Aharon Shekherdemian: RA President Belated Visit To Beirut

AHARON SHEKHERDEMIAN: RA PRESIDENT BELATED VISIT TO BEIRUT

PanARMENIAN.Net
08.10.2009 20:22 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "Diaspora is much concerned over Armenian-Turkish
Protocols, mostly over clauses that may relate to Armenian Genocide
issue and Karabakh conflict," Editor-in-Chief of Lebanon-based "Ararat"
newspaper Aharon Shekherdemian, member of Social-Democratic Hnchakyan
party, told a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter.

Even though RA President gave convincing answers to Diaspora’s
questions, we are still in the dark about certain Protocol clauses,
he said. "They persuade us documents pose no threat to Armenia,
but is that right?"

Editor-in-Chief of Lebanese Armenian newspaper believes "Armenian
President belated his visit."
From: Baghdasarian

‘Turkey Likely To Seal Deal With Armenia’

‘TURKEY LIKELY TO SEAL DEAL WITH ARMENIA’

sp?id=202087
Thursday, October 08, 2009

ANKARA/WASHINGTON: Turkey expects historic accords to normalise ties
with Armenia to be signed on Saturday in Switzerland in a step towards
ending a century of hostility, senior Turkish government sources said
on Wednesday.

Doubts had emerged in diplomatic circles about whether the ceremony
would take place because of pressure from the powerful Armenian
diaspora, as well as opposition within Armenia and to a certain
extent Turkey.

"There are no changes to those plans," a senior Turkish government
source, referring to the planned signature of protocols in Zurich on
Oct 10, told Reuters. Another government source, who also declined
to be named, agreed.

Turkey and Armenia have no diplomatic ties because of hostility
what the latter says stemming from the mass killings of Armenians
by Ottoman Turks during World War One. Turkey closed its border with
Armenia in 1993 in solidarity with fellow Muslim Azerbaijan, then at
war with Armenian-backed ethnic Armenians.

Turkey and Armenia agreed on Aug 31 to sign, within six weeks, two
protocols on the establishment of diplomatic ties, opening a common
border and for historians to investigate the events surrounding the
killings of Armenians in 1915.

But Armenia was taken by surprise when Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip
Erdogan a nnounced in New York that the agreements would be signed
on Oct 10.

Turkish Foreign Ministry officials later told reporters each country’s
foreign minister would attend the ceremony in Zurich.

Armenian officials were not available for comment.

Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan is on a week-long intercontinental
charm offensive to calm concerns in the Armenian diaspora over the
historic thaw with Turkey. Diplomatic observers also fear the signing
could be disrupted by demands by some Turks for a resolution on the
Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.

Armenian nationalists demand that Turkey acknowledge the 1915 killings
as genocide. Ankara rejects the term genocide, saying that many people
died on both sides of the conflict.

Once the protocols are signed they must be approved by the respective
parliaments. This leaves open the possibility that either side delays
the approval in case they face unexpected domestic opposition.

Meanwhile, US President Barack Obama urged Turkey and Armenia to
move swiftly on normalisation talks after decades of hostility,
the White House said on Tuesday. During a call to Armenian President
Serzh Sarkisian on Monday, Obama "underscored the US position that
the normalisation talks should move forward without preconditions and
within a reasonable timeframe," the White House said in a statement.

"President Obama pledged his full support for a process that would
result in normaliszation of relations between the two countries and
a brighter future for all involved."

Obama, it added, called Sarkisian to "commend him for his courageous
leadership" and encourage the "continued progress" of normalisation
talks.
From: Baghdasarian

http://www.thenews.com.pk/daily_detail.a

President Of The NKR Convoked A Consultation Dedicated To…

PRESIDENT OF THE NKR CONVOKED A CONSULTATION DEDICATED TO…

07 -10-2009

On 6 October President of the Nagorno Karabagh Republic Bako Sahakyan
convoked a consultation dedicated to budgetary policy in 2010, volumes
and structure of the next year’s state budget. NKR vice-premier,
finance minister Spartak Tevosyan delivered a corresponding report. The
Head of the State underlined that the budgetary policy should be based
on joint interest of the country, systemized work and cooperation
between different state structures, efficient usage of resources,
and lawfulness. Such an approach will allow maintaining paces of
economic development and safeguarding steady development of the
state. Top leadership of the republic and representatives of all
branches of power partook at the consultation.
From: Baghdasarian

http://www.artsakhtert.com/eng/index.php

Holland: Armenian Cinema Festival in The Hague

Abovian Armenian Cultural Association
Address: Weesperstraat 91
2574 VS The Hague, The Netherlands
Telephone: +31704490209
Website:
Email: [email protected]
Contact: M. Hakhverdian

PRESS RELEASE
The Hague, 6 October 2009

Armenian Cinema Festival at the Filmhuis Den Haag in The Hauge, The
Netherlands

Abovian Armenian Cultural Association is celebrating its 25th anniversary
with two weeks of films from Armenia and the Diaspora

The Hague, 6 October 2009 ­ The Armenian Cinema Festival will take place at
the Filmhuis Den Haag in The Hague from Thursday 22 October until Wednesday
4 November 2009. The Abovian Armenian Cultural Association and Filmhuis Den
Haag would like to present Armenian Cinema to the public with a selection of
eighteen feature films, documentaries, shorts, classics, and experimental
films, both from Armenia as well as the Diaspora. The films will be
introduced by connoisseurs of Armenian Cinema.

Encapsulating Armenian Cinema in a few short sentences is not an easy task.
Its origins and many appearances are and have been shaped by geographical
and political coordinates near and away from the Armenian homeland, both
within the borders of the present Republic of Armenia, as well as in the
worldwide Armenian Diaspora. The variety of streams among Armenian directors
from Armenia, such as Hamo Bek-Nazarov, Sergei Parajanov and Harutyun
Khachatryan, as well as those from the diaspora, such as Rouben Mamoulian,
Atom Egoyan and Eric Nazarian, illustrates the diversity of Armenian Cinema
as a whole. Bearing in mind this wide diversity, it seems more constructive
to speak of a collection of different Armenian Cinemas.

Side Programme
All films will be introduced with a short introduction by a connoisseur.
Some films will be preceded by a separate meeting. The NRC-critic André
Waardenburg, for example, will review the famous film The colour of
Pomegranates by Paradjanov, which portrays the life of Sayat Nova, an
Armenian poet from the 18th century. Don Askarian’s film Komitas will be
preceded by a lecture given by the journalist Heiko Jessayan who will
explain the person and significance of the Armenian monk and composer
Komitas (1869-1935), who is the central character of the film. Peter van
Bueren, one of the initiators of the Golden Apricot Yerevan International
Film Festival, will review the most recent film of the festival: Harutyun
Khachatryan’s Border.

The Festival Programme (subject to change)
-Thursday 22 October – 7.30 pm: The Colour of Pomegranates (Sayat Nova) /
Sergei Parajanov; short pre-film: Hakob Hovnatanyan / Sergei Paradanov
(Opening)
-Friday 23 October – 7.30 pm: Border (Sahman) / Harutyun Khachatryan /
Introduction by Peter van Bueren; short pre-film: Road Movie / Nora
Martirosyan
-Saturday 24 October – 2.30 pm Extra Show: Merry Bus / Albert Mkrtchian /
Introduction by the film director Albert Mkrtchian from Armenia
-Saturday 24 October – 5pm: Rouben Mamoulian: The Golden Age of Broadway and
Hollywood / Patrick Cazals; 7.30 pm: Silk Stockings / Rouben Mamoulian
-Sunday 25 October – 7.30 uur: The Colour of Pomegranates (Sayat Nova) /
Sergei Parajanov / Introduction by Peter Waardenburg; short pre-film: Hakob
Hovnatanyan / Sergei Parajanov
-Monday 26 October – 7.30 pm: Winepress, Sour Grapes (Hndzan) / Bagrat
Oganesyan; short pre-films: Lux Aeterna / Serge Avédikian and Terra Emota /
Serge Avédikian & Levon Minasian
-Tuesday 27 October – 7.30 pm: The Blue Hour / Eric Nazarian; short
pre-film: Akner / Aram Shahbazian
-Wednesday 28 October – 7.30 pm: Calendar / Atom Egoyan /; short pre-film:
Garden Dwelling / Tina Bastajian / Introduction by film director Tina
Bastajian
-Thursday 29 October – 7.30 pm: Silk Stockings / Rouben Mamoulian
-Friday 30 October – 7 pm: Komitas / Don Askarian / Introduction by Heiko
Jessayan, journalist; short pre-film: Chizhik / Vardan Hakobyan
-Saturday 31 October – 7.30 pm: Autumn (Sonbahar) / Ozcan Alper; short
pre-film: Don’t Leave Without News / Christine Khalafian
-Sunday 1 November – 7.30 pm: The Blue Hour / Eric Nazarian; short pre-film:
Akner / Aram Shahbazian
-Monday 2 November – 7.30 pm: Honour (Namus) / Hamo Bek-Nazarov / with live
piano accompaniment by Wim van Tuyl
-Tuesday 3 November – 7.30 pm: Calendar / Atom Egoyan / Introduction by Dr.
Marie-Aude Baronian, Assistant Professor of Film and Philosophy; short
pre-film: Garden Dwelling / Tina Bastajian
-Wednesday 4 November – 7.30 pm: Border (Sahman) / Harutyun Khachatryan;
short pre-film: Road Movie / Nora Martirosyan

The Armenian Cinema Festival is organised on the occasion of 25th
anniversary of the Abovian Armenian Cultural Association in The Hague, The
Netherlands. Over the past 25 years the Association has highlighted
different aspects of the Armenian Culture with presentations and thematic
days revolving around music, dance, literature, painting and much more. The
Abovian Association has chosen the Armenian Cinema to celebrate its 25th
anniversary not only to give the Dutch public an opportunity to discover the
largely unknown output of Armenian Cinema, but also to present many aspects
of life in Armenia and the Diaspora during different eras through this
medium.

The Armenian Cinema Festival is being supported by Fonds 1818, Prins
Bernhard Cultuurfonds, VSB-fonds, Prins Clausfonds and by the Kinokentron in
Armenia and by the Golden Apricot Yerevan International Film Festival.

ARMENIAN FILM FESTIVAL
Filmhuis Den Haag
Thursday 22 October until Wednesday 4 November 2009
Normal entrance fees and discounts will be applied.
Reservations can be made from the Tuesday before the screening week
(Thursday until Wednesday), via / /
Tel: +3170 365 60 30
For more information and film summaries click on: ,
and
From: Baghdasarian

www.abovian.nl
www.filmhuisdenhaag.nl
www.belbios.nl
www.filmhuisdenhaag.nl
www.abovian.nl
www.armeensefilm.nl

Armenian Dram To Have Its Stable Place On Market

ARMENIAN DRAM TO HAVE ITS STABLE PLACE ON MARKET

PanARMENIAN.Net
05.10.2009 17:43 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ "The imperfect money-and-credit policy presents
serious threat. Unpredictability and ineffectiveness of money market
policy leads to fluctuations in foreign currency exchange rates,
making increasingly negative influence on RA economy. National currency
devaluation process is a positive one. Keeping forever the existing
rate would spell waste of national reserves, to the detriment of
economics’ export potential and ability to attract investments. I
support the floating currency rate and inflation targeting policy,
which, unfortunately, was never practiced in RA," ex-Economy Minister,
Edward Sandoyan, Pro-Rector of Russian-Armenian (Slavonic University),
told a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter.
From: Baghdasarian

Armenia Ranked 84th Among World’s Most Desirable Countries To Live I

ARMENIA RANKED 84TH AMONG WORLD’S MOST DESIRABLE COUNTRIES TO LIVE IN

Tert.am
18:47 05.10.09

Norway has retained its status as the world’s most desirable country
to live in among 182 countries ranked, according to U.N. data released
on Monday, reports Reuters.

Armenia was ranked 84th most desirable, above Azerbaijan (86) and
Georgia (89).

According to the official UNDP Human Development Report website,
Each year since 1990, the Human Development Report has published
the human development index (HDI) which looks beyond GDP to define
well-being more broadly.

The HDI provides a composite measure of three dimensions of human
development: living a long and healthy life (measured by life
expectancy), being educated (measured by adult literacy and gross
enrolment in education) and having a decent standard of living
(measured by purchasing power parity, PPP, income).

The index is not in any sense a comprehensive measure of human
development. It does not, for example, include important indicators
such as gender or income inequality nor more difficult to measure
concepts like respect for human rights and political freedoms. What
it does provide is a broadened prism for viewing human progress and
the complex relationship between income and well-being.

In 2007, Armenia’s score of 84 is the overall rating for human
development. However, it ranked 64th in life expectancy (at 73.6
years); 82nd in combined gross enrolment ratio; 100th place at GDP
per capita; and an amazing 14th place in adult literacy (99.5% of
adults aged 15 and above are literate)

Data collected prior to the global economic crisis showed people
in Norway, Australia and Iceland had the best living standards,
while Niger, Afghanistan and Sierra Leone scored worst in terms of
human development.

Half the people in the poorest 24 countries were illiterate, compared
to 20 percent in nations classed as having medium levels of human
development, the index showed.

Japanese people lived longer than others, to 82.7 years on average,
with life expectan n has the highest GDP per capita at $85,383 USD
in a tiny principality home to 35,000 people, 15 banks and more than
100 wealth management companies.

Five countries — China, Venezuela, Peru, Colombia and France —
climbed three or more places from the previous year, driven by greater
earnings and longer life expectancy. China, Colombia and Venezuela
also scored better due to improvements in education.

UNDP said human development had improved globally by 15 percent since
1980, with China, Iran and Nepal the biggest climbers in the chart.
From: Baghdasarian

Special Gorky Program at NAASR Oct. 10

PRESS RELEASE
National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR)
395 Concord Ave.
Belmont, MA 02478
Tel.: 617-489-1610
E-mail: [email protected]

The National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR) will
host a special program entitled "New Perspectives on the Life and Art of
Arshile Gorky" on Saturday, October 10, at 7:00 p.m. at the NAASR
Center, 395 Concord Ave., Belmont, MA. This event will be co-sponsored
by NAASR and the Whistler House Museum of Art in Lowell, MA.

The fall of 2009 is proving to be an extraordinary time for anyone
interested in the life and art of Arshile Gorky. Several significant
publications are forthcoming and two major exhibitions of his work-one
currently on display at the Whistler House Museum in Lowell, Mass., and
the other opening in October at the Philadelphia Museum of Art-will
provide opportunities to become more familiar with this key figure in
20th century art.

The NAASR program will feature presentations by three noteworthy figures
on the still-enigmatic artist. Distinguished clergyman, Armenologist,
and translator Rev. Father Krikor Maksoudian has collaborated with Gorky
biographer Matthew Spender (From a High Place: A Life of Arshile Gorky)
on the soon-to-be-published Arshile Gorky: A Life Through Letters and
Documents. Spender, a noted sculptor and writer, is married to Gorky’s
daughter, artist Maro Gorky. Sara Bogosian is the chair of the
recently-opened Arshile Gorky exhibition, Drawings and Paintings by
Arshile Gorky, at Lowell’s Whistler House Art Museum.

The NAASR Center is located opposite the First Armenian Church and next
to the U.S. Post Office. Ample parking is available around the building
and in adjacent areas. The lecture will begin promptly at 7:00 p.m.

More information about the lecture is available by calling 617-489-1610,
faxing 617-484-1759, e-mailing [email protected], or writing to NAASR, 395
Concord Ave., Belmont, MA 02478.
From: Baghdasarian

Who Needs Carnegie Hall? Early Music in a Greenwich Village Club

New York Times

Music Review | GEMS Project

Who Needs Carnegie Hall? Early Music in a Greenwich Village Club

By JAMES R. OESTREICH
Published: October 2, 2009

What is early music? Literally, it is a repertory, comprising music
from ‘ take your pick ‘ the 18th century and before? The 19th and
before? By extension, the early-music movement came to include a
philosophy of performance that flourished in the 20th century as
musicians increasingly tried to replicate the sounds and styles of
particular eras.

Now, at least in New York, early music has also become a scene. The
two-year-old Gotham Early Music Scene lived up to its name this week
with the GEMS Project, a series of three programs at Le Poisson Rouge,
the trendy Greenwich Village club that is taking the classical music
world by storm.

By any definition, early music is wildly diverse. The project’s
format, developed in previous concerts, presented three groups per
evening, and the first program, on Wednesday, was diverse perhaps to a
fault.

Uncommon Temperament, a group of young Baroque performers, opened with
works of Handel: a trio sonata and a soprano version of the cantata
`Mi Palpita il Cor,’ sung by Ariadne Greif.

The performances were accomplished and winning, and Ms. Greif made a
game attempt to turn the cantata, a young man’s expression of coronary
twitter in the face of budding love, into something mildly
dramatic. Reclining in a chair, she enacted the work as a psychiatric
session: alas, a one-line joke that without real character development
wore thin long before she scribbled the check at the end.

East of the River, another group led by the recorder virtuosos Nina
Stern and Daphna Mor, brought a spirit from east of East River,
Brooklyn, to music more or less east of the Danube, as Ms. Stern
suggested in preperformance remarks. The listing of Armenian,
Macedonian, Italian, Bulgarian and Greek tunes suggested greater
variety than emerged from the stage, where an air of modern-day
klezmer seemed an insistent presence.

The Clarion
this setting, taking the stage in concert garb to present music from
the court of Catherine the Great. This is a theme, mixing Western
European influences and indigenous composition in St. Petersburg, that
could barely be suggested in a third of a concert. Ilya Poletaev gave
a charming performance of a harpsichord sonata by Baldassare
Galuppi. A two-movement string quartet by Anton Ferdinand Titz and
arias from operas by Yevstigney Fomin and Bortniansky made little
impression, bereft of context.

Except that provided in an overlong spoken introduction by Clarion’s
music director, Steven Fox. In general, the talk, guided by Gotham’s
executive director, Gene Murrow, proved awkward, finding little middle
ground between forced banter and scholarly disquisition.

Mr. Murrow claimed in initial remarks to have found `the perfect
place’ for early music that was performed among `friends eating and
drinking,’ and you could live with the occasional crashes of
plates. The noise from the ventilation system and the often unsubtle
miking represented more serious compromises.

And if catchall programs are to be any wave of the future, a way must
be found to make disparate elements speak to one another rather than
merely coexist.
From: Baghdasarian

Baku: Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov Receives Europe

AZERBAIJANI FOREIGN MINISTER ELMAR MAMMADYAROV RECEIVES EUROPEAN UNION SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE FOR THE SOUTH CAUCASUS PETER SEMNEBY

APA
30 Sep 2009 19:40

Baku. Lachin Sultanova – APA. On September 30, Azerbaijani
Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov receives European Union Special
Representative for the South Caucasus Peter Semneby. Press Service
of the Ministry told APA that the sides exchanged views on current
level and perspectives of Azerbaijan – EU relations.

Peter Semneby noted that EU was interested in establishment
of relations with Azerbaijan and added that the 10th meeting of
EU-Azerbaijan Cooperation Committee in Baku on September 25 of the
current year was a bright example for this.

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov in return stated that
Azerbaijan had also keen interest in further expansion of cooperation
with EU and stressed the significance of certain programs and
initiatives in this direction. Touching upon the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict, the Minister provided detailed information about the
negotiation process and stressed the importance of solution to the
conflict on the basis of international legal norms and principles
within the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan.

Regional stability, energy security and other issues of mutual
interests were also in the focus of attention at the meeting.
From: Baghdasarian

Armenia FM Meets US Secretary Of State

ARMENIA FM MEETS US SECRETARY OF STATE

armradio.am
29.09.2009 12:56

The Foreign Minister of Armenia, Edward Nalbandian, had a meeting
with US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton.

Greeting the Armenian Foreign Minister, the US Secretary of State
noted that the United States is Armenia’s partner in the fields
of both democratic reforms and economic development. According to
Mrs. Clinton, the Armenian-American relations are comprehensive and
deep. On behalf of the US Administration, the Secretary of State
expressed willingness to continue the cooperation with the Armenian
President, the Government and the Foreign Minister.

Turning to the Armenian-Turkish relations, Hilary Clinton appreciated
Armenia’s efforts towards normalization of relations with Turkey and
reconfirmed the position of the US that the relations between Armenia
and Turkey should be normalized without preconditions and within a
reasonable time frame.

Edward Nalbandian attached importance to the role of the US, as an
OSCE co-chair country, in the process of settlement of the Nagorno
Karabakh issue. The Armenian Foreign Minister and the US Secretary
of State exchanged views on issues of reciprocal interest.
From: Baghdasarian