The Armenian Mirror-Spectator – 11/21/2009

The Armenian Mirror-Spectator
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November 21, 2009

1. Tension, Emotion at Harvard Turkish-Armenian Forum
2. ‘Hove’ Is Short on Length, Long on Symbolism
3. Repatriate Mooradian Relives His Time Back in the USSR
4. Protocols: Agitation Is Not Action
5. Letters: Hoke Hankist Wishes for Col. (Ret.) Moorad Mooradian

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1. Tension, Emotion at Harvard Turkish-Armenian Forum

By Daphne Abeel
Special to the Mirror-Spectator

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. – Something unprecedented happened at Harvard University’s
Tsai Auditorium on the night of Monday, November 16. A capacity audience of
200 that included, among others, members of the Armenian community, Turkish
students and Henry Morgenthau, the grandson of US Ambassador to the Ottoman
Empire of the same name, heard Hasan Cemal, the grandson of Cemal Pasha, one
of the three architects of the Armenian Genocide, acknowledge the Armenian
Genocide.
The forum, titled `Armenian-Turkish Reconciliation: Routes through
Empowerment,’ was moderated by Pamela Steiner (great-granddaughter of
Ambassador Henry Morgenthau), senior fellow at the Harvard Humanitarian
Initiative, and Eileen Babbitt, professor of practice in international
conflict management, at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, at Tufts
University.
In addition to Cemal, the speakers included Asbed Kotchikian of Bentley
University and Yektan Turkyilmaz of Duke University. The event was
co-sponsored by the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative, the Weatherhead Center
for International Affairs, the University Committee on Human Rights Study
and the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy. Taner Akçam, professor of
Armenian Genocide Studies at Clark University, joined the panel for the
question-and-answer period. Jennifer Leaning introduced the program.
Tension and emotion were palpable as the audience, in total silence, heard
Cemal, whose grandfather ordered the killing of thousands of Armenians,
detail his journey towards recognition of the Armenian Genocide. Detailing
his family background, Cemal reviewed his family roots. His grandfather was
born on the island of Lesbos and his grandmother came from Greek Macedonia.
On his mother’s side, his grandfather was Circassian and his grandmother
was
from Georgia. His father was born in Salonika, and Cemal himself was born in
Istanbul in 1944.
`Cemal Pasha was the story in our family,’ said Cemal. `We heard about the
First World War and how the Armenians cooperated with the enemy. They had to
be deported. The same story was circulated not only in the family, but in
the schools.’
Hasan Cemal studied political science at Ankara University but stated he
“learned nothing about 1915, nothing about the Kurds or the Alewites or the
Armenians. We learned nothing about these terrible pages of history.’
When Hasan Cemal became a journalist, he was warned not to travel to Lebanon
without a bodyguard, and for the past six years, and especially since the
assassination of his friend Hrant Dink, the founding editor and publisher of
Agos, a Turkish-Armenian newspaper, he has worn protective gear.
It was Taner Akçam’s book, published in 1991, which helped to stimulate
Hasan Cemal’s curiosity about what happened in 1915. `For the first time,
Akçam called it a genocide….This was the beginning of the end of living in
lies and living in truth. Akçam opened our hearts to a tragic past. A new
process started in 2000. Turkey began to want harmony with the European
Union,’ he said.
Both Akçam and Cemal have been called traitors.
In 1996, when Dink began to publish Agos, it became another step in Hasan
Cemal’s education about the Genocide.
The first conference on the issue of the Genocide was scheduled to take
place in Istanbul in 2005, but the high court banned it. Since then, said
Cemal, conferences have been held in Turkey, the most recent on the massacre
in Adana, just this month.
After Dink’s funeral, Cemal reminded his audience, `One hundred thousand
Turks marched in Istanbul, shouting “We are all Armenians.” Further, said
Cemal, 30,000 Turks, signed a petition of apology for what happened in 1915.
`I changed altogether my view of what happened in 1915. I even met with the
grandson of the man who assassinated my grandfather in 1922. I invited him
to Istanbul. He had been an Armenian nationalist, but he began to understand
the other side of the story.`
Cemal traveled to Armenia in 2006 and visited the Genocide Memorial in
Yerevan. Later, `deeply affected by Hrant Dink’s death, Cemal wrote a column
for the Turkish paper, Milliyet, titled, `First Let Us Respect Each Other’s
Pain.’
Said Cemal, `It is impossible to escape history, how pointless it is to deny
history, and how pointless it is to be the victim of one’s own suffering.’
In conclusion, Hasan Cemal said, `Let us understand each other’s pain.
Good
things will come of this. The road to recognition is through democracy.’
The next speaker, Turkyilmaz, who is of Kurdish descent, said, `It is no
easy task to challenge the perceived version of history. For example, for
Armenians it is taboo to admit the murders they committed in the 1970s. What
we need to do is place our memories of the past side by side, and we should
not ignore the sufferings of Turkish Muslims.’
Concerning the recent protocols signed by Armenia and Turkey regarding the
opening of the borders, Turkyilmaz said he supported the creation of an
historic commission to study the archives but that it should be independent
of government control and not `repeat the old dog fight.’
Next, Kotchikian noted that there are two issues that are separate from one
another: normalization and reconciliation. `Normalization of relations
between Turkey and Armenia is an issue for the states. Reconciliation cannot
occur between states. There is a difference between Turkey-Armenia, and
Turks and Armenians. Reconciliation has to include all aspects of both
nations and the Armenian Diaspora.’ And Kotchikian noted that there are many
diasporas, yet all are united around the issue of the denial of the
Genocide.
He also responded to the question of whether Armenians in Armenia care about
the Genocide. `There are no posters, no slogans, but 50 to 60 percent of
the
population in Armenia are descendants of the victims of the Genocide.
Armenia’s Armenians may not talk a lot about it, but they commemorate it.’
`Finally,’ said Kotchikian, `we need to recognize that Turkey is not
the
same as it was 100 years ago. There is a small, civil society, a sort of
fifth branch of the government. It is time for Armenians to realize that
changes have taken place in Turkey and time to re-evaluate the world of the
last two decades. We should not allow genocide victimhood to pervade
everything.’
The question-and-answer period unleashed some raw emotions on the parts of
both Turks and Armenians in the audience. One elderly Armenian man, who
spoke in Turkish, thanked Hasan Cemal for his comments and later shook his
hand. One Turkish man questioned why the term `genocide’ had to be used at
all, and seemed not to recognize that the word, coined by Raphael Lemkin,
was invented to apply specifically to the Armenian Genocide. Poignantly, a
young Turkish student, now at Northeastern University, asked, `Well what
am
I supposed to do? What do you want from me? Cemal’s remarks seemed a fitting
conclusion to the evening. `We must empathize and share,’ he said. `We
should open our hearts before we open the borders.’
Certainly, this forum was significant for the presence of Hasan Cemal, an
imposing man in his mid 60s, a Turk, who acknowledged the Genocide to a
partly Armenian audience.
A second forum, featuring mostly the same speakers, took place Tuesday,
November 17, at the Armenian Cultural and Educational Association (ACEC) in
Watertown, sponsored by the Friends of Hrant Dink. Coverage of that event
will appear in next week’s issue.

****************************************** *******************************

2. ‘Hove’ Is Short on Length, Long on Symbolism

By Anna Yukhananov
Special to the Mirror-Spectator

WATERTOWN, Mass. – The lecture hall of the Armenian Library and Museum
(ALMA) was packed last Saturday afternoon – men in suede jackets and
turtlenecks, women in bright patterns, a buzz of accents: Armenian, Middle
Eastern, Bostonian. Members of the Armenian community had gathered for a
screening of `Hove,’ a short film about the aftereffects of the Armenian
Genocide.
Alex Webb, the film’s writer and director, greeted the audience with `ench
bess es,’ or `how are you doing’ in Armenian.
`That’s about all I know,’ Webb said. `I’m ABC – Armenian by Choice.’
Webb is also Armenian by marriage: his wife, Shirleyann Kaladjian, stars in
the film alongside Oscar-winning actress Olympia Dukakis.
It was Webb’s immersion in the Armenian community that inspired him to write
`Hove,’ which means `The Wind.’
`Armenian history has somehow become my history as well,’ Webb said.
`And
it’s pretty astounding to me that the history is still so little known, and
must be constantly defended.’
The 10-minute film tells the story of two Armenian women, Nina and Zara,
each affected in her own way by the legacy of the Armenian Genocide.
Webb said he wanted to eschew an `intellectual’ approach to history, drawing
instead on viewers’ sympathies for the main characters.
`There’s a tendency to put on your emotional armor and not really take
it
in,’ Webb said about difficult topics like genocide. `The film tries to hit
you in that place you know things, where it’s irrefutable in your heart.’
Webb’s previous film work was a psychological thriller, and `Hove’ itself is
intensely psychological. The film creates a powerful mood with colors and
details: yellows like the sepia of old photographs, close-ups of faces and
furrowed brows and long silences punctuated by brief dialogue.
When talking about the Genocide, `there is a lot in the silences between
people,’ Webb said. `They often don’t say things honestly. The important,
painful things may not be spelled out completely.’
During the screening, one of the women watching the film whispered her own
story.
`My mother was 16 in 1915,’ she said. `She never talks about it. Whenever I
bring it up, tears just run down her cheeks.’
In the film, Nina, the younger woman, played by Kaladjian, encapsulates one
of the film’s themes when she says, `I feel alone. Everyone wants to pretend
like it never happened.’
Most of the movie’s soundtrack is not music, but simply the wind, which is
also the title of the film.
`Some cultures believe the wind is actually the voice of the ancestors,’
Webb said. `It’s also something unseen, but very powerful – like this legacy
that we carry, and either think about, or don’t. The wind seems like
nothing, yet it scours rocks and changes the faces of mountains.’
`Hove’ premiered at the 2009 Palm Springs Short Film Festival, and was
also
screened at the Boston Film Festival, the Los Angeles International Short
Film Festival and the Montreal Film Festival.
Webb said that the movie will also be used as part of the curriculum of
Facing History and Ourselves, an organization that focuses on genocide and
mass violence to teach students about moral and ethical questions in
history.

************************************ **********************************

3. Repatriate Mooradian Relives His Time Back in the USSR

By Anna Yukhananov
Special to the Mirror-Spectator

BELMONT, Mass. – When Tom Mooradian graduated from high school in 1947, he
wanted to go abroad to see the world. His older brothers had served in the
navy during World War II, and Mooradian wanted his own taste of adventure.
A
rising basketball star – named player of the year in Michigan – and ranked
five in his class of 310, Mooradian was at the brink of a bright future.
But instead of traipsing through Europe, Mooradian chose to go to Armenia,
then part of the Soviet Union. He would remain there for the next 13 years,
in often-brutal conditions.
`Why would anyone want to go to Soviet Armenia? I’ve been asking myself this
question for many years, and I still don’t have an answer,’ Mooradian said.
He spoke about his experiences of repatriation during a book talk for his
memoir, The Repatriate: Love, Basketball, and the KGB, at the National
Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) last Thursday.
Mooradian said the Soviet Union first attracted him because it was a US ally
in World War II, but relatively unknown in the West. He may also have been
affected by the ideas of his father, an ardent Communist, and the tempting
propaganda of the Soviet Union.
`I thought, they’re not going to harm me,’ he said. `So many Soviet people
died in Stalingrad, so I thought, these people cannot love war. These people
are friendly.
`But once I got over there, the entire picture changed. We were the enemy.’
Along with 150 other Armenian-Americans, Mooradian got on board the Soviet
ship Rossiya. While the journey to Turkey was beautiful, after they entered
the Black Sea the ship started to run out of food. When the passengers
complained, the sailors explained that ports did not want to do business
with Communists.
`We accepted their excuse,’ Mooradian said. `They claimed that it would be
better when we got to Yerevan. And we believed them.’
Instead, upon arrival, the repatriates received only bread and water. Fifty
of them were placed in a newly-built apartment complex, `which was falling
apart even before we got there,’ Mooradian said. `There was no water, no
electricity. And this was December. The conditions were hell. `I think I
can
say for everybody in my building, that from the first day, we all wanted to
go back. What they had promised us was not fulfilled.’
Mooradian described a typical day during the first year and a half of his
stay: he would get up in the morning and try to get a loaf of bread – which
was usually filled with sawdust and stones to make it heavier, and thus
worth more.
If the initial hunt for bread was unsuccessful, he would walk seven or eight
miles to the city center, then trudge from store to store. A long line meant
it might be possible to obtain some bread, or butter and sugar.
As Mooradian spoke neither Armenian nor Russian when he arrived, he sold his
belongings for money.
`But I was running out of things to sell,’ he said. `So I decided to
try out
for the basketball team.’
For the next 10 years, he would be a star on the Soviet Armenian team,
playing to audiences of thousands, and was thus allowed the luxury of
traveling to other republics within the Soviet Union.
Mooradian was lucky. Many other repatriates were less fortunate. One of the
women at the event, Alice, chimed in with her own story. After coming to
Armenia from the United States, she spent six years in a labor camp, an
ordeal she does not like to talk about.
`He went through nothing,’ Alice said of Mooradian’s experience.
Mooradian said he was a good basketball player, `a coach’s dream,’ because
he spent most of his time on the court.
`Most nights, I didn’t want to go back to my crowded apartment, and I didn’t
want to hang around in the street,’ he said. `I only felt safe in that
rectangle where we played basketball. I would practice eight, ten, hours a
day.’
On one of his visits to Moscow, Mooradian met with an American correspondent
from the Associated Press, who wanted to record his story.
`He said to me, you’re wearing nice clothing, you’re staying at a nice
hotel, why would you want to go home?’ Mooradian said. `I said just one
word: freedom.
`He did not believe that I would ever get out.’
Yet, after many futile attempts, in May of 1960, Mooradian was shocked to
learn that he had been granted an exit visa to return to the United States.
He said he was still unsure why the KGB, the Soviet intelligence service,
allowed him to leave the country, while so many others’ applications were
denied. Mooradian said it may have been because of his status as a
basketball star, or because his father was a Communist who raised money for
the Soviet Union.
Mooradian returned to the United States in July 1960, amid hugs from his
overjoyed parents and friends, but also hate mail from those who said he was
a traitor to his country for going to live in the USSR.
`My teacher wrote and said I was her favorite student, and how could I
betray America like that?’ he said.
Despite the difficult conditions during his time there, Mooradian said he
`fell in love with Russia.
`It is such a beautiful place, everywhere I went,’ he said. `There are evil
kings and queens, czars and czarinas, evil presidents and vice-presidents.
But the people, the people are like you and me. They want to live, to work
and eat, to send their kids to a good school. That it what the people
wanted, and they did not get it.’

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4. Protocols: Agitation Is Not Action

By Varoujan Sirapian

Since the month of August 2009, Armenians, in the diaspora as well as in
Armenia, have been preoccupied by what is called generally `the Protocols,’
that is to say, the announcement followed by the signature of protocols on
the diplomatic relations between Armenia and Turkey that took place in
Zurich on October 10.
There has been considerable agitation by certain people, based, it appears
to me, mainly on speculations rather than on facts or certainty.
I read and I hear, `the protocols signed by Armenia and Turkey encounter
a
vigorous opposition both in the diaspora and in Armenia.’
Can one consider a few scores (or even hundreds) of demonstrators, or as I
have seen in Yerevan in the beginning of October, a few stands where they
were trying with difficulty to have some petitions signed as `vigorous
opposition?’ The opinions of politicians, intellectuals and also the men
in
the street that I talked to were very divided and discreet. A large majority
in Armenia and in the diaspora are waiting to see what the concrete results
of the protocols and the outcome of the events will be. Many believe that
this is all a part of the political game and that the signature was
especially a way for the major powers not to lose face as they have been the
originators of these protocols and that they had come to Zurich for that
occasion to assist the `show.’ The daily analyses in the Turkish media
since
the signature do not give the impression that the Turkish parliament is
prepared to ratify the protocols, at least not immediately. In other
respects, in a customarily provocative manner, the overbearing Prime
Minister Erdogan’s linking the question of Artsakh (Mountainous Karabagh)
with the opening of the borders became an evident denial of the signature.
Armenia thus marked the first point in her favor in the eyes of the
international community.
I read and I hear that `during his visits to Paris, New York, Los Angeles
and Beirut, President Serge Sargisian realized the amplitude of the force of
mobilization of the Diaspora against these protocols of surrender.’
A lie and exaggeration. What force! A mob of a few hundred gathered by a
political organization that has lost momentum and is in search of lost
credibility.
A lie and exaggeration. I was there. The demonstration prepared in Yerevan
by an organization accused today by the population of collaborating with
previous governments and discredited, has mobilized only a small number of
people.
I read and I hear that the Turkish government takes advantage of Armenia’s
weakness and pushes her pawns to set up a commission in charge of the
history of the Genocide, and also on the question of Karabagh.
Let us talk about the weakness of Armenia’s power: is it by a demonstration
like the one in Paris before the statue of Komitas that unleashed police
intervention, that one could reinforce the image of a country and her
president? Respect for institutions and for a president should be maintained
even if one does not agree with all of their acts or decisions. This has
been a scandalous action. There is strong opposition against the protocols
also in Turkey, especially by the Kemalists and the extreme right. But I
cannot imagine for a moment this kind of a demonstration would be organized
by Turks abroad during a visit by President Gul. Responsible organizations
seriously concerned about their country’s interests will not behave in this
manner. Nor will they mix daily domestic Armenian problems and
dissatisfactions that they have with their leaders with foreign-affair
issues.
I read and I hear that Turkey is in search of organizing a process that is
aimed at casting doubts about the reality of the Armenian Genocide. But is
this something new? Fighters of the Armenian Cause, starting with Tchobanian
who denounced the conspiracy of silence back at the beginning of the last
century, and many others after him, know well the efforts of the denialist
Turkish state that negates the existence of the Genocide. There again, to
speculate and to play scare tactics to preserve a `political boutique,’ is
disgraceful. We often denounce, with good reason, those who, similar to the
Jewish lobby in the United States, play the Genocide recognition issue as
blackmail against Turkey. No political organization should `utilize’ the
Genocide to promote their interests.
I read and I hear `around the world, the Armenian people of the diaspora
and
Armenia pursue their mobilization against the protocols.’
A lie and exaggeration: how could one talk in the name of `the Armenian
people?’ Any organization, even less so any person, cannot pretend to be
the
representative and the leader of the Armenian people in the diaspora. As to
the Armenians in the Republic of Armenia, there is an elected president and
a government.
I read and I hear that `to refuse these protocols is to work in favor of
Armenia; it preserves the chances of success in the fight for the Armenian
Cause; it promotes the interests of the Armenian Nation.’
Triple lies: who has estimated and decided that saying no is in favor of
Armenia? What is meant by saying `preserve the chances of success for the
Armenian Cause?’ The Armenian Cause is `the defense of the interests of the
Armenian Nation.’ When such and such charitable organization helps Armenia,
she works for the Armenian Cause; when another one works for Armenia and
Artsakh, it helps the Armenian Cause; when a school in the diaspora tries to
transmit our language and our culture to our youth, it works for the
Armenian Cause; when they publish books, reviews and journals to lobby the
leaders of a country, they work for the Armenian Cause, etc. No person or
organization holds a monopoly of the Armenian Cause.
I read and I hear, `after the contest, it is necessary to act against the
Protocols.’
How to act? Like it or not, the only entity de jure having the right to act
in state to state relations is the government of Armenia, since the diaspora
does not have a representative body. This matter points to the necessity of
establishing a legitimate representation of the diaspora, an elected
Armenian World Congress that will have the power to legitimately express
itself in the name of the diaspora. In the meantime, those who pretend today
to be the defenders of the Armenian Cause, should, at best, listen politely
when they talk to them about the necessity to establish such an
indispensable structure.
Certain people, due to political mistakes committed and repeated in the
past, should better examine the balance sheets of their concessions by
facing realities and accepting criticisms before giving lessons of conduct
to the government and the Armenian people.
No one has the right to smother hope by continuously pouring oil on the fire
of hatred. `Optimism is the opiate of the dumb,’ said Milan Kkundera, to
whom Jean Sartre answers, `pessimism is the excuse of the disloyal.’
Let us be neither optimists not pessimists, but simply lucid.
(Varoujan Sirapian is the founder and president of the Tchobainan Institute
of Paris, France. This article was translated from the French original.)

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5. Letter: Hoke Hankist Wishes for Col. (Ret.) Moorad Mooradian

To the Editor:
Moorad’s family wishes to thank all the people who have supported us
emotionally, spiritually, and by generous donations to the Armenia Tree
Project and other charities during the very difficult loss of our beloved
husband, father, brother, relative and friend.
We will miss him very much, but we have wonderful memories to sustain us.
We will always think of his time with us on earth as a `Celebration of
Life.’
We hope you will continue to pray for him.
-Lillian Mooradian
Providence

http://www.mirrorspectator.com

First Center Of Russian Language In CIS To Open In Armenia

FIRST CENTER OF RUSSIAN LANGUAGE IN CIS TO OPEN IN ARMENIA

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
19.11.2009 18:46 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian culturologists can easier go to Paris or
Los Angeles than Moscow, Alexei Lidov said during the presentation of
a new book "New Jerusalem. ‘Hierotopy’ (Ierotopia) and iconography of
sacred spaces, "collection of essays by leading Russian and foreign
researchers. Alexei Lidov is editor and complier of the book.

According to him, unlike Russia, visits of Armenian culture experts
in Europe are sponsored. "Russia’s government has been asleep for a
long time and it is time to break this situation", Alexei Lidov said.

According to Russia’s Ambassador to Armenia Vyacheslav Kovalenko
there is a need to restore the Armenian-Russian relations. "There is a
"Hill of Honor" in Gyumri, where 156 Russian officers are buried. The
Memorial built at that place was eventually destroyed. We want to
restore this monument ", Vyacheslav Kovalenko said, adding that it
is a joint Armenian-Russia project. According to him, the opening
ceremony of the monument will be timed to 65th anniversary of the
Victory in Great Patriotic War.

Counselor of the Embassy of Russia in Armenia Victor Krivopuskov
said that the first Center of Russian language in CIS will open in
Armenia. He also infrmed that Teachers Association of Russian language
in Armenia has already been revived and on December 11 Armenia will
host a congress of Russian language teachers.

Ireland U21s Beaten In Armenia

IRELAND U21S BEATEN IN ARMENIA

BreakingNews.ie
November 17, 2009 Tuesday 02:59 PM GMT
Ireland

Armenia Under-21 4 Republic of Ireland 1<strong>.

The Republic of Ireland Under-21scontinued their winless run in
Group 2 of the Under-21 European Championship as Henrik Mkhitaryan
plundered a hat-trick to fire Armenia to a comfortable win in front
of their own fans.

Led for the first time by MK Dons midfielder Stephen Gleeson, the
Republic fell behind to Mkhitaryan’s opener after half-an-hour’s play.

Mkhitaryan made it 2-0 to the hosts in the 61st minute before
Plymouth’s Cillian Sheridan gave his side a lifeline four minutes
later, turning in James O’Shea’s cross.

Armenia continued to enjoy the best of the game, though, and
re-established a two-goal gap through Hovhaness Goharyan’s 20-yard
strike with 15 minutes to play.

Mkhitaryan slotted in a fourth, and his third, with an 82nd-minute
penalty.

The Republic now sit bottom of Group 2, swapping places with their
opponents, with just four points from six games.

CSTO Institute To Open Its Branch In Armenia

CSTO INSTITUTE TO OPEN ITS BRANCH IN ARMENIA

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
19.11.2009 18:50 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On November 24, Yerevan will host the opening of
CSTO Institute in Armenia. Participants will hear speeches by NSS
Secretary Arthur Baghdasaryan and CSTO General Secretary Nikolay
Borduzha. The same day, Armenian capital will host a round table on
"Organization of Collective Security as stability and security factor
in South Caucasuss". Event will be attended by RA National Security
Council Secretary, CSTO General Secretary and representatives from
CSTO Institute neo-commercial organization.

Ilon Wikland: Carlson Was Born In Paris

ILON WIKLAND: CARLSON WAS BORN IN PARIS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
19.11.2009 18:58 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "In 1955, Astrid Lindgren, finishing her work on
the book of stories about Carlson, sent me the manuscript, so I was
able to create an image of Carlson.

After some time I presented her the first image of my Carlson,
looking at which she said: "No, it’s not my Carlson. After that, I was
looking for an image of Carlson for 6 months in Paris, where once on
the street I saw a man in overalls, with disheveled hair, and I said
myself: "This is Carlson! So he comes from Paris, " Ilona Wikland ,
the world-famous illustrator of books teller Astrid Lindgren said at
the opening of the exhibition "Carlson, who knows how to fly".

Exhibition of works by Ilon Wikland in the Yerevan-based National
aesthetic center will run until December 3. The exhibition is
organized by the Swedish office, consulate of Estonia in Armenia,
"Youth achievements of Armenia" organization in the framework of events
dedicated to the International Convention on the Rights of the Child.

"The event will give us the opportunity to reiterate the importance of
public attention to the fundamental rights of children, " Ambassador
Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Kingdom of Sweden to Armenia,
Hans Gunnar Aden said.

Students’ miniatures on children’s rights have been presented in
Armenia.

"Within 2 months, students of 20 schools from all regions of Armenia
participated in the contest . The teams discussed the rights of
children, and then wrote scripts and prepared small plays," "Youth
achievements of Armenia" director Armine Hovhannisyan said.

Armenian Students Win 2 Gold Medals In China

ARMENIAN STUDENTS WIN 2 GOLD MEDALS IN CHINA

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
19.11.2009 19:09 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On November 8-16, China hosted the 14th International
Astronomy Olympiad . Two of 3 students representing Armenia at the
tournament: Hayk Tepanyan and Hayk Hakobyan won gold medals, Ayb
Educational Foundation reported.

Armenia And Argentina To Deepen Trade And Economic Relations

ARMENIA AND ARGENTINA TO DEEPEN TRADE AND ECONOMIC RELATIONS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
19.11.2009 19:12 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The government of Armenia during November 19 meeting
approved a proposal for agreement between the governments of Armenia
and Argentina over prevention of double taxation (on income and
property) and prevention of tax evasion.

As Armenian finance minister Tigran Davtyan said, the agreement will
promote trade between the two countries, cooperation in the field of
technology and capital, and will also contribute to the development of
economic relations.

Dashnaktsutyun Accused RA Government Of Contributing To Oligopoly

DASHNAKTSUTYUN ACCUSED RA GOVERNMENT OF CONTRIBUTING TO OLIGOPOLY

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
19.11.2009 19:15 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ RA Government and the oligopoly in Armenia’s economy
are a uniform system, so there’s no need to create an artificial
impression that the executive conducts active policy against
oligopoly," ARFD faction member Ara Nranyan told today a Parliament
session devoted to 2010 State Budget.

At that he noted that Armenian Government has, over the course of
years, assisted only in boosting import which caused serious harm
to local producers. "Such policy contributed to the development of
oligopoly and monopoly which exist to date," MP stressed.

According to him, Government’s economic policy has given rise to
serious problems in Armenia’s social justice system, and social
problems prevent people from being concerned by serious national
issues like Armenian-Turkish process.

CSTO To Prevent Illegal Circulation Of Light Infantry And Portable Z

CSTO TO PREVENT ILLEGAL CIRCULATION OF LIGHT INFANTRY AND PORTABLE ZENITH MISSILE COMPLEXES

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
19.11.2009 19:16 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On November 20, Moscow will host consultations on
coordinating CSTO member-states’ positions on issues concerning light
infantry and portable zenith missile complexes."Consultations aim at
enabling participants to exchange experience in the sphere of light
infantry and portable zenith missile complexes," said CSTO Deputy
General Secretary General Ara Badalyan, stressing the importance of
preventing the illegal circulation of above-mentioned weapons.

Event is organized in accordance with CSTO member states’ 2009-10
consultation plans on foreign policy, security and defense.

Discussions will bring together experts from CSTO member states’
Foreign Ministries and other interested state agencies, CSTO press
service reports.

What Risk Does The Opening Of Larsi Entail

WHAT RISK DOES THE OPENING OF LARSI ENTAIL

Kviris Palitra
Nov 9 2009
Georgia

Eka Asatiani’s interview with Caucasus affairs expert Mamuka Areshidze
Translated from Georgian

Many details of the patriarch’s visit to Baku have not been disclosed.

According to Caucasus affairs expert Mamuka Areshidze, discussion of
the idea of a peaceful Caucasus should have been discussed.

[Areshidze] Certain government officials made a serious mistake when
they participated in the adventurism that a member of the Liberty
Institute began. I think that [senior Liberty Institute figure Tea]
Tutberidze’s statement [probable reference to Tutberidze’s reposting
of anticlerical web videos on her Facebook page] was inspired by the
activity of the Patriarchate in the Caucasus region.

Georgian Orthodox Patriarch meets Russian counterpart in Azerbaijan

The Patriarch raised the peaceful Caucasus initiative in talks with
[former US Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and
Eurasian Affairs] Matthew Bryza, after which the idea took on new
life. He highlighted the fact that the Georgian government does not
possess the capacity to maintain peace in the country and in the
Caucasus in general. The Patriarch has taken this role upon himself.

It has now become clear to everyone that the patriarch’s latest visit
to Baku was not just to celebrate the birthday [of Azerbaijan’s senior
Muslim cleric, Allahsukur Pasazada].

The Russian Patriarch was also present. It is fully possible that
the Caucasus peace plan was also discussed in Baku and that the
patriarch is lobbying this idea at a more serious level. There is
a group within the [Georgian] government that is irritated by such
initiatives. What also stood out for me was that a new approach to
the church was expressed in the human rights ombudsman’s [latest]
report. It is stated in it that the Georgian [Orthodox] Church should
not have a privileged position.

The patriarch and Pasazada made a statement that Georgia and Azerbaijan
were in the same situation in that both countries had lost territory
and that they have been abandoned with no supporters bar each
other. This was a serious observation on the ongoing processes in
the South Caucasus and on the position that Turkey has adopted on
Azerbaijan. The meeting of the Georgian and Russian patriarchs on
"neutral territory" was very important. We will hear more about this
in the coming days but I am certain that [Russian] Patriarch Kirill’s
visit to Azerbaijan was an extension of Russian policy.

Parts of Georgia-Russia border "occupied" by Russia

The situation is rather difficult. All the areas the Georgian border
guards used to control have now been "occupied" by Russian border
guards only. For this to be clear to the reader, I will give you
the example of the Mamisoni pass [connecting the north-west Georgian
region of Racha to Russia] where Georgian border guards were forced
to retreat. In addition, Russian border guards have seized a 24km
section in Tusheti [region in north-west Georgia bordering Chechnya
and Dagestan]. This is quite far from the occupied territories
[Abkhazia and South Ossetia], where the Russian army already stands.

Tension rising in periphery of rebel regions

A "political approach" is at work in the occupied territories so that
a buffer zone can be created around them. This is particularly true
of the territory of South Ossetia. This means that work is under way
to ensure that the local population leaves the adjacent territory.

Recently they have begun to detain people claiming that they "violated
the border".

The same thing is happening, albeit to a lesser extent, to the
population of Racha. The [Russian/South Ossetian-occupied] village of
Perevi, in Sachkhere District, has been almost fully vacated by its
residents. And what is happening in the villages of [Abkhazia’s] Gali
District [alleged mistreatment of ethnic Georgians] will soon begin in
Samegrelo [Georgian-controlled region adjacent to Abkhazia]… In those
villages of Gali which are separated from Tqvarcheli and Ochamchire,
young people do not know Georgian at all. They only speak Megrelian
[language spoken by the Georgian ethnic subgroup native to Samegrelo
and parts of Abkhazia] or Russian – that is, the Megrelians are
undergoing a process of Abkhazification. The situation in [Georgia’s
ethnic Armenian-populated] Javakheti, where our adversary, unlike
ourselves, is active and focussed on achieving serious results,
is also difficult. If the Armenian-Turkish border opens, it will be
difficult to predict what will happen in Javakheti…

The situation in the Pankisi Gorge [in northern Georgia, near
Chechnya], where local government elites have handed over economic
levers to the Wahhabis, is also worth considering. These are the
threats Georgia is faced with which are forming the preconditions
for this country’s disintegration. As for the opening of the Larsi
crossing, it has both positives and negatives. It will prove to be
positive only for the residents of Qazbegi [Georgian town nearest to
the Larsi border crossing] because the opening of the border will have
a positive effect on the economic situation there. The restoration of
communications will be good for the part of Georgia’s population which
has relatives in North Caucasus. There is one more positive aspect
to this- if Georgia uses it correctly – Armenia will be connected to
Russia through this route, which means that it will be dependent on
Georgia to an extent…

Armenia main beneficiary of opening of Russia-Georgia border

The negative side is that Georgia will be opening a border with a
country that it is at war with and with which it has no diplomatic
relations. Apart from this, Georgia is to open its border for the sake
of a third country [Armenia]. Are we supposed to watch with an empty
stomach as this country trades [with Russia] and makes money? What is
particularly dangerous for us is that an organization called Daryal has
been established in North Ossetia whose members are Ossetians from the
Truso Gorge [in northern Georgia] who have every legal right to return
to Georgia, yet because of ideological pressure, they have gradually
developed an antagonistic disposition towards everything Georgian.

Main Russia-Georgia highway under threat from South Ossetia

You will know that there is a big campaign in the North Ossetian
press on who should control Qazbegi District (?!) [punctuation as
published]. They assert that it is Ossetian territory and if the border
is opened, I cannot rule out the possibility that this campaign will
take on a more serious, political colouring. Nor should we forget
that a section of the Georgian military highway [connecting Tbilisi
to Vladikavkaz in North Ossetia, Russia] practically borders the
Soviet-era boundary of the South Ossetian Autonomous Region. For
example, the territory adjacent to the village of Mleta is South
Ossetia, which is only 150 metres away from the Georgian military
highway. Let us imagine that if Kokoyty suddenly decides to occupy this
territory with his military units, Qazbegi District, the territory
around Gudauri, the Kobi section of the road and Truso – all these
will be separated from the rest of Georgia.

Incident on Armenian border reported

[Asatiani] What incident took place on the Armenian-Georgian border
a couple of days ago?

[Areshidze] There was a row between border guards near the Armenian
village of Bavra. The Armenian side attempted to move their border
post into Georgian territory and the Georgian side stopped them. Then
Georgian army units arrived there and had it not been for the timely
intervention of the border guards’ leaderships, it is hard to tell
what would have happened. Earlier it was the Georgian side that
shifted their post into the Bavra fields and camped there….All this
happened because no demarcation has taken place on the aforementioned
territory. The settlement of these problems is hampered by the frequent
staff changes among those who are expected to deal with these issues.