What Kind Of Borders Will Be Approved For Zangezour Biodpheric Compl

WHAT KIND OF BORDERS WILL BE APPROVED FOR ZANGEZOUR BIODPHERIC COMPLEX BY CADASTRE?

16:35 March 03, 2015

EcoLur

Khazhak Aghabekyan, acting Staff Head of Nature Protection Ministry,
has replied to the letter on “Zangezour Biospheric Complex” submitted
by “Union for Protection of Employees’ Rights”, which says,

“In reply to your letter on the list of the companies having
conducted mapping of borders of “Zangezour” biospheric complex in
Syunik Region and the results of their activities. In the frames
of UNDP-GEF “Developing The Protected System of Armenia” project
(2010-2011) WWF carried out mapping of “Khoustoup” and “Zangezour”
state reserves, parts of “Zangezour” biospheric complex, and agreed
with adjacent communities, which were approved by RA governmental
resolution N 1465-N dated on 19 December 2013.

What is the substantiation for such contradicting activities, as
mining within and beyond the borders of the specially protected areas
of nature?

No mining activities are carried out in the area of the national park,
Syunik Region, which will be documented by the Armenian Government with
the approval of “Arevik” National Park border description and mapping.

The list of project carried out in the protected areas of Syunik
Region from 2008 to present with positive outcomes and the list of
the organizations.

The following projects have been implemented in Syunik Region with
the support of international organizations under the Nature Protection
Ministry:

– UNDP-GEF “Developing The Protected System of Armenia” project
/2010-2013/ aimed at political, social and economic development of
specially protected areas of nature, improvement of legislative and
bylaw basis of the reserves and their harmonization with other laws.

– “Sustainable biodiversity management in the South Caucasus” regional
project /2008-2011Õ©Õ©â~@¤/ – in the frames of this project component
GIZ discussed and made proper proposals on making amendments to RA
Forest Code.

– UNDP-GEF “Support to Country Actions Aimed at Protected Areas in
Frames of Convention on Biological Diversity” /2009-2010/, where
an extended database was established, which includes environmental
descriptors according to state reserves, national parks and nature
preserves.

– UNDP-GEF “Adaptation to Climate Change Impacts in Mountain Forest
Ecosystems of Armenia” project 2009-2013. The project supported the
reduction of vulnerability to negative climate changes and increase
in adaptation focusing on the preservation of valuable mountain forest
ecosystems in Syunik Region.

From: A. Papazian

http://ecolur.org/en/news/biodiversity/what-kind-of-borders-will-be-approved-for-zangezour-biodpheric-complex-by-cadastre/7081/

Hamazkayin To Stage "Music From Armenia" For Cello And Piano

HAMAZKAYIN TO STAGE “MUSIC FROM ARMENIA” FOR CELLO AND PIANO

19:40, 4 March, 2015

GLENDALE, MARCH 4, ARMENPRESS: The Hamazkayin Music Committee members
would like to urge you not miss a unique, exquisite concert they are
presenting called “Music from Armenia”. Dedicated to the Centennial of
the Armenian Genocide, it will take place on Sunday, March 15 at the
Glendale Presbyterian Church, reports Armenpress referring to Asbarez.

As Armenian communities around the world continue to seek healing and
reparation for their tragedy and losses, this event is yet another
way to comfort our souls and strengthen our spirit.

The Canadian duo of pianist Patil Harboyan and cellist Heather Tuach
will perform works by Armenian composers Alexander Arutiunian, Arno
Babajanian, Haro Stepanian and Komitas. The works to be presented in
the program are recorded in their CD, recently released by Divine
Art Records in England, and is called “Music from Armenia”. This
publication received great reviews and generated wonderful enthusiasm
amongst both Armenian and non-Armenian musical societies. It helped
the acknowledgement and the showcasing of great Armenian music.

Recipient of two Canada Council for the Arts grants and a grant
from the Conseil des arts et des lettres du Quebec, Patil Harboyan
was awarded first prizes at the Margo Babikian Piano competition,
the Armenian Allied Arts Association and also won recognition at the
Southwestern Youth Music Festival in California. In 2004, she won
first prize at the Trois-Rivières Symphony Competition, along with
the Radio-Canada Prize.

Harboyan attended the prestigious R.D. Colburn School of Performing
Arts in Los Angeles, and was a recipient of a Philiban Scholarship.

She holds a Doctorate in Musical Arts from Stonybrook University, where
she studied with Gilbert Kalish on a full scholarship. Her previous
teachers include Richard Raymond, Marc Durand and Jean Saulnier.

From: A. Papazian

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/796426/hamazkayin-to-stage-music-from-armenia-for-cello-and-piano.html

Statements In Russia About "Pro-Western" NGOs In Armenia Viewed As P

STATEMENTS IN RUSSIA ABOUT “PRO-WESTERN” NGOS IN ARMENIA VIEWED AS POLITICAL “MESSAGES”

SOCIETY | 03.03.15 | 10:07

By GAYANE MKRTCHYAN
ArmeniaNow reporter

Representatives of Western-funded nongovernmental organizations (NGOs)
in Armenia find alarming the statements heard from Russia that their
presence in Armenia is undesirable.

Speaking at a press conference in Moscow last week, Konstantin
Kosachev, the head of the International Affairs Committee at the
Federation Council, the upper chamber of the Russian parliament, said
that the presence of 350 NGOs “working against Eurasian integration
and in favor of Armenia’s closer ties with the European Union is
unacceptable”.

The senior Russian legislator also reminded Armenia of “the Ukrainian
experience”, implying that the presence of many Western-funded
organizations in Ukraine were a crucial factor in the change of
government in Kyiv in 2014 that was followed by instability and war
in the territory of the country.

Head of the Yerevan-based International Security Affairs Institute NGO
Stepan Safaryan said that still in 2012 when Armenia was on track to
sign an association deal with the European Union Russia’s authorities
floated an idea that Armenia’s European integration did not hinder
its integration with the emerging Eurasian Union and vice versa. That,
according to the political analyst, was done to attract Armenia into
this Eurasian integration.

“Now that Armenia is a member of the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU)
this motto seems to be changing and it turns out that the NGOs are
an obstacle,” said Safaryan, also reminding the statements made by
Russian Ambassador to Armenia Ivan Volynkin.

A few month ago the Russian diplomat, in particular, called for
Russia’s greater presence in the information field of Armenia in
order to “neutralize” the influence of the NGOs that “seek to drive a
wedge in the Russian-Armenian relations”. In his statements Volynkin
also made references to a law that was adopted in Russia a few years
ago that obliges Western-funded NGOs to work more transparently and
already legally labels them “foreign agents”, implying that Armenia
also needed the kind of law.

The opinion that Western-funded organizations are “foreign agents”
and act against the interests of the state is not uncommon in Armenia
either. Some politicians and public figures, including those standing
close to the authorities, do not hide their markedly negative attitude
towards Western-funded NGOs.

According to Safaryan, while no direct “order” to Armenia is visible
yet, Kosachev’s statement is a disturbing signal and amounts to at
least a clear message. It, the political analyst said, particularly
concerns the NGOs organizing public protests as in recent years
the Russian elites have been very concerned about the phenomenon of
“colored”, i.e. allegedly Western-inspired/funded revolutions in the
former Soviet countries that have traditionally been under Russian
influence.

“Russia realizes that the EEU is an economic space that does not
give it the right to directly make such policy instructions,” said
Safaryan, stressing that all NGOs, including those whose opinions
differ from the government-advocated views, operate in Armenia under
the country’s Constitution.

At the same time, he voiced concerns that Armenia will follow the
example of Russia to pass a law putting restrictions on the activities
of NGOs.

A law on NGOs drafted in 2014 is now at the stage of public discussions
and representatives of many Armenian NGOs point at the circumstance
that under the new law the government gets quite a few instruments
to control NGOs.

“The goal of civil society is counterbalancing, restraining and
controlling the state authorities. Therefore, one should not allow
that… We’ve seen how it ends. Some can declare a person to be
an “agent” of another state and then his neutralization becomes
a technical matter,” said Safaryan, referring to the February 27
assassination of top Kremlin critic Boris Nemtsov in Moscow.

From: A. Papazian

http://armenianow.com/society/61076/armenia_ngos_russia_kosachev_safaryan

Bakou Perpetue Le Conflit Du Haut-Karabagh Pour Mieux Reprimer Les F

BAKOU PERPETUE LE CONFLIT DU HAUT-KARABAGH POUR MIEUX REPRIMER LES FORCES VIVES D’AZERBAIDJAN

L’EXPRESS

A l’occasion des commemorations des pogroms de Soumgaït, Sophie
Joissains, Marlène Mourier et Michel Amiel, trois elus francais –
membres du Cercle d’Amitie France-Karabagh – s’expriment afin de
soutenir le groupe de Minsk de l’OSCE dans ses recentes prises de
position tenant meilleur compte de la realite politique de terrain,
où la jeune democratie karabaghiote reste confrontee a la menace du
regime autoritaire d’Azerbaïdjan.

Voila bientôt 21 ans – le 12 mai 1994 très exactement – que fut signe
l’armistice mettant fin aux quatre annees du conflit du Haut-Karabagh.

Depuis lors, aucun traite de paix n’a ete conclu entre les
protagonistes – Azerbaïdjan d’une part et Republique du Haut-Karabagh
soutenue par l’Armenie d’autre part. C’est donc toujours une paix
precaire qui prevaut dans cette region du Sud-Caucase. Et si un certain
optimisme a pu regner dans les annees qui ont suivi le cessez-le-feu,
il est desormais bien eteint en depit des efforts meritoires du Groupe
de Minsk de l’OSCE en charge d’assister les parties a trouver une
issue politique au conflit.

Annee après annee, semaine après semaine, la tension ne fait que
croître le long de la ligne de contact et on ne compte plus les
tentatives d’incursion ou les innombrables assassinats de civils
perpetres par les tireurs embusques. Dernièrement encore, c’est
un paysan de 60 ans qui a ete froidement abattu par les soldats
azerbaïdjanais dans une zone limitrophe de la region armenienne du
Tavouche, c’est-a-dire en Armenie meme et sur un territoire a priori
non dispute. Les tireurs ont vise a l’aveugle une victime innocente.

Ne plus renvoyer dos-a-dos la victime et l’agresseur

Longtemps, les copresidents francais, russe et americain du Groupe
de Minsk se sont abstenus de pointer les responsabilites. Longtemps
ils ont traite sur le meme plan l’Armenie et l’Azerbaïdjan, et ils ont
ignore – du moins officiellement – la Republique du Haut-Karabagh. Des
elements recents suggèrent qu’ils commencent desormais a rompre avec
cette politique.

La suite sur le lien plus bas

mardi 3 mars 2015, Stephane (c)armenews.com

From: A. Papazian

Azerbaijan Shows Disrespect For The Co-Chairs’ Proposals: Armenian F

AZERBAIJAN SHOWS DISRESPECT FOR THE CO-CHAIRS’ PROPOSALS: ARMENIAN FM

16:43, 03 Mar 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

Azerbaijan shows disrespect for the targeted statements of the OSCE
Minsk Group Co-Chairs, Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian
has said.

The situation at the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and the line of
contact with Nagorno Karabakh has escalated over the past days,
resulting in casualties.

“The Azerbaijani side once again demonstrated its attitude towards the
targeted statements of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs to strictly
observe the ceasefire and to refrain from steps escalating the
situation,” Minister Nalbandian said in comments to Aravot.am.

“In the statement made after their latest visit to the region, the
Minsk Group Co-Chairs noted that the Presidents had agreed to consider
the proposals of the Co-Chairs that could strengthen the ceasefire.

With the recent provocations Baku yet again displays its disrespect
for the proposals of the Co-Chairs,” Edward Nalbandian said.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/03/03/azerbaijan-shows-disrespect-for-the-co-chairs-proposals-armenian-fm/

Nairit Plant Employees Are Demanding Debt Repayment Schedule

NAIRIT PLANT EMPLOYEES ARE DEMANDING DEBT REPAYMENT SCHEDULE

12:13 | March 3,2015 | Economy

“Nairit” plant employees are again in front of the Government
building. During recent 5 days no response has been given about the
schedule of salaries’ repayment.

Nairit employees demand from the Government to make a clear schedule,
according to which 2 times a month their 18-24 months’ unpaid salaries
will be paid. But the problem remains unsolved. Today until 13:00
Nairit employees will stay in front of the Government building. If no
one receives them, they will march to the Presidential residence. At
this moment they are chanting “Repayment” and “Prime Minister”.

We remind that the Government owes 5 billion AMD to Nairit employees
and on February 6 about 1700 Nairit employees were released from
their jobs without final payment.

From: A. Papazian

http://en.a1plus.am/1207124.html

Des Membres De L’AYF Manifestent A Los Angeles Afin De Sensibiliser

DES MEMBRES DE L’AYF MANIFESTENT A LOS ANGELES AFIN DE SENSIBILISER AU GENOCIDE ARMENIEN

USA

Des membres de l’AYF ont manifeste hier a Los Angelès afin de
sensibiliser au genocide armenien.

Plus de 60 membres de la Federation armenienne de la jeunesse –
ouest des Etats-Unis ont pris part a une manifestation devant le
Staples Center a Downtown.

La manifestation a ete prevue dans un effort d’attirer l’attention
et de sensibiliser au genocide armenien, dans le cadre d’une campagne
de 100 jours d’actions de l’AYF a l’occasion du centenaire du genocide.

mardi 3 mars 2015, Stephane (c)armenews.com

From: A. Papazian

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=108656

Five Armenians On Forbes Magazine’s List Of Billionaires

FIVE ARMENIANS ON FORBES MAGAZINE’S LIST OF BILLIONAIRES

[ Part 2.2: “Attached Text” ]

20:29, 2 March, 2015

YEREVAN, 2 MARCH, ARMENPRESS. According to tradition, Forbes has
released the list of the world’s richest people for the year 2015. As
“Armenpress” reports, citing the official website of the
magazine, as in the previous years, former head of Microsoft Bill
Gates is still on top of the list with $79.2 billion dollars.

Gates is followed by Mexican telecommunication magnate Carlos Alim
Helu with 77.1 billion dollars and investor Warren Buffet with
72.7 billion dollars. The list includes the names of five Armenians,
including Armenian American Kirk Kerkorian in 393rd place ($4.2 billion
dollars), businessman Samvel Karapetyan in 418th place ($4 billion
dollars), Danil Khachaturov in 1,190th place ($1.6 billion dollars),
Sergey Galitsky (Harutyunyan) in 162ndplace ($8.3 billion dollars)
and Argentinean-Armenian Eduardo Eurnekian in 1,006th place ($1.9
billion dollars).

From: A. Papazian

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/796126/five-armenians-on-forbes-magazine%E2%80%99s-list-of-billionaires.html

Aliyev Is Showing Signs Of A Frantic Despotism-The Washington Post

ALIYEV IS SHOWING SIGNS OF A FRANTIC DESPOTISM-THE WASHINGTON POST

17:45, 2 March, 2015

YEREVAN, 2 MARCH, ARMENPRESS. The President of Azerbaijan, Ilham
Aliyev, is showing signs of a frantic despotism. Journalists, bloggers,
lawyers, human rights activists and others who speak out for individual
liberty are arbitrarily being swept up in a wave of arrests and
detentions, as “Armenpress” reports, citing The Washington Post.

Mr. Aliyev, suffering a decline in the oil revenue that has propped
up his regime for years, seems to be striking out at anyone who
opposes him.

One of Mr. Aliyev’s favorite tools for silencing people is pretrial
detention. Azeri law states that it is to be used only in limited
cases, and Azerbaijan’s criminal procedure code put this power in
the hands of the courts, not prosecutors, more than a decade ago. In
practice, though, the courts have become servants of the prosecution.

The European Court for Human Rights noted in a case last year that
Azeri courts have frequently endorsed prosecution requests for
detention automatically.

Leyla Yunus, a prominent human rights activist, has been in pretrial
detention since July 30 on arbitrary and trumped-up charges of treason
and tax evasion. She is suffering from a liver condition and diabetes.

On Feb. 18, an appeals court dismissed her appeal and gave her another
five months in pretrial detention, at the end of which she will
have been behind bars for nearly a year without trial. Her husband,
Arif Yunus, a historian who suffers from cardiovascular disease,
was detained on Aug. 5. His appeal was dismissed Feb. 23, and he,
too, was given another five months in pretrial detention.

Meanwhile, the campaign against critical journalists continues. The
investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova, who described her
situation in a letter from prison that ran as a recent Post op-ed,
remains behind bars in pretrial detention. A closed-door trial was
held Feb. 23, three days after her letter appeared, and she was
found guilty of criminal libel and fined. The libel charge stemmed
from accusations made in 2014 by a man who claimed she defamed him
on Facebook, which she denied. In the twisted, Orwellian nature of
the Azeri justice system, she was first arrested in December on a
charge of inciting a former colleague to attempt suicide and since has
been slapped with new charges, including embezzlement, tax evasion,
illegal entrepreneurship and abuse of power.

Mr. Aliyev seems particularly uncomfortable with the work of the
Azerbaijani service of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, to which Ms.

Ismayilova had contributed. On the same day as her snap trial, a
former chief of the service’s Baku bureau was stopped at the airport,
prevented from boarding a plane and told he was under a travel ban at
the request of the prosecutor’s office. More than 26 journalists and
staff of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty have been interrogated by
Azeri authorities since a Dec. 26 raid on the Baku bureau. The news
organization is funded by the United States through the Broadcasting
Board of Governors.

In a recent magazine advertisement, Mr. Aliyev said he wanted to make
Azerbaijan “one of the most developed and competitive countries in
the world.” It certainly won’t become that if he continues to rule
like a despot.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/letter-from-an-azerbaijani-prison/2015/02/17/2a2d6cb0-b3d3-11e4-886b-c22184f27c35_story.html
http://armenpress.am/eng/news/796105/aliyev-is-showing-signs-of-a-frantic-despotism-the-washington-post.html

Film: Local Filmmaker Compelled To Give Armenian Genocide Its Due

LOCAL FILMMAKER COMPELLED TO GIVE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ITS DUE

NorthJersey.com
March 2 2015

March 2, 2015
By JOHN PETRICK, STAFF WRITER, The Record

Jon Milano is a true product of the melting pot called America — an
Oradell native of Italian and Greek descent now living in California
and making a movie about the Armenian genocide.

It makes more sense than you might think.

“I am not Armenian,” Milano says, “but I grew up in Oradell, which
has one of the biggest Armenian populations in America. When I was
growing up, at first I had no idea that was the case. Then when I
went to public school, all my friends were Armenian. They have such
a great history behind them.”

His movie, “Straw Dolls,” has been a work-in-progress the past two
years. Final photography was completed in November. The film is in
its final phases of editing and is to premiere at a screening on
March 15 in Los Angeles, with subsequent screenings on the 100th
anniversary of the Armenian genocide on April 24 in Copenhagen,
New York City and Armenia, according to Milano.

April 24, 1915, was when thousands of the Armenian community leaders of
what was then Constantinople (now Istanbul) were deported or executed,
according to historians. On the eve of World War I, there were 2
million Armenians in the declining Ottoman Empire. By 1922, there
were fewer than 400,000, they say. The others — some 1.5 million —
were killed in what historians consider a genocide. Those who weren’t
raped, beaten or killed at once were driven through mountains and
deserts without food, drink or shelter, according to historians.

The Turks reject use of the word genocide, denying that there was any
systematic or premeditated attempt to destroy a people and saying
that the mass casualties were the consequence of a messy war when
the Ottoman Empire was in its death throes..

A powerful Armenian community in Los Angeles has been pressing for
years for Congress to condemn the Armenian genocide. A bill to that
effect nearly passed in fall 2007, gaining a majority of co-sponsors
and passing a committee vote. But the Bush administration, noting that
Turkey is a critical ally with more than 70 percent of the military
air supplies for Iraq going through an airbase there, successfully
pressed for the bill to be withdrawn.

All of this was news to a young Milano, who was largely educated on
the subject since grammar school by a childhood friend who become a
big advocate in the Armenian community.

“Over the years, he told me the horrible, horrible stories about his
grandparents and how they survived,” he says. “The only people who
talk about this are Armenians. It’s not taught in schools. And so I
wanted to tell their story.”

The film stars the award-winning Iranian-Armenian actress Mary Apick
and Marco Khan, with a full ensemble of young Armenian actors. On
a shoestring budget of $40,000, the movie was shot on location at
a movie ranch in California’s Simi Valley. It was the same location
used for shooting Quentin Tarantino’s “Django Unchained” (2012) and
“Saving Mr. Banks (2013), according to Milano. “It’s the only location
in Southern California that doesn’t look like Southern California,”
Milano said with a laugh. “It looks like the Middle East. It’s just
a big-open-space ranch you can build movie sets on.”

As for the story, he said that the challenge for him and his co-writer
was to tell a self-contained plot that reflected the bigger historical
picture without ever getting too broad.

“It’s a slice of the Armenian genocide.” Milano says. “It’s about
this Armenian farmer and his daughter. They have gotten word of the
deportations, and in a last-ditch effort to escape their village
before the deportations happen, they are too late. Typically, men
were killed immediately. So he pretends to be a Turkish sympathizer,
and he convinces the soldiers he is one of them. His daughter hides
and makes a decision that will alter the rest of their lives.”

Milano studied film at William Paterson University before graduating
and going on to get his master’s in filmmaking from Chapman University
in Orange County in California. He has made two other films before
writing the initial screenplay for “Straw Dolls.” Realizing the script
needed revisions, he brought in screenwriter Caitlin Riblett. “She’s a
fantastic writer. She came in, and we ended up doing drafts together,”
he said.

Yervant Kachichian, 26, of Oradell, the Armenian childhood friend
who Milano says inspired the film, says he couldn’t be prouder.

“My family was always very open about their culture, and John was like
part of our family,” Kachichian says. “John is an honorary Armenian.

That’s how it feels. He’s like a brother to me. So whenever we’re
together, he hears of our family’s stories.”

Some are pretty gruesome, Kachichian says.

“My grandmother barely survived,” he says. “She got out when she
was a baby. The Turks took her from her mother, and they threw
her onto a pile of dead people, dead corpses, and they had a horse
stomp on her to kill her. By the grace of God, she didn’t die. My
great grandmother then came back, found the baby on he pile of dead
people. My grandmother [now deceased] showed me the horseshoe prints
on the back of her neck.”

Kachichian says that he has seen a rough cut of the film and that it
is a great tribute to Armenian people.

“It’s incredible the way they were able to tell a story and make you
feel so emotionally attached in such a short amount of time,” he says.

“It’s really touching.”

From: A. Papazian

http://www.northjersey.com/arts-and-entertainment/movies/filmmaker-tackles-the-difficult-subject-of-armenian-genocide-1.1280755