Clues Sought in Cypriot Airliner Crash

Clues Sought in Cypriot Airliner Crash
ELENA BECATOROS

AP Online; Aug 15, 2005

Coroners testing the remains of passengers and crew of a Cypriot
airliner that slammed into a mountainside near Athens will try to
determine if the 121 people were already dead when they crashed,
while French experts will examine the plane’s black-box recorders,
officials said Monday.

The cause of Sunday’s crash, Greece’s deadliest airline disaster,
appeared to be technical failure resulting in high-altitude
decompression and loss of oxygen. There were no survivors, yet many
questions remained _ including why the co-pilot was unconscious in
the cockpit 40 minutes before the crash and why he was alone, with
the captain nowhere in sight.

The captain’s body has yet to be recovered, and Greek investigators _
joined by a U.S. team _ were trying to determine why he was not in
his seat while the Boeing 737 was in peril.

Coroners also will examine blood and tissue samples from victims’
lungs to determine whether anything they breathed in could have caused
their deaths.

“We will seek to determine when they died and how they died,” chief
Athens coroner Fillipos Koutsaftis said.

Victims’ relatives gathered at a central Athens morgue to identify
the remains.

There had been 21 children aboard Helios Airways flight ZU522 from
Larnaca, Cyprus, to Athens, “all aged 4 and above,” Greek deputy
Health Minister Giorgos Constantopoulos said Monday. Initially, Greek
and Cypriot officials had said there were 48 children on the plane.
No explanation was given for the discrepancy.

According the Cypriot government, at least 10 families with children
were among the dead. Passengers and crew included at least 12 Greeks,
one German _ the pilot _ and a four-member family of Armenian origin.
The rest were Cypriot.

The Boeing 737 had been scheduled to continue to Prague, Czech
Republic, after Athens. It crashed while on autopilot at 12:05 p.m.
Sunday near Grammatiko, a scenic village 25 miles north of the Greek
capital, apparently after running out of fuel.

Greek state television had quoted the Cyprus transport minister as
saying the plane had decompression problems in the past. But a Helios
representative said the plane had “no problems and was serviced just
last week.”

Searchers at the crash site were still looking for three bodies,
firefighting officials said Monday _ including the pilot. His name was
Hans-Juergen Merten, 58, of Berlin, according to German authorities
and his neighbors near the German capital’s Schoenefeld airport.

The body of the Cypriot co-pilot, Pambos Haralambous, was reportedly
found in the cockpit.

In Cyprus, Helios Airways Chairman Andreas Drakos said the airline’s
crews were operating normally on Sunday, rejecting earlier reports
that its pilots and crew were refusing to fly.

The head of the Greek airline safety committee, Akrivos Tsolakis, said
that the two recovered black boxes _ a data and cockpit voice recorder
_ would be sent to French air safety investigators for examination. The
voice recorder was badly damaged by the crash and ensuing fire.

“It’s in a bad state and, possibly, it won’t give us the information
we need,” Tsolakis said. “Both boxes will be sent to Paris where a
French committee will help us and the foreign experts that are here
to decode.”

He said he believed his committee would be able to reach a conclusion
“in a few days, a very few days.”

U.S. experts will join Greek investigators on request by the American
government, because the aircraft was manufactured in the United States,
Tsolakis said.

The plane took off from Cyprus at 9 a.m. Sunday. About a half-hour
later, the pilots reported air-conditioning system problems to Cyprus
air-traffic control. Within minutes, the plane entered Greek air
space over the Aegean Sea and shortly afterward lost all radio contact.

The Greek air force sent two F-16s fighter jets to intercept the
plane. They caught up with the airliner at 34,000 feet and peered
inside the cockpit. The jet pilots saw the co-pilot slumped over the
controls but could not see the captain, and oxygen masks were dangling
inside, government spokesman Theodoros Roussopoulos said.

When the jets flew by a second time they saw two people possibly
trying to take control of the plane; it was unclear if they were crew
members or passengers. The plane crashed 40 minutes later.

“When a pilot has no communication with the control tower, the
procedure dictates that other planes must accompany and help the
plane land. Unfortunately, it appeared that the pilot was already
dead as was, possibly, everyone else on the plane,” Cyprus Transport
Minister Haris Thrasou said.

At 34,000 feet, the effects of depressurization are swift, said David
Kaminski Morrow, of the British-based Air Transport Intelligence
magazine.

“If the aircraft is at 30,000 feet, you don’t stay conscious for long,
maybe 15 to 30 seconds,” he said.

Cyprus declared three days of national mourning, and in Athens flags
were ordered to fly at half staff on Tuesday. A 40-day mourning period
was declared in Paralymni, a Cypriot town of 10,000 that lost 16 of
its residents on the plane.

Istanbul: Surp Prgic Armenian Hospital Press Release

Lraper Church Bulletin 05/08/2005
Contact: Deacon Vagharshag Seropyan
Armenian Patriarchate
TR-34130 Kumkapi, Istanbul
T: +90 (212) 517-0970, 517-0971
F: +90 (212) 516-4833, 458-1365
[email protected]
<;

SURP PIRGIC ARMENIAN HOSPITAL PRESS RELEASE

<;NewsCode=N000000825&
Lang=ENG> &NewsCode=N000000825&Lang=ENG

Since there are errors in the reports of some visual and print
media concerning the individual application made by the Council of
the Yedikule Surp Pirgic Armenian Hospital to the European Court of
Human Rights (ECHR), it has become necessary to make the following
explanation to prevent the public from being misled.

In the news reports it has been claimed that our foundation “applied to
the ECHR, saying that the existing legal arrangements for non-Muslim
religious minority foundations in Turkey to obtain property are
restricted by the Lausanne Treaty and that this situation is in
contradiction to the Court’s decisions.”

In the Lausanne Treaty there is no agreement whatsoever that restricts
or prevents minority foundations from obtaining properties, and in
the application there is nothing mentioned concerning the infringement
of the rights of minorities in this treaty.

In 1974 the Supreme Court gave an interpretation without legal
basis that blocked minority foundations from obtaining properties,
and therefore our foundation’s internal legal avenues were exhausted
and we lost two renowned properties. For this reason-because of the
judge’s decision which contravenes both the Lausanne Treaty and the
EHCR and because of the loss of our two properties-our foundation
used its right in 1998 to apply individually to the EHCR.

–The Board of Directors of the Yedikule Surp Pirgic Armenian Hospital
Foundation

http://www.lraper.org/&gt
http://www.lraper.org/main.aspx?Action=DisplayNews
http://www.lraper.org/main.aspx?Action=DisplayNews&amp
www.lraper.org

Vigil for Darfur Draws 500-Plus

Vigil for Darfur Draws 500-Plus

The Jewish Journal of greater L.A, CA
Aug 4 2005

More than 500 people attended a late July vigil at the Federal
Building in Westwood, where Jews and non-Jews held a candlelight
protest against the ongoing genocide in Sudan’s Darfur region.

“Folks, time is running out,” said Armenian American activist Armen
Carapetian, who likened the situation in Darfur to the past century’s
Armenian genocide.

The early evening rally signified an expansion of Darfur activism
in the Jewish community, spurred on by Jewish World Watch, based at
Valley Beth Shalom temple. The Conservative Encino shul’s leader,
Rabbi Harold Shulweis, was among the speakers, who also included
Rabbi Sharon Brous of the Westside IKAR congregation.

“I don’t want to stand here next summer,” Brous said, “and say,
‘Another year has gone. What have we done?'”

Human-rights experts estimate that 300,000 villagers have been
killed since 2003 by Arab janjaweed horsemen tacitly supported by
the Sudanese government.

The drive-time rally was a little smaller and more secular than a
day of fasting held on May 26, when about 600 Southern California
Jews attended Darfur events at synagogues in Pico-Robertson, Bel Air
and Pasadena. Sponsors of the event at the Federal Building included
Protestant, African immigrant, Catholic and Armenian groups.

Participants took part in making murals, singing and playing
instruments and signing White House-bound petitions.

“It’s my sister’s birthday, and she asked that we all come here for
this,” said Sarah Ham-Rosbrock, whose family, including her 28-year-old
sister Lena, attends Temple Israel of Long Beach.

“I’m involved because I am black,” said homeless activist Ted Hayes,
a speaker.

Progressive Jewish Alliance board member Eric Greene said Jews must
be more involved in non-Jewish issues such as Darfur, even when the
effort seems futile.

“It’s so daunting because it feels so big that it’s hard to know what
you can do,” he said. – DF

Review: Prom 19: Gurning at the Albert Hall

Review: Prom 19: Gurning at the Albert Hall

The Guardian – United Kingdom; Aug 01, 2005

TOM SERVICE

BBCPO/ Sinaisky: Royal Albert Hall, London 4/5

Armenian violinist Sergey Khachatryan is only 20, but his performance
of Shostakovich’s First Violin Concerto with the BBC Philharmonic
Orchestra, conducted by Vassily Sinaisky, was one of the most mature
and complete interpretations of this piece it is possible to imagine.
Not only did he master the fantastic technical challenges of this huge,
daunting work, but he turned the music’s four movements into a vivid,
psychological drama.

Composed in 1948, Shostakovich’s concerto had to wait until 1955 for
its first performance, a victim of the Soviets’ infamous decree banning
formalism in music. It is a piece that eschews the flamboyance of
the concerto form to create an introverted musical world. Khachatryan
played the opening slow movement with a searing intensity; a single
arc of melancholic melody. The scherzo was an explosion of biting,
obsessive energy, and the burlesque finale hurtled to the finishing
line. But it was the third movement, a rigorous passacaglia, that was
the heart of Khachatryan’s performance. Over a haunting, gloomy bass
line, he wove an arc of melody that grew to an overwhelming climax and
subsided in a long, solo cadenza. Without ever resorting to hollow
sentimentality, Khachatryan made this movement a draining emotional
experience, and revealed the piece as one of the 20th century’s most
important concertos.

The other side of Soviet music was represented in Sinaisky’s
performance of Prokofiev’s Fifth Symphony, written in 1944. Where
Shostakovich creates a subtle interior world, the energy of
Prokofiev’s music is directed outwards. This is music on a grand,
public scale. The conviction of the BBC Philharmonic’s playing gave
the piece a bold simplicity, but in comparison with the Shostakovich,
the symphony seemed one-dimensional. Where Shostakovich’s scherzo
was witty and sardonic, Prokofiev’s was merely energetic; where the
finale of the concerto grimaced and gurned, the last movement of the
symphony celebrated its own grandiosity. Only in the final bars, and a
manic passage for solo string quartet in the midst of the surrounding
orchestral tumult, did Prokofiev create a sense of musical ambiguity.

Chemonics International Wins $12.99 Million Contract

US Fed News
July 30, 2005 Saturday 12:38 AM EST

Chemonics International Wins $12.99 Million Contract

WASHINGTON

WASHINGTON, July 30 — The U.S. Agency for International Development
has awarded a $12.99 million contract to Chemonics International
Inc., Washington, for improved heat sector management and delivery of
heat supply program in Armenia.

The contract was awarded by the agency’s Overseas Missions, Armenia
USAID-Yerevan.

Earthquake recorded in Armenia, no victims

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
July 30, 2005 Saturday 1:27 AM Eastern Time

Earthquake recorded in Armenia, no victims (adds)

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

An earthquake measuring 4.0-5.0 on the 12-point scale struck Armenia
overnight. There were no victims or destruction, the national
seismologic service told Itar-Tass.

The tremours were recorded at 01:10 Moscow time.

The epicenter was only seven kilometres west of the capital Yerevan
of more than a million people.

Seismologists usually use two systems – the Richter scale and the
12-point Medvedev-Sponheuer-Karnik MSK-64 scale of assessment of
quake consequences on the surface.

A one-point tremour is not felt by people and only recorded by
special devices. The nine-point quake destroys walls and roofs and
makes cracks on the earth surface. A twelve-point quake completely
destroys buildings and can even divert rivers.

Seven-point tremours destroyed almost all the northern part of
Armenia on December 7, 1988. The disaster killed 25,000 people,
injured the same number and left more than half a million without
homes. The quake destroyed the city of Spitak, 58 villages and
settlements and seriously damaged Leninakan, Stepanavan, Kirovakan
and many other residential areas. The disaster hit a total of 21
cities and towns and 350 villages.

Aram I, Patriarch Paoulos hold joint service

Aram I, Patriarch Paoulos hold joint service

28.07.2005 16:17

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – Cilicia Catholicos Aram I and Ethiopian Orthodox
Church Patriarch Paoulos, visiting Catholicosate of Cilicia in
Lebanon, presided over a special liturgy served on July 28 at the
Antelias Cathedral.

The services were conducted in Armenian and Ethiopian and dedicated to
the innocent victims of the Armenian Genocide. The Ethiopian patriarch
prayed for the restoration of the rights of the Armenian people and
promised to push for the recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the
Ethiopian government.

Russia begins withdrawal of military equipment from Batumi base

RIA Novosti, Russia
July 28 2005

Russia begins withdrawal of military equipment from Batumi base

TBILISI, July 28 (RIA Novosti, Marina Kvaratskhelia) – A railroad
echelon of Russian military hardware left Georgia’s Batumi military
base (Adjaria) Thursday, the Georgian defense ministry said.

The railroad echelon will be relocated to the Russian side of the
Great Caucasian Ridge. A representative of the Georgian defense
ministry will accompany the Russian military equipment to the
Georgian-Russian border.

Under the agreement signed by Moscow and Tbilisi on May 31, 2005,
Russia will begin to pull out its armor from the Batumi military base
in August 2005. A Russian naval ship will arrive in the port of
Batumi for this purpose.

The Russian military requested that Georgia repair bridges in the
region of Samtskhe-Dzhavakhetia (on the border with Armenia) to
provide a safe withdrawal of armor from the Akhalkalaki military base
as scheduled.

Earlier Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov said only a part of
armaments and equipment would be brought from Georgia into Russia’s
military base in Armenia to comply with the treaty on armed forces in
Europe. He also said Russia would not hand over armaments to Armenia.

Under the May agreements signed between Moscow and Tbilisi, Russia
will complete the closure of its two military bases in Georgia by
2008.

In 2006, Russia will withdraw its armor from Akhalkalaki (near the
border with Armenia). Next year, the Akhalkalaki base will be closed.
In 2008, Russia will pull out its armor from the Batumi base, after
which the base will be closed.

Alain Manoukian Posts H1 Sales Fall

Alain Manoukian Posts H1 Sales Fall

just-style.com
22 Jul 2005

PARIS, FRANCE — Clothing group Alain Manoukian has reported turnover of
60.51 million for the first half of 2005, compared to the 66.04m
registered the same time last year.

The company – 62 per cent of which was recently bought by French-US
consortium BCBG-Max Azria – saw turnover rise to 27.28m for the second
quarter of 2005, compared to 26.93m in 2004.

Alain Manoukian makes and sells fashion clothing and sportswear in
France and overseas.

http://www.just-style.com/news_detail.asp?art=38187

Golden Apricot international film festival

Golden Apricot international film festival

Yerkir
July 15, 2005

One of the most significant cultural events of the year, the second
international film festival Golden Apricot, is currently underway
in Yerevan. It is impossible to watch all the films presented at the
festival, to attend all festival events and press conferences. However,
we will try to present the most important and interesting events of
the festival to our readers.

Today our guest is Susan Khardalian, a film director from Sweden. She
is presenting a film on the Armenian Genocide titled “I Hate
Dogs”. Khardalian was born in Beirut. She studied at the local school
there and later graduated from an American university. She has worked
as a film director since 1988 and has directed 30 films.

S.K.: My background is in journalism. I have worked for some newspapers
in Lebanon, I have worked for a radio station. And journalism
brought me to the world of cinema and documentary films. Why? Because
journalism was very important for me in getting to know the world. But
the organizations where I worked limited me. And in this way I entered
cinematography. I have directed 30 films and all of them have social
implications, political aspects and social concerns connected with
conflicts.

Q: Do you mean ethnic conflicts and wars?
A: Different aspects of wars, the social problems connected with wars,
post-war problems, the situation and suffering of women in wars. And
especially, the problems of small nations. We have made several films
about the Palestinians, the Kurds, of course about the Armenians, about
issues of racism in Europe. These films all go beyond journalism; they
not only present information but contain subjective interpretations
of the author. What is important for us is not the details of a
phenomenon or an event. What we are interested in is the roots, the
social causes and if possible alternative solutions for such phenomena.

Q: You came to Yerevan to present your film titled “I Hate Dogs” at the
Golden Apricot Festival. Tell us about this film.
A: This is a short film. We came up with the idea of the film and made
it in the last six months. It is about an Armenian man who survived the
Genocide. Even though the Genocide is the man topic of the film, the
most important thing in it is the ability of Armenians to survive. And
it is also a love story. The man is 99 years old but he got married
at the age of 95. This enthusiasm for life is both very natural and
extraordinary for a person who has survived the Genocide. The film
lasts 28 minutes.

Q: So your hero is a real person? Are your films documentary?
A: This person has been in charge of the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation Party in France. He is a real person with a vivid mind and
great interest towards life and the world, Armenia and the Armenian
nation. He is well aware of the developments in Karabagh, the relations
between Armenia and Turkey, the process of Genocide recognition. He
reads newspapers and watches TV. He has already made up a list of
people whom he wants to invite to his 100th birthday anniversary.

Q: Please tell us about you team with whom you make your films. You
live in Sweden, does this mean that the films you make are presented
at various festivals by this country?
A: Our team is a small and independent one. 5 people work on each of
our projects. There are two directors, me and Pio Holmkwist, we are
co-authors. We have our team and our editor. It is an international
team that includes people from different countries and of different
nationalities. Our center is in Stockholm. We get our financing from
Swedish organizations.

Q: Do they order films from you?
A: No, we sell our projects.

Q: Does this mean that you get the funding before you make the film?
A: Yes, and this is what gives us independence. We sell our ideas and
our projects. People often ask me whether it was the Swedish government
that ordered the film “Return to Ararat”. I answer that it was not. The
Swedish government does not have a right to express their position on
the Genocide. After the film was launched the Turkish diplomats tried
to exert pressure on the Swedish authorities but the latter answered
that just as they do not have a right to order a film, they do not
have the right to ban it or to intervene in any other ways because we
are an independent organization. It’s interesting that the last film,
“I hate the dogs”, raised more resistance in Azerbaijan than in Turkey.

Q: What will be the topic of your next film?
A: It will be on the problems of globalization. The film will be titled
“Bullshit” and the title expresses our attitude towards the cataclysms
accompanying globalization.

Q: Let’s get back to the Golden Apricot. You did not participate in
the first festival, did you?
A: No, I didn’t participate in it.

Q: What is your impression of the festival?
A: Of course, it is a very important event first of all because it
opens up the Armenian issues and the Armenian reality for the world
and secondly, because it opens Armenia in the face of the developments
of the world cinema. The festival will no doubt have its influence
on the development of the Armenian cinema, and not only cinema.