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  • ASBAREZ Online [01-20-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    01/20/2005
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ.COM

    1) Archbishop Mesrob Mutafyan to Take AGBU to Court on Melkonian Issue
    2) Assistant US Secretary of State's Statements Hinder Peace Process Says
    Karabagh ARF
    3) Kentucky Democrat Chandler Joins Armenian Caucus
    4) Azeri Ex-Brigade Commander Refuses to Fight Again for Azerbaijan

    1) Archbishop Mesrob Mutafyan to Take AGBU to Court on Melkonian Issue

    LOS ANGELES--Reliable sources have confirmed that, in the matter of the
    Garabed
    Melkonian Trust, Archbishop Mesrob Mutafyan, in his fiduciary capacity as
    Patriarch of Constantinople, filed a lawsuit against New York-based Armenian
    General Benevolent Union (AGBU) on January 13, 2005. The suit was filed in the
    Superior Court of the State of California for the County of Los Angeles by
    plaintiff Mutafyan's California-based attorney.
    The lawsuit mainly addresses the formal announcement made by the AGBU in
    March
    2004 that it would be closing the Melkonian Educational Institution in
    Nicosia,
    Cyprus at the end of the 2005 school year.
    In July 1921, wealthy Armenian businessman Garabed Melkonian donated a
    gift to
    then Patriarch of Constantinople Zaven Der Yeghyayan, to establish and
    maintain
    Armenian schools, as well as carry out various charitable works for the
    Armenian people. In 1924, the value of the gift was at least $3.5 million and
    per Melkonian's request, an Armenian school and orphanage named the Melkonian
    Educational Institute was established in Nicosia, Cyprus.
    In 1925, Patriarch Der Yeghyayan transferred the entire Melkonian gift,
    including the Melkonian Educational Institute, to the AGBU due to the latter's
    expressed ability to better manage the trust's assets and execute the donor's
    intentions.
    The suit, Arch. Mesrob Mutafyan vs. Armenian General Benevolent Union,
    petitions to compel AGBU to perform the Trustee's duties and redress a breach
    of trust by payment of money or otherwise.
    Asbarez tried to contact Mutafyan for comment but has not yet received a
    response.


    2) Assistant US Secretary of State's Statements Hinder Peace Process Says
    Karabagh ARF

    YEREVAN (Yerkir)--Responding to outgoing US Assistant Secretary of State
    Elizabeth Jones's recent statement concerning Mountainous Karabagh Republic
    (MKR), Grisha Hayrapetian, a member of the MKR Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation (ARF) Central Committee (CC), said that the comments are "extremely
    damaging to the peace process."
    On Wednesday, Jones called for increased US engagement in resolving regional
    conflicts in the former Soviet Union, stating: "It is in Russia's interest for
    these areas--for Transnistria, Abkhazia, South Ossetia, Mountainous
    Karabagh--to be stable, for corruption to end there, for the criminal
    secessionists who rule there to be removed. It is not appropriate for this
    kind
    of instability and criminality to exist right in the middle of Europe."
    In the article that appeared in the newspaper Aparazh, Hayerapetian
    emphasized
    that Jones's statement contradicts those of high-ranking US officials who have
    repeatedly said that democratic process in MKR has advanced significantly,
    specifically in contrast to the authoritarian regime of Azerbaijan.
    He also stressed that the removal of any given country's leadership
    remains an
    internal issue for citizens to decide through free elections.


    3) Kentucky Democrat Chandler Joins Armenian Caucus

    Second term Congressman Serves on House International Relations Committee

    NEW YORK (ANCA-ER)--Representative Ben Chandler (D-KY) became the newest
    member of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues on Wednesday, boosting
    the Caucus's membership to one hundred forty-five.
    Congressman Chandler was first elected to the US House in a special election
    in February 2004 to replace Rep. Ernie Fletcher, who left his seat to
    successfully run for Governor of Kentucky. Chandler was re-elected to
    office in
    November 2004, with 59% of the vote. Congressman Chandler serves on the
    Committee on Agriculture, the Committee on International Relations, and the
    Select Committee on Homeland Security.
    "We welcome Representative Chandler joining the Armenian Issues Caucus and
    look forward to working with the Congressman on a number of issues of special
    concern to his Armenian American constituents," said Doug Geogerian, Executive
    Director of the Armenian National Committee of America Eastern Region
    (ANCA-ER). "As a member of the Committee on International Relations, we look
    forward to his support on gaining official recognition of the Armenian
    Genocide, working to foster stronger US-Armenia bilateral relations, and
    obtaining a just settlement for the people of Mountainous Karabagh," said
    Geogerian.
    Founded in 1995, the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues is a bipartisan
    forum for the discussion of policies to foster increased cooperation between
    the United States and Armenian governments and to strengthen the enduring
    bonds
    between the American and Armenian peoples. Its two co-chairs are Congressman
    Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) and Congressmen Frank Pallone (D-NJ).


    4) Azeri Ex-Brigade Commander Refuses to Fight Again for Azerbaijan

    BAKU (PanArmenian.net)--"I will not fight for Azerbaijan anymore," announced
    retired Colonel Azer Rustamov, in an interview with Azeri weekly
    Obozrevatel.net. "I do not wish to fight and others will not go either.
    They'll
    prefer to trade in bazaars."
    Rustamov rose to the rank of full colonel and commander of a brigade in the
    Fizuli district, where he served from 1999 to 2001. He resigned from the
    military in 2003. "If war breaks out now, I am not sure whether I'll fight. I
    witnessed the attitude showed towards the memory of the killed and those, who
    remained invalid after the war," said Rustamov. "The army, of course, will
    fight for a certain period. But what will happen when their depleted ranks
    would need to be replenished? Who will go if over two million people now work
    in Russia?"
    Rustamov is also critical of Azerbaijan's foreign policy rhetoric. At
    present,
    he is focused on forming "Combat Brotherhood," a non-government organization
    that would focus on veterans of Afghanistan and other wars.
    A veteran of wars in Afghanistan and Karabagh, Rustamov was decorated by both
    the Elchibey and Aliyev administrations with the Order of the Red Star,
    awarded
    for length of service. A group of 100 Chechen volunteers, headed by Shamil
    Basayev and Salman Raduyev, significantly helped the Azeri army, according to
    Rustamov.


    CORRECTION

    In Tuesday's article "Twenty-two Novices Refresh Ranks of ARF," we
    incorrectly
    reported that Khajag Dikranian served as the godfather to the novices entering
    the ranks of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation on January 15; it should
    have stated Khajag Dikidjian.


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