"Golden Apricot" In Artsakh

“GOLDEN APRICOT” IN ARTSAKH

ARMENPRESS
NOVEMBER 17, 2010
STEPANAKERT

“Golden Apricot” film festival will kick off November 19-21 in
Artsakh. NKR Deputy Minister of Culture and Youth Affairs Gayane
Grigoryan told Armenpress that the films presented within the framework
of the festival will be simultaneously shown in Stepanakert Youth
Chamber and Narekatsi Center of Shushi.

Before the opening ceremony of “Golden Apricot” film festival, a
painting exhibition entitled “Autumn Colors of Artsakh” will be held
in the foyer of Stepanakert Chamber of Culture and Youth, as well as
an expo-fair of Tumanyan books of “Edit Print” publishing house will
be conducted.

From: A. Papazian

Abramovich, Talabani And Nazarbayev Carry Rosaries Made By An Armeni

ABRAMOVICH, TALABANI AND NAZARBAYEV CARRY ROSARIES MADE BY AN ARMENIAN

news.am
Nov 17 2010
Armenia

Istanbul Armenian Sevan Keci is famous for making rosaries for
well-known people.

Turkish businessmen are keenly interested in his collection of
rosaries, Sabah newspaper reports. Sevan Keci makes rosaries of gold
and precious stones for U.S. $ 120,000.

Keci mentioned that Russian billionaire, owner of Chelsea Football
Club Roman Abramovich, Iraqi President Jalal Talabani, President of
Iraqi Kurdistan region Massoud Barzani, Kazakh President Nursultan
Nazarbayev, singer Ibrahim Tatlises and other famous people are among
his clients.

From: A. Papazian

Our Positions Strengthened In Military And Diplomatic Spheres, Defen

OUR POSITIONS STRENGTHENED IN MILITARY AND DIPLOMATIC SPHERES, DEFENSE MINISTER SAYS

news.am
Nov 17 2010
Armenia

At the moment positions of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh are not
weakened, on the contrary our positions have strengthened in military
and diplomatic spheres, Armenian Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan said
at the November 17 meeting with university conscripts.

According to him, Azerbaijan’s positions are weakening as it does not
fulfill commitments to international community. Instead of advancing
the Karabakh peace process, Baku is trying to shift resolution of
the conflict in military field.

Ohanyan stressed that Aliyev’s warlike statements are first of all
intended for Azerbaijani society.

The Minister noted that the Armenian armed forces maintain balance
to Azerbaijani ones due to qualitative but not quantitative indicators.

“We are increasing readiness of the Armed Forces, military spirit of
the staff, strengthening combat efficiency of the army and Armenia’s
security,” he noted, adding that the Armenian side has all methods
to neutralize quantitative superiority of the opponent.

However, this is not an indicative of not buying modern
military equipment, he added. “Armenian leadership headed by the
Commander-in-Chief, President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan, is working
in this direction,” he stressed.

From: A. Papazian

The Armenian Mirror-Spectator 11/13/10

The Armenian Mirror-Spectator
755 Mount Auburn St.
Watertown, MA 02472
Tel: (617) 924-4420
Fax: (617) 924-2887
Web:
E-mail: [email protected]

November 13, 2010

1. Mirror Celebrates With Style

2.Brooklyn Bread House: New Armenian Bakery/Café Takes Root in New York

3. Commentary: To `Come Home’ or `Stay Home?’

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

*1. *Mirror Celebrates With Style

*By Alin K. Gregorian*
*Mirror-Spectator *Staff

WATERTOWN, Mass. – The Armenian Mirror-Spectator is marking its 78th
anniversary on December 9 at 7:30 p.m. with a program featuring local and
national journalists at the elegant Taj Boston Hotel.

The program, titled `Celebrating 78 Years and Beyond’ will feature as
keynote speaker Tim Kurkjian of ESPN. Kurkjian is a baseball analyst and
reporter for ESPN TV and the Emmy award-winning ESPN productions’ `Baseball
Tonight’ and `SportsCenter.’ He is also a senior writer for *ESPN* magazine
and ESPN.com and a frequent contributor to baseball discussions on Tony
Kornheiser’s `Pardon the Interruption,’ ESPN radio and numerous other radio
baseball programs, including NPR’s `Only a Game.’ He has been covering major
league baseball for 30 years, including eight years writing for *Sports
Illustrated* before joining ESPN in 1998. He wrote his first book, *America’s
Game*, in 2000. His second book, *Is This a Great Game or What?*, was
released in 2007.

Kurkjian grew up in Bethesda, Md. And attended Walter Johnson High School,
named for the great Washington Senators pitcher. He graduated from the
University of Maryland with a BS in journalism in 1978. He currently resides
in Darnestown, Md. with his wife, Kathy, and two children, Kelly and
Jeffrey.

Kurkjian said he was thrilled to help out with the
*Mirror-Spectator*celebration, especially because it’s an Armenian
organization and `an
Armenian called me and asked me to help.’ He noted that helping out fellow
Armenians is a part of the ethos of the community.

`I travel across the country and meet people. Some come up to me and say
hello only because they’re Armenian,’ he said.

For Kurkjian baseball is in the genes. `My father, who grew up in Watertown,
loved baseball. It was the language we spoke at home. It was something we
were all taught to love at a very early age. It always was a really
important part of my life.’

He concluded, `I still love baseball. I want to go to games as much as ever
and talk to the players. I hope that lasts a whole lot longer.’

Kurkjian and Wendy Semonian Eppich, publisher of the *Improper Bostonian*,
will receive awards of excellence that night. Handing out the awards will be
Tim Kurkjian’s cousin, Pulitzer- Prize-winning journalist Stephen Kurkjian,
and Armen Keteyan of CBS News, both recipients of the 2007 Award of
Excellence.

The emcee for the evening will be Chris Talanian of NECN’s Style Boston.

Serving on the benefit committee are Alexandra Allukian, Nigoghos and Roset
Atinizian, Leslie Aznoian, Aida Bejakian, Rita Bejakian, Rebecca Tellalian
Cahaly, Nina Festekjian, Alin Gregorian (editor), Michael Guleserian, June
Hatfield, Carol and Richard Ishkanian, Robert Khederian, Michele Kolligian,
Kevork Marashlian, Antranig and Christina Mardiros, Mark McKertich (art
director), Dr. Armineh Mirzabegian, Hasmik Saroyan (advertising), Chris
Talanian, Barbara Tellalian (chair), Carolyn Atinizian Yardemian, Esq. And
Johnny Yardemian. For invitations to the event on December 9 or for more
information, write to anniversary@ mirrorspectator.com.

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

2. Brooklyn Bread House: New Armenian Bakery/Café Takes Root in New York

*By Aram Arkun*
*Mirror-Spectator* Staff

BROOKLYN, N.Y. – Brooklyn used to be an important center for
Armenian-Americans a century ago, but somehow until the last few decades the
Armenian population there had dwindled. Then an influx of immigrants from
Armenia and other parts of the former Soviet Union changed the situation.
Nonetheless, there are still only a few recognizable centers for Armenians
in Brooklyn – a restaurant, an Armenian Saturday school affiliated with the
Diocese of the Armenian Church and an Armenian Catholic cathedral
immediately come to mind. Brooklyn Bread House, a new bakery in the Brooklyn
neighborhood of Sheepshead Bay, looks like a good candidate for addition to
this list.

Its founder, Khoren Badalyan, is a native of Gavar, Armenia. He came to this
country in 2001, intending to work in construction and renovation. He
brought with him his wife, Amalya, and his two sons (also specialists in
construction), all from Yerevan. They noticed that there was no lavash, a
type of Armenian flat bread, baked fresh in the New York area. Armenians
were buying it primarily from bakeries in Los Angeles. The Badalyans
recognized this as an opportunity and because Khoren’s parents and brothers
in Armenia worked as bakers, they already knew what to do. The timing was
right, as the construction industry had taken a downturn along with the rest
of the American economy.

Khoren and his family first prepared a model oven in their backyard, and
when this worked well, they felt confident enough to order the necessary
parts and built a full-scale oven for their new venture. They opened their
store in August and thanks largely to word of mouth, they soon began selling
around 200 to 220 pieces of lavash a day. People from places like Boston
would take lavash back home with them and orders began coming from cities as
far away as Chicago. Initially the Badalyans sent lavash to various stores
in Manhattan, but as local demand grew, they stopped this. Their output is
just enough for the area now. Even so, customers who come late in the day
are often out of luck because the supply runs out early, especially on
weekends. This was the case when I visited the store. The lavash is prepared
fresh at 4 a.m. each day, and has to cool down before it can be packaged for
customers.

In addition to Armenians of the New York metropolitan area, Russians, Jews
and New Yorkers of various other backgrounds have discovered the wide range
of products of the Brooklyn Bread House. Desserts are all made in-house, and
in addition to Armenian gata and baklava, include non-Armenian favorites
such as Napoleons and éclairs. Khachapuri (a cheese-filled pastry equivalent
to börek of the Western Armenians and Turks), and several Georgian breads
like shoti are prepared daily and Ajarian khachapuri (cheese-filled bread
with egg on the top) and lahmejun (a type of meat pizza) are prepared to
order.

Despite the name of the store, Brooklyn Bread House is already more than a
bakery. Khash (boiled cow’s feet) and various soups are available and the
Badalyans plan to eventually add Armenian khorovats or barbecue, and the
kufta of Gavar to their offerings. Khoren Badalyan has already begun
experimenting with the preparation of khorovats. The Badalyans offer
buffet-style cooked meals of chicken, sausage and other foods ready for
purchase each day. Customers can enjoy Armenian coffee, and also purchase
various types of Armenian cheese and canned or pickled goods.

The store is small and usually is packed with customers. There are a few
chairs and a small table in front of the store on the sidewalk outside, but
there is no possibility at present for many customers to sit down and enjoy
the fruit of the Badalyans’ labor. Khoren Badalyan, however, is ambitious
and hopes to be able to expand and create a restaurant with seating if
business continues to expand. He also might then create larger facilities to
make lavash. At present, in addition to his family members, he has five or
six other workers employed at Brooklyn Bread House, which is open from seven
in the morning until 10 p.m.

The Badalyans support Armenian institutions when possible. They provided
catering for an Armenian independence celebration at St. Vartan Cathedral in
Manhattan recently. Khoren Badalyan wants to provide a place for the
Armenians of Brooklyn and the New York area to come together, and keep in
touch with Armenian affairs. It seems he is already off to a good start.

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

3. Commentary: To `Come Home’ or `Stay Home?’

*By Edmond Y. Azadian*

The newly-formed Ministry of Diaspora has a very creative minister at the
helm, namely Hranoush Hagopian, who develops many innovative programs, or
puts into practice ideas long discussed but never acted upon.

Ever since Hagopian took over the ministry, several world conferences have
been held in Armenia (architects, medical professionals, educators, lawyers
and journalists) to tap into the diaspora resources to benefit Armenia.

Recently, a new initiative was launched to lure young Armenians living
abroad to settle in Armenia. It is a worthwhile project, which caught the
imagination of some Diaspora-Armenian youth. But the idea also touched some
raw nerves and triggered a hot controversy. One of the soul-searching and
pertinent articles was signed in the daily Azg in Yerevan, by Varoujan
Sirapian, founder and director of Chobanian Research Center in Paris,
France.

The program announced by the Diaspora Ministry is called Ari Tun (come
home). The writer has reversed the title and renamed it Mena Tun (stay
home); the upshot of this reversal is that Sirapian asks the authorities
what incentives they are offering to the diaspora youth to come and stay in
the homeland and second, he suggests, shouldn’t we find ways to keep the
Armenian-born youth at home, before inviting the diasporan youth to come?
And he offers some disturbing statistics. A recent poll conducted among the
youth in the three republics in the Caucasus region has revealed the
following sad picture: 40 percent of the young people polled in Armenia have
expressed the desire to leave the country permanently, whereas in Georgia 14
percent have expressed the same desire and in Azerbaijan, only 12 percent.

In the young people’s perception, Armenia remains a less desirable country
to live in than its two neighbors.

Then comes the perennial question: what the hell is possessing Armenians to
leave their homeland and disperse around the globe and then stubbornly
continue struggling with their national identity? E. Agnouni has well said:
`The Armenian seeks haven anywhere, except the location called Hayastan.’

As the Byzantine Empire was shrinking, Armenia could not sustain its
statehood on its ancestral territory and the nation collectively moved west
to establish the Kingdom of Cilicia, which was eventually overrun by the
Memluks in 1375, with King Leo Lousignan taken as prisoner to Egypt.

Armenians dispersed again always singing Tzangam desnel zeem Giligia (I wish
to see my Cilicia).

Then Khrimian Hairig’s battle cry of `back to the land’ did not materialize
because the Ottoman Turks took away that land from under the very feet of
the Armenians, after trying first to wipe them off the face of the globe.

The first Republic at the turn of the 20th century was short-lived and the
70 years of the Soviet misrule was tolerated, with the people always
yearning for a free homeland. After a million-and-a-half victims at the
hands of the Turks, and 300,000 Armenian youth lost as Stalin’s canon fodder
during World War II, one would think that Armenians would treasure the Third
Republic, yet they are voting with their feet and running out of the
historic land. The logic of every departing Armenian is `let someone else
build the country, defend its borders and we will love the homeland from a
distance.’

The irony is that Armenians are law-abiding citizens. They are fiercely
loyal to their adopted countries and they contribute tremendously to those
governments; beginning with the Byzantine Empire, where they produced kings,
princes and army generals, all the way to Czarist Russia and even the
Ottoman Empire, where Armenian ministers, armiras, scientists, jurists and
linguists were trailblazers, and the elite served bloody sultans with
unwavering dedication.

Even in the West, in Europe and the US, Armenians have distinguished
themselves with their loyalty and genius – both in politics and in science.

Once they are back in their homeland, they cannot stand a ruler who is their
kin and they begin the process of self destruction – a stage in which we
find ourselves now. Armenians take refuge in the comfort zone of victimhood.
Had we taken responsibility for our own failings, maybe we could turn out to
be a stronger nation.

Armenia is surrounded by enemies, yet people don’t recognize the dangers
threatening the historic homeland.

Of course there are objective reasons for internal divisions and cut-throat
animosity which has gripped the populace. The most disheartening factor is
the situation in the army. We won a historic victory against the stronger
Azerbaijani army, and rather than savoring that victory and glorifying the
armed forces, there is army bashing, sometimes rightfully. Given the rate of
hazing, beatings and killings of young recruits, the youth has begun to
question why it should defend a country when his only reward from them is
beatings, maiming and killing?

Fortunately, parliament has sobered up recently and new laws are being
drafted to change that atrocious culture prevalent in the armed forces.

Capitalism has infected the country in its ugliest form; the rich are
getting richer and the poor are getting poorer and the unemployment is being
`solved’ through depopulation.

Any Diaspora Armenian willing to invest in Armenia is either cheated, beaten
or found dead near Lake Sevan.

Of course there is a free press and journalists are writing about all these
shortcomings courageously, yet nobody cares; the trend is continuing.

Many writers in the diaspora are cautious about touching these sensitive
issues for fear of being labeled a traitor or a collaborator with the
opposition, which, in its turn, has only gloom and doom to spew through its
media. Even the most positive projects are given a negative spin. A case in
point is the skyline cable car built near the monastery of Tatev through the
generosity of a Russian- Armenian benefactor. The idea was to spur tourism
in that historic region. While the state media was hailing the longest
skyline cable in the world, the opposition was thriving on a glitch, which
stopped the cars in mid air for 40 minutes.

Similarly, when Ukraine donated animals and habitat for a large aquarium to
be built in Komitas Park to protect dolphins, the opposition media said the
government was using the drinking water meant for people. Later on it was
revealed that only irrigation water was being used for the project, but they
could not be bothered to run a correction.

The Medicare scandal in the US offered a treasure trove of political capital
to the opposition to link it to the current rulers in Armenia, desperately
seeking ties between the arrested ex-pats and the relatives of the officials
in Armenia.

The opposition is dead set on overthrowing this government (`kleptokrats’)
in the name of democracy, but deep down the resentment is that the present
rulers benefited too much from the gravy train. The opposition is aspiring
to take over that favorable position, and no wonder people are confused and
disheartened.

Armenia’s land is sacred, every youth in the world must touch it to be in
communion with the soul of its ancestors.

But how can we entice the youth to `come home,’ when there is a problem of
`staying at home’ for the indigenous youth?
Hi Asbed,Here is the 11/13/10 Mirror. Please let me know if there are any issues.

ThanksTomFrom: http:// mirrorspectator.com.***********************************************************************************************************2. Brooklyn Bread House:
New Armenian Bakery/Café Takes Root in New York

By Aram Arkun
Mirror-Spectator Staff
BROOKLYN, N.Y. – Brooklyn used to be an important center for
Armenian-Americans a century ago, but somehow until the last few
decades the Armenian population there had dwindled. Then
an influx of immigrants from Armenia and other parts of the former
Soviet Union changed the situation. Nonetheless, there are still only a
few recognizable centers for Armenians in Brooklyn – a restaurant, an
Armenian Saturday school affiliated with the Diocese of the Armenian
Church and an Armenian Catholic cathedral immediately come to mind.
Brooklyn Bread House, a new bakery in the Brooklyn neighborhood of
Sheepshead Bay, looks like a good candidate for addition to this list.
Its founder, Khoren Badalyan, is a native of Gavar, Armenia. He came
to this country in 2001, intending to work in construction and
renovation. He brought with him his wife, Amalya, and his two sons
(also specialists in construction), all from Yerevan. They noticed that
there was no lavash, a type of Armenian flat bread, baked fresh in the
New York area. Armenians were buying it primarily from bakeries in Los
Angeles. The Badalyans recognized this as an opportunity and because
Khoren’s parents and brothers in Armenia worked as bakers, they already
knew what to do. The timing was right, as the construction industry had
taken a downturn along with the rest of the American economy.
Khoren and his family first prepared a model oven in their backyard,
and when this worked well, they felt confident enough to order the
necessary parts and built a full-scale oven for their new venture. They
opened their store in August and thanks largely to word of mouth, they
soon began selling around 200 to 220 pieces of lavash a day. People
from places like Boston would take lavash back home with them and
orders began coming from cities as far away as Chicago. Initially the
Badalyans sent lavash to various stores in Manhattan, but as local
demand grew, they stopped this. Their output is just enough for the
area now. Even so, customers who come late in the day are often out of
luck because the supply runs out early, especially on weekends. This
was the case when I visited the store. The lavash is prepared fresh at
4 a.m. each day, and has to cool down before it can be packaged for
customers.In addition to Armenians of the New York metropolitan area,
Russians, Jews and New Yorkers of various other backgrounds have
discovered the wide range of products of the Brooklyn Bread House.
Desserts are all made in-house, and in addition to Armenian gata and
baklava, include non-Armenian favorites such as Napoleons and éclairs.
Khachapuri (a cheese-filled pastry equivalent to börek of the Western
Armenians and Turks), and several Georgian breads like shoti are
prepared daily and Ajarian khachapuri (cheese-filled bread with egg on
the top) and lahmejun (a type of meat pizza) are prepared to order.
Despite the name of the store, Brooklyn Bread House is already more
than a bakery. Khash (boiled cow’s feet) and various soups are
available and the Badalyans plan to eventually add Armenian khorovats
or barbecue, and the kufta of Gavar to their offerings. Khoren Badalyan
has already begun experimenting with the preparation of khorovats. The
Badalyans offer buffet-style cooked meals of chicken, sausage and other
foods ready for purchase each day. Customers can enjoy Armenian coffee,
and also purchase various types of Armenian cheese and canned or
pickled goods.
The store is small and usually is packed with customers. There are a
few chairs and a small table in front of the store on the sidewalk
outside, but there is no possibility at present for many customers to
sit down and enjoy the fruit of the Badalyans’ labor. Khoren Badalyan,
however, is ambitious and hopes to be able to expand and create a
restaurant with seating if business continues to expand. He also might
then create larger facilities to make lavash. At present, in addition
to his family members, he has five or six other workers employed at
Brooklyn Bread House, which is open from seven in the morning until 10
p.m.The Badalyans support Armenian institutions when possible. They
provided catering for an Armenian independence celebration at St.
Vartan Cathedral in Manhattan recently. Khoren Badalyan wants to
provide a place for the Armenians of Brooklyn and the New York area to
come together, and keep in touch with Armenian affairs. It seems he is
already off to a good start.************************************************************************************************************************3. Commentary: To `Come Home’ or `Stay Home?’

By Edmond Y. Azadian
The newly-formed Ministry of Diaspora has a very creative minister
at the helm, namely Hranoush Hagopian, who develops many innovative
programs, or puts into practice ideas long discussed but never acted
upon.
Ever since Hagopian took over the ministry, several world
conferences have been held in Armenia (architects, medical
professionals, educators, lawyers and journalists) to tap into the
diaspora resources to benefit Armenia.
Recently, a new initiative was launched to lure young Armenians
living abroad to settle in Armenia. It is a worthwhile project, which
caught the imagination of some Diaspora-Armenian youth. But the idea
also touched some raw nerves and triggered a hot controversy. One of
the soul-searching and pertinent articles was signed in the daily Azg
in Yerevan, by Varoujan Sirapian, founder and director of Chobanian
Research Center in Paris, France.
The program announced by the Diaspora Ministry is called Ari Tun
(come home). The writer has reversed the title and renamed it Mena Tun
(stay home); the upshot of this reversal is that Sirapian asks the
authorities what incentives they are offering to the diaspora youth to
come and stay in the homeland and second, he suggests, shouldn’t we
find ways to keep the Armenian-born youth at home, before inviting the
diasporan youth to come? And he offers some disturbing statistics. A
recent poll conducted among the youth in the three republics in the
Caucasus region has revealed the following sad picture: 40 percent of
the young people polled in Armenia have expressed the desire to leave
the country permanently, whereas in Georgia 14 percent have expressed
the same desire and in Azerbaijan, only 12 percent.
In the young people’s perception, Armenia remains a less desirable country to live in than its two neighbors.
Then comes the perennial question: what the hell is possessing
Armenians to leave their homeland and disperse around the globe and
then stubbornly continue struggling with their national identity? E.
Agnouni has well said: `The Armenian seeks haven anywhere, except the
location called Hayastan.’
As the Byzantine Empire was shrinking, Armenia could not sustain its
statehood on its ancestral territory and the nation collectively moved
west to establish the Kingdom of Cilicia, which was eventually overrun
by the Memluks in 1375, with King Leo Lousignan taken as prisoner to
Egypt.
Armenians dispersed again always singing Tzangam desnel zeem Giligia (I
wish to see my Cilicia).
Then Khrimian Hairig’s battle cry of `back to the land’ did not
materialize because the Ottoman Turks took away that land from under
the very feet of the Armenians, after trying first to wipe them off the
face of the globe.
The first Republic at the turn of the 20th century was short-lived
and the 70 years of the Soviet misrule was tolerated, with the people
always yearning for a free homeland. After a million-and-a-half victims
at the hands of the Turks, and 300,000 Armenian youth lost as Stalin’s
canon fodder during World War II, one would think that Armenians would
treasure the Third Republic, yet they are voting with their feet and
running out of the historic land. The logic of every departing Armenian
is `let someone else build the country, defend its borders and we will
love the homeland from a distance.’
The irony is that Armenians are law-abiding citizens. They are
fiercely loyal to their adopted countries and they contribute
tremendously to those governments; beginning with the Byzantine Empire,
where they produced kings, princes and army generals, all the way to
Czarist Russia and even the Ottoman Empire, where Armenian ministers,
armiras, scientists, jurists and linguists were trailblazers, and the
elite served bloody sultans with unwavering dedication.
Even in the West, in Europe and the US, Armenians have distinguished
themselves with their loyalty and genius – both in politics and in
science.
Once they are back in their homeland, they cannot stand a ruler who
is their kin and they begin the process of self destruction – a stage
in which we find ourselves now. Armenians take refuge in the comfort
zone of victimhood. Had we taken responsibility for our own failings,
maybe we could turn out to be a stronger nation.
Armenia is surrounded by enemies, yet people don’t recognize the dangers threatening the historic homeland.
Of course there are objective reasons for internal divisions and
cut-throat animosity which has gripped the populace. The most
disheartening factor is the situation in the army. We won a historic
victory against the stronger Azerbaijani army, and rather than savoring
that victory and glorifying the armed forces, there is army bashing,
sometimes rightfully. Given the rate of hazing, beatings and killings
of young recruits, the youth has begun to question why it should defend
a country when his only reward from them is beatings, maiming and
killing?
Fortunately, parliament has sobered up recently and new laws are
being drafted to change that atrocious culture prevalent in the armed
forces.
Capitalism has infected the country in its ugliest form; the rich
are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer and the unemployment
is being `solved’ through depopulation.
Any Diaspora Armenian willing to invest in Armenia is either cheated, beaten or found dead near Lake Sevan.
Of course there is a free press and journalists are writing about
all these shortcomings courageously, yet nobody cares; the trend is
continuing.
Many writers in the diaspora are cautious about touching these
sensitive issues for fear of being labeled a traitor or a collaborator
with the opposition, which, in its turn, has only gloom and doom to
spew through its media. Even the most positive projects are given a
negative spin. A case in point is the skyline cable car built near the
monastery of Tatev through the generosity of a Russian- Armenian
benefactor. The idea was to spur tourism in that historic region. While
the state media was hailing the longest skyline cable in the world, the
opposition was thriving on a glitch, which stopped the cars in mid air
for 40 minutes.
Similarly, when Ukraine donated animals and habitat for a large
aquarium to be built in Komitas Park to protect dolphins, the
opposition media said the government was using the drinking water meant
for people. Later on it was revealed that only irrigation water was
being used for the project, but they could not be bothered to run a
correction.
The Medicare scandal in the US offered a treasure trove of political
capital to the opposition to link it to the current rulers in Armenia,
desperately seeking ties between the arrested ex-pats and the relatives
of the officials in Armenia.
The opposition is dead set on overthrowing this government
(`kleptokrats’) in the name of democracy, but deep down the resentment
is that the present rulers benefited too much from the gravy train. The
opposition is aspiring to take over that favorable position, and no
wonder people are confused and disheartened.
Armenia’s land is sacred, every youth in the world must touch it to be in communion with the soul of its ancestors.
But how can we entice the youth to `come home,’ when there is a problem of `staying at home’ for the indigenous youth?

From: A. Papazian

http://www.mirrorspectator.com
http://www.mirrorspectator.comE-mail:
www.mirrorspectator.comE-mail:

AGBU YP Round-Table Discussion with US Ambassador Marie L. Yovanovit

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
Fax: 212.319.6507
Email: [email protected]
Website:

PRESS RELEASE

Monday, November 15, 2010

AGBU Young Professionals Have Round-Table Discussion with U.S.
Ambassador to Armenia Marie L. Yovanovitch

On October 11, 2010, six executive members of the AGBU Young
Professionals (YP) of Los Angeles Steering Committee were called to an
exclusive round-table discussion with United States Ambassador to the
Republic of Armenia, Marie L. Yovanovitch. The round-table discussion
was initiated by the Ambassador in an effort to meet with young AGBU
leadership and exchange views on current issues, including developments
in Armenia, United States relations with the Republic of Armenia, U.S.
assistance to Armenia, and the work AGBU carries out locally and abroad.

Publicist and executive member of AGBU YPLA, Aleen L. Khanjian, said,
“This was a tremendously satisfying experience. The Ambassador’s
candidness in sharing her encounters with locals in Armenia, as well as
the needs of the people in our homeland, was beyond educational. I
commend her efforts to meet with young Armenians, such as ourselves. I
especially appreciate the sympathetic ear she lent when I expressed my
frustrations as a young diasporan. The self-imposed pressure to preserve
my heritage and culture while living in the United States can be
emotionally arduous at times. She provided that ‘light at the end of the
tunnel’ that I often so desperately struggle to see.” The young
professionals thoroughly enjoyed the open discussion the Ambassador
invited. “All in all, this meeting provided a unique opportunity to
discuss Armenian issues with a non-Armenian diplomat who is genuinely
invested in matters relating to Armenia and its future,” added Khanjian.

Marie L. Yovanovitch is the present Ambassador from the United States to
Armenia. Her term of appointment commenced in August of 2008; she
previously served as ambassador to Kyrgyzstan. Ambassador Yovanovitch
traveled through the United States, visiting Armenians in Philadelphia,
Detroit, as well as San Francisco. The Ambassador also met with senior
AGBU leadership during this trip to Los Angeles. This was her second
visit with Southern California AGBU members since June of 2009, when she
visited the AGBU Alex Manoogian Center in Pasadena, CA.

YPLA is the Los Angeles Chapter of the AGBU Young Professionals–a
growing network of individuals, between the ages of 22 and 40, who
individually and collectively mirror the AGBU’s mission to preserve and
promote Armenian identity and heritage by adding dimensions to the lives
of young professional Armenians through educational, cultural, social
and humanitarian programs. YPLA puts on monthly activities including
social-networking and professional career-building events, signature
weekend getaways, hiking and camping trips, international
video-conferences, service-oriented activities targeted toward Armenian
youth, benefit events, as well as casual get-togethers, where up to 250
young Armenians can come together to exchange ideas and get to know each
other better. YPLA is always looking for individuals who would like to
volunteer their time either as a board member or on an event-by-event
basis. For more information on how to get involved with YPLA, please
visit:

Established in 1906, AGBU () is the world’s largest
non-profit Armenian organization. Headquartered in New York City, AGBU
preserves and promotes the Armenian identity and heritage through
educational, cultural and humanitarian program, annually touching the
lives of some 400,000 Armenians around the world.

For more information about AGBU and its worldwide programs, please visit

From: A. Papazian

http://www.agbuypla.org
www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org.

Iranian-Armenian community continues to breathe new life into Nrnadz

PRESS RELEASE
Hayastan All-Armenian Fund
Governmental Buiding 3, Yerevan, RA
Contact: Hasmik Grigoryan
Tel: +(3741) 56 01 06 ext. 105
Fax: +(3741) 52 15 05
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

15 November, 2010

Iranian-Armenian community continues to breathe new life into Nrnadzor
With completion of latest project, border village is provided with
long-awaited water network

Yerevan, November 12, 2010 – Since 2007, the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund has
carried out far-reaching development projects in Nrnadzor, a village in
Armenia’s Syunik Region, thanks to the continued support of the
Iranian-Armenian community. With an opening ceremony on November 4, the fund
unveiled its sixth project in Nrnadzor, a newly constructed water network,
which was financed by the Executive Council of the Armenian Prelacy of
Tehran.

The new water-supply system consists of a 4.3-kilometer pipeline, two
reservoirs, a pump station, and a water main connected to the community’s 50
households.

“By living in this village despite so many difficulties, you’re helping
secure and strengthen the borders of the homeland, and that, in itself, is
an act of heroism,” said Aida Avanessian, chairperson of the Executive
Council of the Armenian Prelacy of Tehran, in her remarks during the opening
ceremony.

Also delivering congratulatory speeches were Armenian National Assembly
delegate Gagik Gevorgyan, Nrnadzor mayor Mkrtich Lazarian, community school
principal Susanna Grigoryan, representatives of the Armenian Prelacy of
Tehran, and Vardan Partamyan, head of the fund’s Projects and External
Relations Department.

As he welcomed the guests, Partamyan said, “Our fundraising slogan this year
is ‘Water Is Life.’ It conveys the basic fact that no community can grow
without water. We’re very happy that the vital issue of water has at last
been resolved in Nrnadzor.”

“It used to be very hard,” Nune Galstyan, a Nrnadzor resident who attended
the ceremony with her five children, told us during the event. “Now, thank
God, we have water. If only the village road were also taken care of, things
would be much better here.”

At the conclusion of the ceremony, the Iranian-Armenian benefactors
presented school bags to Nrnadzor’s 34 schoolchildren. They also promised to
donate books to the school library as well as those of neighboring villages
on their next visit.

Thanks to the generosity of the Iranian-Armenian community, Nrnadzor’s
central streets now have lighting, its farmers have a tractor, and
schoolchildren have unprecedented learning opportunities through their newly
established computer room, with access to the Internet. Two other projects,
sponsored by Iranian-Armenian benefactor Arbee Arzoumanian in memory of her
late husband, Khajag Arzoumanian, were the provision of furniture for the
recently built community school and the installation of a fence around the
campus.

Currently the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund is implementing two major
initiatives in the Syunik Region: the reconstruction of the Pediatric
Department of the Kapan Medical Center and the provision of furniture for
the Zangezur Cardiology Center, itself built by the fund.

# # #

Hayastan All Armenian Fund

From: A. Papazian

http://www.himnadram.org/

Rizhkov: In case of armed settlement, we’re not going to sit still

Panorama, Armenia
Nov 11 2010

N. Rizhkov: `In case of armed settlement, we’re not going to sit and
look at it.’

Inter-parliamentary committee of Armenian-Russian cooperation kicked
off its 19th meeting in Armenian National Assembly and discussed the
agenda of next, the 20th meeting. Traditionally, Armenian and Russian
deputies meet twice a year in spring in Moscow and at fall in Yerevan.

The co-chair of the committee and member of Russian Federative Council
Nikolay Rizhkov told the reporters that the resolution of NK conflict
has as well been highlighted and supposed to be discussed based on the
remarks and information provided by Armenian and Russian Foreign
Ministries. `The next meeting is issued in April of 2011in Yaroslav
and we’ll have this issues discussed there.’

Russian politician stated they are alarmed by the issue, hence can’t
be indifferent to the negotiations. Though they (deputies) have little
role there, since the issue is focused by international institutions,
still the two parliaments can’t ignore the conflict and have
discussion over it.

It the issue is negatively developed till the next meeting: `We are
not going to sit and look at it.’
N. Rizhkov said the conflict is moving to deadlock and it’s hard to
find any way out of it.

From: A. Papazian

At the Sitting of the NA Standing Committee on Foreign Relations

Parliament.am, Armenia
Nov 11 2010

At the Sitting of the NA Standing Committee on Foreign Relations

1 / 1
On November 10 the NA Standing Committee on Foreign Relations presided
over by Armen Rustamyan debated the Convention on Privileges and
Immunities of the Specialized Agencies (with enclosed reservation)
signed in New York on November 21, 1947, which presented the RA Deputy
Foreign Minister Arman Kirakosyan. It was noted that the Convention on
Immunities was signed on November 21, 1947 and entered into force on
December 2, 1948.

RA Deputy Minister of Economy Mushegh Tumashyan presented the
agreement on the Encouragement of Investments and Mutual Protection
between RA Government and the State of Kuwait signed in Yerevan on
June 25, 2010.

The debated international treaties will be endorsed to the parliament
for ratification.

RA Deputy Foreign Minister Shavarsh Kocharyan presented for debate in
the first reading procedure the legislative package on Making
Amendments and Addenda to the law on Diplomatic Service and on Making
Addenda to the law on Civil Service.

The legislative package will be included with endorsement in the draft
laws of the agendas of the NA current session and upcoming four-day
sittings.

The debate of the draft law on Recognizing as Genocide the Crimes
Committed towards the Local Armenian Population by the Azerbaijani
Authorities in All Settlements of the Azerbaijani SSR and many
Settlements of the NKAR (later of NKR) During 1988-1992′ submitted by
the NA deputy Larisa Alaverdyan was postponed up to 15 days.

From: A. Papazian

Russian expert hopes for progress in Nagorno-Karabakh peace process

news.am, Armenia
Nov 11 2010

Russian expert hopes for progress in Nagorno-Karabakh peace process

November 11, 2010 | 13:46

Positive changes in the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process can be expected
from the OSCE Summit in Astana, Konstantin Zatulin, Vice-Chairman of
the Committee for CIS and ties with Russian Nationals, RF State Duma,
Director of the CIS Institute, told NEWS.am.

The reason for positive expectations is that military operations are
the only alternative to the peace process, but no one wants it. `Those
calling for peace and negotiations and entertaining even vain hopes
for peace can not, at least, be suspected of thwarting the
negotiations because of their uncompromising position,’ Zatulin said.

At present the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairing countries are showing a
unanimous approach. `Of course, approaches may differ, but I can say
one thing for sure: resuming hostilities is not in the co-chairing
countries’ interests. The OSCE MG member-countries have disagreements
over many other issues, but they are unanimous about this issue. They
have an understanding on what a final settlement should be,’ Zatulin
said.

From: A. Papazian

Armenia and Georgia foil latest uranium smuggling plot

Open Democracy
Nov 11 2010

Armenia and Georgia foil latest uranium smuggling plot
Luke Heighton, 10 November 2010

Joint anti-nuclear proliferation operation results in multiple arrests
in Georgia. One year after Fort Hood shootings, US army outlines plans
for radical security overhaul. Somali pirates land largest-ever ransom
payment. All this and more in today’s security briefing.
On Monday the Armenian government announced the detention of a man
suspected of supplying weapons-grade uranium to two men arrested
earlier this year in a joint operation between the Armenian and
Georgian security services. Garik Dadayan, who previously served two
and half months of a two-year sentence for a similar offence committed
in 2003, was intercepted following a tip-off by Georgian
investigators. Anonymous investigators told the Guardian they believed
Dadayan had been allowed to keep some of his stash by Georgian border
guards at the time of his original arrest, having bribed his way out
of detention.

Meanwhile, the two men to whom Dadayan is alleged to have supplied 18g
(0.6oz) of highly enriched uranium, and who were arrested in Georgia
in March, have appeared in a closed court in the Georgian capital,
Tblisi. Hrant Ohanyan and Sumbat Tonoyan, both of whom are Armenian,
pleaded guilty to trying to attempting to smuggle the uranium into the
country concealed in a zip-lock plastic bag inside a lead-lined
cigarette case. Ohanyan, a 59-year-old semi-retired physicist, and
63-year-old Tonoyan, a former businessman who had gambled away his
fortune, had attempted to move the uranium from Yerevan to Tblisi by
train, with the intention of selling it for approximately $50,000
(£30,800) per gram, with further, larger sales to follow.

Their client – so they believed – was a Turkish-speaking Muslim acting
on behalf of mysterious `serious people’. In fact he was an undercover
policeman commissioned by Archil Pavlenishvili, head of the
radioactive materials investigations team at the Georgian ministry of
the interior and mastermind of the sting operation. The `buyer’ is
understood to have first crossed paths with Tonoyan a few weeks
beforehand, when the latter travelled to Batumi on the Black Sea coast
to look for buyers.

Much to the bemusement of the security officers who had been tracking
them since their departure, once on board the train Ohanyan and
Tonoyan stashed their cargo between two carriages, before getting off
the train once it had crossed in Armenia and taking a taxi to its
final destination, Tblisi. Arriving several hours before the train,
they then zig-zagged across the city to ensure they could not be
followed. Tonoyan and another man, Kaka Kvirikadze – a Georgian
contact with extensive smuggling experience – then collected the
package headed to the Tori hotel, where the `buyer’ had reserved a
room for the deal to take place. As soon as the exchange was made,
however, a police team watching from the room next door moved in.
Ohanyan, who was not present, was arrested shortly afterwards as he
slept at another hotel.

This was the third incident of its type to have occurred in Georgia in
the last seven years, and the 21st recorded attempt to smuggle nuclear
materials through Georgia since the break up of the Soviet Union. In
August police in Moldova seized 1.8kg of uranium-238 in the capital,
Chisinau, which thieves were attempting to sell for around 9m euros
(£7.4m), despite it being of no use in building a nuclear weapon.
Commenting on this latest incident, Georgian officials were quick to
describe the operation as an encouraging sign that increased
cooperation between local agencies and the US is leading to increased
arrests. The long history of smuggling in the country means it will
take more than one successful hit for such a claim to be validated.

The authorities’ ability or inability to thwart such operations
highlights the country’s political and diplomatic woes – its failure
to appease ethnic and religious minorities and its hostile
relationship with Russia, with its broader implications for Russia’s
relations with Nato powers. For Boris Volkhonsky, writing for the
Voice of Russia, the plot evidenced Georgia’s `very poor control over
its territory’, which in turn has allowed it to become a `safe haven’
for both Al Qaeda and Chechen separatists, a long-standing Russian
grievance and common refrain in criticism of the country. From the
other side, meanwhile, the coup will be cited as reason to continue
the US Nuclear Smuggling Outreach Initiative partnership, which under
US oversight bolsters Georgia’s police, military and coastguard
capabilities, with perhaps tangential benefits for Georgia’s
intelligence and military strength vis-a-vis its still much more
powerful northern neighbour.

US army recommends radical changes to security procedures, closer ties
with intelligence services

A little over a year since the 5 November shootings at the Fort Hood
military base, Texas, which left thirteen people dead and wounded
thirty others, the United States army has released the findings of its
118-page internal follow-on review of force protection policies,
programmes and procedures. Published by the army and the department of
defence, the report calls upon the army to address the ways in which
it protects its soldiers, collects information regarding potential
internal threats, and in particular its working relationship with the
FBI and the Joint Terrorism Task Force.

The report also recommends that the sharing of information within the
organisation by service personnel must be made easier, having already
identified a number of factors – fear of punishment being among them –
which currently discourage individuals to come forward with their
concerns. It goes on to suggest that the army should continue to
develop a greater knowledge and understanding of what it calls the
“observable indicators for espionage, terrorism and extremism.”

To date, it is suggested, the army has implemented or is taking
definitive action on 66 of the DoD’s 79 Independent Review Panel
recommendations. These include:

– The development and implementation of a `Threat Awareness and
Reporting Program’, centred on identifying and reporting ‘insider
threats’ and emphasising soldier awareness and reporting.

– The creation of a `Counterintelligence Fusion Cell’ and developed
systems to improve information sharing within the army and with other
agencies.

– The development and implementation of the `iWatch’ and `iSalute’
programmes. iWatch is described as `a 21st Century version of the
neighborhood watch program [integrating] terrorism prevention and
suspicious activity reporting’. The iSalute programme, meanwhile, is
`an online counter-intelligence reporting system through the army’s
main intranet and primary web portal, Army Knowledge Online. Soldiers,
Family members and department of the army employees can now
electronically file reports that will initiate an interview with army
counter-intelligence personnel’.

– The establishment of an Army Personnel Security Investigation Center
of Excellence at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland, which oversees an
enhanced screening program, and which now serves as the central
submission and processing point for all army personnel security and
suitability background investigations.

– Increased incident response training capability and leveraged
civilian law enforcement best practices to improve the army’s ability
to respond. According to the report, to date, more than 23,000
security force personnel have received additional training in law
enforcement functions, with another 2,700 army law enforcement
personnel at 122 army installations undergoing training in how to
respond to an `active shooter’ scenario.

Both the army’s report and senior army personnel have stressed that in
their view no single action could have prevented what happened at Ford
Hood a year ago; nevertheless, `in the aggregate, the initiatives
outlined by the army’s internal review team will significantly improve
the army’s ability to mitigate internal threats, ensure FP [force
protection], enable emergency response and provide care for the
victims and families.” Henceforth, military police attempting to stop
similar acts of violence will also be authorized to use jacketed
hollow point ammunition. Hollow point bullets expand upon entering a
target, causing greater fragmentation tissue disruption than normal
ammunition.

An evidentiary hearing into the 5 November shootings, which were
carried out by Major Nidal Hasan, is set to resume on Monday. It has
not yet been decided whether or not Major Hasan will face a
court-martial and a possible death penalty. Members of Congress are
known to be exerting pressure on the department of defence and US
intelligence services to release more information on what they knew
about Major Hasan prior to the shootings, So far, however, these
requests have been resisted on the grounds that any such release could
compromise the trial. The air force, navy and marines have already
released separate reports of their own.

International efforts to curb piracy in the Gulf of Aden failing, says
UN official

Somali pirates are continuing to outpace attempts to crack down on
their activities, despite significant international attempts to stop
them, and repeated warnings to commercial shipping, aid agencies and
independent sailors to steer well clear of Somali waters if at all
possible or face potentially disastrous consequences. According to the
latest International Maritime Organization figures, 438 crew and
passengers and 20 ships are currently being held hostage at sea near
Somalia. A report by the IMB Piracy Reporting Centre released last
month found that in the first nine months of 2010, 44% of 289 piracy
incidents on the world’s seas were committed by Somali pirates. That
compares with the same organisation’s report of the previous year,
according to which there were some 214 attacks reported between 2008
and 2009 (of which 47 resulted in a hijacking), and a total of 867
ordinary crew members were held hostage by pirates during that period.
Another organisation that monitors Somali pirates’ activities,
Ecoterra International, believes more than 25 foreign ships and up to
500 people are currently held hostage.

Speaking at the beginning of the week, Lynn Pascoe, UN
undersecretary-general for political affairs, described how pirates
are taking greater risks and seeking ever-higher ransoms: “As long as
piracy is so lucrative [and] with ransom payments adding up to tens of
millions if not hundreds of millions of dollars, and other economic
incentives so bleak, the incentives are obvious.”

One of the possible reasons for the increase both in the frequency of
attacks and the size of the ransoms demanded is that pirates are said
to be using increasingly larger vessels, allowing them to strike
further and further away from shore, where patrols are also less
frequent. There is evidence that this escalation has been accompanied
by an increasing likelihood of violence and murder, both trends a
response perhaps to the increasing force being brought to bear on
pirates by the world’s navies. On Saturday, pirates announced that a
ransom of between $9-10 million had been given to them for a South
Korean supertanker, and there is evidence al-Shabab is becoming
increasingly involved in pirating activities, as it looks to increase
revenues to aid its campaign to wrest control over remaining
government-held territories.

However, Pascoe also said that the situation would be worse “if not
for the very considerable international anti-piracy efforts under
way”. Despite the military superiority of patrolling vessels and crew,
encounters with hostage-takers have proved far from uniformly
successful. In a recent incident, EU Navfor warship FS Floreal located
a yacht belonging to a South African yachtsman who refused to
cooperate with pirates who attacked and boarded the vessel. The
Floreal came under fire from the vessel before the yacht ran aground.
After failing in their attempts to remove the three crew members on
board, and with the skipper refusing to leave his vessel. The pirates
left with the remaining two crew members as hostages, however, neither
of whom have since been found.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.opendemocracy.net/opensecurity/security_briefings/101110