Week of Armenian Culture to be Held in Krasnodar University

WEEK OF ARMENIAN CULTURE TO BE HELD IN KRASNODAR UNIVERSITY OF
MINISTRY OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS

KRASNODAR, OCTOBER 27, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The week of
national culture of Armenia will be held from October 30 to November 3
in the Krasnodar University of the Ministry of Internal Affairs of
Russia. As they informed from the editorial office of the "Yerkramas"
(country) newspaper of Armenians of Russia, the week during which
different events will be held at the university is held within the
framework of the "Year of the Republic of Armenia in the Russian
Federation" being marked in 2006.

Press freedom in US slips

Press freedom in US slips
24/10/2006 13:18 – (SA)

Paris – North Korea is the worst violator of press freedom while
journalists in Finland, Ireland, Iceland and the Netherlands enjoy the
most liberty, according to a new index released this week by Reporters
Without Borders.

South Africa came in at No. 44, ahead of the United States at No. 53 –
a spot it shared with Croatia, Botswana and Tonga. Russia came in at
No. 147. The Paris-based media advocacy group relied on its network
of 130 correspondents, plus journalists, legal experts and human
rights activists, to come up with the ranking.

Worst offenders The worst offenders, in order, were North Korea,
Turkmenistan, Eritrea, Cuba, Burma, China, Iran and Saudi Arabia,
Reporters Without Borders said in a statement.

"Unfortunately, nothing has changed in the countries that are the
worst predators of press freedom, and journalists in North Korea,
Eritrea, Turkmenistan, Cuba, Burma and China are still risking their
life or imprisonment for trying to keep us informed," the organisation
said.

In the country at the bottom of the list, "the all-powerful North
Korean leader, Kim Jong Il, also continues to totally control the
media," the group said.

US has steadily declined

In the index’s first year, 2002, the United States was in 17th place
and has steadily declined since then.

"Relations between the media and the Bush administration sharply
deteriorated after the president used the pretext of ‘national
security’ to regard as suspicious any journalist who questioned his
‘war on terrorism,"’ the report said.

US press freedom is slipping even when terrorism is not at stake, the
report said, citing the case of Joshua Wolf, a freelance video
journalist jailed after he refused to turn over footage of a political
protest to a grand jury. France fell back five places to No. 35,
which it shared with Australia,

Bulgaria and Mali, and Japan dropped 14 places to No. 51.

Bolivia and Bosnia, meanwhile, moved into the top 20. Bolivia shared
16th place with Austria and Canada, while Bosnia was in 19th place
with Denmark, New Zealand and Trinidad and Tobago.

Denmark suffers over cartoon threats

Denmark, which shared first place last year, suffered a sharp loss of
press freedom because of threats against the authors of the Prophet
Muhammad cartoons that caused an uproar in September 2005.

"For the first time in recent years in a country that is very
observant of civil liberties, journalists had to have police
protection due to threats against them because of their work," the
report said.

Russia

Among European nations, press freedom is worst in the ex-Soviet
states, the group said.

Media freedom in Russia – where award-winning investigative reporter
Anna Politkovskaya was shot to death on October 7 in a suspected
contract killing – has not improved, the report said.

"Russia, which suffers from a basic lack of democracy, continues
slowly but steadily dismantling the free media, with industrial groups
close to President Vladimir Putin buying up nearly all independent
media outlets and with passage of a law discouraging NGO activity," it
said.

BAKU: S. Sarkisian: We did not touch upon settlement of NK conflict

Today, Azerbaijan
Oct 27 2006

Serge Sarkisian: "We did not touch upon the settlement of Nagorno
Karabakh conflict in the meeting with Azerbaijani Defence Minister"

27 October 2006 [11:08] – Today.Az

"The violation of ceasefire is normal, because there are thousands of
armed personnel on both sides of the border. But it should not grow
to large-scale standoff," Serge Sarkisian, Armenian Defence Minister
told journalists.

He said that Azerbaijani Defence Minister is for maintaining of
ceasefire regime in the region. Sarkisian also noted the meeting with
his Azerbaijani colleague was organized by co-chairs.

The minister said that they had talks on the maintaining of ceasefire
only and did not touch upon the settlement of Nagorno Karabakh
conflict.

In response to the question "who will sign the peace agreement?"
Sarkisian said that it is in the president’s competence.

Asked whether he would make a president, the minister answered that
he will think about it if journalists help the people to hold free
and fair parliamentary elections.

URL:

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.today.az/news/politics/31848.html

Armenia : Institute promotes aspiring lady entrepreneurs

Fibre2fashion.com, India
Oct 27 2006

Armenia : Institute promotes aspiring lady entrepreneurs
October 27, 2006

Armenia Small and Medium Enterprise Market Development Project has
organized the `Armenian Woman in Business 2006′ trade exhibition,
with financial support from USAID in Yerevan.

Women are more than half the population in Armenia and they have to
contribute to economic development of the country with their creative
and flexible ideas.

Organization aims mainly at creating new jobs, supporting small
enterprises through various kinds of consultancy to help them to
improve sales.

Sixty businesswomen from different regions of Armenia are showing
samples of their vocation in textile/clothing, handicraft, carpet,
consultancy and other activities.

There were just 49 enterprises representing their businesses at the
exhibition last year.

Traditional mentality in Armenia may reject the notion of woman in
business but the Armenian women manages to combine those two things
in a way that they complement each other instead of interfering with
one another.

Women entrepreneurs believe it will be a challenge but not impossible
to change the traditional image and role of woman in Armenia.

industries-news/newsdetails.aspx?news_id=25295

http://www.fibre2fashion.com/news/daily-textile-

A TV Evangelist and Public Ignorance

American Chronicle, CA
Oct 27 2006

A TV Evangelist and Public Ignorance

David Kessel
October 26, 2006

Some two decades ago, I was watching a famous preacher on TV. The
topic for that day’s sermon was `India`. According to the preacher,
India was poor because it was not Christian, and he was inviting
people to go there and teach Christianity. At the end of the speech,
he raised his voice and shouted something like: `Jesus will take that
country out of poverty!’, `Jesus will make India advance!’ The people
in the audience were nodding with meaningful expressions on their
faces- `That’s right! Amen! Jesus will help India!’

`Wait a minute`, I said to myself- `doesn’t the audience know that
there are many countries that are even poorer than India and that are
Christian, to boot? Don’t they remember that just some time ago,
there was a huge drive on TV to gather food and medical supplies to
be sent to starving Ethiopians most of whom were Christians?" Were
the people, enthralled by the charisma of the evangelist, so
uninformed and with such a short memory as to not have been aware of
such important details?

On another occasion, I was reading a publication by a very radical
Christian organization in which there was an article that said that
the Jews had suffered the Holocaust because they would not accept
Jesus. Ha! You mean, if the Jews had converted to Christianity, the
Holocaust would not have happened? Dream on! Don’t they know that the
Nazis were very busy asking foreign governments to give them the
names of converted Jews (which they duly received) so that they could
send them to the gas chambers along with the non-converted ones?
Don’t they know of so many devoted Christians who had ended up in
Auschwitz along with the Jews? The authors were probably not aware of
such niceties of history or thought the readers were not aware of
these small details, either. Is ignorance really such bliss when they
can mislead you by having you believe such worthless statements?

And if the Holocaust was the punishment for not becoming Christians,
what did those who were, in fact, Christians, suffer for when
genocides were carried against them? I mean, the Armenians, for one.
At the beginning of the 20th century as many as 1.5million very
Christian Armenians were annihilated by the Ottoman Turks. What was
that for? That shouldn’t have happened- they had accepted Jesus and
thus, they should have been protected. Why did they perish? And, one
also forgets the massacres of the Huguenots in France when
Protestants were being killed in broad daylight by the hundreds of
thousands. What was that for? For not accepting Jesus, either? Hmm.
Who do these fundamentalists think I am? Some kind of dodo?

Two decades after that speech, India is doing very well. The reason
for the economic progress of the country is the move from a very
staid socialism to a more dynamic, market -driven economy and the
relaxation of restrictions on foreign investment. That, coupled with
a strong IT base, has moved the country out of poverty. And the
country is still predominantly Hindu with a strong Muslim minority.

And Japan, a Shinto-Buddhist country, may have suffered a setback in
the 1990ies, but it was then and still is the world’s second largest
economy. How come that preacher did not mention that in his sermon,
and why didn’t anyone in the audience question him about that?

Today, many African and Latin American countries who are devoutly
Christian- Guatemala, El Salvador, Kenya, etc. are still mired in
poverty and corruption. And the long suffering regions of Sudan where
so many people have been dying of starvation – did you see the horrid
pictures of people eating leaves from the trees?-are mostly
Christian. So, what gives, preacher?

I respect, and see good in any religion, and if there is Heaven, I
believe that good and upright people will go there regardless of what
they believe in. I also believe that people who work hard and are
honest in their dealings with others will prosper, no matter what
their religion is. And that misfortune can befall any group
regardless of their faith. However, those Christian fanatics who
claim that the sufferings- political, economic or otherwise, of
others are due to the fact that they did not convert to these
preachers’ particular religion make me mad. Not only they are totally
disrespectful of the distress of others, but they display morbid
ignorance of world history and politics.

However, the thing that angers me the most is that they take me, or
any reader or listener, for a fool because those who can actually
fall for their outrageous claims must be, in fact, complete fools.

ticle.asp?articleID=15465

http://www.americanchronicle.com/articles/viewAr

Just Saying, Is All…Plausible Deniability

Bleacher Report, CA
Oct 27 2006

Just Saying, Is All…Plausible Deniability

Written by Ryan Alberti
Friday, 27 October 2006
I always said those Frogs had to be good for something.

Here’s what you need to know, minus the standard geopolitical
hullabaloo: Between 1915 and 1917, a bunch of Armenians died in
Turkey. Actually, it was the Ottoman Empire then, not Turkey…and it
was a million-plus Armenians who died, not just a bunch. But still,
Bubba, facts is facts: Armenians, Turkey, death, not necessarily in
that order. Easy enough, right?

Not quite.

Some folks – Armenians foremost among them – are intent on calling the
thing a genocide. Other folks – including (surprise) the Turks – want no
part of such stark language. And that, Bubba, is where the lilly-pad
crew comes in: Earlier this month, the French National Assembly voted
to criminalize the characterization of the deaths in anything other
than genocidal terms. Which maybe wasn’t such a hot call, if you’re
into silly little bagatelles like free speech and open dialogue…but
here at the Just Saying desk we’ve always taken pride in our
narrowness of vision, and more than anything else we can’t get over
the sublimely stifled crossover appeal of it all:

What if we could do the same thing in sports?

Not slaughter innocent Armenians, of course (Jerry Tarkanian, please
return to your seat): What if we could make it a crime to gainsay the
truth? What if we could mandate the frank and earnest admission of
fact, in a sports world where half-real rhetoric is more or less the
coin of the realm? What if, Bubba, my goodness gracious what if, what
if, what if:

What if it were illegal – actually honest-to-George-Washington
illegal – to call a spade anything other than a spade?

It’s not an entirely absurd notion, really – not in a country whose
favorite President-slash-avatar-slash-lap dance financier couldn’t
chop down a plain old cherry tree without having to come clean about
it. (Also not an absurd notion in such a country: ethical logging
practices. But anyway.) And God Bubba, imagine the possibilities:
Imagine the national sporting landscape if everyone had to tell it
like it really was. Kenny Rogers would be in hot water. Scott Boras
would be out of a job. Pete Rose would catch a lot less flak for his
autograph epigrams. And O.J. Simpson, well –

O.J. Simpson would be that much closer to finally finding the real
killers.

But we could play like this for days. The truth, as conventional
wisdom has it, is not a thing to be trifled with; it’s a high-white
idol, the single most sacred pillar of any civil society. Man without
his word is hardly even Man at all, and so if we’re going to go
around separating sports fact from sports fiction the least we can do
is start where it matters, with the one issue that we can never, for
the life of us, manage to be all-the-way candid about:

The least we can do is start with the drugs.

Which I know, I know: Not again, right? Not another riff on the
performance-enhancement thing – especially not in an article that
opened with something about Turks and Armenians. This is a snow job,
a Trojan horse (a Turkish horse?): a quarter-assed attempt to milk an
old story, no matter what the sports sheet says about Shawne Merriman
and four-game suspensions. We’ve done it before, is the problem, and
it didn’t do any good, and so let’s please just move onto something
else, to something different; let’s please just move onto something
that doesn’t feel, you know, so wholly and hopeless stale –

Well relax, Bubba. I’m here to freshen things up.

You see, there’s a valuable lesson to be gleaned from the new French
law, and it goes something like this: Truth is what you make of it.
Such is the bottom line in this postmodern age of ours, where the
information revolution has shown us a world that doesn’t make sense
through any lens except the one we apply to it. We – All of Us – are the
only authority that counts anymore – and so a genocide is only a
genocide if we say it is, same as a sports scandal can only touch us
if we decide to let it. Which means, of course, that we – All of Us,
Bubba – could be done with the sports-and-drugs problem once and for
all, if we’d only have the stones to make like the Frogs and quit
denying three points which oughtn’t to be denied. To wit:

First, the Merriman case shows that drug use in professional American
sports isn’t going away. No sir, no how: We’re stuck with
pharmaceutically-altered superstars, no matter how ardently George
Mitchell and Henry Waxman claim to be getting a handle on the
problem. On the scale of mind-blowing revelations, this one ranks
somewhere just north of No Duh territory. The sooner we quit denying
the obvious – that athletes will continue to do anything and everything
they can to get an edge on the competition – the happier we’ll be.

Second, the use of performance-enhancing substances is not, if
current statistical trends can be trusted, The End of the World As We
Know It. It’s been two years since the drug issue got pushed to the
front burner on the national culture scene, and the sky has not
fallen. Our social institutions have not collapsed. Our children are
still the same spoiled, lethargic, Ritalin-addled Xbox-junkies
they’ve always been. More to the point, fans are still shelling out
sizable chunks of their weekly paychecks to get into the games, thus
proving that the tainted-pro-sports model is an economically viable
one. Everything might be different in the post-BALCO world, but
nothing much has changed – and pretending otherwise isn’t doing anybody
good. Selah.

Third, and finally, there’s the most important point of all: Once you
cut through all the aimless furor of the BALCO fallout – once you get
past the angst and the indignation and the absurd Kabuki pantomime of
the thing – we’re still just us. We have, as a nation, ranted and raved
and achieved not much of anything at all, mostly because there was
never frankly anything to achieve in the first place. Again, Bubba,
learn from the French: Truth is what we make of it, and until we stop
denying that the universe can only ever be what it is – until we stop
denying that the pill-and-needle habits of very large strangers do
exceptionally little to change the incontrovertible nature of our own
collective existence – we’re bound to keep grasping at the formless
shadow of nothing in particular. Which maybe isn’t the most vile
pastime in the history of the world, that grasping, but somehow it
seems like a waste, doesn’t it?: It seems like an underutilization of
resources, really, because God if we could only just recognize the
power of self-authorship, and cop to the fact of our uniquely
personal capacity to determine what’s real and what isn’t, then,
Bubba – then – then –

Then we could finally get down to only just saying, c’est tout…

m_content&task=view&id=665&Itemid=38

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.bleacherreport.com/index.php?option=co

First Sight: Ken Davitian

The Guardian, UK
Oct 27 2006

First Sight: Ken Davitian

Phelim O’Neill
Friday October 27, 2006
The Guardian

Who is he?
A fiftysomething American-born actor of Armenian descent, Davitian
has appeared in small roles in such fine television fare as Six Feet
Under, The Shield and ER.

Any movies?

Yes, how could you forget Frogtown 2?

He doesn’t look like a movie star – are you sure he’s an actor?

Any town that regarded his type as their prettiest son should just
pack up and attempt to join better-looking towns. People with Ken’s
looks tend not to go to Hollywood in search of stardom. They really
should: they stand more chance of getting regular work than 99% of
all the bland blondes who arrive by the busload.

How come?
Regardless of acting talent, Davitian’s continued employment can be
attributed to two physical characteristics: he’s fat and, by American
movie standards, foreign-looking. Thankfully for him, tinseltown’s
worldview means anyone not meeting its rigid standards of physical
perfection can easily fill the role of "foreigner".

By foreigner, you mean … ?

Doesn’t matter – they’re all the same, apparently. Ken has played a
Luciano, a Jorge, a Krikor, a Ramon, an Igor and even a Jesus.

You say he’s overweight, too.

Has this held him back?

Nope, that’s an asset, too: his earliest roles include Fat Man in
Maximum Force and Fat Bartender in American Raspberry. But he did
appear as plain old Bartender a few years later in Private Wars,
suggesting a very literal lean period in his career.

Where can I see him now?

You can see more of him than is decent in Borat: Cultural Learnings
of America for Make Benefit Glorious Nation of Kazakhstan, in which
he plays "operator of camera instrument" Azamat Bagatov, Borat’s
companion. We may never know how Sacha Baron Cohen persuaded him to
be involved in the film’s notorious hotel room scene – a sequence
that starts in a bathtub then spirals so far out of control that a
nude Baron Cohen and Davitian were almost arrested.

Ken Davitian could well be the bravest actor you’ve never heard of.
For that alone he deserves your attention.

Monitoring of human rights in Armenia formal

Arka News Agency, Armenia
Oct 26 2006

MONITORING OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN ARMENIA FORMAL

YEREVAN, October 26. /ARKA/. The monitoring of the human rights
sector in Armenia is formal, Chairman of the Helsinki Committee of
Armenia Avetik Ishkhanyan told reporters today. He pointed out that
the values proclaimed in Armenia are mostly declarative.
Ishkhanyan reported the human rights sector has been long closed for
surveys, and only since 2001, after Armenia’s admission to the
Council of Europe, monitoring of human rights has become systematic.
He said that the availability of conducting monitoring at
institutions of confinement since 2001 can be considered the
progress.
"However, a group of public observers does not have a possibility to
visit police departments, but only places of imprisonment before
trial, though lawless actions take place mostly at police
departments," he said.
Ishkhanyan also pointed out that the close structure for monitoring
are still the armed forces of the country, in spite the fact that
they are included in the list of obligations before the CE.
"Some public organizations have access to the armed forces, however
the army infrastructure is mostly closed for the public. We learn
about happenings in the army from parents and relatives of the
servicemen, mostly about tragic incidents," he said.
In this relation, the HCA chairman said that monitoring of human
rights is aimed not only at revealing the situation in a specific
sector, but first of all making an impact on it. R.O. -0–

Crime most serious obstacle in Armenia’s way toward democracy: NSDU

Arka News Agency, Armenia
Oct 26 2006

CRIME MOST SERIOUS OBSTACLE ON ARMENIA’S WAY TOWARD DEMOCRACY: NSDU
LEADER

YEREVAN, October 26. /ARKA/. Crime is the most serious obstacle on
Armenia’s way toward democracy, Leader of the National
Self-Determination Union party (NSDU) Paruir Hairikyan told reporters
Thursday.
"Crime has its roots in all the power structures of the country. All
political forces should join to combat this evil," he said.
Hairikyan reported that the parliamentary elections 2007 are an ideal
opportunity to eradicate the crime in the power structures solely by
taking the letter of the law into account.
The NSDU leader points out that his party and he personally have
experience in combat against crime, lawlessness and "other cases of
antidemocratic nature".
In this context, Hairikyan stated that he is ready to do his utmost
for the sake of this goal. R.O. -0–

Local Production of Vodka Bolstered

Panorama.am

17:42 26/10/06

LOCAL PRODUCTION OF VODKA BOLSTERED

Soon equal conditions will be created for local producers and
importers of vodka which will promote local production. The government
made changes in several laws today, including on Customs Code, On
State Tariffs, On Excise-Tax, On Licensing.

Vakhtang Pirumyan, state incomes policy department head of the staff
of the ministry of finance and economy, told a briefing shortly after
the government session that the customs duty for import of vodka will
be raised which is 240 Armenian drams per one liter
today. /Panorama.am/