Oryol Jewish Leader Founding Member of Regional Experts Committee

The Federation of Jewish Communities of the CIS (FJC), Russia
June 9 2005

Oryol Jewish Leader Founding Member of Regional Experts Committee
Thursday, June 9 2005

ORYOL, Russia – This week, the Jewish National-Cultural Autonomy of
Oryol Region was represented during a session of the ‘Public Chamber’
Association of Community Organizations. At this latest session,
Semyon Livshitz, the President of the regional Jewish community
proposed to create a Regional Committee on Inter-Ethnic Issues.

Participants in this organization overwhelmingly accepted the Jewish
leader’s proposal. The final outcome of this approved proposal was
the official establishment of the ‘Expert Committee on Federal and
Inter-Ethnic Relations’.

The Oryol Jewish National-Cultural Autonomy will continue to be
active in resolving inter-ethnic and inter-religious issues in the
region through involvement in this committee. The Jewish community is
to be represented by President Semyon Livshitz. Other founding
members of this Expert Committee include T. Ponomaryova, the
Executive Director of the local Jewish ‘Nesher’ Organization, and P.
Danielyan, the Vice-Chairman of the local branch of the Russia-Wide
Organization ‘Armenian Union of Russia’.

At the next session, these persons will determine the ultimate goals
and priorities for the ‘Expert Committee on Federal and Inter-Ethnic
Relations’.

Sizing up the “Bush Effect” in Armenia and Azerbaijan

Eurasianet
June 9 2005

SIZING UP THE `BUSH EFFECT’ IN ARMENIA AND AZERBAIJAN
Haroutiun Khachatrian and Alman Mir-Ismail 6/09/05

US President George W. Bush stressed the need for “freedom and
democracy” during his visit last month to Georgia. Bush’s words have
had a noticeably different impact on neighboring states in the
Caucasus. In Azerbaijan, where parliamentary elections are scheduled
for November 2005, Bush’s rhetoric seems to be influencing domestic
political developments. The reaction in Armenia, meanwhile, appears
far more muted.

In his May 10 speech in the Georgian capital Tbilisi, Bush suggested
that Georgia’s Rose Revolution in 2003 heralded an era of democracy
across the Caucasus. “We are living in historic times when freedom is
advancing, from the Black Sea to the Caspian, and to the Persian Gulf
and beyond,” Bush said. “Now, across the Caucasus, in Central Asia
and the broader Middle East, we see the same desire for liberty
burning in the hearts of young people. They are demanding their
freedom — and they will have it.”

In Azerbaijan, the president’s speech resonated broadly, helping to
energize opposition political supporters. In an interview shortly
after Bush’s visit to Georgia, Khagani Huseynli, director of the
Azerbaijani Center for Strategic Research, argued that US president’s
remarks were a signal to the Azerbaijani government that free and
fair elections must be held this fall. Accordingly, opposition
leaders are taking action designed to ensure Bush’s message is heard
by President Ilham Aliyev’s administration in Baku. On June 4, an
estimated 10,000 demonstrators took to the streets of Baku to call
for a cleanly contested poll. As they marched, many protestors
carried framed photos of Bush. [For additional information see the
Eurasia Insight archive].

The US embassy in Azerbaijan welcomed the government’s decision to
sanction the June 4 rally, which occurred two weeks after police used
force to break up a similar opposition protest. [For background see
the Eurasia Insight archive]. “We urge the [g]overnment of Azerbaijan
to continue sanctioning public demonstrations, and to meet its other
stated commitment to conduct parliamentary elections this fall that
live up to international standards,” said embassy spokesperson Sean
McCormack in a June 6 statement.

Pro-government figures have argued that Bush’s May 10 comments
contained no message for Azerbaijan. “We know that there are five
countries around the Caspian Sea,” Mubariz Gurbanli, deputy executive
secretary of the governing Yeni Azerbaijan Party (YAP), said shortly
after Bush’s Tbilisi speech. “I think Bush’s hint applies to other
countries and not to Azerbaijan. Because there is already a
democratic system functioning in Azerbaijan.”

In the weeks since Bush’s visit, a variety of influential
presidential supporters have sought to reinforce the notion that the
government is a champion of gradual democratization, and therefore
should not be viewed as a regime-change target. In remarks broadcast
by ANS television on June 7, YAP Executive Secretary Ali Ahmadov
stated that “democratic development is Azerbaijan’s strategic
choice.” The same day, Interior Minister Ramil Usubov offered
assurances that the police would conduct themselves “worthily” during
the November parliamentary poll, the Turan news agency reported.
“Therefore, the opposition should not be expecting a revolution,” he
added.

An opposition bloc, comprising Musavat, the Popular Front and the
Democratic Party, appears determined to press ahead with protest
plans. Authorities have already sanctioned a follow-up rally,
scheduled for June 18.

In Armenia, the governmental reaction to Bush’s speech has been
similar to that in Azerbaijan, with President Robert Kocharian’s
administration insisting that it stands on the side of
democratization. Pro-government media outlets in Yerevan have scoffed
at the notion, implied by Bush, that Georgia’s reform-minded
administration could provide an example for countries throughout the
former Soviet Union to follow. “By ascribing such a
worldwide-historical mission to little Georgia, President George Bush
simply paid tribute to [President] Mikheil Saakashvili, a person
having messianic ambitions,” said an editorial published by Hayots
Ashkharh on May 11. “It was a solemn moment, but had no relation to
real politics.” Many Armenian political analysts view the newspaper
as the unofficial mouthpiece of Defense Minister Serge Sarkissian.

At the same time, the reaction of opposition activists in Armenia, in
sharp contrast to that of their Azerbaijani counterparts, has been
comparatively subdued. Opposition leaders have not attempted to stage
anti-government demonstrations during the last month. Instead, their
reaction has largely been limited to hopeful rhetoric. Bush’s visit
may work to the advantage of “a victory of democratic forces . . . to
revolution, or to the change of power,” Viktor Dallakian, secretary
of the opposition Justice bloc told the weekly Yerrord Uzh on May 13.

Bush’s visit to Georgia generated little public attention in Armenia,
local political observers say, helping to account for the
opposition’s muted response. Many Armenians do not appear to see the
US president as a force for positive change. In a recent survey
conducted by the Armenian Sociological Association for the Gallup
Institute, only 32 percent of those polled expressed confidence in
President Bush, as compared with 87 percent for Russian President
Vladimir Putin. Armenia and Russia have long enjoyed a special
relationship. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

Most Armenians, in fact, paid greater attention to Moscow’s May 9
celebration for the 60th anniversary of the end of World War II than
to President Bush’s speech in Tbilisi. One Yerevan pensioner who did
watch Bush’s televised visit to Tbilisi echoed the views of many. “I
think President Bush was wrong to give such a high mark to modern
Georgia,” said Torgom. “To name Georgia `a beacon of liberty’ is the
same as to declare it the eighth wonder of the world.”

Recent actions by US diplomats in Yerevan provide no indication that
the White House is ready to support the Armenian opposition’s
confrontational stance toward the Kocharian administration. [For
background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Opposition leaders were
not invited to the recent opening of the new American embassy in
Yerevan, and US Ambassador John Evans has described the Kocharian
administration as “headed in the right direction,” a qualification
not shared by the opposition.

Washington has been similarly careful not to offend Aliyev’s
administration in Azerbaijan. The recently opened Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan
oil pipeline – a project that stands at the core of US energy policy
for the Caspian Sea basin – explains that US caution in part. [For
background see the Eurasia Insight archive]. Azerbaijan, which
borders on Iran, also plays a growing role in security policy for the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization and the Pentagon.

With those considerations apparently in mind, Azerbaijani
pro-government media outlets have dismissed opposition hopes for
greater attention from the White House as overblown. “At first, they
[opposition parties in Azerbaijan] said that President Bush would
meet with them. Then, they said that he would meet with the
opposition NGOs. And what we see is that President Bush did not even
meet with anyone from Azerbaijan,” commented the privately owned TV
channel Lider TV. Pro-opposition youth groups such as Megam (It Is
Time) and Yox (No) traveled to Tbilisi in hopes of catching the
president’s attention during his May 10 speech in the city’s Freedom
Square, but, apparently, did not succeed.

US Senator Charles Hagel, a Nebraska Republican, reinforced
Washington’s support for the Kocharian and Aliyev administrations
during his recent tour of Caucasus states. In Baku, Hagel ruled out
the possibility of American support for a ‘velvet revolution’ in
Azerbaijan. “The US does not support a ‘velvet revolution’ and I am
not aware of such reports”, the English-language AzerNEWS daily
newspaper quoted Hagel as saying. In Armenia, the senator said he was
“very impressed” with the Kocharian administration’s reform record.

Despite Bush’s characterization of Georgia as “a beacon of liberty,”
the Armenian and Azerbaijani governments both seem disinclined to
follow the reform example set by Saakashvili’s government in Tbilisi.
Indeed, several geopolitical factors are exerting force on Georgia to
adopt conciliatory positions towards Armenia and Azerbaijan.

With Georgian state coffers slated to receive some $50 million per
year from the BTC pipeline, Azerbaijan’s importance as an energy
producer is likely to restrain any urge by Saakashvili to press for
democratization in Baku. In Armenia, complaints from ethnic Armenians
in the southern Georgian region of Samtskhe-Javakheti and disputes
with the Georgian Orthodox Church over Armenian churches in Georgia
appear likely to place similar restraints on Tbilisi’s political
influence in Yerevan. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
archive].

Editor’s Note: Haroutiun Khachatrian is a Yerevan-based writer
specializing in economic and political affairs. Alman Mir-Ismail is
pseudonym for a freelance political analyst based in Baku,
Azerbaijan.

Armenian Eyecare Project starts blindness prevention campaign

Armenpress

ARMENIAN EYECARE PROJECT STARTS BLINDNESS PREVENTION CAMPAIGN

YEREVAN, JUNE 8, ARMENPRESS: The Armenian EyeCare Project plans to
distribute around 600,000 booklets across the country in an attempt to raise
the people’s awareness about the causes of blindness, early diagnosis and
prevention. The distribution is part of a wider primary health maintenance
program.
Out of 12 names of brochures eight were published with the financial
support of the USAID, the rest with the assistance of Jinishian Foundation.
Three of the brochures are intended for parents to help them identify at
early stages eyesight disorders.
Since 1992, the Armenian EyeCare Project has been “Bringing Sight to
Armenian Eyes” through a comprehensive ophthalmology program. Dedicated to
the elimination of preventable blindness and making 21 st century eye care
accessible to every Armenian child and adult, the EyeCare Project’s
Initiative is an integrated program of assistance focused on strengthening
the Armenian eye care delivery system and reducing preventable blindness in
Armenia. The five comprehensive program components include direct patient
care; medical training and education; public education; research; and
capacity building.

Georgia hampering Russian operations – commander

Interfax.ru, Russia
June 7 2005

Georgia hampering Russian operations – commander

MOSCOW. June 7 (Interfax) – Col. Vladimir Kuparadze, deputy commander
of the Russian forces in Transcaucasia, has accused the Georgian
authorities of creating obstacles to the operations of his troops.

“Because of Georgian visa denials, Maj. Gen. Alexander Bespalov has
long been performing his duties as commander of the Group of Russian
Forces in Transcaucasia from Russia’s 102nd Military Base in Armenia.
And now the Georgian authorities have denied a visa to the recently
appointed deputy commander for armaments,” Kuparadze said.

Work that belly!

Sun Star, Philippines
June 7 2005

Work that belly!
By Jojie Alcantara
Witerary

“BELLY dance ” has gone by many names. The French who found the dance
named it “dance du ventre”, or dance of the stomach. It is known in
Greece as the cifte telli, in Turkey as rakkase and in Egypt as Raks
Sharki. Middle Easterners call it “danse orientale”.

This folk dance developed through the influence of many different
cultures and continues its long process of modernizing today. It is
not only a sensual form of movement but was historically performed
under special occasions throughout ancient times and was regarded as
sacred in its purest form.

When I was very young, dance was my first love. Writing and art came
second. My world revolved around the arts and theater since childhood
(one I am so grateful to my parents for). Mom put me in Locsin’s
Ballet Studio when I was 6, piano lessons at 7, guitar and banjo at
8, Hawaiian dance class at 9, drama, speech and theater under Miss
Aida Rivera Ford at 11.

I danced my way through high school and college, and stopped being a
dance choreographer only in my late 20s, when the ballroom trend came
in (I hate teaching pair dancing). My obsession was to master the
artful Balinese dancing.

Alas, alack I gained weight and people forgot that I knew how to
break dance in my prime years (I once did a mean backspin that ripped
my pants off onstage).

So when belly dancing came in as a form of fun exercise, friends
joined the latest craze to shed off excess pounds, trim the belly and
learn to be graceful at the same time. They tell me to join these
dance sessions. I didnt have the heart to inform them I’ve been doing
a mean hula dance since Hawaii Five-O and can jerk my hip separately
from my upper torso like a madwoman in heat! I have done Body
Language popularized by Pia Moran in the 80s (ugh)! This time,
though, I cannot bend over backwards and be able to kiss my ass.

In the olden times, belly dancing was probably sensual and erotic
without being lewd. Since noontime shows launched these Showgirl
dance competitions, scantily clad bodies incorporated the motions,
writhing and jerking suggestively that often maligns the art.

If you want to learn real belly dancing, however, go for the real
McCoy and learn from professionals. The first thing they will teach
you is to stop being self-conscious and let yourself go. If you
don’t, you will look so rigid, you’re better off doing the Macarena.

Diana Dakini, a professional Armenian performer, was in Davao and
gave an hour demo to a group of excited ladies in the Fitness Gym of
Marco Polo Hotel.

While teaching the basic movements, she told them not to worry about
their breasts (too small?), or bellies (too big?), but to always feel
sexy as they dance to the rhythm. I joined the group as an observer,
but before long I was gyrating with the class as well, alongside
enthusiastic fellow columnist Tita Josie San Pedro.

Diana was fun to talk to as we later had an engaging conversation on
dancing. She had impressive credentials, having performed in Germany,
Armenia, Japan, Denmark, France and Greece.

In the Philippines, she has performed in Shangri-La Edsa Hotel, New
World
Renaissance Hotel, Prince of Jaipu (The Fort), Jools Cabaret
(Makati), Air Force One Club (with Andrea del Rosario and Katya
Santos), and Club Paraw (Boracay).

In Davao, she gave dance workshops, including the ladies of Square
Circle (a well-known club). I sure hope they will really learn the
true art of dancing from her.

Last time I watched them many years ago, they were just slipping and
sliding down the runway to the music of Bon Jovi.

Antelias: Project of Funding Housing Complexes Nears Completion

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr. Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

THE CATHOLICOSATE’S PROJECT OF FUNDING HOUSING COMPLEXES NEARS COMPLETION

The social service initiative of the Catholicosate of Cilicia to provide
housing for the public will be completed in a few months. The last building
of the project is being constructed in Fanar and it is the second of its
type in the region.

His Holiness Aram I and members of the Cilician Brotherhood visited the
construction site and the newly built apartments on June 3.

“We launched this project giving a tangible expression to our church’s
social service activities. These apartments will soon be completed; their
reasonable prices aim at encouraging our new generation. On this occasion,
we also encourage all our dioceses to included housing projects in their
social service activities. We are also happy to affirm that some dioceses
have already taken successful steps on this direction,” His Holiness said.

Leading architects Hratch Markarian and Haroutioun Nazaretian, as well as
the chancellor of the Catholicosate of Cilicia, Khatchig Dedeian, gave
detailed information about the construction to His Holiness.

The two three-storey buildings contain ground-floor apartments that open up
to small gardens, big and small apartments, as well as duplex apartments.

##

View picture here:

*****

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Photos/Pictures19.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

Government should be formed by NA

GOVERNMENT SHOULD BE FORMED BY NA

A1plus

| 13:14:56 | 04-06-2005 | Politics |

Just imagine a situation when we put the Constitution on vote and
it fails for the second time. It gives negative outlook”, RPA deputy
Samvel Nikoyan considers.

The coalition realizes that that one of the most important conditions
for the adoption of the Constitution in Armenia is the meeting the
requirements of all the political forces. If any political force calls
upon the nation to boycott or upset the referendum on constitutional
amendments the present amendments will have the same fate as the ones
in 2003.

“Let us leave Europe alone. There are problems from the point of view
of the development of the country and mutual control of the power
branches” Samvel Nikoyan says hinting that the criticism of the Venice
Commission was not a surprise for him. “Upon adopting the draft in
the first reading we all, including the chairman of the commission
on integration into European structures Tigram Torosyan realized that
these three important aspects still need elaboration. This work should
be done during the period between the first and second readings”,
he said.

“I am aware of Tigran Torosyan’s attitude and his readiness to work. He
realizes that the changes must be inserted otherwise we will have
problems both with Europe and our home policy”, Samvel Nikoyan noted.

Thus, the representative of the ruling coalition agrees that the draft
should be admissible for internal and external forces. S. Nikoyan
considers the clause according to which the NA should be dissolved by
the President in case of voting down the government composition twice
to be odd. “Suppose that fearing to be dissolved the NA approved the
government. Taking into consideration the dislike of the NA towards the
government the former can fail any government activity. It can also
initiate laws the government will be incapable to implement. Thus,
we are coming to the idea that the executive power should rely on the
majority of the NA. If does not happen the antagonism between these
two branches cannot be efficient. In my opinion the government should
be formed by the NA”, he resumed.

Lena Badeyan

Few places for many gifted

AZG Armenian Daily #102, 04/06/2005

Culture

FEW PLACES FOR MANY GIFTED

The Routine of Aram Khachatrian Competition

The second stage of violinists’ international competition after Aram
Khachatrian came to its end. 6 violinists, 3 of whom will share 1st,
2d and 3d place, were supposed to enter the 3d stage. But the jury set
apart 7 best musicians saying that during such contests some low-key
participants display great technique at the second stage and it
becomes difficult to choose only 6 best performers for the third stage.

Georgian conductor Vadim Shubladze, the honorable guest of the
competition, said, “Such competitions usually host technically strong
musicians who have already exhausted their potential for further
growth. There are also young musicians who do not perform brightly
but the jury catches the hidden talent which is still to ‘open'”.

The program of the second stage consisted of the works of composers
of the 20th century, including the “Solo-Sonata” of Levon Chaushian
who was among the spectators. The composer delightfully said, “Only
that musician who pants not for displaying his own technique but for
the work’s emotionality can reveal the composer’s idea”.

The violinists who entered the 3d stage will hold rehearsal today
with the Philharmonic Orchestra of Armenia to get ready for the final
stage on June 5.

By Tamar Minasian

Ad hoc commission requests extra time

AD HOC COMMISSION REQUESTS EXTRA TIME

Armenpress

YEREVAN, JUNE 3, ARMENPRESS: An ad hoc commission set up to look into
whether the government is able to pay back bank savings of thousands
of Armenians that depreciated rapidly immediately after the fall
of the former Soviet Union has asked the president to prolong their
authorities for another two months, saying they need extra time to
draw their final conclusion.

The head of the commission, Eduard Muradian, said they need extra
time as at a certain stage it appeared they need to examine also
international experience about how to tackle such problems. He said
the commission members are trying now to learn the experience of
some CIS member nations. He also said they need to specify the lists
of bank account holders, because they were made back in 1993. The
commission was established in 2005, February to examine some 3
million bank accounts of around 1.5 million clients of the former
Soviet Savings Bank

–Boundary_(ID_dFZEmyF6IFxpf+vNGRPUBw)
Content-type: message/rfc822; CHARSET=US-ASCII
Content-description:

From: Sebouh Z Tashjian <[email protected]>
Subject: Ad hoc commission requests extra time
MIME-version: 1.0
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Armenpress

AD HOC COMMISSION REQUESTS EXTRA TIME

YEREVAN, JUNE 3, ARMENPRESS: An ad hoc commission set up to look into
whether the government is able to pay back bank savings of thousands of
Armenians that depreciated rapidly immediately after the fall of the former
Soviet Union has asked the president to prolong their authorities for
another two months, saying they need extra time to draw their final
conclusion.
The head of the commission, Eduard Muradian, said they need extra time as
at a certain stage it appeared they need to examine also international
experience about how to tackle such problems. He said the commission members
are trying now to learn the experience of some CIS member nations. He also
said they need to specify the lists of bank account holders, because they
were made back in 1993. The commission was established in 2005, February to
examine some 3 million bank accounts of around 1.5 million clients of the
former Soviet Savings Bank

–Boundary_(ID_dFZEmyF6IFxpf+vNGRPUBw)–