has its own government
and is de facto independent.

According to the Minsk Group, Azerbaijan and Armenia must come to an
agreement on the disputed territory of Nagorny Karabakh on the basis
of the Madrid 2007 agreement.

The group also unveiled new principles for settling the dispute,
including defining Nargorny Karabakh’s status in regard to freedom
of movement with Armenia, as well as road and rail links between the
two. The group also said that security in the area be guaranteed and
troops should be withdrawn.

A war between Azerbaijan and Armenia over the mountainous enclave in
1988-1994 left an estimated 35,000 people dead. Sporadic violence on
the border has continued ever since.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian President Serzh
Sargsyan met in Prague last month to discuss the conflict, on the
sidelines of the EU’s Eastern Partnership summit, and said some
progress had been reached.

Sargsyan Called An Emergency Meeting Related To The Air Crash Of TU-

SARGSYAN CALLED AN EMERGENCY MEETING RELATED TO THE AIR CRASH OF TU-154 AIRCRAFT

president.am
July 15 2009
Armenia

Today, President Serzh Sargsyan called an emergency meeting related
to the air crash of TU-154 aircraft which was heading from Tehran
to Yerevan.

The Heads of the National Security Service and Civil Aviation
Department reported on the details of the plane crash.

At the meeting it was decided to set a state commission headed by
the Vice Prime Minister, Minister of Territorial Administration.

NKR: To Combine The Tourism Programmes Of Armenia And Artsakh

TO COMBINE THE TOURISM PROGRAMMES OF ARMENIA AND ARTSAKH

NKR Government Information and Public Relations Department
July 14, 2009

On July 13, NKR Prime Minister Ara Haroutyunyan received the executive
representatives of tourist companies of Armenia and discussed the
perspectives of the sphere’s promotion in Artsakh with them. The
guests paid a visit to the NKR aimed at getting familiarized with
the tourism resources of Artsakh and, in accordance with this,
preparing a package of trip programmes. The Prime Minister noted that
according to the arrangement between the NKR and the RA Governments
the tourist permits must be accessible and, first of all, addressed
to the citizens of Armenia. Artsakh is not conversant to the greater
part of them,- A.Haroutyunyan stated,- tourist companies can propose
necessary services for many inhabitants of Armenia to visit the NKR,
where there is much of interest and attraction to see and to enjoy.

With the aim of expanding the tourism market in Artsakh it is envisaged
to attach top priority to such directions as ethnic and eco-tourism,
for the application of which there is great potential available.

On the basis of the investigations to be carried out during
the forthcoming one-two days the guests will generalize their
considerations and proposals and will present them to the NKR Prime
Minister.

Head of the Department of Tourism adjunct to the NKR Government
S.Shahverdyan and head of the Department of Tourism and Territorial
Economic Development of the RA Ministry of Economics M.Apresyan
participated in the meeting.

BAKU: Tataristan Public Figure: Armenians In Shusha Understand They

TATARISTAN PUBLIC FIGURE: ARMENIANS IN SHUSHA UNDERSTAND THEY DO NOT LIVE IN THEIR HOMES

Today.Az
3758.html
July 13 2009
Azerbaijan

"I’ve always followed the conflicts around Nagorno Karabakh problem
with sorrow."

"We are against all conflicts in the world. Islam is completely
against the conflict. Allah loves union. There is usually split when
there is not unity", well-known public figure of Tatarstan Republic
and translator of Quran into Russian Ravil Bukharayev said.

At the same time, Bukharayev works in "Muslim TV Ahmadiyya
International" TV Channel in London.

He said he visited Shusha in 1999 to investigate this problem.

"Armenian family who were from Baku hosted me in Shusha. Armenians
living at Azerbaijani houses understand that they did not live in their
homes. They had an old TV at home, but they could watch Azerbaijan’s TV
channels. They spoke Azerbaijani language very well and I guessed from
their talking that they were concerned about Azerbaijan. Their eyes
were full of tears while watching the programs in Azerbaijani. Those
Armenians were ready to sacrifice everything just to see Baku some
day".

http://www.today.az/news/society/5