Bethlehem Style Christmas Eve Services in Hollywood

Srpotz Tarkmanchatz Alumni of North American
PO Box 10506
Glendale, CA 91209
Contact: Mr. Nahabed Melkonian
818-247-6809

January 16, 2004**

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*Bethlehem Style Christmas Eve Services in Hollywood*

* *

On Saturday, January 15, 2005 the Holy Translators School (Srpotz
Tarkmanchatz) Alumni of North America and the Friends of the Jerusalem
Armenians organized the 6^th annual Christmas Eve Service at St. John
Garabed Armenian Church in Hollywood.

The Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem as well as the other Orthodox
Churches of Jerusalem adheres to the Old Calendar (heen domar). In
accordance with the tradition, the Armenian faithful travel from
Jerusalem to the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem (Armenian altar)
and the Grotto of the Nativity to observe the birth of Jesus Christ. In
Hollywood, the Night Service began at 11:00 PM followed by the Morning
Service. The Gospel was read at midnight, followed by the singing of
“Park ee Partzoonus”. The Blessing of the Water Service followed the
Night and Morning Services.

Rev. Fr. Arshag Khachadourian, pastor of St. James Armenian Church of
Los Angeles, read the Christmas message of His Beatitude Archbishop
Torkom Manoogian, Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem and former Primate of
the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of North America.
Tarkmanchatz alumni from as far away as Vancouver, Canada traveled to
Los Angles for this special event. Fr. Arshag congratulated the
Godfather of the Cross, Mr. Harout Boyadjian, and wished him health and
happiness in 2005.

Mr. Nahabed Melkonian, founder of the Srpotz Tarkmanchatz Alumni of
North America and currently coordinator of the organization, expressed
his thanks to the faithful in attendance. Mr. Melkonian also thanked
the Friends of the Jerusalem Armenians for attending the traditional
service, which ended at 1:55 AM. Mr. Melkonian stressed his solidarity
with the Armenians of the Holy Land and the Armenian Patriarch of
Jerusalem, who is able to maintain the rights of the Armenian Orthodox
Church during the most difficult times. Also participating in the
service was Rev. Fr. Nareg Matarian, pastor of St. Sarkis Armenian
Church of East Los Angeles, Rev. Fr. Asoghig Jamgochian, visiting pastor
of the Armenian Church of Whittier, Deacon Hrair Karaverdian, Deacon
Mihran Toumajan, Deacon Carl Bardakian, and Mr. Nahabed Melkonian.
Afterwards, a traditional Bethlehem style breakfast was served for all
those in attendance.

Armenian president signs bill to combat money laundering

Armenian president signs bill to combat money laundering

.c The Associated Press

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) – Armenian President Robert Kocharian has signed
into law a parliamentary bill on combating money-laundering, his
office said Sunday.

The new law, which is also intended to help block funding of
terrorism, requires banks to report money transfers by individual
clients exceeding the equivalent of US10,000 (about euro7,600) and
obliges business structures to report all real-estate deals worth the
equivalent of more than US$100,000 (about euro76,000).

The law establishes a special structure under the ex-Soviet republic’s
Central Bank to track down money-laundering.

01/16/05 13:41 EST

Armenian peace-keepers to leave for Iraq

Armenian peace-keepers to leave for Iraq

Mediamax news agency
17 Jan 05

YEREVAN

An Armenian peace-keeping contingent is to leave for Iraq tomorrow, 18
January, the press service of the Armenian Defence Ministry told
Mediamax news agency.

The Armenian National Assembly ratified a memorandum at its closed
session on 24 December 2004, to send 46 Armenian military doctors,
drivers and sappers to Iraq.

Ninety-one deputies voted for, 23 voted against the ratification of
the document. In particular, the Justice opposition bloc and the
Armenian Revolutionary Federation – Dashnaktsutyun, which is a member
of the ruling coalition – voted against sending the Armenian
humanitarian contingent to Iraq.

The memorandum “On the management of the multi-national group included
into the stabilization forces in Iraq and on the settlement of other
similar issues” was signed between Poland and 19 other countries and
came into force on 24 July 2004. The countries which joined this
memorandum as the multinational battalion Polish command, are taking
part in establishing stability and security in Iraq and restoring the
economic infrastructure of this country.

BAKU: Armenia wants to disrupt Council of Europe report on NK

Armenia wants to disrupt Council of Europe report on breakaway region – TV

ANS TV, Baku
16 Jan 05

[Presenter] Azerbaijan and Armenia will again stand face to face on 25
January at the winter session of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe [PACE] in Strasbourg. It is worth saying that the
most successful moments of Azerbaijan’s Karabakh diplomacy are related
to the work done at this council. Baku has achieved some significant
progress to boast of here which, at first sight, can be seen as devoid
of important mechanisms to influence the resolution of the problem
[Nagornyy Karabakh conflict]. Multifaceted ongoing initiatives of the
Armenians and their efforts to use everyone and everything prove that
Yerevan will try at least not to lose in Strasbourg.

[Passage omitted: background information given as reference on screen]

[Correspondent, over video of CE building in Strasbourg, CE sessions]
This time the front-line is Strasbourg and the opposing forces are
parliamentarians. Our MPs together with their counterparts from
occupying Armenia will join the hearings on the Nagornyy Karabakh
issue at the winter session of the PACE in this French city on 25
January. The debates will certainly be very strenuous. The report by
the PACE rapporteur on Nagornyy Karabakh, David Atkinson, which will
be presented for hearings, and the draft resolution that will be
passed have caused hot debates in the media of the two countries for
nearly two months. There are many aspects that are in Azerbaijan’s
interests in the text of the report. From this viewpoint, the
Armenians are trying to disrupt its discussion by mobilizing all their
forces. The Armenians had some insignificant changes made to the
report when it was discussed at the political committee of the PACE in
November. The Azerbaijani side tentatively predicts what points
Armenia will heed at the discussions on 25 January.

[Gultakin Haciyeva, member of Azerbaijani delegation to PACE,
captioned, shown speaking to ANS] The first point is that they are
planning to make changes to the document, that Azerbaijani territories
were occupied not by Armenia’s armed formations, but by local Armenian
military formations [in Nagornyy Karabakh]. The main argument the
Armenians are putting forward is that this wording was used in the
resolutions issued by the UN Security Council.

[Correspondent] Haciyeva said the Azerbaijani delegation is going to
the session with specific facts and documents testifying to Armenia’s
aggression against Azerbaijan. She said Azerbaijan has a number of
proposals to the draft resolution, as well, but it won’t disclose them
yet in order not to give Armenia ammunition.

Armenia is also seriously bracing itself for the
discussions. Unofficial information says that the foreign minister of
the occupying country, Vardan Oskanyan, has made several visits to
London since November to influence English parliamentarians on this
issue. Even, the faithful defender of Armenia’s interests, the former
Russian co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group, Vladimir Kazimirov, tried
to correct rapporteur Atkinson’s, in inverted commas,” mistakes” last
month.

Although there are many objective points in the draft resolution, it
cannot be considered to be [the basis of] a claim. The document says
that Azerbaijan and Armenia assumed obligations to resolve the
conflict only by peaceful means when they entered the Council of
Europe in January 2001. Taking into consideration the fact that the
negotiations have not produced any results so far, we can say that
this provision restricts Azerbaijan’s right to liberate its occupied
lands by force if the peace talks prove to be sterile. At the same
time, the resolution suggests that the parties go to the international
court if the resolution of the conflict is not possible. But it is
admissible to Azerbaijan. As we know, courts usually consider
disputed issues, while Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity cannot be a
subject of dispute, court or referendum since it was recognized by the
UN and other influential entities. Anyhow, we do not have any good
reason to celebrate yet. Everything will depend on the 25 January test
of our MPs. In other words, he who laughs last has the best laugh.

Azada Balayeva for ANS

BAKU: Pundit urges Azeri govm’t to demand permanent withdrawal 907

Pundit urges Azeri government to demand permanent withdrawal of US aid ban

Yeni Musavat
17 Jan 05

Text of report by Anar in Azerbaijani newspaper Yeni Musavat on 17
January headlined “Section 907 was again not abandoned”, subheaded
“Hikmat Hacizada connected this with the strength of the Armenian
lobby and the government’s negligence”

US President George Bush has signed a decree prolonging for one more
year the suspension of Section 907 to the Freedom Support Act. To
recap, the section banning US aid to the Azerbaijani government was
adopted in the US Congress a few years ago. It is interesting why the
document running counter to the interests of Azerbaijan – which is
cooperating with the USA in the fight against international terrorism
– has not been withdrawn once and for all.

Answering our question, political scientist Hikmat Hacizada connected
this with the strength of the American [as published, presumably
Armenian] lobby.

“This means that the Armenian diaspora is still enjoying its power of
influence. The US government is reckoning with the Congress because it
needs to be mindful of the Congress. Azerbaijan is not such an
important country for the USA that it would fight with Congress
because of us.

“There are some notes of insincerity as well. Because Azerbaijan is
the US ally in the fight against international terrorism. They use our
aerodromes and fly to Afghanistan via our territory. From this
standpoint, the Azerbaijani authorities have the opportunity to demand
the withdrawal of the document once and for all and it should do so,”
Hacizada said.

A man of letters – and passion

The Toronto Star –
Jan. 17, 2005. 06:41 AM

A man of letters – and passion
Edited Armenian paper before moving to Canada
Architect also wrote book about William Saroyan

CATHERINE DUNPHY
OBITUARY WRITER

Two careers, two countries, one passion.

Call it pride, if you will, of place or of history but certainly of a
people. Bedros Zobyan was an architect and crusading newspaper editor
born and raised in the Turkish city of Istanbul who used both of his
careers to nurture and nudge his fellow Armenians closer to their
heritage and culture.

Five years ago, long after he and his wife and daughter had immigrated
in 1967 to live quietly in Don Mills, as well as after retiring from
the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce where he designed everything
from buildings to bank machines, Zobyan once again took up his pen.

He wrote a book about the three-week trip he took in May 1964 with
William Saroyan to find the Pulitzer Prize-winning author and
playwright’s Armenian ancestral home.

Towards Bitlis with William Saroyan was published by an Armenian
publisher in 2003. The cover features a photo of Saroyan sitting on a
rock in the rugged Anatolian countryside alongside a signpost stating:
Bitlis 10.

The pair went from Istanbul via Ankara to Samsun on the Black
Sea. They stopped at Lake of Van (considered to be as sacred a place
as Ararat to Armenians). Venturing into remote villages where
Armenians had lived before the genocide of 1915, they found Armenian
children being raised in primitive conditions by Turkish and Kurdish
families.

In Bitlis, Saroyan located the foundations of his family’s home, with
some help from villagers hoping this rich American was going to lead
them all straight to a hidden cache of gold. (He didn’t.)

Although Zobyan told his family that Saroyan took notes during their
trip, the author never directly wrote about it, although he did write
a play called The Istanbul Trilogy. Zobyan, however, wrote up a series
about the trip for his newspaper called: “60,000 Kilometres in 16 Days
with William Saroyan.”

For years people told him he should write a book based on those
articles. And when he finally did start writing, he became immersed in
the work.

“While he was working on the book, nothing else existed,” said his
wife, Seta.

It took three years. A perfectionist, he typed, copy-edited and
typeset the book, along with choosing and laying out the photos, then
sent it to the publisher in Istanbul. When the publisher sent back the
galleys, Zobyan proofed every comma.

“Every day I came home from school and my grandfather would be
typing. Every day,” said Amara Possian, 15. “My grandma too, both of
them always had red pens.”

American Armenians had arranged a special book launch for October 2003
in California, but Zobyan was too ill to attend. When he died at 82 of
pancreatic cancer this past December, he had received dozens of
letters from Armenians around the world thanking him for writing the
book.

It is considered much more than a travel book.

“It’s part of our history,” says his friend, Arta Yuzbasian, an
Armenian artist living in Toronto. “It was very well received within
the Armenian diaspora, especially in the U.S.”

A dignified and diffident man, Zobyan was well respected within the
Armenian community in Toronto.

“People looked up to him,” said Berc Luleciyan. a deacon at the Holy
Trinity Armenian Church, who attended high school with Zobyan in
Istanbul.

In 1958, Zobyan was commissioned by the patriarch of St. Gregory the
Illuminator Church to build a new church in the old authentic Armenian
style on the site in Istanbul of the old church that had been
expropriated to make way for a highway. He rescued and reincorporated
the ceramic tiles from the original chapel, marble stones, and reused
the carved stone cross belonging to the 500-year-old church.

It was – and continues to be – the only one of Istanbul’s 28 Armenian
churches that displays the austere, powerful lines and massive
stonework that marks Armenian church architecture. The church’s
Catholics wrote him commending his work.

“My father built the most important church in Istanbul,” said his
daughter, Hasmig Possian, 53.

But he was having more fun as a journalist working at the Marmara, a
daily started in 1940 by Seta Zobyan’s father, a well-known foreign
correspondent. The young couple took over the paper in 1950. One of
two Armenian dailies in Istanbul, it had a circulation of 5,000 but a
considerably larger reach in terms of influence.

Zobyan lobbied in its pages to save the church he would go on to
rebuild; his scoop on the guilty verdict of the court martial trials
of the Democratic Party president and its prime minister landed him in
prison for two days. Seta Zobyan pulled every string she had to get
her husband released.

“Without bribery he would have been in jail months and months,” she
said.

They lived a good life for a time, attending balls, receptions for
visiting royalty, the ballet and concerts. “I translated for Petula
Clark when she was getting a leather coat made,” his daughter
recalled. She also danced with Eric Burdon, lead singer of the
Animals, when she was 14 and her father took her on his press pass to
a club.

But after the military coup of 1960, many Armenians left Turkey,
including many of their families. In 1965 they sent their daughter to
Toronto, to St. Clements School, where they believed she would be safe
and get a better education.

Two years later, they immigrated, but it wasn’t until 1970 that they
sold the paper.

“That still hurts,” said Seta Zobyan.

Neither practised journalism in Canada: Bedros Zobyan went to work for
the large architectural firm of Page and Steele building the Commerce
Court towers, and Seta Zobyan found a job in market research. She now
works part-time as a court translator and interpreter.

In the 1970s they visited Saroyan at his home in Fresno, Calif. He had
two houses, one in which he lived and one in which he wrote. After
Saroyan died of cancer in 1981, his homes became the site of a museum
dedicated to his works and his Armenian heritage.

Zobyan made sure the museum received copies of his book; he’d hoped to
translate it into English for Armenians living in California and
Europe.

“I will translate it,” Seta Zobyan said. “That was his wish and I will
try and make it come true.”

[email protected]

www.thestar.com

BAKU: EU official threatens sanctions if Azerbaijan goes to war

EU official threatens sanctions if Azerbaijan goes to war

Ekspress, Baku
5 Jan 05

A senior EU official has warned that sanctions may be imposed on
Azerbaijan and Armenia if the countries opt to resume hostilities. In
an exclusive interview with Azerbaijani newspaper Ekspress, an
official representative of the EU commission for security and conflict
settlement, Pierre Garton, said that the future integration of the two
Caucasus republics into Europe depends on the resolution of the
dispute over Azerbaijan’s breakaway region of Nagornyy Karabakh. He
also complained about what he thinks to be the “monopoly” of the OSCE
Minsk Group, a team of international mediators put in charge of
settling the conflict, and termed its activities as sterile. The
following is the text of Alakbar Raufoglu’s report by Azerbaijani
newspaper Ekspress on 5 January headlined “The EU will impose
sanctions if there is war” and subheaded “Pierre Garton: ‘Integration
of Azerbaijan and Armenia into Europe depends on the Karabakh issue'”;
subheadings are as published:

“If military operations resume in Nagornyy Karabakh, the European
Union may take tough steps against the two conflicting parties,” an
official representative of the EU commission for security and conflict
settlement and former rapporteur of the European Parliament
[Commission] on the South Caucasus, Swedish diplomat Pierre Garton,
said in an exclusive interview with Ekspress yesterday [4 January].

He said that Europe called on the leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia in
1992 to freeze military hostilities. “Since these calls went unheard
then, certain restrictions were introduced to the two countries’
cooperation with the EU. These sanctions will be imposed on
Azerbaijan and Armenia again should there be any clashes on the front
line.”

What is Brussels concerned about?

The EU’s attitude to the Karabakh conflict remains unchanged. “We are
interested in continued dialogue between the two countries. The
conflict should be resolved peacefully. It concerns both Azerbaijan
and Armenia.”

Garton believes that the EU’s cooperation with Armenia and Azerbaijan
is now based on three factors: economic cooperation, the development
of democracy and a peaceful solution to the Nagornyy Karabakh
conflict. “We are having a close and balanced cooperation with both
countries and do not distinguish between them. But the parties to the
conflict often try to disrupt this balance,” the diplomat complained.

The EU’s high-ranking officials have recently visited both Azerbaijan
and Armenia to become familiar with the domestic situation here and
the settlement process. “We understand that the delay in the peace
talks is accompanied by certain tension in both countries. But it is
wrong to exaggerate this concern as if it could lead to war, and this
seriously worries us. At the same time we regret the fact that
Azerbaijan and Armenia have failed to officially appeal to the
European Union for mediation.”

The EU’s main concern is that calls for war are being made in the
conflicting countries at a time when peace talks are under way. “It
undermines the dialogue. The situation should be duly evaluated and
these occurrences should be eliminated.”

Armenian Defence Minister Serzh Sarkisyan did not rule out a military
option in the Karabakh settlement at a briefing in Moscow last
week. He said that “if the limits of negotiations are depleted, the
tension that will follow may provoke military operations.”

Monopolist co-chairmen

Garton believes that the takeover of the “mediation monopoly” in the
Karabakh talks by the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairmen restricts active
involvement of other European entities in the issue. “This problem can
only be eliminated with joint efforts of the international
community. Someone’s reigning the process will not bear fruit. The
conflicting countries do not seem to have understood this
necessity. They may be thinking that if there are other mediators, the
Minsk Group will dodge its mandate. But its activity is sterile
anyway. In a settlement everything depends on the parties. It is not
possible to lead the parties to peace with one [mediating] party.”

Liberating five districts still on agenda

Touching upon the proposals the EU has made on the Karabakh settlement
to date, Garton said that “the fate of those ideas shows that acting
as a mediator, which is outside intervention in the process, is
difficult and ineffective”. “The EU possesses more possibilities and
leverage to solve the Karabakh problem.”

If so, why does the EU not back up its proposals such as five
districts [Armenian-occupied districts around Nagornyy Karabakh] in
exchange for railway communications or other solution models and put
pressure on Yerevan to ensure their implementation?

The refusal to accept the EU’s solution options does not mean that it
will not provide new proposals for a Karabakh solution, Garton
said. Simply, Europe “thinks it is better not to increase the number
of solution models which are being disputed by the parties and
remaining on paper”.

“Moreover, the liberation of five districts is still on the agenda,”
the rapporteur said.

Saying that Armenia’s position in the negotiation process “is
explained with rather heavy arguments”, Garton refused to call that
country “non-constructive”. “It would imply putting [the blame for]
the failure of the talks on one party. It can be just considered that
Yerevan’s position in the peaceful settlement requires more
concessions than Azerbaijan’s.”

Conflict can be resolved in 12 months

Garton also said that the EU’s increasing activity in the Karabakh
settlement is the main priority of the union’s future performance,
since Azerbaijan and Armenia have been included into Europe’s New
Neighbourhood programme and integration of both countries into the EU
depends on Karabakh.

“Negotiations will start with Ankara in 2005 on Turkey’s integration
into the EU, thus bringing the borders of Europe closer to
Azerbaijan. As for the EU, it does not want problems like Karabakh to
persist in territories close to Europe,” he said.

“I hope that the conflict will not last for another 12 years. Armenia
and Azerbaijan have already demanded that the [Minsk Group]
co-chairmen should increase their efforts. It builds up confidence
that the Minsk Group will increase activity and the conflict will be
resolved in 12 months.”

Baku is optimistic

Commenting on the EU representative’s statements to Ekspress,
Azerbaijani Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov said: “The EU is our
strategic partner and supports Baku’s position in the settlement
process. We are optimistic about war. Naturally, Azerbaijan has never
promised to observe eternal peace. Even in Europe it is not ruled out
that military operations may resume if the peace talks fail.”

Armenia Maybe of Less Importance for Russia, A Russian Analyst Says

ARMENIA MAYBE OF LESS IMPORTANCE FOR RUSSIA, A RUSSIAN ANALYST SAYS

YEREVAN, JANUARY 17. ARMINFO. In return for Russia’s support, Armenian
President Robert Kocharyan expresses readiness to further favor the
strengthening of Russian economic presence in Armenia, writes Gennadiy
Sisoyev in his article in the Russian newspaper “Kommersant.”

In his words, in the establishment of relations with Yerevan, Russia
actively used the interest of President Robert Kocharyan in the
political support of Moscow in connection with activation of the
Armenian opposition after “rose revolution” in Georgia. The author
writes that in the course of implementation of the bilateral agreement
“Property for Debt,” the main part of power capacities of Armenia were
transferred under control of Russia (80% of energy generation in
Armenia). The Armenian monopolist in the sphere of gas, “ArmRosgasprom,”
is also controlled by Russian structures. And finally, the author
writes, full packages of shares of a number of enterprises of the
defense complex of Armenia have been transferred to Russia. Armenia’s
importance as a major strategic partner of Russia in the Transcaucasus
may considerably decrease if Moscow fails to maintain its influence on
Georgia, the analyst says.

He said that although the relations between Moscow and the new
authorities of Georgia overcame the phase of tension at the end of
2004, they are still unsatisfactory. As regards the relations with
Azerbaijan, the author says that the Kremlin is concerned that Aliyev
Jr. may correct the balanced policy of his father in direction of
closer cooperation with the West in order that Azerbaijan receives the
role of the regional leader. The author says that official Moscow is
dissatisfied that Baku avoids conclusion of a long-term agreement with
Russia on oil transit to supply the whole Caspian oil through the
pipeline BTC via Georgia and Turkey. Besides, Moscow is concerned over
lack of process in the sphere of military and technical cooperation
with Baku and suspects the new authorities of Azerbaijan in the secret
intention to change over to western standards of armament.

Yerevan Intends to Regulate Street Trading Within 2 Month

ARMENIAN MUNICIPALITY INTENDS TO REGULATE ISSUE OF STREET TRADING
WITHIN 2 MONTHS

YEREVAN, JANUARY 17. ARMINFO. Regulation of the issue of street
trading requires some 2 months, Vice Mayor of Yerevan Arman Sahakyan
said at a briefing, Monday.

He said that street trading in Yerevan was banned starting from
January 14, 2005. In connection with New Year and Christmas shopping,
Yerevan authorities allowed street trading during the holidays.
Already on January 7, there were notices prohibiting street trading at
all the shops. Relevant words are currently in process in the
communities of Center, Shengavit, Kanaker-Zeitun. Sahakyan assessed
these works as satisfactory. Representatives of municipality, local
prefectures and police participate in the works.

As regards mini-markets created in the spring of 2004, Sahakyan said
that they have justified themselves only by 30-40%. According to
traders, the mini-markets are not located in crowed areas, so they
prefer trading in the streets. To note, daily payment for a trading
point at mini-markets is some 500-2000 AMD, which is by 10-15% lower
than the payment for a place at markets. In response to the question
of ARMINFO’s correspond concerning the guarantees that street trading
will not be launched again after a time, Sahakyan said that this issue
will be strictly controlled by the municipality and the police.

FM and League of Arab States to Sign MOU in Cairo

ARMENIAN FOREIGN MINISTRY AND LEAGUE OF ARAB STATES TO SIGN MEMORANDUM
OF MUTUAL UNDERSTANDING IN CAIRO

YEREVAN, JANUARY 17. ARMINFO. Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan
Oskanyan will leave for Egypt on January 18.

The Public Relations Office of the Armenian Foreign Ministry told
ARMINFO that the major goal of Vardan Oskanyan’s visit to Cairo is
signing of a Memorandum of Mutual Understanding between the Armenian
Foreign Ministry and the Chief Secretariat of the League of Arab
States. This document will factually provide Armenia with a status of
an observer at the League of Arab States, the source reports.

The same day, Minister Oskanyan will meet his Egyptian colleague Ahmed
Abul Gheit. In the course of his visit, Vardan Oskanyan will meet
Secretary General of the League of Arab States Abu Musai and Minister
for International Cooperation of Egypt, Head of the Intergovernmental
Commission of Armenian-Egyptian Cooperation on the Egyptian party
Faiza Abul Naga.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress