BAKU: Leaders of Azerbaijani opposition plan to hold Karabakh forum

Today.az, Azerbaijan
May 6 2008

Leaders of Azerbaijani opposition plan to hold Karabakh forum

06 May 2008 [15:01] – Today.Az

The Center of Democratic Elections, functioning in Azerbaijan, plans
to hold the next Karabakh forum.

Azadlyg party chairman Ahmed Oruj told Day.Az that the forum dates to
the situation established around the Karabakh problem, as well as the
next anniversary of Shusha’s occupation by Armenians.

"We have invited representatives of all political structures to the
said event. Leaders of Azerbaijani opposition consider that the
Karabakh problem should be constantly discussed and this is the most
important problem in the country", he noted.

It should be added that the forum will be held in the International
press center on May 7.

The Center of Democratic Elections includes the National-Democratic
Party, Classical Popular Front Party, Great Creation, Single Popular
Front Party, Green Party, Great Creation Party, Tekkamul, Azadlyg
party and Open Society Party.

/Day.Az/

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/44809.html

The ravaged pearl of the Aegean

Morning Star, UK
May 5, 2008 Monday

Feature – The ravaged pearl of the Aegean

by Gordon Parsons

Paradise Lost
by Giles Milton (Hodder and Stoughton, £20)

The total annihilation of Smyrna, the modern Izmir, by Kemal Ataturk’s
Turkish forces triumphing over the defeated Greek army in 1922 was
described by one eyewitness as having "scarcely a parallel in the
history of the world for hideousness and danger."

The grotesque record of the rest of the 20th century surely makes the
claim appear extravagant. Nevertheless, Giles Milton’s detailed,
day-by-day account, largely compiled from personal diaries and
contemporary reports of the ravaging of this cosmopolitan "pearl of
the Aegean" which, even through the first world war, had remained an
Edwardian enclave of summer balls, tea dances and family picnics – at
least for the privileged Levantine, Greek and Armenian merchants –
depicts a modern Pandemonium, outrivalling that of the author’s
classic namesake.

The turning of blind eyes to the human tragedy on the part of the
great European powers, busily weighing up their own interests in the
face of a rising Turkish nationalism, comes as no surprise in the
light of recent history.

The Turkish government, still today denying the earlier Armenian
genocide, will not welcome this forensic revelation of the barbarity
of their national hero who saw his way to power and the destruction of
the Greek dreams of a greater Greece that hoped to encompass large
portions of Asia Minor "with the great city of Smyrna at its heart."

Haigazian: Dr. Arda Jebejian on "Linguistic Challenges of Diaspora"

PRESS RELEASE
From: Mira Yardemian
Public Relations Director
Haigazian University
Mexique Street, Kantari, Beirut
P.O.Box. 11-1748
Riad El Solh 1107 2090
Tel: 01-353010/1/2
01-349230/1

Dr. Arda Jebejian on "Linguistic Challenges of the Armenian Diaspora in
Lebanon"

Beirut, May 6, 2008- On April 30, 2008, Dr. Arda Jebejian, current
lecturer in the Humanities Department at the University of Nicosia,
Cyprus, delivered a lecture entitled "Challenges of the Armenian
Diaspora in Lebanon: Implications for a Resolution of a Crime Still
Denied" at the Cultural Hour in the Haigazian University Auditorium.

Dr. Jebejian was introduced to the audience by Dr. Arda Ekmekji, Dean of
the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, who in her opening word tackled the
issue of the Armenian Genocide, pointing out to the fact that it is the
first genocide of the 20th century.

Jebejian began her lecture by explaining the role of language in
societies, as "the means of socialization into one’s culture, the
vehicle for transmitting the cultural heritage of the past, reshaping
it, and passing it on to the next generations."

Jebejian also explained the implications of the Armenian language on
Armenians who live in Diaspora communities. "They have been subjected to
shifts and fluctuations of language ideologies, ranges of identities,
sociopolitical and socioeconomic trends, and more recently to
globalization, consumerism, explosion of media technologies, and the
post-colonial and post-communist predicament of belongingness", Jebejian
noted.

Jebejian concluded her lecture by considering that pride in ethnic
identity, communal belongingness, and transmission of the Armenian
language and history, are crucial in hastening the just conclusion of an
internationally unresolved national tragedy.

He Brought Hope To People With Behavioral Problems – Dr. R. Asarian

HE BROUGHT HOPE TO PEOPLE WITH BEHAVIORAL PROBLEMS DR. RICHARD ASARIAN
by Joe Fahy Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Pennsylvania)
May 4, 2008 Sunday
REGION EDITION

Inspired by the 1989 movie "Field of Dreams," Dr. Richard Asarian
planted corn and constructed a baseball diamond at his farm in
Washington County, holding occasional softball games there with
friends and family members.

The fanciful pursuit, they said, suggested his love for life and
baseball — and his belief that everyone, including the troubled people
that he served as a clinical psychologist, should strive toward dreams
of a better life.

Dr. Asarian, 61, of Scenery Hill, died Tuesday at his home. The cause
was a heart attack, said his son, Aram.

In his professional career, Dr. Asarian focused much of his attention
on bringing hope to people with behavioral problems, including criminal
offenders. But his interests were wide-ranging.

They included religious studies, existential phenomenology and the
Chautauqua Institution in New York, which he visited regularly. He
was an amateur guitar player, blues singer and songwriter and was
an avid fan of Democratic politics and sports teams, especially the
Pittsburgh Pirates.

"He loved nature, the environment and creativity in general," his
son said.

Of Armenian descent, with a hearty laugh, Dr. Asarian was known for
his humor and zest for life.

"He was eccentric in a fun kind of way," said his older brother,
Dr. John Asarian, a pediatrician. He noted that his brother had a
fuschia-colored hot tub installed in his dining room and, on a trip
to Paris, wore a cowboy hat as he sat outside near the Seine River
and played his guitar.

He also formed a group of friends, known as the Brotherhood of the
Symbolic Stalk, to shake corn stalks at Pirates games.

But friends and colleagues also recalled the optimism and compassion
he brought to the people he served.

He was a co-founder of the Ielase Institute, an agency that provided
community-based mental health treatment to criminal offenders, said
his longtime friend, Earl Hill, program director for a local drug
and alcohol treatment program.

In his latest job, director of psychology at Torrance State Hospital,
Dr. Asarian helped patients with mental illness, including those
struggling with addictions, to focus on their ability to move toward
recovery, said Edna McCutcheon, the hospital’s chief executive officer.

She recalled how he performed at a professional conference last year
with a patient who also played guitar.

"You could see the pure joy on Richard’s face," she said, adding
that he was concerned with "maximizing the skills our individuals
could attain."

Dr. Asarian "could always make you laugh and was a wonderful
optimist. He could see the best in everything," said another friend
and local epidemiologist, Dr. Melissa Wieland.

Dr. Asarian was born in New York City to Sherman and Zabelle
Asarian. His father was a dentist and his mother a homemaker.

After his father joined the Army, the family lived in California,
Virginia and Kentucky before settling in the Fresno, Calif. area in
the late 1950s.

He received a bachelor’s degree from Fresno State University and a
master’s degree from Sonoma State University before earning a Ph.D. in
psychology from Duquesne University in 1981.

For about 20 years, beginning in the mid-1970s, he worked at the
Ielase Institute, serving as clinical director. He also worked at other
agencies around the area, including several correctional facilities,
and served on a state addictions task force.

He had been at Torrance State Hospital since 2006.

Besides his son, of Washington, D.C., and brother, of Chico, Calif.,
Dr. Asarian is survived by his former wife, Anne Asarian Cummins of
Washington, Pa., and three nephews.

Interment will be private. Arrangements are being handled by Hummell
and Barnhill Funeral Home. Memorial contributions can be made to the
American Diabetes Association.

Friends are invited to a memorial service at 7 p.m. Friday at the
Century Inn on Route 40 in Scenery Hill.

Armenian Parliament Approves Government’s Program For 2008-2012

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT APPROVES GOVERNMENT’S PROGRAM FOR 2008-2012

ARKA
May 4, 2008

YEREVAN, May 4. /ARKA/. With 88 to three, the RA Parliament approved
the Government’s program of action for 2008-2012.

The Government worked out the program in the context of the National
Security Strategy of Armenia, the Poverty Reduction Strategic Program
and the election programs of the President, the coalition-forming
parties (the Republican Party of Armenia, the Prospering Party of
Armenia, the Country of Law Party and the Armenian Revolutionary
Federation, ARF), as well as the principal provisions of the Agreement
on Political Coalition.

The concept of the government’s program is based on five pivots –
efficiency and security in the rapidly changing world, preservation
of spiritual and cultural values, and human freedoms.

In presenting the program, RA Premier Tigran Sargssyan presented
stressed that the Government will work to ensure high rates of
macroeconomic stability and economic growth.

"The Government’s role in economy will be essential, however,
restricted to creating a favourable environment for the private
sector," the Premier said.

The government says it will try to achieve an ambitious goal of making
Armenia a regional centre of business and investments.

The program largely focuses on poverty reduction issues as well.

"The shortest way to solve the problem of poverty is to make needy
citizens actively involved in the country’s economic and political
life," Sargssyan said.

Тhe Government will keep focus on the problem highlighted by the
former Government, namely, the gap between the average pensions
and average wages, which led to a tangible gap between the living
standards of employed citizens and pensioners.

The new Government will also focus on the development of a national
system of environmental protection, people’s access to cultural
resources and aviation modernization.

–Boundary_(ID_urmtyPRRsJsloBXzDot lDA)–

6.4% Unemployment In Armenia In Jan-Mar 2008

6.4% UNEMPLOYMENT IN ARMENIA IN JAN-MAR 2008

ARKA
May 4, 2008

YEREVAN, May 4. /ARKA/. 6.4% unemployment was recorded in Armenia in
January-March 2008 – a 0.8% decrease as compared to the corresponding
period of last year.

The RA National Statistical Service reports that Armenia’s economically
active population was nearly 1,149,800 in the first quarter of 2008,
with 1,076,600 of them employed.

33.3% of the population – 29.5% men and 37.4% women – were employed
in the economic sector. 79.9% worked for the private sector, 19.7% for
the government sector, with only 0.4% involved in the public sector.

By the end of March, 2008, the RA State Employment Service had
officially registered 89,100 job-seekers, with 77,000 of them claiming
unemployed.

74,700 of the job-seekers were granted unemployment status. 47,000
of the job-seekers were employed, with 9,300 of them being first-time
job-seekers.

Women constituted 74.4% of all the officially registered unemployed
in Armenia – 55,600.

Only 16,100 unemployed were granted unemployment benefits against
11,400 last March. The average monthly benefit was 13,338 AMD against
last year’s 10,458 AMD.

868 vacancies were officially registered at the end of March 2008
(89 unemployed for one vacancy).

NKR rep. to USA: NK problem direct result of Armenian Genocide

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
May 2 2008

NKR REPRESENTATIVE TO USA: NAGORNO-KARABAKH PROBLEM DIRECT RESULT OF
ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

YEREVAN, 02.05.08. DE FACTO. NKR Representative to the United States
Vardan Barseghian spoke at the annual Armenian Genocide Observance on
Capitol Hill that also featured U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
(D-CA), Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD), Senator Bob Menendez
(D-NJ) and other members of Congress, the Press Office of the NKR
office in the USA reports.
To note, the event was organized by the Congressional Caucus on
Armenian Issues, co-chaired by Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Joe
Knollenberg (R-MI), in cooperation with the Armenian Embassy in
Washington and leading Armenian-American organizations. Armenian
Ambassador Tatoul Markarian, Prelate Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan,
Archbishop Vicken Aykazian, and Dr. Gregory Stanton, President of the
International Association of Genocide Scholars also spoke to the
audience that included Armenian Genocide survivors, human rights
activists, and members of the Armenian community.
In his remarks, Representative Barseghian called upon the United
States to recognize the Armenian Genocide saying that it would "send a
powerful warning signal to those who plan new ethnic cleansing
campaigns that the truth will prevail, that criminal actions will be
named for what they are and that the perpetrators will be condemned
and will bear responsibility."
Tying past crimes against humanity to today’s situation, Barseghian
said that the Nagorno Karabakh problem was a direct result of the
Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923.
"Weakened by mass killings, deportations and widespread devastation
inflicted by the Ottoman Turks, Armenia was not able to hold on to its
historic province of Artsakh and eventually gave in to the Soviet
pressure to include it within administrative borders of Soviet
Azerbaijan. And the consequences of the Armenian Genocide, including
that particular decision by the Bolsheviks, continue affecting our
lives today, over 90 years later", the Artsakh representative said.
Stressing that the risk of genocide still exists, Barseghian said that
"Azerbaijan continues to threaten Nagorno Karabakh with a new war
because we insist on our right to live in freedom."
"Nagorno Karabakh will continue reinforcing its defense capabilities
to be up to the task, but we would like to see our friends on Capitol
Hill and those who want to see a stable and peaceful South Caucasus to
send a clear signal to Azerbaijan that a new war would not be
tolerated," he said.
On behalf of the NKR Government, Barseghian thanked Representatives
Pallone and Knollenberg and other congressional leaders for their
steadfast support on issues related to Artsakh’s security, freedom,
and economic development. He urged greater U.S. political and economic
support.
"We hope that the U.S. Congress will continue its leading role in
charting a new format for relations with Nagorno Karabakh that looks
beyond conflict resolution to collaboration on issues of security,
democracy and economic development."
Concluding his remarks Barseghian said that leaders on Capitol Hill
acknowledged that in "parallel to our common efforts to make this
world genocide-free, we also need to deal with consequences of past
crimes and to support those who still struggle for freedom and
justice."

The story behind the untold story (Willian Saroyan)

The Fresno Bee (California)
May 1, 2008 Thursday

The story behind the untold story

by Guy Keeler, The Fresno Bee, Calif.

May 1–William Saroyan’s dream of becoming a writer sprouted in Fresno
and blossomed in San Francisco. Like the first flower of spring, he
seemed to burst on the literary scene overnight.

But from the time he signed up for a typing class at Fresno Technical
School around 1920 until Story magazine published "The Daring Young
Man on the Flying Trapeze" in 1934, he wrote many things that never
saw print.

Beginning today, The Bee will present one of Saroyan’s early,
unpublished works. "Follow," a virtually unknown novella of about
26,000 words, will appear in 13 installments through June 1.

Publication of the novella was arranged through the Stanford
University Libraries, which keeps the work in its collection of
Saroyan papers.

"William Saroyan was a truly prolific writer, and there is a vast body
of unpublished work in his archives," said Annette Keogh, William
Saroyan Curator for American and British Literature at Stanford. "Many
know him through the Saroyan classics, but there is so much in the
archives that is very good. Anything that draws new readers to
unpublished Saroyan material is an exciting thing."

"Follow" was brought to The Bee’s attention by Bill Secrest Jr., who
learned about the novella last year from Aram Saroyan, the son of
William Saroyan. Secrest, history librarian for the Fresno County
Public Library and a member of the William Saroyan Society and the
William Saroyan Centennial Committee, was looking for ways to create a
tangible Saroyan tribute.

"When Bill told me the centennial was coming up, I thought of
‘Follow,’ " Aram Saroyan said. "I had read it about 10 years ago while
going through some of my dad’s archive material. It’s a beautiful
piece of work. I haven’t read anything among his unpublished works
that I like better."

The novella bears the address of a second-story apartment on Carl
Street in San Francisco, a block south of Golden Gate Park and seven
blocks from the corner of Haight and Ashbury streets. Saroyan shared
the place with his mother, Takoohi, brother Henry and sister
Cosette. At the time he wrote "Follow," he had returned from an
unsuccessful quest to become a writer in New York and was continuing
to pursue his dream in the security — and obscurity — of his
mother’s San Francisco flat.

Saroyan typically put a date on everything he wrote, said Dickran
Kouymjian, a Saroyan friend and retired chairman of the Armenian
Studies program at California State University, Fresno. But he also
sent manuscripts to typing services, which produced undated copies for
him. No date appears on any of the copies of "Follow" at Stanford.

When writing from personal experience, which he often did, Saroyan
liked to get things down on paper while the memories were fresh,
Kouymjian said. Since Saroyan returned from New York in 1929, he might
have written the novella that year or in 1930.

"Follow," which begins in the summer of 1924, tells the story of
16-year-old Aram Diranian, who breaks away from his Fresno roots to
seek adventure and a new life in New York.

Secrest said those who knew Saroyan or have read about his life will
be intrigued by the autobiographical tidbits in "Follow." He describes
his boyhood home on San Benito Avenue, with its walnut tree, crickets,
spiders and mice. He tells about eating oatmeal and bread for
breakfast and lamb stew or cabbage soup at night. He also mentions
writers who captured his attention — H. L. Mencken, Walt Whitman,
Sherwood Anderson, Mark Twain and Jack London, to name a few — and
yearns to get away from his hometown.

"The thrust is similar to James Joyce’s ‘A Portrait of the Artist as a
Young Man,’ " Secrest said. "It’s about a young fellow trying to feel
his way around in the world. It’s a classical coming-of-age piece."

Aram Saroyan said readers familiar with his father’s published work
will find, in "Follow," some rehearsals of scenes that show up in
later Saroyan books and plays. The novella also showcases Saroyan’s
early writing skill.

"On the first page, you see the work of a writer who is barely 21
years old," Aram Saroyan said. "The prose is so beautiful and
lyrically done that it already has the stamp of the writer that my
father would become."

Aram Saroyan calls "Follow" the best of his father’s apprentice works,
a collection of several unpublished book-length manuscripts in the
Saroyan archives at Stanford. He is not surprised the manuscript is
still around after eight decades, adding, "My father kept
everything. He was a pack rat."

Aram Saroyan said he has found no evidence that his father ever
submitted "Follow" for publication. Although William Saroyan was to
gain fame as a master of the short story, he might have produced
"Follow" in an effort to write longer pieces. An editor’s letter in
the archives, urging his father to write a novel, might have motivated
the work, Aram Saroyan said.

Secrest said the autobiographical aspects of "Follow" might offer
another clue to why it was written.

"One thing about Saroyan, he was at the typewriter every day," Secrest
said. "Writing was something he ate, lived and dreamed about. It was
catharsis and therapy. I think in ‘Follow’ there may have been
something in Saroyan that needed to come out."

Betsy Lumbye, executive editor and senior vice president of The Bee,
and Managing Editor Jack Robinson had been looking for unpublished
Saroyan material to share with readers when they first read "Follow."

"It’s a rare honor and a privilege to be able to unveil an unpublished
work by an author of William Saroyan’s stature," Lumbye said. "It
means a lot to me, personally, because I first read "The Human Comedy"
when I was growing up in Virginia in the 1960s and was captivated by
the place and people he depicted."

"Follow" also will appear on The Bee’s Web site, which could generate
an even wider worldwide audience.

"We were immediately taken with the piece," Robinson said. "It works
as a story, and it also says a lot about Saroyan the man. He was so
young at the time that he had to rely heavily on his own experience
for material. His passionate character just shines off the page."

Gas Price Rise Not To Affect Armenia’s Low-Income Groups

GAS PRICE RISE NOT TO AFFECT ARMENIA’S LOW-INCOME GROUPS

ARKA
April 30, 2008

YEREVAN, April 30. /ARKA/. The expected rise in gas prices must not
affect the low-income sections of Armenia’s population, stated RA
Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan.

"Our resorting to unpopular steps does not mean that we do not thing
about low-income sections of the population. We will first of all
identify low-income sections of the population and organize selective
aid for them," Sargsyan told a press conference.

On May 1, 2008, the RA Government will stop subsidizing gas-supply,
which has been practised since April 2006, when the price for Russian
gas supplied to Armenia was raised from $56 to $110 for 1,000 cubic
meters. From May 1, 2008, 1,000 cubic meters of gas will cost 90,000
AMD (about $300) (VAT included), and $146.51 for consumers of over
10,000 cubic meters a month (VAT included).

The RA Premier said that the RA Government also plans redistribution of
budgetary funds to relieve the negative consequences of the price rise.

T. Sargsyan reported that the issue of gas prices will also be
discussed during a visit to be paid to Armenia by Gasprom Board
Chairman Alexey Miller in May.

"We will discuss the issue and inform you of the results of the talks,"
he said.

On April 6, 2006, Gasprom and the RA Government signed a 25-year
agreement setting strategic principles of cooperation in gas-energy
projects in Armenia. Under the agreement, Gasprom pledged not to
raise gas prices until 2009.

EU Presidency Welcomes Amendment Of Turkish Free Speech Law

EU PRESIDENCY WELCOMES AMENDMENT OF TURKISH FREE SPEECH LAW

STA – Slovenska Tiskovna Agencija
April 30 2008
Slovenia

Ljubljana, 30 April (STA) – The Slovenian EU presidency welcomed
on Wednesday the decision of the Turkish parliament to soften a law
restricting free speech, saying this was a constructive step forward
in ensuring freedom of expression. The presidency added it was looking
forward to its effective implementation.

Responding to the amendment of Article 301 in the Turkish penal code,
which penalises "insults to Turkishness", the EU presidency said
this was positive for Turkey and an indication of Turkey’s continuing
commitment to the reform process.

Under the government-sponsored amendment, which was passed on
Wednesday, the vague term of "Turkishness" was replaced with the
"Turkish nation" and the envisaged jail term cut down from three to
two years.

Article 301 has mainly been used to discipline those challenging
the official line on the WWI mass killings of Armenians under the
Ottoman Empire.