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  • ASBAREZ Online [12-28-2004]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    12/28/2004
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ.COM

    1) Gomitas Institute Donates Armenian Genocide Books to US Congress Members
    2) Armenian Prime Minister Conveys Condolences
    3) Saakashvili Tells Armenian Population Integration Necessary
    4) Another Gas Poisoning Reported in Armenia

    1) Gomitas Institute Donates Armenian Genocide Books to US Congress Members

    WASHINGTON, DC (Armenpress)--In commemoration of the 90th anniversary of the
    Armenian Genocide, the UK-based Gomitas Institute on Armenian Genocide studies
    has donated 500 copies of its latest publication, United States Official
    Records on the Armenian Genocide 1915-17, to members of the US Senate and
    House
    of Representatives.
    This initiative was taken at the request of a generous benefactor, and made
    possible through the support of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian
    Issues, as
    well as the Washington, DC based Armenian National Committee of America
    (ANCA);
    the move comes as the incoming 109th Congress faces consideration of the
    Armenian Genocide Resolution.
    "With the publication of this volume, the Gomitas Institute has, once again,
    provided a vital resource for all those working to overcome the Turkish
    government's shameful campaign to pressure the United States into
    complicity in
    Turkey's denial of the Armenian Genocide," said ANCA Executive Director Aram
    Hamparian. "The comprehensive and compelling evidence assembled in this book
    establishes the US response to the Armenian Genocide as a critical
    milestone in
    American history--one that Turkey should not be allowed to erase."
    United States Official Records on the Armenian Genocide 1915-17 was published
    by the Gomitas Institute and is the latest book among the expanding resources
    on the Armenian Genocide, currently utilized by students, scholars, and
    journalists.
    "The documents in this book provide a first-hand look at the efforts of US
    consuls and the American Ambassador in Constantinople to engage the US
    government in ending the systematic destruction of the Armenian people. Sadly,
    these efforts were ultimately unsuccessful, the massacres continued, and most
    Armenians perished as a result. . . It is our hope that this publication will
    help educate America's leaders and the general public about the Armenian
    Genocide and the need for the US Congress to enact legislation that recognizes
    this tragedy as genocide. Finally, we must ensure that the lessons learned
    from
    this tragedy are used to prevent future genocides." write Congressmen Frank
    Pallone and Joseph Knollenberg in their forward of the book.
    A sister publication, United States Diplomacy on the Bosphorus: The Diaries of
    Ambassador Morgenthau 1913-1916, will soon be printed.
    Serving as an invaluable record of the Armenian genocide in all its
    complexities, the two books reveal to what extent the United States government
    knew about the Armenian genocide, as early as the summer of 1915.


    2) Armenian Prime Minister Conveys Condolences
    Death Toll in Asian Disaster Approaches 60,000

    GALLE (Reuters)--Armenian prime minister Andranik Margarian sent
    condolences to
    the prime ministers of Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Thailand, Bangladesh, and India to
    express Armenia's anguish over the thousands of deaths and the scale of the
    destruction caused by Sunday's monster tsunami.
    The sea and wreckage of coastal towns around the Indian Ocean yielded up tens
    of thousands of bodies on Tuesday, pushing the toll to 60,000.
    The apocalyptic destruction caused by the ocean surge dwarfed the efforts of
    governments and relief agencies as they recovered countless corpses while
    trying to treat survivors and take care of millions of homeless, increasingly
    threatened by disease amid the rotting remains. Thousands more were injured.
    The United Nations launched what it called an unprecedented relief effort to
    assist nations hit by a devastating tsunami triggered by a magnitude 9.0
    undersea earthquake off the Indonesian island of Sumatra.
    In a further threat to the region, disease could kill as many people as those
    killed by the wall of water, a top World Health Organization (WHO) official
    said.
    While grieving families in wrecked coastal towns and resorts buried their
    loved
    ones, others, including many foreign tourists, searched for friends and
    relatives still missing.
    In Thailand, where thousands of tourists were enjoying a Christmas break to
    escape the northern winter, many of the country's paradise resorts were turned
    into graveyards.
    In Sri Lanka, hundreds of people were killed when a wave crashed into a train,
    wrecking eight carriages and uprooting the track it was traveling on. The
    train
    was called "Sea Queen".
    Of the overall death toll so far of 59,186, Indonesia has suffered the biggest
    number of victims, with its Health Ministry reporting 27,174 dead.
    Nearly all the deaths in Indonesia were in the northwestern province of
    Aceh at
    the tip of Sumatra. Rescue crews were still trying to reach cut off areas.
    Separatist rebels announced a truce while people search for loved ones.
    Sri Lanka reported around 19,000 dead. India's toll of 11,500 included at
    least
    7,000 on one archipelago, the Andamans and Nicobar. On one island, the
    surge of
    water killed two-thirds of the population.
    Hundreds of others died in the Maldives, Myanmar and Malaysia. The arc of
    water
    struck as far as Somalia and Kenya. Fishing villages, ports and resorts were
    devastated, power and communications cut and homes destroyed. The United
    Nations said the cost of the damage will reach billions of dollars.
    The tremor, the biggest in 40 years, ripped a chasm in the sea bed which
    launched the tsunami, possibly the deadliest in more than 200 years.


    3) Saakashvili Tells Armenian Population Integration Necessary

    JAVAKHK (Civil Georgia)--Georgia's President Mikhail Saakashvili visited
    Akhalkalak on December 28, a predominately Armenian-populated town in southern
    Georgian region of Javakhk.
    In meeting with the local population, President Saakashvili addressed the
    necessity of integration into Georgia.
    "Our Armenian population [of Javakhk] is very patriotic, and requires more
    attention and care. Though you should be integrated, your language and your
    culture should also be preserved. I know that you face many problems, but we
    can solve them if we stand together," he said.
    Saakashvili stressed that the construction on a new highway connecting Tbilisi
    with Akhalkalak would begin in the coming year, "We have already allocated
    funds for this project."
    He also promised scholarships for students willing to continue their education
    in Tbilisi universities.


    4) Another Gas Poisoning Reported in Armenia

    (AP)--A man and his wife were asphyxiated by a natural gas leak in Armenia, an
    emergency official said Monday--the fourth such incident this month.
    The deaths of the couple, aged 59 and 55, brings the death toll from gas leaks
    and poisonings this year to 16--with 12 in December alone.
    A spokesman for the emergency situations ministry said neighbors found the two
    bodies on Sunday at their home in the town of Ashtarak, north of Yerevan.
    Preliminary information showed that a poorly installed homemade gas heater and
    an illegal connection to municipal gas pipes were to blame.
    Many people in the poor ex-Soviet republic use homemade gas heaters, sometimes
    tapping illegally into gas lines, because their homes lack heaters, which are
    expensive.


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