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  • ASBAREZ Online [05-03-2006]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    05/03/2006
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ. COM

    1) Armenian Jet Crashes off Russia, 113 Killed
    2) Kocharian Orders Plane Crash Inquiry, Declares National Mourning
    3) ARF Western Region Offers Condolences to Plane Crash Victims~R Families
    4) Turkey Experiences Setbacks in Human Rights Reforms

    1) Armenian Jet Crashes off Russia, 113 Killed

    (Reuters/AP)All 113 passengers and crew on board an Armenian airliner were
    killed on Wednesday when the plane crashed into the Black Sea off the Russian
    coast as it tried to land in torrential rain.
    Investigators blamed bad weather for bringing down the Airbus A-320, which
    was
    trying to land at Sochi, a popular holiday spot in southern Russia. Russian
    Emergency Situations Ministry spokesman Viktor Beltsov said weather was
    considered the likeliest cause. He said that the clouds were as low as 100
    meters (330 feet) at the time of the crash.
    Divers searched storm-churned waters off Russia's coast for the remains of
    the
    113 passengers. A spokesman for the Russian emergencies ministry said rescue
    workers had found baggage, life jackets, body parts, pieces of the shattered
    plane, and a patch of oil floating on the surface of the sea at the crash
    site.
    "According to preliminary information, all people on board are dead," a
    ministry spokeswoman said.
    Wreckage from the plane was found not far from the shoreline. Sergei Kudinov,
    the head of the emergency ministry's southern office, said the fuselage was
    found at a depth of 400 meters (1,300 feet). Search and rescue teams had
    pulled
    47 bodies from the water so far, emergency officials said; none was wearing a
    life jacket, indicating they did not have time to prepare for an emergency
    landing.
    Twenty-five boats, many carrying divers, were involved in the search, and a
    deep-sea robot was to be used to try to recover the plane's recorders, the
    emergency ministry said. But Rudolf Teymurazov of Russia's Intergovernmental
    Aviation Committee, expressed doubt the recorders could be found because water
    at the crash site is as deep as 2 kilometers (1.2 miles).
    The plane broke up on impact and passengers' personal belongings and plane
    fragments were found scattered over an area spreading 1.5 kilometers (a mile)
    from the crash site. Rough seas, driving rain, and low visibility were
    hampering the search, Russian news agencies reported.
    The plane, operated by Armavia, had been making a short flight of about an
    hour from the Armenian capital Yerevan. Most of the passengers were Armenian
    nationals. The airline organized a special flight to take relatives from
    Yerevan to the site of the tragedy.
    About 100 tearful relatives kept an anguished vigil in a waiting hall of the
    Adler airport just outside Sochi, a resort town that became popular with
    Russians in the Soviet era. One man became hysterical and had to be taken away
    by ambulance. Sobbing women held handkerchiefs to their mouths, while men sat
    silently, their heads in their hands.
    Relatives also gathered at the airport in Yerevan. A list of passengers
    showed
    26 had Russian passports and almost all the rest were Armenians.
    "I was waiting for a call from my mother that she had arrived okay. But she
    did not phone, so I phoned myself and heard that this accident had happened,"
    Hapet Tadevosyan, 32, said as he stood in the Yerevan airport building. "She
    flew to Sochi to see her sisters, whom she hadn't seen for 15 years," he
    said.
    Gurgen Serobian, whose 23-year-old fiancee Lusine Gevorkian was an attendant
    on the flight, wept as he waited at Yerevan airport for a charter flight that
    was to take relatives of the crash victims to Adler.
    Samvel Oganesian said his 23-year-old son Vram and his friend Hamlet Abgarian
    had been heading to Sochi for vacation. "Why did he go?" Oganesian asked in
    anguish, over and over again.
    Beltsov said the plane vanished from radar screens at 2:15 AM Wednesday
    (10:15
    PM GMT Tuesday) near Sochi, which lies close to the Georgian border. The
    emergencies ministry said the torrential rain had probably caused the crash
    after the plane failed to land on its first attempt.
    He said it went down while trying to make a second attempt at an emergency
    landing. However, the Interfax news agency quoted the Russian air control
    agency as saying that the plane's crew had not declared any emergency.
    "At the moment, we have absolutely no evidence pointing to the possibility of
    a terrorist act on the plane," Deputy General Prosecutor Nikolai Shepel told
    Interfax news agency.
    An Armavia official said the aircraft had initially been refused
    permission to
    land because of the storm, but the airport officials changed their minds. He
    ruled out a technical failure. "The plane was in ideal technical condition,
    the
    crew was well qualified," said Andrei Aghajanov, deputy commercial director of
    the airline.
    Aghajanov said that weather conditions were "certainly" the cause. The plane
    was manufactured in 1995 and underwent full-scale servicing a year ago, he
    said.
    Armavia is the largest airline in ex-Soviet Armenia and has three Airbus 320s
    of the kind that crashed. The plane was carrying at least five children and
    eight crew members.

    2) Kocharian Orders Plane Crash Inquiry, Declares National Mourning

    YEREVAN (RFE/RL)--President Robert Kocharian rushed his influential Defense
    Minister Serge Sargsian to southern Russia early Wednesday to investigate the
    worst plane crash in Armenia's history and declared a two-day period of
    national mourning for its 113 victims.
    Kocharian held an emergency meeting with Sargsian, Prime Minister Andranik
    Markarian and senior Armenian officials immediately after news of the deadly
    accident reached Yerevan. A statement by his press service said Sargsian was
    instructed to clarify its "causes and circumstances on the spot." The Armenian
    Prosecutor-General's Office has opened a criminal case in connection with the
    crash, it added.
    The Defense Minister was already in Sochi by early afternoon. He was due
    to be
    joined there by Russian Transport Minister Igor Levitin. The two men co-chair
    the Russian-Armenian inter-governmental commission on economic cooperation.
    Kocharian was also contacted by Russian President Vladimir Putin early in the
    morning. A statement released by the Kremlin said Putin briefed him on the
    "large-scale search and rescue operation conducted by the Russian side in the
    disaster area and planned further actions."
    "Robert Kocharian expressed gratitude for the telephone call and the detailed
    information," the statement said. "Armenian specialists will join in the
    operation very soon."
    Putin and Kocharian were also cited as describing the plane crash as a
    "common
    tragedy of the Armenian and Russian peoples." Armenia will officially mourn
    its
    victims on Friday and Saturday. Friday will also be a day of national mourning
    in Russia.
    At least twenty-six of the 113 passengers and crew on board the Airbus A-320
    of the Armenian national airline Armavia were Russian citizens. Most of them
    were of Armenian descent.
    Virtually all of the other victims are believed to be Armenian nationals.
    Among them were Vyacheslav Yaralov, deputy director of Armavia and the former
    head of Armenia's civil aviation authority, Husik Harutiunian, a business
    executive who used to head the Armenian branch of the Soviet KGB in the late
    1980s, as well as the son of Karlos Petrosian, former head of the National
    Security Service, the Armenian successor to KGB.
    Kocharian formed a separate government commission tasked with repatriating
    the
    bodies of the Armenian victims and organizing their funerals in Armenia. The
    commission will be headed by Minister for Local Government Hovik Abrahamian.
    The Armenian parliament, meanwhile, observed a minute of silence in honor of
    the dead before adjourning its regular session on Wednesday. Deputies also
    decided to form a multi-party ad-hoc group that will take part in the
    Russian-Armenian investigation of the crash.

    3) ARF Western Region Offers Condolences to Plane Crash Victims~R Families

    The Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Western Region Central Committee
    Wednesday learned with deep sorrow about the Armavia Armenian airline crash in
    Sochi.
    The ARF Central Committee offered its condolences and extended its sympathies
    to all those who lost loved ones or were affected by this tragic accident.

    4) Turkey Experiences Setbacks in Human Rights Reforms

    In an interview with Aztag Daily, Professor Noam Chomsky said that although
    Turkey has made slow progress in improving its Human Rights record since 2002,
    lately the country has regressed in reforms.
    According to Chomsky, the Turkish Armed Forces do not want to lose their hold
    on Turkish society. He also said that the EU's reluctance to admitting Turkey
    into the Union has become apparent in Turkey. All these are reasons for the
    setbacks in reforms, said Chomsky.
    The entire interview, in which Chomsky also discusses US foreign policy,
    issues relating to the Middle East, and the present geo-political situation
    using historical examples, will appear in Aztag and the international press in
    coming days.

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    (c) 2006 ASBAREZ ONLINE. All Rights Reserved.

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