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  • ASBAREZ Online [04-17-2006]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    04/17/2006
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ. COM

    1) Central Genocide Commemoration Event to Be Held in Montebello
    2) Karabagh Holds War Games
    3) ARF Holds Ceremony in Memory of Shahen Meghrian
    4) US Considers Setting up Naval Bases in Turkey
    5) Armenian Women Politicians Discuss Lack of Female Representation

    1) Central Genocide Commemoration Event to Be Held in Montebello

    The commemoration of the 91st anniversary of the Armenian genocide will be
    held
    Sunday, April 23 at 4:30 PM at the Armenian Genocide Monument in Montebello's
    Bicknell Park, announced California's Central Commemorative Body.
    The program will feature local and state officials, including State Senator
    Jackie Speier. The keynote speaker will be Professor Peter Cowe, Narekatsi
    Professor of Armenian Studies at UCLA.
    After the political portion of the program, there will be a requiem service
    for the 1.5 million victims of the Genocide.
    Transportation to and from the event will be provided at the following
    locations:

    GLENDALE, St. Mary's Apostolic Church
    GLENDALE, St. Gregory's Armenian Catholic Church
    PASADENA, St. Gregory the Illuminator Church
    PASADENA, St. Sarkis Church
    VAN NUYS, St. Bedros Church
    HOLLYWOOD, St. Hovhannou Garabed Church
    HOLLYWOOD, St. Garabed Church

    California's Central Commemorative Body urges all Armenians to attend
    Sunday's
    event and remember the victims of the Armenian genocide.

    2) Karabagh Holds War Games

    YEREVAN (Armenpress)--The armed forces of Mountainous Karabagh Republic (MKR)
    will hold three-day military games starting April 18. The Armenian Ministry of
    Defense reported that the defense ministers of Armenia and Karabagh and other
    top army officers will watch the drills.
    MKR Defense Ministry spokesman Senor Hasratyan told journalists the war games
    are going to be held in compliance with the 2006 army training plan.
    "The measure aims at improving the combat readiness of Armenian forces of
    Nagorno-Karabagh and coordinating their work during defense and counterattack
    operations," he said.

    3) ARF Holds Ceremony in Memory of Shahen Meghrian

    YEREVAN (Yerkir)--Monday marked the 13th anniversary of the death of Karabagh
    war hero Shahen Meghrian and Nigol Aghbalian Student Union member Grigor
    Grigorian. Marking the date, eleven new members were inaugurated into the
    Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF).
    The ceremony was attended by Meghrian's relatives, officials, and students
    visiting the hero's grave. Parliament Vice Speaker and ARF Bureau member Vahan
    Hovannisian, who was also godfather of the ceremony, said the new members were
    taking their oaths at the grave of one of the most beloved heroes of the ARF
    who, if alive, could have held a top post at the Defense Ministry. The eleven
    students took their inauguration oaths with their hands on the ARF charter,
    program, and a weapon.
    Hovannisian said, "We swear on the charter since it unites us for our
    work, we
    swear on the program because it unites us for our ideas, and we swear on the
    weapon, which symbolizes not only war, but also struggle, freedom, and the
    defense of our country."

    4) US Considers Setting up Naval Bases in Turkey

    ANKARA (RIA Novosti)--The United States is considering setting up three naval
    bases in Turkey, a Turkish newspaper reported Monday.
    Cumhuriyet said the bases would have the same legal status as the
    American-Turkish Air Force base at Incirlik, where the presence of Turkish
    representatives is mandated and all activities must be coordinated with the
    local authorities.
    The paper said the port of Iskenderun on the Mediterranean coast and Urla in
    the Aegean Sea, as well as Mordogan on the Aegean Sea coast are possible
    locations for the bases, which are likely to host large naval ships including
    aircraft carriers.
    The US has been searching for appropriate locations for the last eight
    months,
    the paper said, and had been considering the use of current Turkish ports or
    establishing new ones.
    Initially, Washington wanted one of the three bases to be located on Turkey's
    Black Sea coast. But the request was denied because Turkey is a signatory to
    the 1936 Montreux Convention, which regulates navigation in the Black Sea
    straits and bans non-littoral states from maintaining a permanent naval
    presence in the Black Sea.

    5) Armenian Women Politicians Discuss Lack of Female Representation

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL/Armenpress)--One of few women members of Armenian Parliament,
    Alvart Petrosian from the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF), said Monday
    that Armenia must demand democracy in order to boost the role of women in the
    country's political life.
    Armenian women are grossly underrepresented in government. Armenia has no
    female government ministers and only six out of 131 members of its parliament
    are women.
    Armenia has a legal provision stipulating that at least five percent of
    candidates from a party or alliance must be women. However, female candidates
    have usually been low on the electorate slates of competing political groups,
    meaning that they have very low chances of winning parliament seats.
    The most common explanation for this phenomenon is that Armenia is still a
    conservative male-dominated society where women are largely confined to minor
    positions outside their homes.
    But according to one of the country's best-known female politicians, this is
    not necessarily the case. Speaking at a roundtable discussion in Yerevan,
    Ruzan
    Khachatrian, a senior member of the People's Party of Armenia, said that
    Armenian women have primarily themselves to blame for their extremely weak
    presence in the executive and legislative branches of government.
    "Strangely enough, during elections in Armenia a woman is far more reluctant
    to elect another woman than a man is," said Khachatrian. "Why is this so? I
    don't know."
    Khachatrian was the main opposition candidate in last October's local
    election
    in Yerevan's central administrative district which a businessman won. She
    believes that that the vast majority of some 5,000 local residents who voted
    for her were men.
    Lyudmila Harutunian, a prominent Armenian sociologist who leads a small party
    called Arzhanapatvutyun (Dignity), agreed that winning an election or securing
    a high-level government post is extremely difficult for local women, but laid
    the blame squarely on the men. She said Armenia's government affairs have long
    been monopolized by wealthy businessmen and other powerful men reliant on
    brute
    force and there is little women can do about that.
    Harutunian said women should play a bigger role in moving the country towards
    true democracy. She said democracy has no alternative, adding that a
    democratic
    Armenia would face fewer problems in its efforts to settle the Karabagh
    dispute.

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