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  • ASBAREZ Online [07-26-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    07/26/2005
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ.COM

    1) Turkey and Azerbaijan 'Failed States,' According to Foreign Policy Magazine
    Index
    2) Hovhannisan Tells Youth that Armenia Has Nothing to Negotiate
    3) Ciao Mediterranean, Ahoy Atlantic!
    4) Armenian Relief Society's 85th Convention Concludes

    1) Turkey and Azerbaijan 'Failed States,' According to Foreign Policy Magazine
    Index

    By Aris Babikian

    In its July /August issue, Foreign Policy magazine published its first annual
    Failed States Index. Turkey and Azerbaijan are ranked 49 and 50 respectably
    out
    of 60 countries surveyed. Turkey accumulated 86.1 points and Azerbaijan 85.7
    points. Armenia was not included in the Index.
    Produced by Foreign Policy and the Fund for Peace, the ranking measures the
    world's most at-risk countries, based on 12 social, economic, political and
    military indicators. The Failed States Index was compiled using the Fund for
    Peace internationally-recognized Conflict Assessment System Tool (CAST).
    According to Fund for Peace, a state is failing when its government begins to
    lose physical control of its territory or lacks a monopoly on the legitimate
    use of force. Other indicators include the breaking down of authority,
    resulting in inability to make collective decisions, and become incapable to
    formally interact with other states as a full member of the international
    community.
    As suggested by the list of 12 indicators, extensive corruption and criminal
    behavior, large-scale involuntary dislocation of the population, widespread
    violation of human rights, sharp economic decline, group-based inequality, and
    institutionalized persecution or discrimination are other hallmarks of state
    failure. States can decline at varying rates through explosion, implosion or
    erosion.
    The UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan has warned, "Ignoring failed states
    creates problems that sometimes come back to bite us." French President
    Jacques
    Chirac has spoken of "the threat that failed states carry for the world's
    equilibrium."
    The 2005 Failed States Index is based on a sample of countries deemed to be
    the most vulnerable to violent conflict. The Fund for Peace updated a list of
    vulnerable countries using the "World Conflict and Human Rights Map," produced
    by Leiden University in Holland. The map identifies states with a history of
    high levels of internal violence and political oppression.
    Tens of thousands of articles from global and regional open-sourced media
    were
    collected from May to December 2004. The Failed States Index will be updated
    annually.
    The Fund for Peace is a non-profit educational, research and advocacy
    organization based in Washington. Its mission is to prevent war and to
    alleviate the conditions that cause war. Since 1996, it has specialized
    primarily on reducing conflict stemming from weak and failing states.
    Foreign Policy is published since 1970 and is a major, award-winning magazine
    of global politics, economics, and ideas. It is published by the Carnegie
    Endowment for International Peace.


    2) Hovhannisan Tells Youth that Armenia Has Nothing to Negotiate

    YEREVAN (Combined Sources)--A senior member of the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation (ARF) echoed findings of a study conducted by the Armenian-European
    Policy and Legal Advice Center (AEPLAC), a research center funded by the
    European Union, which concluded an open border with Turkey would do little to
    give a strong push to Armenia's economic development.
    Vahan Hovhannisan, who is the vice chairman of Armenia's parliament and a
    member of the ARF Bureau, stressed however, that Turkey must eventually lift
    its blockade of Armenia, in aspiring to join the European Union.
    The blockade was instituted in 1993, in the heat of the Karabagh conflict. It
    resulted in a total shutdown of land and air communications between Turkey and
    Armenia.
    Speaking to a gathering of the Third Pan-Armenian Youth forum, taking
    place in
    Yerevan, Hovhannisian added that the border is open from the Armenian side,
    and
    that Armenia has nothing to offer to Turkey in return of its opening the
    border.
    "We cannot give up what Turkey demands. It demands that Armenian forces leave
    Karabagh. In addition, Armenia cannot drop its demand for the recognition of
    the Armenian genocide. That process is in place even without Armenia's
    participation," said Hovhannisian, citing the recent passage of Armenian
    genocide legislation by Venezuela. "Armenia's role was minimal."
    AEPLAC's findings run counter to the opinion of Western donors and some
    members of the Armenian government who say that an open border would help
    restore the Turkish-Armenian rail link and give Armenia alternative routs to
    take its products to other markets.
    Currently over 90 percent of Armenia's external trade is carried out through
    Georgian territory.


    3) Ciao Mediterranean, Ahoy Atlantic!

    YEREVAN (Armenpress)--The Armenian "Cilicia" sailing ship, named and modeled
    after the 13th century vessels used in and around the Armenian kingdom of
    Cilicia, dropped its anchor in the Mediterranean Sea, and will sail the
    Atlantic ocean in two days. Diaspora Armenians and deputy speaker of Britain's
    House of Lords Caroline Cox will be present as it passes the Strait of
    Gibraltar.
    The vessel has been in 9 seas and 10 islands carrying the flags of Armenia
    and
    Mountainous Karabagh Republic. Cilicia's Seven Seas Navigation expedition
    began
    in June 2004, as it sailed through the Marmara, Aegean, Mediterranean, and
    Adriatic seas to arrive in Venice in September of 2004, where it stayed for
    the
    winter.
    The crew returned to Venice to start the second leg of the expedition, taking
    the ship from the historic Italian city to circle Europe and arrive in
    Amsterdam by September 2005.


    4) Armenian Relief Society's 85th Convention Concludes

    WOODLAND HILLS--The Armenian Relief Society's 85th Convention took place in
    Southern California from July 21 to July 24, with the participation of 36
    delegates from 26 chapters.
    Participants included ARS Central Executive members Hasmig Derderian and
    Anahid Meymarian, and invited guests ARS Western Region (ARS-WR) Executive
    member Lucine Isjanian, Armenian Revolutionary Federation Central Committee
    member Vahe Bozoian, and former ARS-WR Executive Secretary Dr. Rita Vorperian.
    During the course of the four day convention, delegates made recommendations
    for the coming year, after reviewing the fiscal year's activities, and the
    regional executive's financial records, and finally, elected the 2005-2006
    executive.
    Five new members--Garine Parigian-Setian, Christine Keshishian, Hourig
    Aintablian, Adrineh Postoian, and Rose Altounian--were elected to serve.
    Continuing their term are executive members Angela Savoian, Rita Hintlian, and
    Maral Nashalian-Arsenian.
    The convention also elected three delegates--Annie Keshishian, Sona Madarian,
    and Sonia Peltekian--to represent the ARS Western Region at the organization's
    International Convention.


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