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  • ARMENIANOW.COM March 11, 2005

    ARMENIANOW.COM March 11, 2005

    Administration Address: 26 Parpetsi St., No 9
    Phone: +(374 1) 532422
    Email: [email protected]
    Internet: www.armenianow.com
    Technical Assistance: (For technical assistance please contact to Babken Juharyan)
    Email: [email protected]
    ICQ#: 97152052

    CHURCH QUARREL: ARMENIAN CHURCH IN TBILISI UNDER THREAT

    By Julia Hakobyan, ArmeniaNow Reporter

    An Armenian church in Georgia has again became a subject of debate
    following a long term dispute between Armenian and Georgian Dioceses.

    This time the debate was raised around Norashen church, where several
    months ago tombs from Georgian cemeteries with Georgian inscriptions
    appeared.

    Norashen, a 15th century construction in the Georgian capital Tbilisi
    is located next to Georgian Orthodox Church Jvris monastery. Father
    Tariel, the priest of monastery, who brought the Georgian tombs
    into the Armenian church, said in an interview to Georgian Mzera TV
    Company that ~Sall the churches on the territory of Georgia belong
    to Georgian Orthodox, with the exception of some, built also by
    Georgians~T. Referring to Norashen the Georgian priest said that
    ~Schurch was taken away from Georgians by Russians, privatized and
    then sold to Armenians~T. Father Tariel assured if digging at the
    church, he would discover new Georgian tombs.

    Last week Armenian diocese of Georgia and several non Armenian
    organizations issued statements protesting against assimilation of
    Norashen and ~Sobvious attempt of falsification of the historical
    facts.~T Aggressive actions of Georgian ecclesiastic are ~Sblasphemy
    towards the deceased, from whose graves the tombs were taken~T,
    said father Abgar, the representative of Armenian Eparchy in Georgia.

    ~SIn fact father Tariel does not deny that the Norashen church
    is Armenian but in his interview to Georgian Rustavi 2 channel he
    suggested Armenians 'go to your country Armenia and take care of your
    churches there',~T father Abgar told ArmeniaNow.

    ~SToday we have to defend not only Norashen but also Surb Nshan and
    four other closed half destroyed Armenian churches in Tbilisi. These
    churches are obviously Armenian and we will not allow appropriating
    them.~T

    On March 3 Georgian and Armenian youth organizations organized
    a peaceful procession in Tbilisi aiming to raise attention to
    Norashen~Rs problems. The participants of the action called both
    Dioceses to enter into negotiation for solving the existing problem.

    ~SThe closed Armenian churches on the Georgian territory officially
    are accepted as architecture monuments and ~Qguarded~R by the state
    and being on the culture ministry~Rs balance at present,~T says Karen
    Elchyan, the head of Armenian Cooperation Centre of Georgia based in
    Tbilisi. (ACCG) ~SBut only in Tbilisi, six Armenian churches from
    the list of so called ~Qprotected~R architectural monuments were
    transformed into Georgian Church.~T

    The ACCG as well as other Armenian organizations are going to continue
    their efforts to prevent from destruction the historical monuments
    in Georgia.

    The attempts to convert Armenian Church Norashen into Georgian started
    in 1994 when the altar of the church, frescos, and khachkars were
    ruined in order to eliminate the fact proving the Armenian origin of
    the building. The protest of the Armenian community was not effective
    and following the destruction the door with Armenian epigraphy was
    changed also.

    However the culmination of the church~Rs appropriation happened in
    1995 when Norashen was consecrated as Georgian Orthodox.

    Such encroachment rose concern in Echmiadzin and an Armenian clergy
    arrived to Georgia to meet Georgian Patriarchy ~V Ilia II. But
    the problem wasn~Rt solved and sides agreed to delay the question
    temporarily ~Suntil favorable conditions~T. The reconstruction works
    initiated by Georgian Diocese were stopped and church status remained
    unresolved.

    The issue of Armenian churches in Georgia is painful for the Armenian
    community in Georgia. According to official data some 250,000 Armenians
    live in Georgia however neither community not Armenian Diocese can
    prevent the further destruction of its churches.

    In the beginning of the 20 century there were 30 Armenian churches
    in Tbilisi. Now only two churches are acting while others have been
    either destroyed or redecorated to remove any characteristically
    Armenian architectural features. Now they belong to Georgian Orthodox
    and other confessions. Georgian authorities strictly deny the facts
    of churches appropriation.

    Samvel Karapetyan, a coordinator of the ~SResearch of Armenian
    Architecture~T, ngo in Yerevan is very skeptical towards the
    attempts of the Armenian community of Georgia to protect cultural
    and historical monuments. Karapetyan, who published several books on
    Armenian monuments in Georgia calls the current efforts ~Sretarded~T
    and ~Sartificial~T ~SThey had to unite and think what to do before
    the church was consecrated into Georgian,~T he said.

    Karapetyan published a book in 1995 where he described day by day what
    was stole, destroyed, and vandalized in Norashen church. However he
    says his book got no attention nor response from Armenian authorities.

    ~SNorashen is just a sample, a result of our own politics towards our
    culture. I accuse Georgians in what they do, but moreover I accuse
    the Armenian government which allows Georgians to do it.~T


    AT WAR: ARMENIAN TROOPS ON THE GROUND IN IRAQ

    By Aris Ghazinyan, ArmeniaNow Reporter

    The Armenian military contingent dispatched to Iraq began service
    within a Polish battalion on March 1, Press Secretary of the RA
    Ministry of Defense Colonel Seyran Shahsuvaryan told ArmeniaNow.

    Forty-six ~Snon-combatant~T Armenians went to Kuwait for special
    training in mid-January.

    ~SAfter passing a course of adaptation to the new conditions as well
    as a short preparatory course, the Armenian contingent accompanied by
    a Polish battalion crossed the southern border of Iraq and on March
    1 began implementing their direct duties,~T Shahsuvaryan said.

    That representatives of the armed forces of Armenia, unlike Georgian
    and Azeri servicemen in Iraq, will not participate in military
    operations.

    ~SArmenia is not going to send to Iraq a strictly military contingent,
    which should be involved in military operations,~T said Foreign
    Minister Vardan Oskanian last September. ~SThe matter concerns only
    humanitarian assistance to this country and Armenia~Rs participation
    in the post-war rehabilitation of Iraq.~T

    The Armenian deployment includes one general commander, one liaison
    officer attached to the Polish division~Rs staff, one platoon
    commander, three doctors ~V a cardiologist, a physical therapist and
    a psychiatrist, 10 sappers and 30 drivers.

    ~SIt was originally planned that Armenian drivers would operate
    military vehicles at the disposal of Armenia~Rs Ministry of Defense,
    however we had to abandon this intention, as the fact of their being
    unfit for specifically desert areas with sand surface and conditions
    of sharp daily fluctuations in temperature became apparent,~T said
    Shahsuvaryan. ~SIn particular, our vehicles are largely meant for
    passing sections typical for Armenia, and they lack parts essential
    for desert areas.~T

    The decision about sending Armenian peacekeepers to Iraq was made by
    the Ministry of Defense on April 26, 2004. On June 9, the Government
    supported this decision and endorsed the proposal. President Robert
    Kocharyan ratified the proposal last August 9.

    Various politicians and groups have opposed sending Armenians to the
    war in Iraq, stating that to do so would jeopardize relations for
    the community of Armenians in Iraq, some 25,000.

    But on December 24, with a vote of 91-23 and one abstention, the
    National Assembly gave its approval. Most deputies who opposed sending
    troops worried over how Armenia~Rs participation would affect relations
    with Russia, who has opposed the war.

    National Assembly Vice-Speaker, ARF Dashnaktsutyun faction member
    Vahan Hovhannisyan said in this connection: ~SArmenia is entitled to
    make decisions proceeding from its interests in the matter of sending
    an Armenian contingent to Iraq. Russia itself rendered much assistance
    to this country writing off the bulk of Iraq~Rs state debt.~T

    The prospect of national communities in Arab countries and problems
    of security of the contingent itself aroused much more concerns in
    Armenian society. In an editorial, ~SAzg~T daily, raised a question:
    ~SWho will assume the responsibility if one day we see a prisoner
    from among our compatriots pleading for indulgency on one of the
    Arabic TV channels?~T The fact that representatives of the Armenian
    contingent are not immediately involved in military operations, in
    the opinion of not only political analysts, but also many citizens
    of Armenia cannot serve as a guarantor of peace.

    ~SAlmost every month we witness on television people being taken
    prisoner, and the victim, as a rule, is a journalist representing
    a pacifist newspaper or a member of a humanitarian mission far from
    military affairs,~T says 55-year-old Rita Manaseryan from Yerevan. ~SI
    watched the joyous farewell party for our guys on television on January
    18 and did not understand the point of the celebrations. I think that
    the fact of our children~Rs non-participation in military operations
    cannot calm our authorities.~T

    (Armenian also has a 34-member platoon on duty in Kosovo as part of
    a Greek battalion, with a rotation of new troops expected March 12.)

    Armenia~Rs financial obligation ~Sdoes not exceed $600,000~T and
    includes only payment of salarires, said Armenia~Rs Defense Minister
    Serge Sargsyan late last year. ~SI should mention that the Parliament
    of Armenia gave its consent only for a year~Rs stay of Armenian
    peacekeepers in Iraq. A rotation of the personnel will take place
    after six months from the day of leaving and the personnel will be
    replaced with a new one.~T

    NEGOTIATIONS IN EQUATORIAL GUINEA: OSKANIAN REPORTS ON VISIT WITH
    IMPRISONED PILOTS

    By Zhanna Alexanyan, ArmeniaNow Reporter

    After recovering from an illness upon his return from Equatorial
    Guinea Februrary 20th, Minister of Foreign Affairs Vardan Oskanian
    met with journalists Wednesday to report his meeting concerning the
    fate of the six Armenian pilots imprisoned there.

    Last November the Equatorial Guinea court found the pilots guilty
    of participating in a plot to overthrow the government there, and
    sentenced them to 14-24 years prison. They were arrested March 9,
    2004 and were held at the Malabo ~SBlack Beach~T prison. The Armenian
    pilots had left for Malabo in January and were arrested after making
    their first flight.

    On February 21 in Malabo the Minister met with the Prime-Minister,
    the State Secretary, the Foreign Minister and the Prosecutor General
    of the country. The Armenian side wished also to meet the president
    of the country, but the Guinean side had made the program of meetings
    without the participation of the Armenian side.

    The negotiations referred to the creation of legal grounds for an
    agreement between the two countries to release the pilots back to
    Armenia. Oskanyan insists that high-level meetings will facilitate
    an efficient resolution of the problem with the Armenian pilots.

    ~SIn fact contacts were established on quite a high level that
    will facilitate in future the most efficient procedure regarding
    the question of imprisonment and transportation of our pilots to
    Armenia,~T said Oskanyan. ~SWe didn~Rt have the connection before,
    now I have at least the opportunity to talk to my colleague.~T

    The authorities of Equatorial Guinea have promised to seriously
    discuss the issue. The Foreign Minister sees positive trends in
    the resolution of the problem, although no final response has been
    received. The Guinean side has expressed its readiness to discuss
    the possibility of signing agreements that will allow in the nearest
    future to return the Armenian pilots.

    Last week the president of the Union of Armenians of Russia Ara
    Abrahamyan stated in an interview with ~S168 hours~T weekly he could
    help the Armenian side in returning the Armenian pilots sentenced in
    Equatorial Guinea, but a special consent from the state is necessary
    for that.

    ~SI am going to have a phone talk with Ara Abrahamyan and ask what
    our opportunities are. If indeed there is an opportunity to solve
    the problem through him, why not, we should use it,~T said the
    Minister. ~SWe just need to coordinate to escape a parallel work and
    overlapping as well as the opposite effect by all means.~T While in
    Malabo, Minister Oskanyan visited the Armenian pilots.

    ~SThe prison conditions there are quite hard and the guys~R
    psychological and moral conditions are quite hard,~T said the
    Minister. ~SLooking a bit tired, they looked depressed, but I can~Rt
    comment on their physical condition and in terms of health. When we
    asked them, they said health is normal, but they are quite depressed.~T


    APPEAL DENIED: COURT RULES IN FAVOR OF NAJARIAN IN PROPERTY DISPUTE

    By Mariam Badalyan, ArmeniaNow Reporter

    The Appellate Court of Armenia has denied an appeal by the General
    Procuracy to stop the Procuracy~Rs investigation into whether criminal
    charges should be brought in a dispute between George Najarian, a well
    known Armenian-American philanthropist and a former business associate
    in Yerevan, Grigor Igityan. The court proceedings may still continue
    on the same matter (deciding whether it is a criminal or civil matter)
    if the General Procuracy decides to further appeal the case in the
    Cassation Court.

    Armen Nadiryan, Senior Investigator in especially important cases
    says they will decide whether to further appeal or not after they
    see the court decision in written form.

    In summary: After 18 months of investigation (following termination
    of investigation by the Yerevan city Procuracy) the General Procuracy
    concluded that the case was entirely a civil business dispute and
    should be resolved in a civil court. A lower court, however, ruled
    that the investigation should continue, leading to the General
    Procuracy~Rs appeal.

    If the appeal were successful, Najarian might still be entitled to the
    disputed property, but there would be no fraud charges brought against
    Igityan. Najarian claims Igityan embezzled his property (two buildings
    at #4 and #11/12 Dzoragiugh District and a Photoshop at Abovyan Street
    founded as a partnership between Najarian and Igityan). During his
    concluding speech Najarian lawyer Ashot Poghosyan argued, among other
    things, that investigators wrongfully considered a receipt to Igityan
    by Najarian in connection with their photo business. According to
    the lawyer, Igityan was supposed to pay back the original money,
    after which the two men were to share the profit as partners. The
    investigators, however, had considered it a loan made to Najarian
    by Igityan.

    Senior Investigator Nadiryan accused Poghosyan of disclosing
    pre-investigation secrets and pointed out that the investigators
    considered all facts in combination, whereas Poghosyan points to
    single facts separately.

    During the hearing the court heard an extract from a letter by Igityan
    addressed to the President of Armenia, which said that Najarian
    hired lawyers who were intimidating Igityan~Rs family and asked the
    President to take relevant measures in protecting the safety of his
    family. Poghosyan called the letter a ploy by Igitiyan to distract
    attention from the main issue of the complaint.


    OFFLINE: PREVIOUSLY ~SCLOSED~T DOMAINS NOW ~SOPEN~T

    By Arpi Harutyunyan, ArmeniaNow Reporter

    For 10 years many domains registered in the ~Qam~R Internet zone
    have been considered untouchable. By a decision of the Internet
    Union of Armenia the domains were restricted from use because,
    according to Union president Igor Mkrtumyan, they carry state and
    national significance.

    Few, though, have known about the off-limits domains. Only those who
    wanted to register one of those domains and were denied have learned
    of the status.

    ~SThere was a time when young people called ~QInternet squatters~R
    appeared in Armenia, who bought well-known domains and resold them
    at higher prices. That is why we registered a number of domains and
    kept it locked. In our opinion those are the domains of national
    value and importance,~T says Mkrtumyan.

    But since March 4 year the domains called ~Sclosed~T became officially
    ~Sopen~T.

    Individuals and organizations can apply to the Internet Union on-line,
    receive a permission, then sign an agreement with companies providing
    Internet communication in Armenia and run the domains.

    The national Internet community of Armenia was created in 1995. The
    Internet Union was registered, which undertook the full responsibility
    for allotting of domains.

    The Armenia server was created and the stock of Armenian data,
    previously administered in Moscow, was moved to Armenia. Since 1997
    all the works connected with the internet are done in Armenia.

    Until the present 3,700 domains have been registered in the ~Qam~R
    zone, of which 1,200 belong to foreigners. Rights to use of the
    domains are sold by the Internet Union for a fee of $24 per year.

    According to Hrach Bayadayan, president of the ~SInformation
    technologies Foundation~T the policy of allotting domains in Armenia
    is wrong. He believes clear mechanisms for distributing domains should
    be developed; for instance, permission for registering domains should
    be given solely to locals and organizations connected with the sphere.

    People still speculate in domains, the IT specialist says and disagrees
    with the policy imposed by the Union.

    ~SI can~Rt see any logic in how the domains are separated,~T says
    Bayadayan.~TI know many registered domains that do not yield to those
    ~Qclosed~R ones. I have as well registered the ~Qsociety.am~R domain
    that had no less importance. And why was it decided to declare them
    open now?~T

    David Sandukhchyan, coordinator of the ~SGlobal Initiative for Internet
    Policy~T, holds the same opinion.

    ~SWe had registered the media.am domain for ~QInternews~R, which was
    not an accidental one. If hotel.am had special value and had to be
    kept closed, then the media.am should also appear in the list. So a
    question arises what principles have been chosen?~T says Sandukhchyan.

    ~SIt is obvious the Internet Union has had some internal reasons
    to undertake the policy,~T says Bayadayan. ~SThe thing is that that
    we, the specialists, have not been informed of anything. They give
    us reason to suppose they might have organized a shadow sell: they
    registered a large number of domains and sold then to people who paid
    them more. And now they declare the domains they did not manage to
    sell ~Qopen~R. All these are, of course, suppositions.~T

    The Union has in fact distributed domains of special significance to
    various individuals and organizations since its creation. Among them
    is hayastan.am, yerevan.am, diaspora.am.

    To the question of why a number of known domains were sold if
    supervision over them was set, the president of the Internet Union
    answered: ~SIt is now useless to go deep into all that stuff. All
    those domains are declared ~Qopen~R already.~T


    PATIENT PENSIONERS: THE DOCTOR WILL SEE YOU NOW ~V FOR FREE

    By Gayane Abrahamyan, ArmeniaNow Reporter

    Pensioners over 65 will now be entitled to free medical treatment at
    walk-in clinics in Armenia following an order from the Health Ministry.

    Previously, free treatment was available only to impoverished families,
    disabled people and families of those killed in the war over Nagorno
    Karabakh. The elderly, whose pensions were only 6,000-8,000 drams
    per month, were expected to pay even for consultations, which cost
    between 1,000 and 2,000 drams.

    Susanna Ghazaryan, a senior specialist at the Department for First
    Medical Help at the Ministry of Health, says the free service is
    intended for the entire population beginning next year. Although
    pensioners were given the right to free treatment in January, many
    remain unaware of it.

    In 2004, 8.7 billion drams was allotted for the program and 12.4
    billion this year.

    Nazeli Minasyan, 68, says she attended Polyclinic Number One in
    Yerevan a month ago for check-ups on her heart, but had to pay for
    the cardiologist~Rs consultation and for her cardiogram. She says she
    has receipts for payment of her treatment and intends to ask for her
    money back.

    ~SI paid 1,500 drams to the doctor, and 2,000 for cardiogram; the bad
    thing is that they did not give me any advice,~T complains Minasyan
    anxiously.

    At Polyclinic Number 8 in Arabkir community, Doctor Anahit Sargsyan
    says medics strictly observe the new system and treat all pensioners
    for free.

    ~SFrom this year, even the calls are free for them; in our clinics
    only the sonogram survey is charged for as it does not belong to
    the clinic. All of the rest, the analyses, the cardiogram, the ECG,
    Roentgen are free for pensioners and for chronic patients,~T says
    Sargsyan.

    According to nurse Nonna Zakaryan, staff welcome this new law on free
    check-ups. She says: ~SIn my family I have parents-in-law over 65,
    my father-in-law~Rs heart should be checked at least once a year. How
    can one manage that with the 6,000 drams they get?~T

    However Zakaryan believes that doctors will work for free and
    attentively only when they receive proper salaries. At Polyclinic
    Number 8, doctors are paid 20-25,000 drams ($35-44) per month while
    nurses get 15,000 drams ($26). In other Polyclinics, such as those
    in Davitashen and Nor Nork, doctors get more than 35,000 drams
    (determined by the Government).

    ~SThere are Polyclinics where they get 10,000 more drams, but how
    does that happen when both of us are run by the State? We serve the
    same amount of the population, but they work full-time and we were
    cut to 75 per cent. It depends on them to treat the way they want,~T
    says Zakaryan.

    Open door days are also planned across the country in May for
    pensioners and veterans of the Great Patriotic War. On these days the
    best specialists of the republic will survey and prescribe treatments
    to the elderly. ~SMedicines will be distributed, partially for free,
    partially for a 30 percent discount,~T says Ghazaryan at the Ministry
    of Health.

    A partnership between the Ministries of Health and Defense has also
    ensured that 200 free trips to the spa resorts of Arzni and Jermuk will
    be available for veterans of World War Two to enjoy rest and treatment.
    According to the Veterans~R Union, there are 12,000 veterans of the
    Second World War in Armenia. Some are skeptical about who will be
    chosen to receive the spa treatments.

    Vladimir Abrahamyan, an 82-year-old disabled veteran, his suit
    decorated with medals, said: ~SIt~Rs obvious that it will be those
    who have relatives in the ministries. I reached as far as Berlin,
    I~Rll see whether they let me go or they will push their own people.~T

    SERVICE OR PUNISHMENT?: ARMENIA~RS ALTERNATIVE MILITARY SERVICE
    QUESTIONED BY PARTICIPANTS

    By Vahan Ishkhanyan, ArmeniaNow Reporter

    Twenty-four young people whose religious convictions do not allow
    them to serve in the army were enlisted for alternative labor
    service last autumn. They serve in hospitals and homes for elderly
    people. Twenty-two of them are Jehovah~Rs witnesses.

    Non-military service became possible after a law on alternative service
    was passed in December 2003. However, many of the servicemen regret
    to have opted for alternative service and say that they would prefer
    rejecting service altogether and going to prison.

    The reason, they say, is that labor service is conducted by the
    military regime, is controlled by military police and by 1.5 years
    longer ~V 42 months or 3.5 years.

    ~SIf it continues like this, it is better to be in prison,~T
    says 18-year-old Vagharsh Margaryan, who, together with his three
    fellow-believers, is serving in Sevan~Rs mental hospital.

    They are not allowed to leave the premises of the hospital, they
    work without days off and wear uniforms, on the back of which it is
    written: ~SAlternative Labor Service~T. Military police pay visits
    once every 10 days and inspect their service. In fact, their service
    is not civil. In their cards it is written: ~SRA Armed Forces~T.

    By becoming a member of the Council of Europe, Armenia assumed
    obligations to adopt a law on alternative civil service and before
    that release from prisons draft dodgers who rejected to be enrolled
    in the army for their religious convictions. About 150 Jehovah~Rs
    witnesses had been put in jail for refusing service in the army.

    ~SThe authorities wanted to adopt a law on military alternative
    service (that is, service in military units without carrying
    weapons), however Europe demanded that a law on alternative civil
    service be adopted,~T says Armenia Helsinki Committee Chairman Avetik
    Ishkhanyan. ~SIt was under pressure from the Council of Europe that
    alternative labor service was included into the law besides military
    alternative. However, this is not a civil service and contradicts
    the European standards.~T

    According to those standards, civil service must not be controlled by
    the military, be without uniform and not exceed the term of military
    service.

    Ishkhanyan says that the authorities in fact try to cheat Europe by
    presenting military-controlled labor service as civil service.

    According to the information provided by the Helsinki Committee, one
    serviceman at Vardenis~R mental boarding house had a broken collarbone
    and he was taken to hospital. However, there the military put pressure
    on him and he returned without getting proper treatment. Now he is
    serving with a dislocated collarbone.

    Sevan Mental Hospital workers complain that they are not allowed to go
    to town to participate in religious gatherings. ~SWe ask them to let us
    go out twice a week for two hours, but it is prohibited. People from
    military police come and threaten that if we leave the premises,
    they will put us in the guardhouse,~T says 19-year-old Boris
    Melkumyan. Hospital director Gagik Karapetyan says that like in the
    army, here too, until six months of service is completed, they will
    not be allowed to go off the premises.

    Nevertheless, the guys are not dissatisfied with their work. They work
    in construction and do sanitary-inspecting work, distribute meals,
    see that patients do not behave in a disorderly way and cause no
    harm to one another. The administration also demands that they clean
    patients~R waste, however the servicemen have refused, saying that
    it is a humiliating job.

    ~SIf they are faithful indeed, then why don~Rt they follow the
    precepts? It is said in the Bible: love your neighbor ~V but they do
    not love, if they loved, they would clean the waste of the patients,~T
    says the hospital~Rs head physician Aram Alexanyan.

    Vagharshak Margaryan replies that it is not that they either love the
    patient or not, but they do not accept the offered conditions. ~SIf
    their goal is to send us for such jobs, it is they who do not love
    us and humiliate us.~T Previously, National Assembly Deputy Speaker
    Vahan Hovhannisyan said that alternative service should be shameful.
    Nevertheless, they do not force the men to do dirty work. However,
    according to the data of the Helsinki Committee, a serviceman at
    Yerevan~Rs boarding house situated in Nork is forced to do humiliating
    work.

    The hospital~Rs administration has no clear idea of how to deal with
    the men, as no order of alternative service was provided to them,
    but they received only verbal instructions, as Alexanyan says, ~Swe
    are guided by our horse sense~T. Generally, the mental hospital has
    no need for additional labor force, and the alternative servicemen
    are not of much use: ~SIt would be good if I were far from this
    headache,~T says the mental hospital~Rs director Gagik Karapetyan.

    Not all of Jehovah~Rs witnesses agreed to alternative
    service. Currently, 18 Jehovah~Rs witnesses are in jail for refusing
    to be enrolled for service. They refuse to be enrolled for alternative
    service considering it humiliating and too long.

    MANANA: A DECADE PROVIDING FOOD FOR HUNGRY MINDS

    By Suren Musayelyan ArmenianNow Reporter

    Eleven-year-old Armen Babayan isn~Rt being a truant. Simply sometimes
    the fifth former leaves boring school lessons earlier to spend more
    time at Manana.

    It is ten years that children like Armen have the opportunity to
    attend the Manana youth educational-cultural center where they can
    learn journalism, translation skills, computer graphics and web
    design, painting, photography and filmmaking as well as many other
    useful subjects.

    The center~Rs director Ruzanna Baghdasaryan says the idea to set up
    the center arose still when the country was in crisis, when many
    children didn~Rt attend school because they were either closed or
    poorly heated in winter. ~SWe wanted to keep children busy and make
    their lives more interesting,~T she says.

    According to Baghdasaryan, very few children attended the center at
    first. But then the number of pupils gradually increased to up to a
    hundred a year and now, she says, about a thousand children have passed
    through this center. The first recognition of Manana came in 1996 when
    their newspaper ~SKhabarbzik~T won the first prize of UNICEF as the
    ~Sbest initiative of the year~T. Since then, according to Baghdasaryan,
    Manana pupils have won numerous prizes both at home and abroad.

    In 2004, she says, Manana won grand prizes at 17 international
    contests. About a 100 children aged 8-18 currently attend the center
    where they are involved in different clubs. Their work is available
    to the public online as they now have their own website created and
    maintained by the center itself.

    Baghdasaryan says that they have children from different social
    backgrounds and that there are no selection criteria like exams
    or competitions. There is no tuition fee at Manana, there is
    only membership fee, which is 2,000 drams a month, about five
    dollars. But according to Baghdasaryan, they do not take money from
    all children. She says there are children from poor families for whom
    they even cover their travel expenses. ~SWe have not so many children
    from rich families, though. Perhaps they think that something which
    is free is not good,~T says Baghdasaryan.

    For many years Manana worked on pure enthusiasm, without any external
    support. ~SI have noticed that many international organizations in
    Armenia tend to fund programs that have a more humanitarian nature,
    such as feeding the poor, while they simply have no funds designated
    for programs like this one that develops creative abilities,~T
    Baghdasaryan says. ~SThey think that to make a film is for a satisfied
    person only. If an Armenian child doesn~Rt make a film he will not
    die. That~Rs what most of them think.~T

    Nor do they get any assistance from the government. Baghdasaryan
    says that when they were given a week to find a new office or face
    eviction three years ago she wrote letters to authorities, but there
    was no response. ~SOur government thinks they have much more important
    things to take care of,~T says Baghdasaryan. ~SSimply I think that
    we are a little ahead of our time and therefore cannot demand much.~T

    Perhaps they would have to close but for the assistance provided by
    the Tufenkian Foundation, which undertook to rent a new office on 2
    Baghramyan Avenue in Yerevan.

    ~SOf course we have problems with our material-technical base and
    sometimes it seems fantastic to have made such achievements on the
    international arena with so many difficulties and so few resources,~T
    says Baghdasaryan. ~SManana~T worked closely with UNICEF producing
    short films, which later won prizes at international festivals. Now,
    Baghdasaryan says, they have an offer from the UN Youth Orchestra to
    produce a film for their Bach concert in Hamburg on March 15. ~SIt~Rs
    an honor for us and for Armenia. But that~Rs honor, not money,~T
    she says.

    Many of Manana alumni stay in the center even after graduating. Arpine
    Grigoryan, 20, is a fourth-year student at the Engineering University
    now. After attending Manana for almost eight years, she now works
    there on the center~Rs website and teaches children web design. ~SThe
    experience I got here helps me a lot. I not only work on the website. I
    come here every day after classes. I can say this is my second home,~T
    she says.

    Arpine also participates in film production. Her ~SCarousel~T film
    was nominated for a prize at an international festival in Amsterdam
    and was recently shown on the BBC.

    Anna Javakhyan, 23, recently graduated from the Philological Department
    of the Teachers~R Training University. Now she teaches children to
    write their own stories. ~SI loved Manana very much and attended
    the center with great pleasure. Now I teach children here with great
    pleasure too,~T she says. ~SThere is ability in every child. Simply
    he needs to have aspiration. I think the atmosphere here is perfect
    for generating this aspiration.~T

    The work of Manana children can be seen at: www.mibanasem.com and
    www.mananayouth.org

    IN PRAISE OF WOMEN: FESTIVAL HOPES TO PROMOTE GENDER ISSUES

    By Gayane Lazarian, ArmeniaNow Reporter

    The opening of an international women~Rs festival on the ~SWomen~Rs
    Dialogue~T subject was announced at NPAK (Modern Experimental Art
    Center) on March 8. The festival will continue until March 14.

    The festival was opened with feminist works at the exhibition hall. It
    was accompanied by electronic music presented by female DJs from
    abroad. Women~Rs dialogue was conducted not only through the presented
    works, but also through live contacts.

    In the works ~SThesis~T, ~SExercise~T, ~SAction~T the same girl is
    trying to show the balance in life which is necessary for her from a
    young age. The author of the pictures is Cristina Ohlmer from Germany.

    ~SIt is the first time I am in Armenia, and I think that it is an
    amazing initiative to be able to present a woman from different
    perspectives through art,~T she says.

    The idea of the festival belongs to Yeva Khachatryan, who is the
    festival curator. Yeva says that March 8 was not chosen by chance.

    ~SWhat is March 8 in the Armenian society? This day means getting
    presents and flowers from men. Even April 7, which was adopted after
    the collapse of the Soviet Union, is just another version of the
    Russian-Armenian March 8 by its contents. Today, we call on women to
    remember the sense and history of the International Women~Rs Day,
    whose Armenian version is a picture opposite to reality,~T the
    curator explains.

    ~SWe show problems through art at this festival. I believe and am
    convinced that especially modern art contains the power through which
    it is possible to do that. Of course, in our country it is generally
    difficult to make changes, but we can achieve result if the festival
    becomes continuous,~T says Yeva.

    A male leather belt is proudly hanging from one of the walls of the
    hall, from this belt modestly are hanging different kitchen ware
    ~V a rolling-pin, a mallet, a crusher, a ladle, a crimp sealer. The
    leather belt seems to be overseeing the mild talk of the tools and
    allows them to show off to viewers.

    The author is artist Arevik Arevshatyan. She says that the work is
    called ~SFidelity Belt~T.

    ~SDuring crusades when men went to war they locked their women so that
    they remained faithful. With this work I want to say that there are
    criteria by which the society understands a woman~Rs mission. That is,
    the presence in the kitchen is a woman~Rs primary mission. It is the
    heritage that reaches every woman and no one but them can remove it.~T

    According to Arevshatyan, she became interested in feminist
    movements in the 1990s. And the festival is another step towards the
    establishment of feminism in Armenia.

    UNDP Women~Rs Rights Department Manager Kristina Khenshen says that
    generally people speak about feminism and feminist views with fear
    and difficulty not only in Armenia but also in other CIS countries.

    ~SAt this festival feminist views are presented through women~Rs
    works. That~Rs what dialogue consist in and a question arises ~V what
    is a woman~Rs status in Armenia today?~T says Khenshen.

    Khenshen considers what is happening at NPAK to be very important for
    the establishment of feminism in Armenia. If there are issues between
    the rights of men and women, they should be corrected in some way,
    especially if both know the possibilities well. ~SIf the situation
    is settled, all this is feminism to me. It is the first feminist
    step. It is very important to bring the intellectual dialogue of
    different women to one space, which is public,~T says Khenshen.

    Yeva Khachatryan says that women~Rs rights are infringed upon in
    Armenian society.

    ~SAnd here the main restraining factor is not the law, but the
    not-so-progressive mentality of our society which, even embracing
    European values, is incapable of rejecting traditional ideas
    accumulated over centuries,~T says Yeva. Arevshatyan also thinks that
    similar events will bring in changes in society because it is guided by
    international models. Armenian women themselves must understand their
    model ~V what do they like: an oriental standard or the western one?

    ~SI think that with our ideals we are more inclined towards the
    European model. Women have rights in family, society and defend
    them. Simply all this is in a closed state and is observed only
    in families. It needs to come out to public discussion,~T says the
    painter.

    Practical workshops on the subject of ~SStop Violence against Women~T
    will also be held as part of the festival, led by social worker Marlen
    Reissle from Norway.

    ~SPrivate talks will be held with 30 women, we~Rll try to be of use
    in solving their problems. The first week of the festival will be
    the most active, symposiums will be held on three days during one
    week. ~STsovinar~T NGO, which also deals with these problems, will
    also participate,~T says Yeva.

    The main sponsor of the festival is the UN Gender Policy Program. About
    $4,500 will be spent on the festival. One of the walls of the
    exhibition hall is declared to be the ~SWall of Love~T. Small pieces of
    paper patches are full of quatrains devoted to the woman and love. The
    visitors read or add a couplet of their choice.
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