Let’s Support Our Compatriot And Friend

LET’S SUPPORT OUR COMPATRIOT AND FRIEND

DeFacto Agency
May 22 2008
Armenia

YEREVAN, 22.05.08. DE FACTO. The Union of Armenians of Russia urges
its compatriots in Armenia to more actively vote for a Russian singer
Dima Bilan during the Eurovision 2008 Song Contest Final and calls on
Russians to support a talented Armenian singer Sirusho. Dima Bilan
and Sirusho successfully overcame the Contest’s semi-final and will
perform in the Eurovision 2008 Final.

To remind, the voting is interactive, via SMS and phone
calls. According to the Contest’s terms, one cannot vote for his
country’s participant.

Russia TV Channel will broadcast the Eurovision Song Contest 2008
Final on May 24, at 11 p.m.

Be more active; support our compatriot and our friend!

ANKARA: Olive Branch To Armenia

OLIVE BRANCH TO ARMENIA

Turkish Press
May 22 2008
Turkey

Ankara, which offered to establish dialogue with the newly elected
Armenian administration, is waiting for Yerevan`s reply.

Turkey has extended its hand to Armenia in an effort to put an end
to a dispute of 234 years between the two countries.

President Abdullah Gul, Premier Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Foreign
Minister Ali Babacan congratulated Serzh Sargsyan upon his election
as the president of Armenia and offered to "improve the relations"
between the countries.

Nina Katchadourian Likes To Be A Bit Baffled

NINA KATCHADOURIAN LIKES TO BE A BIT BAFFLED
By Leah Ollman

Los Angeles Times, CA
May 22 2008

She has a solo show at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego.

SAN DIEGO — Over the last decade, Nina Katchadourian has mended broken
spider webs with colored thread and glue. She has programmed a computer
to translate the pulses of a popcorn popper into Morse code. She has
diagramed a family tree of supermarket icons — Uncle Ben, Mr. Clean,
the Gerber baby — and staged an endurance test for herself, attempting
to smile for as long as possible while archival footage of explorer
Ernest Shackleton was projected onto her front tooth.

Endearing, goofy, earnest, witty, subversive, penetrating —
Katchadourian’s work leapfrogs across an array of emotional
touchstones, finding a briefly comfortable fit, then moving on. Many
of her projects center on thwarted efforts to categorize and simplify,
to define and know. They suggest that the impulse toward order may be
fundamentally human but that the complexity of nature and experience
is just as absolute. Yet according to Katchadourian, misalignment
brings satisfactions of its own.

"A lot of things I’m attracted to are like that: close, but not
quite. The way they mismatch is often a starting point for work for
me," she explained recently. "Misunderstanding is a very fertile point
for making art. When things aren’t quite right, that often makes them
funny, or awkward, or poignant."

The Brooklyn-based Katchadourian, 40, was speaking as finishing touches
were being put on her new solo show at the Museum of Contemporary
Art San Diego. A part of the museum’s so-called Cerca Series, it has
brought her back to the city where she began to mature as an artist
in the 1990s.

Consider one of the exhibition’s two video installations, "Accent
Elimination" (2005), which begins with the simplest of interviews and,
within its short (less than 15-minute) loop, evolves into a meditation
on voice, identity and origin.

The artist and her parents appear, head and shoulders, separately
on three side-by-side monitors. Katchadourian asks them their names,
which leads to questions about their nationalities and accents. Basic
enough, except that her mother is Swedish and grew up in Finland,
and her father is Armenian but was raised in Turkey and Lebanon.

After eliciting the mildly perplexing facts from each, Katchadourian
repeats the interviews — only this time she addresses her mother in
her mother’s accent and her father in his. They both answer in their
best imitations of their daughter’s uninflected American. Three other
monitors, back to back with the first set, show the family training
with a vocal coach to perfect the transformations.

"It’s not a project about watching our stunning success with the task
at hand," Katchadourian said. "It’s much more about the brow-sweating
effort to get there, and the awkwardness in all of that, and how that
awkwardness is linked to a kind of goodwill, to be inside the other
person’s voice."

She said she was working on the piece at the same time the home she
grew up in was being sold. There was a lot of discussion, she recalled,
about what to keep and what to get rid of.

"That’s when I started to think about the accent as something
that could be handed down. What if it was a physical thing, like
an heirloom?"

Assistant curator Lucía Sanroman, the organizer of the show,
encountered the video piece shortly after she began work at the museum
a few years ago. Its themes of translation and mistranslation seemed
relevant to the San Diego-Tijuana region, she says, and to her own
experience.

"It resonated with me personally, because I also have a strong accent,"
says the Mexican-born Sanroman. "For Nina, it was a very personal and
keen observation of being from so many parts, of having an identity
that is beyond hybrid, and how to negotiate that."

Katchadourian, boyishly slim and angular, with wavy dark hair, soft
brown eyes and a deep, mellifluous voice, was born and raised in
Palo Alto, where her mother worked as a literary translator and her
father was a professor of psychiatry at Stanford. After receiving her
undergraduate degree from Brown, she enrolled in the master of fine
arts program at UC San Diego, studying with the late Allan Kaprow —
the father of happenings and currently the subject of a retrospective
at the Geffen Contemporary in L.A. — as well as performance poet
David Antin and "Eco-Artists" Newton and Helen Mayer Harrison.

"UCSD was a great fit for me, because no one ever told me I had
to work in any particular medium," Katchadourian said. "We were
required to have people from outside the art department on our thesis
committee. They didn’t want us just talking to artists."

In the subsequent years, Katchadourian has taught at Brown, the Rhode
Island School of Design and Parsons and been the subject of exhibitions
around the world, including a 10-year survey recently organized
by the Tang Museum at Skidmore College in upstate New York. She
also has a thriving career in music, writing and recording songs
independently and with a folky Brooklyn-based group, the Wingdale
Community Singers. And she works part time at the Drawing Center
in Manhattan’s SoHo district, managing and curating shows from its
registry of 1,200 contemporary artists.

With her attention honed by so many different endeavors, she doesn’t
necessarily look to art for her ideas or inspiration.

"Art has become the best alibi I’ve found for exploring different
things in the world," she said. "It’s the perfect excuse. You get
to talk to people who are interesting to you. You get to travel to
places you want to see, investigate subjects that have you enthralled
and obsessed. It’s just a fantastic vehicle for all these things."

In her newest installation, "Zoo" (2007), also at the San Diego
museum, she portrays a familiar environment as something fragmentary
and disjunctive, using footage shot at zoos around the world over
the last seven years. Images of animals, enclosures and signage are
projected on four walls and dispersed among 15 monitors splayed at
different angles and heights around the exhibition space. Several tight
close-ups of animal parts are tricky to identify, and sometimes the
sounds don’t match the accompanying images. Jellyfish pulse against a
glass enclosure to the rhythm of chittering birds. Soothing classical
music accompanies footage of a bird maniacally pacing its space.

"In some ways," the artist said, "this is the least funny piece I’ve
made in a while. There are funny moments, and there are moments
that are odd and awkward and quirky. What happens for me overall,
largely as a result of the sound, is that it becomes a place you don’t
feel that good in after a while. It’s an unsettling and unsettled
environment. The animals don’t seem entirely comfortable, and neither
does the viewer.

"I haven’t set out to make a piece that’s anti-zoo. What I’m really
interested in is this complicated relationship that is contained in
zoos and that I certainly have to them. On one hand, I love going to
zoos and I love seeing animals up close. But there are also always
moments when I feel saddened and guilty.

"Sometimes I make projects as a way of thinking through the
questions. I’m making this piece about zoos to figure out what I
think about them."

–Boundary_(ID_tw6gq4dPdF6ablGhXZPywQ )–

Armenia To Double Its Peacekeepers’ Contingent In Kosovo

ARMENIA TO DOUBLE ITS PEACEKEEPERS’ CONTINGENT IN KOSOVO

PR-Inside.com (Pressemitteilung)
May 22 2008
Austria

YEREVAN, Armenia (AP) – Armenia’s defense minister says the ex-Soviet
nation will double the number of peacekeepers deployed in Kosovo.

Seiran Oganesian said Thursday the contingent serving as part of a
U.N. mission will be increased to 68.

Around 17,000 NATO-led peacekeepers are deployed in Kosovo, which has
been administered by the U.N. and NATO since 1999, when a U.S.-led
air war put an end to attacks by Serb forces against the province’s
ethnic Albanian majority.

Kosovo declared independence from Serbia in February.

TBILISI: Russia To Continue Managing Armenia Power Plant

RUSSIA TO CONTINUE MANAGING ARMENIA POWER PLANT
By M. Alkhazashvili

The Messenger
May 22 2008
Georgia

Russian company INTER RAO UES will continue managing the Metsamor
nuclear power station in Armenia after its initial contract expires
later this year, according to company officials.

Since 2003 Metsamor has been operated by Unified Energy Systems,
part of INTER RAO UES, in a five-year arrangement to help Armenia
pay off its USD 40 million debt to Russia for providing uranium.

Head of the INTER RAO board of directors Andrey Rapoport said that the
company plans to build a new power plant to replace the Soviet-built
Metsamor plant, which supplies the country with around 40 percent of
its electricity supply.

Armenia is under pressure from the EU to shut down Metsamor due to
safety concerns over its lack of a containment system to deal with
potential radioactive leaks.

Armenian Energy Minister Armen Movsesyan has said that if a new plant
is built Metsamor can be shut down before it is due to in 2016.

SuperJet 100 Will Make Russia’s Aircraft Industry Relevant Again

SUPERJET 100 WILL MAKE RUSSIA’S AIRCRAFT INDUSTRY RELEVANT AGAIN
By Dave Demerjian May

Wired News
rst-t.html
May 22 2008

Russian aerospace company Sukhoi has successfully tested its Superjet
100, a mid-sized airliner that could make Russia a player in the
commercial aviation business.

The Superjet program marks a major step forward for Russia’s civilian
aircraft programs, which until now have shown the sophistication of
a Piper Cub and have the sales figures to prove it. If this plane
comes together the way Sukhoi and its partner, Finmeccanica SpA –
Italy’s biggest military company – hope, it could compete alongside
regional jet biggies like Bombardier and Embraer and revitalize
Russia’s lagging aircraft industry. The two companies have invested
more than $1.5 billion in the project.

"All hope for Russia’s commercial aviation future hangs on this
plane," Richard Aboulafia, vice president of the Teal Group aerospace
consulting firm, told Bloomberg. "With Finmeccanica involved, there
could be a third regional aircraft force emerging."

Sukhoi’s still got a long way to go before that happens.

The SuperJet can carry 70 to 95 passengers and is designed to replace
creaking Russian planes like the ancient Tupolev 134 and Yakovlev
42. It’s 100 feet long, has a wingspan of 90 feet and can cruise at
41,000 feet and 515 miles per hour. It made its first test flight
earlier this week, five months behind schedule because of problems
integrating components from more than 40 suppliers.

"The first flight is a challenging task, as the Sukhoi Superjet
100 is a new super product with excellent technical and flight
characteristics," Mikhail Pogosyan, the company’s CEO said after the
test flight, which saw the plane cruise at 4,000 feet during a flight
that lasted 65 minutes. "This aircraft is unique for Russia. Every
minute of the first flight was both an exciting expectation and an
impressive experience."

Translation: "We had high expectations for this maiden flight and we
were not disappointed. We know we’ve got a plane that doesn’t suck,
and our competitors should be nervous."

Sukhoi conducted the test in secret, with Pogosyn telling the
Moscow Times, "The Superjet is our child, and its birth is sacred. A
pregnant woman would never invite the press and guests to watch how
she delivers her child." Test pilot Alexander Yablontsev said the
plane feels a lot like the Boeing jets he’s flown and told the Times,
"I’m so happy that I am speechless. I’ve finally done something manly
after all these years."

They broke out the champagne after the test flight, but it’s a bit
early for celebrations. The company’s got 600 more test flights
scheduled, and it concedes

Russia isn’t the only country jumping into the commercial plane
business. China recently launched a new company to develop a mid-sized
jet capable of carrying as many as 150 people, and Toyota Motor Co. is
investing Mitsubishi Heavy Industries confirmed in March that it would
proceed with a project to develop Japan’s first home-grown passenger
jet aircraft.

So far Sukhoi has racked up 98 orders for the new plane, which will
cost $29 million apiece. most from little known airlines like Dalavia,
Transaero, and Armavia (Armenia rocks!). As part of its fleet renewal
program, Russian flag carrier Aeroflot has also placed an order for
45 of the planes.

"Our target markets are the U.S. and Western Europe," Valerio Bonelli,
a spokesman for Alenia Auronautica, the subsidiary of Finmeccanica
responsible for the Superjet, told Moscow Times. "The Superjet has
now showed that it can fly, so interest will be growing with every
passing day."

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://blog.wired.com/cars/2008/05/for-the-fi

ANKARA: Armenian MP: Armenia And Turkey Interests Don’t Coincide

ARMENIAN MP: ARMENIA AND TURKEY INTERESTS DON’T COINCIDE
By Melek Tuzluca

Journal of Turkish Weekly
May 22 2008
Turkey

Armen Ashotuan, Armenia MP and member of the ruling Republican Party
of Armenia thinks that the true and announced interests of Turkey
and Armenia do not coincide, Pan-Armenian reports.

Mr. Ashotuan said "If the interests, which are just declared, can be
compared, so the true interests clash only. Ashotyan gave a lecture
in "Global Challenges and Threats: Are Joint Efforts between Armenia
and Turkey Possible?" international conference in Yerevan.

"If Armenia needs Turkey as a steadily developing neighbor,
Turkey needs Armenia at the instigation of world powers and major
international organizations," the MP Ashotuan added.

"Armenia’s global and regional interests focus international
recognition of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic, open communication and
recognition of the Armenian Genocide. Turkey is aspired to join the
EU and maintain Turkish unity," he noted.

* ‘Turkey-Armenian Co-operation is not a Dream’

Turkish scholars however do not share Armenian MP Ashotuan’s
pessimism. Dr. Sedat Laciner, head of the USAK, told the JTW that
Turkey and Armenia can develop good relations and closer ties are
good for both countries:

"Armenia is a tiny country with limited natural sources, small economy
and limited population. It has no sea way. Under these curcumstances,
Yerevan should solve its problems with the neighbours to survive and
to be really an independent country. Turkey is the best (if not the
only one) way to reach the West. Similarly Turkey needs Armenia for
better transportation ways to Central Asia’s Turkic republics. Also
Armenians are very part of Turkish identity and past."

Armenia does not recognise Turkey’s national borders and claims the
eastern part of Anatolia is ‘Western Armenia’. About 20 percent of
Azerbaijain has been under Armenian occupation.

ANKARA: Turkey Says ‘The Armenian Archives Should Be Opened’

TURKEY SAYS ‘THE ARMENIAN ARCHIVES SHOULD BE OPENED’
By Halil SOngul

Journal of Turkish Weekly
May 22 2008
Turkey

Turkey has offered $20 million to open an Armenian archive in the
United States. All Armenian archives regarding the 1915 events are
closed and Turkey makes presure on Armenia, Tashnaks and Armenian
Church to open their archives.

Yusuf Halacoglu, head of the Turkish Historical Society, told Hurriyet
daily the archive in Boston includes important documents on the events
of 1915.

Halacoglu said he had been told the archives cannot be opened because
they need proper cataloging.

This would directly open a debate over the genocide claims, he
said. "Armenians are aware of this and therefore they are doing their
best not to sit at the table".

Armenians name the 1915 events ‘genocide’ although the Turkish side
also blames the Armenians of comming genocide against the Turks and
Kurds during the First World War. More than 520.000 Muslim Ottoman
civilians were massacred by the nationalist Armenian groups during the
war years in order to establish an independent Armenian state. The
Armenian population made co-operation with the occupying Russian,
Greek, British and French forces against Istanbul government.

Today more than 100.000 Armenians live in Turkey. Armenia does not
recognise Turkey’s national borders and names the eastern Turkey as
‘Western Armenia’.

BAKU: Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry Investigating Information On Agr

AZERBAIJAN’S FOREIGN MINISTRY INVESTIGATING INFORMATION ON AGREEMENT BETWEEN RUSSIA’S VLADIMIR OBLAST AND SEPARATIST "NAGORNO KARABAKH REPUBLIC"

Today
itics/45167.html
May 22 2008
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan Foreign Ministry has instructed the Russian embassy to
investigate information about the agreement, signed between the
Vladimir oblast of Russia and the so called Nagorno Karabakh Republic.

Day.Az reports that the due announcement was made by spokesman
for Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry Khazar Ibrahim commenting on the
information about the agreement between the Vladimir oblast of Russia
and separatist "Nagorno Karabakh Republic", said spokesman for the
Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry Khazar Ibrahim.

"First, it is necessary to investigate the information and if confirmed
we will take due steps. We have set this task before our ambassador",
said Ibrahim.

At the same time, spokesman for Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry noted
that in case information is confirmed, we will undertake due steps.

"One of the variants of the due steps is an appeal to the federal
authorities of Russia for prevention of illegal actions and for
cancellation of previous illegal steps", said he.

http://www.today.az/news/pol

Turkey Urges Opening Of Armenian Archive

TURKEY URGES OPENING OF ARMENIAN ARCHIVE

United Press International UPI
May 21 2008

Turkey has offered $20 million to open an Armenian archive in the
United States, claiming documents there will support its version of
the 1915 massacre.

Yusuf Halacoglu, head of the state-funded Turkish Historical Society,
told Hurriyet the archive in Boston includes important documents on
the events of 1915.

Halacoglu said he had been told the archives cannot be opened because
they need proper cataloging.

"This would directly open a debate over the genocide claims," he
said. "Armenians are aware of this and therefore they are doing their
best not to sit at the table."

Armenians and most non-Turkish scholars of the period say 1.5 million
Armenians were killed by the Ottoman Empire in 1915 and generally label
the deaths genocide — a term the Turkish government disputes. The
official Turkish version is that about 300,000 Armenians and 300,000
Turks were killed in an Armenian bid for independence.

About 50,000 Armenians remain in Turkey.