Armenian army officers have IHL instructors’ course

ARMENIAN ARMY OFFICERS HAVE IHL INSTRUCTORS’ COURSE

ArmenPress
Dec 6 2004

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 6, ARMENPRESS: A five-day training course on
International Humanitarian Law (IHL) has started today in the resort
town of Tsakhkadzor (some 40 km north of Yerevan) for 12 officers
from the Ministry of Defense’s Combat Training, Missile Troops and
Artillery Departments, Military Institute and Institute of Military
Aviation, as well as Army corps and units. The course, designed for
future IHL instructors is organized by the International Committee of
the Red Cross (ICRC) jointly with the Ministry of Defense of Armenia.

Conducted by the ICRC’s Armed and Security Forces Expert in South
Caucasus, this course focuses on the effective use of the “IHL for
Commanders” and “IHL for Instructors” manuals, used as didactic tools
for IHL training in the Armenian Army. During the course, topics
such as conduct of operations, command responsibilities and behavior
in combat will be covered with particular emphasis on requirements
stipulated by IHL. The ICRC and its activities will also be presented.

A similar training course was organized recently, in October 2004.
Through such courses, the ICRC seeks to ensure that officers from
Armenian Armed Forces know and respect the rules and principles of IHL.

The ICRC stands ready to support the Armenian military authorities
in integrating IHL into the teaching and combat training programs of
the Armenian Armed Forces.

Georgia’s First Lady Meets With Students of Yerevan State University

GEORGIA’S FIRST LADY MEETS WITH STUDENTS OF YEREVAN STATE UNIVERSITY

YEREVAN, December 3 (Noyan Tapan). On December 3, Georgia’s first lady
Sandra Elizabeth Rulovs who is in Armenia on a 4-day visit had a
meeting with the students of Yerevan State University. Answering the
students’ questions, the first lady and officials accompanying her
noted that a 270-km road will be built and economic programs
imlemented in Javakhk. As regards her husband, Georgia’s President
Mikhail Sahakashvili’s promises to fight corruption and implement
refoms in the political sphere, Mrs. Rulovs stated this will be done
gradually, in particular programs are already being implemented in the
spheres of health care and education. During the meeting it was also
mentioned that this year a centralized system of entrance examinations
was introduced at Tbilisi State University, whereas this system has
been used at Yerevan State University for 13 years. NT corresdpondent
was told all these details by a student present at the meeting since
the journalists accredited to cover the meeting were deprived of an
opportunity to attend it because of the university vice rector
Shahazizian’s inhospitality. He complained the place was “too
crowded”, as a result of which the reporters were asked out and had no
chance to do their job.

Baroness Cox for battle

World Magazine
Dec 3 2004

Baroness for battle

COVER STORY: Whether speaking before Parliament or sneaking supplies
across militarized borders, Baroness Caroline Cox, WORLD’s Daniel of
the Year, has defended the persecuted poor. “When God gives you a
vacuum, you fill it” | by Mindy Belz

Most English grandmothers wouldn’t know an MRE if they met one.
Caroline Cox has military rations down to a science. The
vacuum-packed portions from the United States are cheaper than ration
packs supplied by the British Army, she admits, and preferable,
anyway, because each one contains a miniature bottle of Tabasco
sauce.

Spice is not what you first expect from a demure 67-year-old
parliamentarian with 10 grandchildren. Mrs. Cox is a titled woman,
after all: deputy speaker of the British House of Lords and a
baroness. She has a flat in northwest London and a getaway in a
14th-century manor home in Dorset. She serves on boards of this and
that, including vice president of the Royal College of Nursing, and
has honorary academic degrees from universities on three continents.
But neither resumé nor pedigree nor the wine-colored pantsuit and the
black velvet headband tell the full story: Caroline Cox is more
Amelia Earhart than Miss Marple and arguably has guts enough to
supply a platoon of Marines.

Her first helicopter flight into the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh
territory was shot down over Azerbaijan. It was “a sacramental
moment,” she recalls, as crew, passenger, and supplies made a soft
landing in snow – but that did not stop her from making 58 more trips
to the war zone, most recently six weeks ago.

Danger is a steady diet for the president of Christian Solidarity
Worldwide, who regularly forsakes the gilt halls of Westminster Abbey
in pursuit of persecuted Christians and other wretches. Reaching them
requires – literally – crossing militarized borders, hiking forbidden
mountains, and fording bridgeless rivers.

In 2004 Mrs. Cox traveled also to war-torn Nigeria three times, to
Indonesia, Burma, and North Korea. Between those journeys, she spoke
at churches, missions conferences, human-rights forums, and other
events in the United States, Canada, and Australia. Between speaking
tours she promoted a new book about Islam and the West (slated for
U.S. publication next month), joined a new British panel monitoring
religious freedom, advised on Muslim-Christian reconciliation in
Indonesia, and founded a new humanitarian aid organization.

The list of accomplishments, the feats of daring – and the endless
reservoir of energy they imply – are not the only reasons WORLD selects
Mrs. Cox as its seventh Daniel of the Year. Others in this season of
war have risked (and lost) their lives on battlefields. Others in
this election year have staked their careers and their fortunes on
bold rhetoric. Mrs. Cox, in five decades of public service from the
tenement wards of central London to the peerage seats of Parliament,
has with courage and boldness confronted fiery furnaces stoked for
Western civilization, chiefly Marxism and now militant Islam. She has
risked her reputation in their defeat, not only with rhetoric in
royal courts but with literal bandages on the battlefield.

Caroline Cox likes to tell audiences that she is “a nurse by
intention but a baroness by astonishment.” She was born in 1937 to a
prominent surgeon and a schoolteacher in London and studied to be a
nurse. Working the night shift in a London hospital, she met
internist Murray Cox. They courted in a nearby rhubarb patch, read
poetry to one another, married, and had three children.

A stint with tuberculosis forced her into six months’ convalescence;
she spent the time studying for advanced degrees in economics and
sociology and moved into teaching, eventually heading London
University’s nursing program. The academic world provided her first
up-close encounter with Marxism as it flourished among the
intelligentsia. In one department where she taught, 16 of 20 faculty
members were communists.

For nine years, she says, she challenged the Marxist education
philosophy – “hardline indoctrination with academic intimidation.” The
scholastic warfare led to co-authoring a book, The Rape of Reason.
Published in 1975, it helped to inspire a Tory resurgence, catching
the attention of Fleet Street columnists and Whitehall mavericks,
including Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, who in 1982 recommended
Mrs. Cox to Queen Elizabeth for a lifetime seat with title in the
House of Lords.

Parliamentary status, Mrs. Cox says, is evidence of God’s sense of
humor. “I don’t really like politics,” she confesses, “and I am
pathologically shy.” In college she was president of the debating
society but claims she never said a word.

In government she found her voice by speaking for the voiceless.
Having accurately characterized the problems with Marxism, she set
about to help its victims behind the Iron Curtain. She signed on as a
patron for the Medical Aid for Poland Fund. The work took her across
Europe for weeks at a time, eating and sleeping out of delivery
trucks as the relief group brought medicine and other supplies to the
dispossessed in Poland, Romania, and Russia.

“I’m a great believer in the authenticity of firsthand experience,”
she told an audience in Australia recently. “It’s important to be
able to say, ‘I’ve been, I’ve seen, I know how it is.'”

What she saw under Soviet domination offended both her medical
sensibilities and Christian sense of justice. She returned from
visiting state-run orphanages in Leningrad to write a report,
“Trajectories of Despair,” about bright and able orphans shunned and
misdiagnosed as mentally handicapped. She lobbied openly for Soviet
regime change from the upper house of Parliament at the height of the
arms race, when fashionable Europeans were agitating not for an end
to Soviet hegemony but for dismantling U.S. missiles based on the
continent. As the Soviet Union crumbled over the next decade, Russian
medical and social service officials, once bound to silence, welcomed
her report. She joined with a panel of experts to reform foster-care
and adoption procedures.

Such experiences prepared Mrs. Cox for the next global war – against
militant Islam – long before al-Qaeda struck directly at the United
States. As Soviet-led oppression gave way to ethnic cleansing, Mrs.
Cox was ready with relief aid and public advocacy. When
Muslim-Christian tensions flared into war between the former Soviet
republics of Armenia and Azerbaijan over a disputed region known as
Nagorno-Karabakh, Mrs. Cox went to see for herself.

Muslim Azerbaijan annexed the region, historically home to 150,000
Armenians. A systematic campaign, backed by Soviet-made missiles and
air defenses, sought to rid the region of the Christian Armenians, a
tiny minority long persecuted by Turks in the east and now at the
mercy of 7 million Azerbaijanis to the west.

Moscow implicitly sided with Azerbaijanis and used its veto power on
the UN Security Council to keep international intervention at bay. It
was the start of an ongoing battle for Mrs. Cox and her allies
against rogue states using international legitimacy not only to
oppress stateless minorities (in many cases Christians) but also to
starve them of outside aid.

The UN declared Nagorno-Karabakh a “no-go” area for aid. Turkey and
Azerbaijan closed borders. Hearing of besieged Armenians hiding in
root cellars, Mrs. Cox made the first of dozens of sorties to the
remote enclave, setting out from England in cargo planes, then
switching to smaller craft in Armenia to skirt radar across
Azerbaijani airspace and the Caucasus. Throughout a conflict much of
the world ignored, she smuggled cigarettes for the pilots, food for
Armenians, and needed drugs for doctors performing surgery by
candlelight and without anesthetics. She counted 17 pilots among her
friends killed during that period. Still, she kept up steady jaunts
to the region, often hunkering with families in bomb shelters. Today
the medical-supply runs have turned into a full-service healthcare
center in Stepanakert, the capital, with a training center that in
the last year graduated its first healthcare workers.

Nagorno-Karabakh taught the baroness to beware of other “no-go”
areas: southern Sudan, northern Nigeria, East Timor, and refugee
camps along the Burma-Thai border. Other parliamentarians, she could
see, were content to read reports about faraway conflicts and give
speeches about them. Some aid workers, on the other hand, were
content to transport a plane or two of emergency supplies into a
conflict zone, easing temporary needs and pricks of conscience but
accomplishing little toward lasting transformation. The baroness
recognized her unique position: She could do both.

In Nigeria this year she put the combo to work, successfully
embarrassing local authorities into reinstating jobs for 11 nurses
fired by Muslim hospital administrators in Bauchi state. The nurses
would not renounce Christianity and wear Islamic dress. When Mrs. Cox
learned of their cases, she dragged other parliamentarians to Nigeria
and lobbied endlessly on their behalf.

Mrs. Cox has made at least 28 trips to southern Sudan to regions
where the Islamic government forbids UN aid to predominantly
Christian tribes. She learned from villagers and saw firsthand slave
raids, villages burned, crops destroyed, and forced Islamicization.
She met Christians whose first aid request was for Bibles, and rebel
commanders who walked all night, fording swollen rivers on foot
during the rainy season, just to meet her.

On one trip to Eastern Upper Nile she and a relief team discovered
newly displaced Sudanese. “Mothers had babies dying on their
breasts,” she recalls. “Even an immediate supply of food would be too
late for them. They were just sitting and dying in huge numbers.” The
nurse quickly recognized that thousands of the children had whooping
cough, but “we had nothing but erythromycin.” She watched many of
them die.

Such incidents have convinced Mrs. Cox that she never wants to show
up in a war zone empty-handed. Documenting atrocities and speaking
out against them for her go hand-in-glove with tangible aid. That
burden led her this year to help launch the new U.K.-based
Humanitarian Aid Relief Trust, or HART.

Success is sweet but no mission is without controversy. During her
most recent trip to Nagorno-Karabakh, Azeri state television fumed
about “the separatist baroness,” and the foreign ministry sent a note
of protest via its embassy in London.

And her own government is not necessarily pleased with her causes.
“None of the British governments – Conservative or Labor – have supported
our work in Nagorno-Karabakh,” she says, due to British Petroleum
(BP) oil interests in Azerbaijan. One cabinet minister once told her,
“No country has an ‘interest’ in other countries; only ‘interests.'”
Her response: “I am not naive and can understand commercial
interests; I can understand strategic interests; however, I do not
think it is in the interest of any nation to let these ‘interests’
override concern for human rights.”

“Plenty of groups go to record the event of persecution, then they
leave when the persecution ends,” said Dennis Bennett, president of
U.S. relief group Servant’s Heart. “But persecution is not an event.
It takes decades to recover from the physical loss and economic
devastation. That is why Caroline Cox goes back over and over. She’s
building relationships and trust. She’s not interested in Band-Aids,
not interested in creating a Christian welfare state out of
persecuted people.” Besides drawing attention to the fact of
persecution, Mrs. Cox has changed the way the church in the West
thinks about it, Mr. Bennett said. “The Christian church has to
recognize you don’t repair overnight and the problems are not
answered only by prayer. You have to be interested in long-term
infrastructure, in making friendships that will be there for
eternity.”

With upcoming U.S. publication of the book, The ‘West’, Islam and
Islamism (published in London by Civitas, due out from The American
Foreign Policy Council, January 2005), Mrs. Cox (with colleague and
co-author John Marks) turns to what she now hopes can be a
“redemptive aspect” to the war on terror and her own experiences.
With the 9/11 attacks, “suddenly the tragedy of the suffering that we
see in Islamic countries is not on another planet,” she says. “This
is a wakeup call to stop neglecting the suffering at the hands of
militant Islam.” She believes Christians and other non-Muslims are
not the only victims of jihadist regimes; so are most Muslims. The
Islamic regime in Khartoum, for instance, represents less than 5
percent of Sudan’s population.

“Islam is not inherently a religion of peace,” she said. Nonetheless,
“we have to give the hand of friendship to moderate Muslims.” Putting
that into practice for the baroness meant joining a commission on
reconciliation in Indonesia headed by former president Abdurrahman
Wahid. The group is bringing once coexisting Muslims and Christians
together from embattled parts of Indonesia.

Like much of Mrs. Cox’s work, that mission is charged with tension
and risk. Mrs. Cox is cautious about family and other personal
details for fear of exposing her family to threats. A prison sentence
in Khartoum and death threats in several parts of the world hang over
her. Asked if her own family worries about her, she says, “Sometimes
I call them when I am back.”

Returning to England does include time for children and
grandchildren, and for worship. An Anglo-Catholic and Third Order
Franciscan, she attends services once a week no matter where she is
“if at all possible.” At home that means the Anglican St. John’s
church in Middlesex. She also finds time for “recuperative exercise”
like tennis and long walks, even though, as Mrs. Cox describes it,
she receives much more than she gives on any harrowing journey.

Each step in her career, she says, has been less about premeditated
ambition and more about walking through the next door that opens.
That helps to explain why she not only endures but enjoys long days
on the field or floor of Parliament where little sleep and inferior
tea out of Styrofoam cups are the norm. And why, when her husband
died in 1997, she found even more time for missions and speaking
abroad. “When God gives you a vacuum, you fill it.”

For her the overall pursuit has changed little since age 11, when she
chose Joshua 1:9 as her confirmation verse: “Be strong and
courageous. Do not be frightened, and do not be dismayed, for the
Lord your God is with you wherever you go.” – –

Armenie; Les patrons de la diaspora financent le reveil armenien

L’Expansion
1 décembre 2004

Arménie; Les patrons de la diaspora financent le réveil arménien

par Jean-Luc Barberi, à Erevan

Place de la République, à Erevan, une statue de Kirk Kerkorian,
enfant du pays et milliardaire américain, remplacera-t-elle un jour
celle de Lénine, abattue en 1991 lorsque l’Arménie est devenue
indépendante? Ce ne serait que justice. Car ce self-made-man
californien de 87 ans, capitaliste intraitable, roi de Las Vegas et
ancien gros actionnaire de DaimlerChrysler, dépense sans compter pour
embellir la capitale arménienne.

Par le biais de sa fondation Lincy, cet ancien laveur de carreaux
devenu la trente-troisième fortune des Etats-Unis a offert 170
millions de dollars en dix ans pour rénover les infrastructures du
pays. Il est loin d’être le seul. Si Erevan (1,2 million d’habitants)
va mieux, c’est notamment grce à la mobilisation de l’importante
diaspora arménienne – 3,5 millions de personnes dans le monde. Au
total, plusieurs dizaines de millions de dollars ont été récoltés
depuis une dizaine d’années. Et ça se voit. La plupart des centres
culturels, des thétres et des écoles de la capitale ont été rénovés
grce aux dons des patrons expatriés. Leurs fonds servent aussi à
financer de gros travaux d’infrastructures, comme l’actuelle
réfection des canalisations. Quant à Kerkorian, c’est lui qui a payé
la remise en état de la voirie et de l’éclairage du centre-ville. Un
changement majeur, rappelle un habitant, car, «voilà seulement quatre
ans, il n’y avait pas de lumière dans les rues.»

Aznavour et Alain Manoukian

Tout comme Kirk Kerkorian, Louise Manoogian Simone, présidente de
l’Union générale arménienne de bienfaisance (Ugab), basée à New York,
pilote la collecte de fonds aux Etats-Unis. Albert Boyadjian, roi du
pain industriel, et Hrayr Hovnanian, une pointure de l’informatique,
sont des contributeurs réguliers, comme l’Anglais Vatche Manoukian,
qui a facilité l’installation d’une filiale de la Banque HSBC. Tous
s’activent pour donner du tonus aux affaires de ce petit pays
caucasien de 3,6 millions d’habitants. Les Français ne sont pas en
reste. Parmi eux, le chanteur Charles Aznavour, bien sûr. «Beaucoup
de bienfaiteurs donnent par l’intermédiaire de notre association»,
rappelle Pierre Terzian, patron de la revue Pétrostratégies et
président du Fonds arménien de France. Le couturier Alain Manoukian
et le fabricant de lunettes Alain Mikli ont rejoint en 2003 les 13
000 familles françaises qui ont versé 1,5 million d’euros pour que
renaisse la «mère patrie».

“Arion” Theater Participates in Festival of Damascus Dramatic Arts

ARMENIAN “ARION” THEATER PARTICIPATES IN FESTIVAL OF DAMASCUS DRAMATIC ART

DAMASCUS, November 30 (Noyan Tapan). The 12th festival of Damascus
dramatic art was held in Syria on November 21-30. The Armenian “Arion”
theater after Edgar Elbakian participated in the festival with the
“Final Waltz” play of Fridrich Dyurenmat. RA People’s Artist Vladimir
Msrian, RA prominent artists Anna and Armen Elbakians were involved
into the theatrical troupe.

According to the press service of the RA Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
simultaneously with the performances given within tbe framework of the
festival the theatrical troupe also gave performances for the Armenian
Communities of Damascus and Aleppo upon the initiative of the RA
Embassy in Syria.

A press conference of actors was held on November 26 with
participation of representatives of mass media, as well as theatrical
theorists, who highly estimated the performance of the Armenian
theatrical troup.

Telethon results

-PRESS RELEASE
-“Hayastan” All-Armenian Fund
-Governmental Building 3, Yerevan, RA
-Contact: Artak Harutyunyan
-Tel: 3741 52 09 40
-Fax: 3741 52 37 95
-E-mail: [email protected]
-Web:

29.11.2004

Telethon results-more than $11 million

On November 25, the “Hayastan” Fund’s annual Telethon was launched in
Los-Angeles. The funds raised during this event will be directed to
the construction of the North-South highway started four years
ago. This year’s Telethon was of great success: promises of more than
$11 million were received. Due to this amount the construction of
the160 km long highway will be continued. Armenians worldwide took
part in this event: our compatriots from Armenia, NKR and Diaspora
lent a hand to this project. It should be mentioned that donations of
1 million and 100 thousand dollars were received from Armenia and
NKR. 800.000 Euros were raised during the Phonethon in France
conducted earlier, and about 15 million drams were received from the
Armenian Phonethon.

Among the big donors were Louise Simone Manoogian, Hrair Hovnanian,
Kevork Hovnanian, Sarkis Hakopian, Eduardo Ernekian, Caroline Mugar,
Gerard Cafesjian, Ara Abrahamyan and others.

http://www.himnadram.org/

On this day – 11/30/2004

Sunday Times, Australia
Advertiser, Australia
Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia
Nov 30 2004

On this day

30nov04

1988 – Ethnic clashes between Armenians and Azerbaijanis kill 11
people in five Armenian cities.

1652 – Dutch defeat English fleet off Dungeness, England.
1710 – Turkey declares war on Russia.
1718 – Sweden’s “warrior king” Charles XII dies at Fredrikshald in
Norway after being hit by a bullet in the head. The day was later
declared a holiday for Swedish nationalists.
1782 – Americans and British sign preliminary peace articles in
Paris, ending American Revolutionary War.
1804 – US Supreme Court Justice Samuel Chase goes on trial, accused
of political bias. He is acquitted by the Senate.
1833 – Eight people die when brig Ann Jamieson explodes while moored
at King’s Wharf, Sydney.
1838 – Mexico declares war on France after French occupation of Vera
Cruz.
1853 – Turkish fleet is destroyed by Russia off Sinope.
1900 – Death of Irish-born author Oscar Wilde.
1901 – Death of Australian explorer Edward John Eyre.
1913 – Actor Charlie Chaplin makes film debut in Holywood’s Making a
Living.
1918 – Transylvania proclaims union with Romania.
1934 – Moroccan Nationalist movement is founded.
1938 – Members of Romanian Iron Guard are shot as government attempts
to destroy fascism.
1939 – The Soviet Union invades Finland.
1949 – Chinese Communists capture city of Chungking.
1953 – A US delegate charges before the UN General Assembly in New
York that Russians headed Korean prison camps where 38,000 Allied
troops and Korean civilians were victims of Communist atrocities
during the War.
1962 – U Thant of Burma is elected UN Secretary-General, succeeding
the late Dag Hammarskjold.
1964 – Soviet Union launches spacecraft toward Mars in apparent race
with US Mariner 4.
1966 – The former British colony of Barbados gains independence.
1967 – Aden, South Yemen and Protectorate of South Arabia gain
independence from Britain.
1971 – US President Richard Nixon authorises Import-Export Bank to
extend credit to Romania, ending three-year ban on US
government-backed credits to Communist-bloc nations.
1975 – Four Timorese parties proclaim independence of the territory
and its integration with Indonesia.
1980 – The Uruguayan military dictatorship loses a plebiscite to
amend the constitution.
1981 – The United States and the Soviet Union open negotiations in
Geneva aimed at reducing nuclear weapons in Europe.
1988 – Ethnic clashes between Armenians and Azerbaijanis kill 11
people in five Armenian cities.
1989 – Terrorists kill West German banker Alfred Herrhausen.
1990 – US President George Bush announces he will send Secretary of
State Jim Baker to Baghdad to invite the Iraqi foreign minister to
the White House in a last effort to reach a peaceful end to the
Persian Gulf crisis.
1991 – Fighting escalates in Croatia despite cease-fire as UN envoy
Cyrus Vance prepares for talks on deploying up to 10,000 UN
peacekeepers in Yugoslavia.
1992 – The European Community agrees to speed up expulsions of bogus
asylum seekers, and turns down an appeal by Germany to share the
influx of refugees.
1993 – In Belfast, Northern Ireland, gunmen murder a Catholic factory
worker while politicians talk of peace; US President Bill Clinton
signs into law the Brady bill, which requires a five-day waiting
period for handgun purchases and background checks of prospective
buyers.
1994 – Flames roar through the cruise ship Achille Lauro off Somalia.
The ship, which was hijacked by PLO terrorists in 1985, sinks two
days later.
1995 – The UN Security Council votes unanimously to end its
three-and-a-half-year-old peacekeeping mission in Bosnia by January
31, 1996; US President Bill Clinton becomes the first US chief
executive to visit Northern Ireland.
1996 – Rallying against Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic, who
annulled opposition victories in local elections, 150,000 people
march through the Yugoslav capital of Belgrade.
1997 – The UN mission in Haiti officially ends.
1998 – The British hospital where General Augusto Pinochet is staying
says he doesn’t need medical care – a blow to the Chilean
ex-dictator’s plan to plead he is too ill to stand trial for
extradition to Spain.
1999 – The opening of a 135-nation trade gathering in Seattle is
disrupted by at least 40,000 demonstrators, some of whom clash with
police.
2000 – South and North Korean relatives, separated for half a
century, are reunited in the North Korean capital, Pyongyang.
2001 – Robert Durst, 58, an estranged member of a prominent New York
City real estate family, is arrested in Pennsylvania after a 45-day
manhunt. He is charged with killing and dismembering his neighbour,
71-year-old Morris Black, in Texas.
2002 – Egypt’s foreign minister urges America and other nations to
help halt Mid-East violence, and says the international community has
reacted weakly to Israeli attacks on Palestinians.
2003 – Time magazine reports that 140 of the roughly 660 prisoners
detained at the US military prison at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, were due
to be released at a “politically propitious time”.

Glendale: Craving change in the area

Craving change in the area

Glendale News Press
LATimes.com
Nov 27 2004

Alina Azizian takes over as executive director of local Armenian
National Committee chapter.

By Josh Kleinbaum, News-Press and Leader

GLENDALE – Alina Azizian can trace her activism back to a craving
for karmeer pilar, an Armenian dish with rice pilaf and tomatoes.

Azizian remembers sitting with her best friend, a neighbor from
Nicaragua, at UC Berkeley in 2002. Azizian had just transferred from
Glendale Community College, and both were getting homesick. They
started talking about their native food, and Azizian wanted the
traditional Armenian rice dish.

“I suddenly wanted an Armenian person to say, ‘Oh my god, I miss it,’
” Azizian said.

After growing up in Glendale, Azizian was accustomed to being
surrounded by Armenian-Americans. Suddenly, she had to seek them out,
so she joined the Armenian Student Assn., a campus Armenian activist
group.

Two years later, with experience as a political activist in college
and the real world, Azizian is taking over the Armenian National
Committee’s Glendale Chapter. The organization named her executive
director this week, making her the chapter’s first paid employee.

“She’s definitely from the community, so she knows the community
very well,” said Pierre Chraghchian, chairman of the chapter’s board
of directors. “She’s going to be doing everything from helping
and organizing more events to participating in certain meetings,
attending City Council meetings, school board meetings and college
board meetings.”

Azizian will be running the day-to-day operation of the chapter.
She’s going to focus on improving communication between the Armenian
and non-Armenian community in Glendale, and increasing voter education
and turnout within the Armenian American community.

She’s gotten plenty of experience over the past two years. She served
as co-president of Berkeley’s Armenian Student Assn. and became
involved in the committee’s San Francisco chapter. She spent a summer
working for the committee’s Washington D.C. headquarters. Before
November’s election, she worked as the Democratic campaign manager
for San Mateo county, assisting campaigns at every level, from local
City Council races to the presidential race.

“When I was in my teens, being involved was always in the back of my
mind, but I was kind of apathetic, like most teens,” Azizian said.
“It took a while to get over that apathy. Now, I feel like I’m trying
to make up for lost time.”

Ex-Soviet bloc states mull election

Ex-Soviet bloc states mull election

BBC News
Nov 27 2004

Ukrainian opposition supporters have displayed the Georgian flag
Several countries in the former Soviet bloc have lined up behind
Russia in endorsing the disputed result of Ukraine’s presidential
election.

A notable exception is Georgia, which on the first anniversary of its
own “rose” revolution sees itself as having led where Ukraine now
follows.

Moldova has also openly broken ranks by criticising the conduct of
the polls.

Approval

Following the congratulatory message sent by Russian President
Vladimir Putin to the pro-Moscow candidate Viktor Yanukovych, Belarus
President Alexander Lukashenko telephoned the latter to offer his own
congratulations before the results had been declared.

Mr Lukashenko’s press office said that during the conversation, “the
president said he was completely confident that relations between
Ukraine and Belarus will continue to develop as dynamically as they
have done in the past”.

The presidents of three Central Asian countries also added their
voices.

“Your victory shows that the Ukrainian people have made a choice in
favour of the unity of the nation, of democratic development and
economic progress,” Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev wrote in a
letter to Mr Yanukovych.

Uzbek President Islam Karimov sent his “sincere congratulations” to
Mr Yanukovych.

What is happening in Ukraine today clearly attests to the
importance of Georgia’s example for the rest of the world

Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili
The UzReport.com web site quoted Mr Karimov as saying he was “deeply
convinced that the acting Ukrainian prime minister’s activity in the
high post will serve to further strengthen the country’s independence
and the prosperity of its people”.

Kyrgyz President Askar Askayev also sent a message to Mr Yanukovych
expressing his satisfaction.

“On behalf of the Kyrgyz people, and from me personally, please
accept congratulations on the occasion of your election to the high
post of Ukrainian president,” the message said.

The state-controlled media in Turkmenistan have yet to report the
outcome of the polls.

Stability call

Two other CIS countries, Armenia and Azerbaijan, were more
ambivalent, stressing that the most important thing was to preserve
the unity and stability of Ukraine.

Armenian President Robert Kocharyan said that he had not favoured
either candidate, but was prepared to congratulate whichever one the
Ukrainian election commission decided was the winner.

“The sooner the tension subsides, the better,” Armenia’s Noyan Tapan
news agency quoted him as saying.

A member of the Azerbaijani government also expressed concern that
Ukraine could become destabilised.

Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov was quoted by the Azerbaijani
news agency Turan as saying it was important to prevent the country
from splitting into two.

Dissent

The message coming from Georgia was unashamedly pro-opposition.
President Mikhail Saakashvili said he was proud that Georgian flags
were being flown by Ukrainian opposition supporters in Kiev.

In November 2003, an alliance of opposition parties led by Mr
Saakashvili challenged the results of parliamentary elections that
initially declared the party of veteran leader Eduard Shevardnadze
the winner.

“What is happening in Ukraine today clearly attests to the importance
of Georgia’s example for the rest of the world,” he said in a
statement broadcast by Georgia’s Rustavi-2 TV.

Moldova also raised concerns over the conduct of the election.

The country’s foreign ministry issued a statement saying that “basic
democratic principles were distorted” and expressing regret that the
poll “lacked the objective criteria necessary for their recognition
by both the citizens of Ukraine and the international community”.

Tbilisi: Armenia: Russia’s traditional ally

Armenia: Russia’s traditional ally

The Messenger, Georgia
Nov 26 2004

According to the Russian weekly newspaper Military-Industrial Courier,
while Georgia and Azerbaijan do not conceal their aspiration to join
the NATO as soon as possible, Armenia has consistently strengthened
its military-strategic partnership with Russia. The 9th joint
Russian-Armenian military training has been held in the country
recently. The Russian armed forces were present at this training
through its subdivision of the 102nd military base located in Gumri.

According to the assessment of sociologists, Armenian public opinion
perceives the Russian army as the guarantor of security in their
country. Facing real threats from Turkey, Armenia pays a great deal
of attention to defensive expenditures, preparation of its general
staff and technical rearmament of the army. About 600 Armenian
military officers receive their education at senior military-training
institutes is Russia. Moscow provides Yerevan with military equipment,
extra parts and other military property as well.

According to the paper, the fact that Armenia has one of the best
armies among the post-Soviet countries is the considerable merit of
President Robert Kocharian, who received real fighting experience by
heading the defense committee of Nagorno-Karabakh from 1992-1994. As a
matter of fact, this was the starting point of his path toward great
politics. “Today, in the person of Robert Kocharian, the Kremlin has
not only a reliable partner in this region, but also military-political
ally, who is ready to defend together with Russia common geopolitical
priorities,” the newspaper writes.