TERRY DAVIS: Progress Will Be Registered Only When NK Participates

TERRY DAVIS: A PROGRESS WILL BE REGISTERED IN NEGOTIATION PROCESS ON
SETTLEMENT OF KARABAKH CONFLICT ONLY WHEN REPRESENTATIVES OF NAGORNY
KARABAKH ARE INVOLVED IN PROCESS

YEREVAN, JANUARY 27. ARMINFO. The Council of Europe will not make an
initiative of involvement of the representatives of Nagorny Karabakh
in the process of settlement of the Karabakh conflict, as it can be
considered as an attempt of interfere in the activity of the OSCE
Minsk Group from the CE. Secretary General of the Council of Europe
Terry Davis stated during the press conference, Thursday.

At the same time he stressed that representatives of Azerbaijan has
made many complaints against the activities of OSCE Minsk Group. “I
see why the authorities of Azerbaijan are not satisfied with the
activities of the OSCE MG, however, the progress in settlement of the
Karabakh conflict may be reached only on the basis of the dialogue”,
he mentioned. At the same time, Terry Davis stressed that a progress
may be registered in the negotiation process on settlement of the
Karabakh conflict only when involvement of representatives of Nagorny
Karabakh in it. “The representatives of Nagorny Karabakh of course
must take part in the negotiation process, and it concerns not only
representatives of the Armenian population of Nagorny Karabakh, but
also of the Azerbaijani population”, CE Secretary General stated. He
reminded that the PACE Resolution on Nagorny Karabakh says that the
authorities of Azerbaijan must establish contacts with representatives
of the population of Nagorny Karabakh without any pre-condition.

“I will assist in every possible way the implementation of this
provision of the resolution, as it is necessary to seek a way of
settlement of the Karabakh conflict. The continuation of the
negotiation process for settlement of the Karabakh conflict without
representatives of Nagorny Karabakh will be the same if we try to
solve the problem of Northern Cyprus without representatives of the
Turkish population living there”, Terry Davis pointed out. He informed
that he has received many letters from residents of Nagorny Karabakh
who complained that the Karabakh problem is solved without taking into
consideration their opinions.

AUSCHWITZ REMEMBERED: The shadow of Auschwitz

AUSCHWITZ REMEMBERED: The shadow of Auschwitz
John Lichfield

The Independent – United Kingdom
Jan 27, 2005

The turn-off is just past a BP petrol station, close to a Leclerc
supermarket. You leave a roundabout and cross a concrete flyover. You
could be on the edge of any town in early 21st-century Europe.

Ahead, through the swirling snow, looms a single railway line,
disappearing through a tower in a long, red-brick building – the
terminus of a short branch line to Auschwitz-Birkenau built in the
spring of 1944. Beyond are three long railway sidings, tall
barbed-wire enclosures, wooden watch- towers, and dark huts in neat
lines. Some huts are ruined. Others stand pristine in freshly fallen
snow, as if enchanted by a curse and frozen for all time.

All is symmetrical and orderly, the product of rational, intelligent
minds – modern, Western minds.

If you stroll to the end of the railway tracks, you find the rubble

of two buildings strewn in front of a small birch wood (Birke means
birch tree.) Two other ruins stand a little way over to the right. The
remains of two cruder buildings can be seen in the distance.

Inside, or just outside, these six buildings at least one million
people, almost all of them Jews, were gassed and cremated during 1942,
1943 and 1944. Birkenau, only part of the Auschwitz complex, was,
among other things, a factory, a purpose-built human abattoir, an
assembly line of death.

The factory’s raw materials were men, women and children, whose only
crime was to be Jewish or Gypsy. The Jews came initially from other
parts of Poland and nearby Slovakia. Later, they were transported for
hundreds of miles across Europe, from Greece, from Hungary, from
France, from Belgium, from the Netherlands, to be reduced to ashes,
their gold teeth, hair, clothes, false limbs recycled into raw
materials for the Nazi war effort. These, however, were merely
by-products. The chief purpose of Auschwitz- Birkenau was to destroy a
race and to obliterate the 800-year-old Jewish- European
civilisation. (In this second task, the Nazis succeeded.)

Auschwitz was not, in itself, the Holocaust. There were five other
Nazi death camps in Poland, some of whose names are still scarcely
known to the general public (Belzec, where 550,000 Jews are thought to
have died; Sobibor, where 200,000 died).

Auschwitz has, nonetheless, become the prime symbol of the
bureaucratically organised, orderly frenzy of killing in which at
least five million European Jews were murdered by the Nazis (maybe as
many as six million) between 1939 and 1945.

Many other victims were also deemed unfit to live by the perverted
Darwinism of Nazi, racial ideology: not just Gypsies but also
homosexuals and the handicapped. Pre-planned Nazi mass murders were
also carried out – it is sometimes forgotten in the West – of hundreds
of thousands of Russians and at least 1,500,000 Polish officers,
intellectuals, students, priests and randomly seized civilians. The
Poles were slaughtered to reduce their country to a slave state,
permanently colonised by Germans.

On a first visit to Auschwitz-Birkenau, the mind revolts against the
proximity of roundabouts and barbed wire, of supermarkets and gas
chambers; against the juxtaposition of the death camp and the pleasant
Polish town of Oswiecim, now as much part of the European Union as
Dorking or Macclesfield. In truth, this is no anachronism, but a
useful reminder. The Holocaust began three years after Walt Disney
made Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs; 20 years before The Beatles and
Swinging London. Auschwitz is part of Modern Times.

Today, politicians from 40 countries will travel to the Birkenau camp
to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the discovery of Auschwitz by
Soviet troops in January 1945. Up to 400 survivors – the remaining,
fit survivors of the maybe 60,000 survivors in 1945 – are expected to
be there.

Among those at the Birkenau commemoration will be Raphael Esrail, 80,
who was taken to Auschwitz from France in February 1944, at the age of
19, and is now secretary general of the French association of
Auschwitz victims. “There have been other anniversaries and there will
be others still to come,” he said, “but this is maybe the most
important. First, because it will be the last big anniversary to have
so many living eyewitnesses. Most of us are already in our eighties.

“But it is crucial also for another reason. The world has changed. And
not in the way we had hoped. After the war, we comforted ourselves
that this terrible experience might finally teach mankind to love
mankind, but what do we see now? We see again the rise of
anti-Semitism and we see a world torn apart by fanatical hatreds and
by absolute certainties.”

In other words, the most important lesson that we can learn from today
is that Auschwitz is not just part of our history. It is part of our
present. This is a lesson that seems to have escaped the 45 per cent
of Britons – according to a recent poll – who have not heard of
Auschwitz.

In truth, the story of the Holocaust is imperfectly understood, even
by many of us who think we know what happened. (I was astonished by my
own ignorance when I visited Auschwitz, even though my father was
Jewish, even though some of my distant, Slovakian-Jewish relatives
almost certainly died there.)

The details are imperfectly known, even to honest, specialist
historians, because so much of the evidence was destroyed by the
Nazis. The story was further muddied by the Soviet domination of
Poland up to 1990 – years when Auschwitz was turned into an
“anti-fascist” shrine and the suffering of the Jews was pushed into
the background.

Did 5,000,000 Jews die in the Holocaust or 6,000,000? Even now, honest
historians disagree. The generally accepted figure of 1,100,000 dead
in Auschwitz alone (including 960,000 Jews, 75,000 Poles and 21,000
gypsies) is a “conservative estimate”, according to the head archivist
of the Polish state museum on the site, Piotr Setkiewicz. “It was
almost certainly more than that. These are just the people that we can
say with absolute certainty died here.”

One of the perverted oddities of the Final Solution is the mixture of
brazen pride and shame with which it was implemented. Intelligent,
educated men believed that they had a right to destroy millions of
fellow human beings. At the same time, they felt it was necessary to
lie about, and cover up, what they were doing. The same twin impulses
– denial on the one hand, and pride in the Holocaust on the other –
persist among Nazi apologists to this day.

The 60th anniversary has brought an abundance of new studies,
including the excellent BBC television series on Auschwitz, and the
accompanying book by Laurence Rees. All the same, confusions remain in
many educated and unprejudiced minds: confusions which are often
exploited by Holocaust- deniers and relativisers. There is,
especially, an abiding confusion about the different kinds of camps
which existed in the Nazi archipelago of evil.

Broadly speaking, there were labour camps, concentration camps and
death camps. Life in the labour and concentration camps, such as
Belsen, south of Hamburg, and Dachau, north of Munich, was
barbaric. Life expectancy was short. These camps had tens of thousands
of political prisoners, and resistance activists, from Germany and
from occupied countries – and some high-profile Jews.

Much of the confusion, in the West, arises because these camps, in the
western part of Germany, were liberated by the British and the
Americans. They provided the images which were first seared on to the
world’s memory and conscience: images of walking skeletons in striped
uniforms and heaps of emaciated bodies being cleared by bulldozers.

But these were not the death camps. There were no planned mass
killings – no gas chambers or crematoria – in Belsen or Dachau or
Ravensbruck or Mauthausen or anywhere within Germany’s pre-war
borders.

The Holocaust happened further east, in Poland, notably at Auschwitz
but also in five other camps, some of which were no larger than three
or four football pitches: Treblinka, Belzec, Sobibor, Chelmno and
Majdanek.

The unfamiliarity of these names – apart from Treblinka –

is significant, and deliberate. They were dismantled, and the ground
ploughed over and planted with trees, by the SS at the end of 1943. By
that time, it is estimated that 1,700,000 people had been murdered
there, mostly Polish Jews, mostly killed by carbon-monoxide poi-

soning (Zyklon-B gas was an Auschwitz speciality.)

Mr Setkiewicz says: “We have very, very little direct information on
what happened in these places. There are few records, few eyewitness
accounts, no survivors. We know only that transports took Jews out of
the ghettos established by the Nazis in Warsaw and other cities and
they took them to these camps, which were set up as extermination
centres. There was no room for people to live or work in these
places. No one came back.”

Auschwitz was unique. It was the only site which contained both an
extermination camp and a labour camp (in fact 40 different camps,
spread over an area covering 40 square kilometres, the Auschwitz “zone
of interest”).

Because both kinds of camp existed side by side, there are survivors,
Jewish survivors and Polish survivors, to tell us what happened in
Auschwitz. But the existence of both kinds of camp on one site, or at
one complex of sites, is also fertile ground for the negationists.

Look, they say, Auschwitz had a swimming pool; it had a brothel for
inmates, an orchestra, a sauna. How bad could it have been? Yes,
Auschwitz had an orchestra but most of the 1,100,000 people who died
there never heard it play.

The complex has two main camps: the original Polish army barracks
taken over by the Nazis in 1940, and the much larger Birkenau camp,
three kilometres away, built by slave labour from October 1941.

The original Auschwitz camp – which looks like a pleasant army base or
a university campus – has its own horrific tale to tell. It was here
that the first mass killings of Poles and Russian prisoners of war
took place.

It was here that the camp commandant, Rudolf Hoss, devised methods of
mass slaughter with Zyklon-B in the first of the Auschwitz gas
chambers (built at the end of the garden where his children
played). It was here that the SS doctor Josef Mengele conducted
medical experiments on twins and pregnant women.

It was here that the orchestra, comprised of musically talented
inmates, played merry dance tunes and waltzes as the half-starved work
groups – kommandos – struggled in and out of the gate marked Arbeit
macht frei (work makes you free).

The swimming pool and brothel also existed – but only for the kapos or
inmates promoted to be overseers.

Tens of thousands of people died in the original camp but the greater
slaughter happened down the road at Birkenau, conceived originally as
a labour camp but then developed into an industrial killing-machine.

Another grim distinction needs to be made. The Belsen-generated image
of the Holocaust – emaciated people in striped uniforms being herded
into gas chambers – is largely false. Most of those who died at
Auschwitz never wore camp uniforms. They never received a number
tattooed on their forearm (another Auschwitz speciality which did not
occur elsewhere). Most were led, or taken in trucks, directly from the
trains to the chambers. They died, not as dehumanised skeletons, but
as people looking and feeling like citizens of the mid-20th century.

When a train arrived (from Hungary or Holland or France), the
prisoners – 1,200 to 1,500 on each train – were divided into columns
of men and columns of women and children. The SS doctors and guards,
often behaving with extreme politeness, selected maybe 200 young men
and women from each train to be admitted to the camp as slaves for the
Nazi war machine. The remainder were taken to the far end of the site
– to the place where tomorrow’s ceremony will take place. They were
made to undress and told they had to take a shower. They were led into
the gas chambers and murdered as they huddled in family groups. Their
bodies were removed by the members of the sonderkommando – the Jews
and other prisoners forced to do the most horrific work to protect the
minds of the SS guards. Gold teeth, rings and hair were cut from the
bodies before they were burnt. (The hair was made into, among other
things, socks for submariners.)

It is estimated that Birkenau, when functioning at its most efficient,
could murder and burn 20,000 people in a day.

How do we know all this? The Holocaust deniers say we don’t know; that
it is largely made up or exaggerated; that no evidence exists that the
gas chambers – destroyed by the SS in January 1945 – were gas
chambers. (On surviving plans they are described as “morgues”.)

In truth, the amount of direct and circumstantial evidence of what
happened in Auschwitz-Birkenau is huge. Twenty-five photographs were
taken by an unknown SS guard, discovered in an album when the camp was
liberated, showing the process of “selection” of trainloads of
Hungarian Jews in 1944. Eyewitness accounts have been given by SS men
and by survivors, including members of the sonderkommando, the few who
survived and others who buried their testimony in the earth of the
camp.

Plans show the “morgues” were designed to be gas-tight and have a high
ambient temperature – counter-productive for a morgue but necessary to
activate pellets of Zyklon-B. (One plan also exists which labels the
gas chamber not as as a morgue, but as a “gas chamber”).

Mr Setkiewicz says: “Do we have one piece of evidence which proves
beyond all doubt that the Holocaust happened? No. We have a thousand.”

The museum at the original Auschwitz camp presents this evidence in
crushing, disturbing mass. Human hair is piled behind a glass window
and covers the area of two tennis courts. Similar picture-windows
display heaps of shoes, spectacles, suitcases, false legs and arms,
crutches and clothes found when the camp was liberated six decades
ago.

A newer exhibition has also been opened in the “sauna” at
Birkenau. This was, in fact, the building where the few selected to
work and suffer, rather than to die instantly, were stripped, shaved
and tattooed. This display speaks of the individual ordinariness of
thousands of obliterated lives. It shows hundreds of photographs,
mysteriously found in a suitcase at the site – all of them pre-war
family snaps taken by Jews living in the town of Bedzin: snaps of
weddings and walking trips, grinning young men acting the fool,
brothers arm in arm, happy picnics and shopping expeditions.

In the next room is a display of objects, confiscated from Jews as
they arrived at the camp: banal objects, precious objects, objects
which suggest that many of those who arrived here had no conception of
the fate awaiting them. There are cigarette lighters and
cheese-graters, picnic baskets and kettles, razors and chess sets,
hairbrushes and cameras.

Once again, you are reminded that the Holocaust happened in a time
like the present, to people like you and me. Visiting Auschwitz, and
seeing sights like these, you wrestle with an impossible
question. What makes Auschwitz and the Holocaust different? Are they
different?

Massacres and genocides have been carried out throughout history, from
Genghis Khan to the Crusades, from the American Plains to Turkish
Armenia, Lebanon, Cambodia, Rwanda and Bosnia.

Even the numbers killed in the Holocaust are not unique. Stalin killed
more, for reasons of expediency and terror, than Hitler killed for
reasons of race and ideology. Studies in comparative evil are barren
and

pointless: all of these crimes are monstrous. And yet there is
something about the Holocaust which sets it apart, in its essence, if
not its enormity.

Here was a genocide willed and planned by a modern industrial state,
using all the paraphernalia of modernity, from trains to toxic
gases. Here was a genocide, willed not just because a people were
occupying space coveted by another people but because of a
self-induced, obsessive, racial fear and hatred. In no other genocide,
before or since, have hundreds of thousands of people been sought out
and shipped hundreds of miles, at great expense, to their instant
murder. In no other genocide have bodies been treated as industrial
raw materials. It took a very advanced state to conceive and organise
such an elaborate, bureaucratic genocide. It took all the resources of
modern politics and mass media to brain-wash an entire people so that
they were complicit in murder on an industrial scale.

What is the way to Auschwitz? The road does not just start beside a
roundabout and a BP petrol station.

Teresa Swiebocka, the senior curator at the Auschwitz museum said:
“The Holocaust did not begin in 1939 or 1941. It began many years
earlier. It began with an obsession that one nation, one race, had
absolute wisdom and absolute rights, superior to those of other races
or religions.

“The question people should ask when they come here, or watch the
anniversary ceremonies, is how can civilised people in a modern state
be brought so far and so low? How does it begin? At what point do you
take a turning which leads you eventually on to a road marked
Auschwitz?”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Eastern Prelacy: Crossroads E-Newsletter – 01/27/2005

PRESS RELEASE
Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
138 East 39th Street
New York, NY 10016
Tel: 212-689-7810
Fax: 212-689-7168
e-mail: [email protected]
Website:
Contact: Iris Papazian

CROSSROADS E-NEWSLETTER – January 27, 2005

FIVE EAST COAST ORGANIZATIONS RECEIVE
SETTLEMENT FROM NEW YORK LIFE
Yesterday, January 26, was both a poignant and melancholy day as five
Armenian organizations on the east coast each received $333,333 as part of a
$20 million settlement reached between New York Life and descendants of
victims massacred in the 1915 Armenian Genocide. The ceremony took place at
the New York headquarters of the Armenian General Benevolent Union.
The five organizations are: the Armenian Church of North America Eastern
Diocese (New York); Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of Eastern
United States and Canada (New York); Armenian Apostolic Catholic Exarchate
in the United States and Canada (New York); Armenian Missionary Association
of America, Inc., (Paramus, New Jersey); and the Armenian General Benevolent
Union (New York). An additional four other Armenian organizations in
California and Massachusetts will receive an equal portion of the proceeds
in ceremonies later this month.
Representing the Eastern Prelacy on this occasion were: V. Rev. Fr.
Anoushavan Tanielian, Vicar General; Mr. Bedros Givelekian, treasurer of the
Executive Council; Dr. Vazken Ghougassian, Executive Director; and Mrs. Iris
Papazian, Communications Director.
On hand for the ceremony were attorney Brian S. Kabateck of the Los
Angeles based firm of Kabatek Brown Kellner, LLP, one of the attorneys
representing the class, California Insurance Commissioner John Garamendi and
Bill Werfelman representing New York Life.
Prior to 1915, New York Life sold life insurance policies to thousands
of Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire. New York Life policyholders were
among the 1.5 million Armenians massacred during the Armenian Genocide. In
the ensuing chaotic years, many of the rightful policy heirs were unable to
obtain the insurance proceeds while others were unaware that they were
entitled to any insurance benefits. According to the records of New York
Life about 2,400 policies were sold to Armenians before the Genocide and
remain unpaid. Survivors and/or their descendants will share the bulk of the
multi-million settlement.
Descendants have until March 15, 2005, to make a claim for a portion of
the settlement. Details, including a list of the names, addresses, and
occupations of the policyholders, are available at

The first distribution totals three million dollars. Any unclaimed money
from the $20 million settlement will subsequently be distributed to the
Armenian charitable organizations.
To view photos from the ceremony yesterday go to:

STATUE OF ST. GREGORY THE ILLUMINATOR
IS INSTALLED AT ST. PETER BASILICA AT VATICAN
Pope John Paul II attended the unveiling and official installation of a
statue of St. Gregory the Illuminator, the patron saint of the Armenian
Church, last week on January 19. The 18-foot, 26 ton statue of Carrara
marble is the work of Khatchik Kazandjian of Paris. St. Gregory holds in his
right hand the Armenian Holy Cross of gilt bronze, and in his left hand the
Holy Bible decorated with the symbols of the four Evangelists. To see a
photo of the statue go to:

ARCHBISHOP OSHAGAN IS IN ROME
FOR DIALOGUE
Archbishop Oshagan is currently in Rome attending official dialogues at
the Vatican between the Catholic Church and the Oriental Orthodox Churches.
The division dates back to the Council of Chalcedon in 451. The Oriental
Orthodox Churches include: Syrian Orthodox Church of Antioch, Coptic
Orthodox Church, Armenian Apostolic Church, Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church
in India; and Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahido Church.
The meetings began Tuesday, January 25 and will continue to Sunday,
January 30.

PRELACY LENTEN PROGRAM WILL
FOCUS ON PASSION NARRATIVES
This year the Prelacy’s Lenten program will focus on passages from the
passion narratives, particularly those that are solemnly read during the
Holy Week services in the Armenian Church. The six-week Bible study will be
led by Archdeacon Shant Kazanjian, Director of the Armenian Religious
Education Council (AREC), sponsor of the series together with the Prelacy
Ladies Guild. The Lenten programs will take place at St. Illuminator
Cathedral, 221 E. 27th Street, New York City. For details go to:

CATHOLICOS ARAM I RECEIVES DELEGATION
OF NATIONAL COUNCIL OF CHURCHES USA
His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, received
a delegation of the National Council of Churches USA at the Catholicosate in
Antelias, Lebanon, last Saturday, January 22.
His Holiness spoke about the challenges facing the Ecumenical Movement
and identified areas where the Churches should cooperate and support each
other: We do not live in isolation. Global, regional and local challenges
are inter-connected and we need to adopt a policy of facing them together
and responsibly. In this respect, the role of the Churches should be
expressed as bridge-builders and promoters of dialogue and collaboration,
and the Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is strongly committed to this
principle.
The delegation invited His Holiness to address the National Council of
Churches Board meeting in October, in New York.

ARTICLE BY VIGEN GUROIAN IN
RECENT ISSUE OF CHRISTIANITY TODAY
An article by Professor Vigen Guroian is included in the recent issue of
Christianity Today. The article entitled, Dorm Brothel, explores modern-day
mores in institutions of higher learning and condemns the institutions for
allowing what he calls the new debauchery.
The article can be found at:

REMEMBERING CATHOLICOS SAHAG BARTEV
This Saturday, January 29, the Armenian Church remembers Catholicos
Sahag Bartev who with Mesrob Mashtotz was instrumental in the establishment
of the Armenian alphabet which led to the naming of the fifth century as the
Golden Age of Armenian literature. Sahag was the son of Nerses the Great.
Sahag wisely understood that the lack of a written Armenian language was
a major problem for the Church. He realized that the faith would be
transmitted more effectively to the people if the liturgy itself were in
Armenian, and if the Gospels and other books of the Bible were available in
Armenian. He, therefore, became a great proponent for the development of the
Armenian alphabet. As it happens so many times in history, he was joined by
the right person in this endeavor in the person of Mesrob Mashtots.

CELEBRATING THE GHEVONTIAN SAINTS
Next Tuesday, February 1, is the commemoration of the Ghevontian saints
and priests. It has become a time when clergy come together for a period of
renewal and brotherhood. The collective name for the feast honors the memory
and the sacrifice made by those churchmen who dedicated their lives to their
faith and nation. While the name, like Vartanantz, is meant for the many, it
is based on one individual, Ghevont Yeretz (Leondius the Priest).
GhevontYeretz studied under Mesrob Mashtotz and St. Sahag, and was one of
the early translators. He is remembered and honored for his extraordinary
religious devotion, eloquent speech and exceptional patriotism.
The martyrdom of Ghevont Yeretz and his fellow clergy is observed in the
Armenian Church on the Tuesday before the beginning of Lent and two days
before Vartanantz. It is a day of particular importance for Armenian
clergymen, since Ghevont is their patron saint. It has become traditional
for the clergy to come together to observe the memory of their saintly
predecessors while celebrating the present and future of the Armenian
Church.
This year the clergy of the Eastern and Western Prelacies will travel to
Montreal where they will be hosted by the Canadian Prelacy.

WINTER IN FULL BLOOM
After the start of a mild winter, the east coast was barraged with the
fury of winter, with a major blizzard this past weekend bringing up to three
feet of snow in some areas, especially in New England. Travel was difficult
especially with temperatures in the single digits and below. But still, the
whiteness and purity of the snow had a beauty of its own. And really, is it
possible to appreciate spring without winter?

May the most beneficient Christ be moved to pity, that he may be your
comforter and savior, release you from these material bonds that constrain
you, and humiliate your enviers and enemies. May he make you worthy in the
eyes of your families and all the Armenian world. May the remains of each of
you be interred alongside those of your forbears, and may your souls be
released from the invisible bonds of Satan, and thus be safeguarded always.
Prayer by Ghevont Yeretz for the martyred clergy

Visit our website at

http://www.armenianprelacy.org
http://www.armenianprelacy.org/012705b.htm
http://www.armenianprelacy.org/012705a.htm
http://www.armenianprelacy.org/012405a.htm
http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2005/002/13.44.html
www.ArmenianInsuranceSettlement.com.
www.armenianprelacy.org

UK Hosts First Season of Armenian Cinema For 25 Years

UK HOSTS FIRST SEASON OF ARMENIAN CINEMA FOR 25 YEARS

YEREVAN, JANUARY 27. ARMINFO. A season of Armenian cinema is to be
held in London Feb 11-17, says film director Artsvi Bakhchinyan.

This is the first such season in the UK in 25 years. The festival is
aimed to be an eye-opening glimpse into the Armenian culture too
little known in the UK.

Showcasing shorts, features, documentaries and artists’ film, the
season features established directors like Atom Egoyan and undisputed
classics like Paradjanov’s The Colour of Pomegranates but also
uncovers lost gems and overlooked directors of great
significance. Panel discussions will place the films in the context of
both Armenian experience and contemporary film, providing a unique
chance to encounter one of world cinema’s hidden national treasures.

Shown will be the following films:

Pierlequin, Lighter than Air, by Tigran Xmalian, with Vladimir Msrian,
Hrach Harutunian, Anush Khorenian;

Garin Torossian Artists’ Film Programme, Short Films Programme;

Vodka Lemon by Hiner Saleem, with Romen Avinian, Lala Sarkissian, Ivan
Franek;

Calendar by Atom Egoyan, with Atom Egoyan, Arsine Khanjian, Ashot
Adamian;

Return to the Promised Land by Harutiun Khachatryan;

Terra Emota & Lux Aeterna by Levon Minassian and Serge Avedikian;

Last Station by Harutiun Khachatryan and Nora Armani, with Nora
Armani, Gerald Papasian, Armen Djigarkhanian;

The Colour of Pomegranates by Sergei Paradjanov, with Sofiko
Chiaureli, Melkon Aleksanyan, Vilen Galstyan;

Ararat by Atom Egoyan, with Arsine Khanjian, Charles Aznavour, Elias
Koteas, Marie-Josie Croze;

Komitas by Don Askarian, with Samuel Ovasapian, Onig Saadetian,
Margarita Woskanjan;

Lovember by Tigran Xzmalian.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Ethnic Azeri leaders say US concern about Iran justified

Ethnic Azeri leaders say US concern about Iran justified – fuller version

Ekspress, Baku
27 Jan 05

Excerpt from Nigar Almanqizi’s report by Azerbaijani newspaper
Ekspress on 27 January headlined “If USA bombs Iran…”

The Iranian parliament approved the country’s nuclear programme and a
uranium enrichment project last November. [Passage omitted: general
comments by unidentified experts on Iranian nuclear energy programme]

We wonder what organizations of Southern Azerbaijan [northern Iran
populated by ethnic Azeris] and other experts think about this. What
fate awaits our compatriots in the event the USA starts military
operations against Iran?

The head of the Baku office of the National Revival Movement of
Southern Azerbaijan (NRMSA), Huseyn Turkelli, has said that he is
against war in any country. “Our activity does not aim to have Iran
bombed or pressurized by foreign forces. The history of the struggle
of Azeri Turks to restore their rights is a century long,” Turkelli
said, adding that he was more concerned about Iran having access to
nuclear weapons. He believes that this could affect not only
Azerbaijan but all Iran’s neighbours and the Gulf states.

Apart from Armenia, Iran does not have normal relations with
Turkmenistan, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar or its other neighbours,
he said. “A regime which has serious problems with the population
inside the country will become a new tragedy for the world if it gets
access to nuclear weapons. In preventing this tragedy, if there is no
choice but to bomb Iran’s strategic facilities, we cannot say no to
this option and we should accept this.”

Asked whether this could lead to Azeri Turks gaining independence,
Turkelli said that in Iran there would be no war, as has been the case
in Iraq. Turkelli also believes that even if the USA has plans, it
takes into consideration the people’s will. “Our organization is the
largest one in Southern Azerbaijan. The movement is currently facing
serious problems with disseminating its ideas among people. These
problems hinder the strengthening of the movement. But the movement
can still have its say,” Turkelli said. He believes that even if the
people of Southern Azerbaijan cannot gain full independence, they will
at least manage to establish an autonomous state with their own flag,
parliament and president.

The chairman of the defence committee of the NRMSA, Cahandar Bayoglu,
also said that the countries responsible for security in the world
were naturally concerned about the threats Iran posed to both the
region and world as a whole and that this concern was well
grounded. “Iran has turned into a dangerous country that does not
accept the rest of the world. The fact that this country produces
nuclear warheads causes justified concern in countries like the USA.”

Bayoglu said that the United States was looking into options to
eliminate this regime: “One of the options is a military
intervention. But the question is how this military intervention will
be implemented. The timing and ways are possibly being discussed.”

Bayoglu said that in the event of a US invasion of Iran, there would
be no need to use a large number of troops, as was the case in
Iraq. He thinks that during a US operation, not only the Azeri Turks
but also all the ethnic groups living in that country would revolt
against the Iranian regime.

[Passage omitted: Iranian general recently warned USA about
retaliatory actions Iran can take]

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenia’s President Starts Three-Day Official Visit to Italy

ARMENIA’S PRESIDENT STARTS THREE-DAY OFFICIAL VISIT TO ITALY

YEREVAN, JANUARY 27. ARMINFO. Armenia’s President Rabert Kocharyan
started today a three-day official visit to Italy on the invitation of
his Italian counterpart Carlo Azeglio Ciampi.

Kocharyan is being accompanied by FM Vardan Osknayan, Trade and
Economic Development Minister Karen Tchshmarityan, Agriculture
Minister David Lokyan, businessmen.

The president is to meet with the Italian president, PM, senators and
businessmen.

The sides are to sign agreements on cooperation and mutual assistance
in small and medium-sized business and customs. In Vatican Kocharyan
is to meet with Pope John Paul II, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, Catholicos
of the Great House of Cilicia Nerses Pogos and to see the newly
unveiled monument to Grigor the Enlightener. Jan 28 Kocharyan is to go
to Venice to meet with the local authorities and Armenian community.

One of the goals of the visit is to enlarge Armenian-Italian political
ties, exchange views on the political issues of mutual concern and to
conclude agreements on cooperation within international
organizations. This is the first official visit of Kocharyan to
Italy. Kocharyan is to come back Jan 30.

The National Statistical Service of Armenia reports that in Jan-Nov
2004 the Armenian-Italian trade turnover totalled $63 mln – Armenian
exports $26 mln, Italian imports $36.5 mln.

Italy’s President Ready to Assist Economic Development of Armenia

ITALY’S PRESIDENT READY TO ASSIST ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF ARMENIA

ROME, JANUARY 27. ARMINFO. Italy is ready to assist the economic
developmentof Armenia, increase of the trade turnover between the two
countries and Italian capital in Armenia. President of Italy Karlo
Adzelio Champi stated during the meeting with President of Armenia
Robert Kocharian, who is in Italy on a visit.

During the meeting the presidents have discussed the relations between
the two countries, a series of issues of regional and international
plan, as well as the process of Armenia;s integration into
Europe. During the president of Armenia has expressed hope that the
first visit of the president of Armenia to Italy will promote the
development of bilateral relations. Kocharian informed his Italian
counterpart about the relations of Armenia and EU and stressed the
importance for Armenia the program “Wide Europe. New Neighborhood
Policy”. In his turn, the president of Italy has expressed readiness
to assist Armenia’s integration into European structures and mentioned
that the Caucasus has a strategic importance for Europe.

Robert Kocharian has also met with the chairman of the parliament of
Italy, chairman of the senate of Italy.

It should be noted that in Jan-Nov 2004 the total volume of trade
turnover between Armenia and Italy was $62.8 mln, which is 26.6% more
than in the same period of 2003.

CIS body chief suggests single global list of terrorist groups

CIS body chief suggests single global list of terrorist groups

Interfax-Kazakhstan news agency
26 Jan 05

Almaty, 26 January: The world community should form a single list of
terrorist and extremist organizations in addition to other measures in
order to fight terrorism effectively, the head of the CIS
Antiterrorist Centre, Boris Mylnikov, told a session of the UN
Security Council Counter-Terrorism Committee in Almaty on Wednesday
[26 January].

Mylnikov regards countries forming a single list of terrorist and
extremist organizations as “an effective way of anti-terrorist
cooperation”.

He recalled that similar lists had already been adopted within a
number of regional organizations, particularly within the CSTO
[Collective Security Treaty Organization; members are Armenia,
Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Russia] and the SCO
[Shanghai Cooperation Organization; members are China, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Russia].

[Passage omitted: exchange of information about terrorist
organizations is necessary to work out this kind of list]

[In a separate report, in Russian, at 1448 gmt, the
Interfax-Kazakhstan news agency quoted Mylnikov as saying that a draft
agreement on exchange of information about terrorist and extremist
organizations is being considered in the CIS. He said, according to
the agency, was no similar agreement in the world.]

BAKU: French mediator says OSCE lacks resources to resolve Karabakh

French mediator says OSCE lacks resources to resolve Karabakh – Azeri agency

Turan news agency
27 Jan 05

Baku, 27 January: “The OSCE Minsk Group cannot resolve the Karabakh
conflict for Azerbaijan and Armenia. The cochairmen of the OSCE Minsk
Group can support the governments of Armenia and Azerbaijan in
establishing dialogue and holding talks. Confidence should be built
between the leaders of the two countries in the first place and then
between the peoples,” the new French cochairman of the OSCE Minsk
Group, Bernard Fassier, said at a news conference in Baku today.

Commenting on the resolution of PACE [Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe] on Nagornyy Karabakh, Fassier said that “this is
the position of an organization which is one of the major pillars of
democracy in Europe”. Fassier believes that other organizations
should express their position on the Karabakh conflict as well.
Pointing to the interest of the EU and the UN in the conflict, Fassier
expressed the wish that those organizations adhere to a single
position and not compete with each other.

In Fassier’s opinion, the OSCE Minsk Group does not have adequate
resources to facilitate a solution to the conflict. “The Minsk Group
is a political forum. It can put forward political ideas. However, it
does not have financial resources to implement those ideas. But the
European Union has enough economic capacity,” Fassier said.

[Passage omitted: Fassier’s background]

Testing of Russia S-400 missile system could be moved to Kazakhstan

Testing of Russia’s S-400 missile system could be moved to Kazakhstan

ITAR-TASS news agency
27 Jan 05

Moscow, 27 January: The upcoming S-400 Triumf air defence missile
system will possibly be tested on the proving ground in Kazakhstan,
deputy commander-in-chief of the Russian air force in charge of the
CIS’s unified air defence system, Lt-Gen Aytech Bizhev, told
journalists today.

“The possible transfer of the testing of the S-400 to Kazakhstan is
linked to the fact that the Russian proving grounds at Ashuluk and
Kapustin Yar have limited possibilities in respect of the distance of
firing,” Bizhev noted. At the same time the Balkhash proving ground in
Kazakhstan makes it possible to fully check the combat potential of
the new air defence missile system, which is designed to destroy
cruise missiles and aircraft as well as warheads of ballistic missiles
at a wide range of heights and at a range of up to 400 kilometres.

The Triumf air defence missile system was developed at the Almaz
central design bureau. It is expected to be used to fight airborne
targets as well as in the interests of nonstrategic antimissile
defence. The chief of staff of the air force, Col-Gen Boris Cheltsov,
said in December 2004 that Triumf will arrive in the forces in 2005.

Members of the CIS unified air defence system, which in a few days’
time will mark its 10th anniversary, are Russia, Armenia, Belarus,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Ukraine and Uzbekistan.