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  • ASBAREZ Online [02-17-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    02/17/2005
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
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    1) 90th Anniversary Commemoration Committee Finalizes Programs
    2) Russian FM Discusses Bilateral Ties, Karabagh in Armenia
    3) Tbilisi Incident Concerns Javakhk Armenians
    4) Christian Minority in Azerbaijan Gets Rid of Armenian 'Eye Sore'

    1) 90th Anniversary Commemoration Committee Finalizes Programs

    LOS ANGELES--This year marks the 90th Anniversary of first genocide of the
    Twentieth Century--the genocide against the Armenian people. This page in
    history--the annihilation of close to two million Armenians --will be
    marked by
    Armenians throughout the world.
    The Armenian-American community of California, which has traditionally
    organized an array of events during the month of April, and specifically
    between April 17-24, will this year commemorate the Genocide's 90th
    Anniversary
    by hosting a series of events jointly organized by over two dozen Armenian
    political, cultural, and religious groups. With the recent addition of the
    Organization of Istanbul Armenians, the Iraqi Armenian Community, and the
    Armenian Youth Movement, the number of member groups of the United Armenian
    Genocide 90th Anniversary Commemoration Committee of California, grew to 26.
    The United Young Armenians, however, left the coalition.
    Having begun its work in 2004, the Committee has nearly finalized its agenda,
    and has resolved to mark the 90th Anniversary through:
    - Organizing a large-scale cultural event;
    - Hosting a commemoration in Sacramento with the participation of State-level
    elected officials and government representatives;
    - Organizing a demonstration adjacent to the Turkish Consulate of Los
    Angeles;
    - Hosting a requiem service at the monument, dedicated to the memory of the
    Genocide's victims, in the City of Montebello.
    - Hosting requiem services at all Armenians churches throughout the State;
    - Organizing a community-wide event, concluding the series of commemorative
    events.


    United Armenian Genocide 90th Anniversary Commemoration Committee of
    California


    2) Russian FM Discusses Bilateral Ties, Karabagh in Armenia

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov met with President
    Robert Kocharian and other Armenian leaders in Yerevan Thursday on an official
    visit which focused on bilateral relations and the Karabagh conflict.
    The talks were also aimed at preparing for Russian President Vladimir
    Putin's upcoming visit to Armenia, his country's main regional ally.
    "We expect a very busy year for our partnership and allied
    relationship,"
    Lavrov said at the end of the one-day trip. "We have to implement agreements
    reached by the [Russian-Armenian] inter-governmental commission on economic
    cooperation last December. We agreed to accelerate implementation of all
    issues
    agreed by the parties so that our presidents can see… that their decisions are
    put into practice."
    "There are no problems in our relations. But because those relations are
    constantly developing, they need constant attention," he added.
    "We are happy with the results of the visit. I believe that it will give
    an additional impetus to our relations," Oskanian said for his part.
    Kocharian told Lavrov that he is satisfied with the current state of
    bilateral ties and hopes that Russia will help to lift transport blockades
    resulting from the unresolved ethnic conflicts in the South Caucasus.
    The Karabagh conflict was a major theme of the talks. "We hope that the
    Prague process of regular meetings between the foreign ministers of Armenia
    and
    Azerbaijan will bear fruit," Lavrov said. "The co-chairs of the OSCE's Minsk
    Group are ready to foster that. We will do our best to make sure that the
    process progresses successfully."
    "Sergei Lavrov is a minister who probably knows more [about the Karabagh
    peace process] than I," Oskanian joked at their joint news conference,
    underlining Moscow's role as a key international mediator. He announced that
    his next meeting with Azeri Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov in Prague will
    take place on March 2.
    Economic issues were another subject of discussions, with Kocharian and
    Prime Minister Andranik Markarian again calling on the Russians to speed up
    work on reactivating four of five moribund Armenian enterprises which were
    handed over to them two years ago in payment for Armenia's $100 million debt.
    Markarian also expressed concern at Russia's plans to finance a new railway to
    Iran that would bypass Armenia and run through its arch-rival Azerbaijan
    Lavrov, who revealed to reporters last year that his father was a
    Tbilisi-born Armenian, assured Markarian that "Russia will take into account
    Armenia's interests and will not take any steps that would damage them,"
    according to an Armenian government statement.


    3) Tbilisi Incident Concerns Javakhk Armenians

    YEREVAN (Combined Sources)--Voicing concern over a recent incident in Tbilisi
    involving the desecration of Armenian gravestones, the Javakhk Union of
    Georgian Armenians sent a letter to Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili,
    urging him to take measures to preserve Armenian cultural monuments in
    Georgia.
    On February 8, Armenian gravestones from the St. Virgin Church in Tbilisi's
    Norashen district were removed and replaced with Georgian ones. A Georgian
    priest also told the Armenian clerics to pray in Armenia because "this church
    is ours now."
    The 15th century church's ornaments made by the Hovnatanyans are still
    preserved. Head of the Georgian-Armenian diocese Archbishop Vazgen
    Mirzakhanyan, said he is concerned that the next incident will involve
    vandalism of the church.


    4) Christian Minority in Azerbaijan Gets Rid of Armenian 'Eye Sore'

    By Simon Ostrovsky

    (AFP)--When a Christian people in this predominantly Muslim republic ground
    away the Armenian inscriptions from the walls of a church and tombs last month
    to erase evidence linking them to Azerbaijan's foe [Armenia], they thought
    they
    had the interests of their small community in mind.
    But now the tiny Christian church in the former Soviet republic of Azerbaijan
    has become the focus of a big scandal as the Udi minority struggles to find
    its
    identity in an ideological minefield. The church, which has not been used
    since
    Azerbaijan became part of the Soviet Union, has become the center of a dispute
    between the Norwegian backers of the reconstruction, who consider the
    alterations to be vandalism, and the Udi community.
    "We have no God, our people lost their religion under communism and this
    church is our only hope of reviving it," said Georgi Kechaari, one of the
    village elders who doubles as the ethnic group's historian.
    "But we live in Azerbaijan, and when people came into the church and saw
    Armenian letters, they automatically associated us with Armenians," he said.
    The Udi, who once used the Armenian alphabet, have struggled to separate
    their
    legacy from that of their fellow Christians, the Armenians, who fought a war
    with Azerbaijan and have been vilified here.
    Since the beginning of the conflict with Armenia over Mountainous Karabagh,
    which erupted just before the break-up of the Soviet Union, Azerbaijan has rid
    of nearly everything associated with Armenia in has been wiped away, although
    hundreds of thousands of Armenians lived here before the war that ended in a
    cease-fire in 1994.
    Armenian-sounding city names have been changed, streets named after Armenians
    have been replaced with politically correct Azeri surnames, while Soviet
    history glorifying Armenian communist activists has been rewritten in school
    textbooks. But the white stone church in Nij, some two centuries old, had not
    been tampered with until the Udi undertook to reconstruct it with help from
    the
    state financed Norwegian Humanitarian Enterprise (NHE).
    "It was a beautiful inscription, 200 years old, it even survived the war,"
    Norway's Ambassador to Azerbaijan Steinar Gil told AFP. "This is an act of
    vandalism and Norway in no way wants to be associated with it."
    But the Udis insist they erased the inscriptions to right a historic wrong.
    Kechaari alleged that the Armenian inscriptions, which stated that the Church
    was built in 1823, were fakes put there by Armenians in the 1920s so that they
    could make historical claims to it.
    The Udis are the last surviving tribe of the Caucasus Albanians, a group
    unrelated to the Mediterranean Albanians, whose Christian kingdom ruled this
    region in medieval times before Turkic hordes swept in from Central Asia in
    the
    13th and 15th centuries. They number under 10,000 people and Nij is the only
    predominantly Udi village to survive to this day, and although they call
    themselves Christian, there is little that Christians from other parts of the
    world would find in common with them.
    The Udis have not had a pastor for nearly a century and celebrate Islamic
    holidays together with their Muslim neighbors. But while the Udis soul search
    for an identity, Azerbaijan has used their legacy to strengthen its claims to
    Karabagh.
    Armenians argue that the multitude of churches in the occupied region proves
    that they as a Christian people can lay a historic claim to it. But Azeris,
    who
    consider themselves to be the descendants of Albanians who were assimilated
    into a Turkic group, say the area is rightfully theirs because the churches
    were actually built by their ancestors the Albanians.
    To the Udi, who used Armenian script when their church was built, toeing the
    official Azeri line has become more of a priority than historical accuracy.
    The
    perception that they are one with the Armenians has meant that there has been
    little trust from the authorities; Udi men for example were only allowed to
    start serving in the Azeri Army two years ago.
    But their use of power tools to fit the status quo took their Norwegian
    sponsors by surprise. "They think they have erased a reminder of being
    Armenian...instead they have taken away the chance to have a good image when
    the church is inaugurated," the director of the NHE in Azerbaijan, Alf Henry
    Rasmussen said, adding that a visit to the church by Norway's prime minister
    will probably now be canceled.
    "Everyone will stare at the missing stones. I'm not quite sure if we can
    continue our work there," Rasmussen said.


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