"Armenian Genocide" Film To Be Shown In Brussels December 13

"RARMENIAN GENOCIDE" FILM TO BE SHOWN IN BRUSSELS DECEMBER 13

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
Oct 24 2006

According to the information DE FACTO got at the RA MFA Press Service,
December 13 a Laurence Jourdan’s "Armenian Genocide" film will be
shown in Brussels.

The measure has been initiated by the Jewish Audiovisual Memory
Institute and the European Sepharadi Institute.

After the film’s demonstration the participants will discuss the
issues referring to the Armenian Genocide committed by the Osmanian
Turkey. The discussions will be held with the political and public
figures’ participation.
From: Baghdasarian

Boston: The Planting Of Ideas

THE PLANTING OF IDEAS
By Carolyn Mugar and Jeff Masarjian

Boston Globe, MA
Oct 24 2006

"THE PLANTING of trees is the planting of ideas," says Dr. Wangari
Maathai, Nobel Peace Prize laureate and environmentalist. But what
does she mean?

Hosted by Boston’s Urban Forest Coalition, she will address this
question at Faneuil Hall today.

In a world faced with such weighty problems as global warming,
dwindling fossil fuels, and the gap between rich and poor nations
— the planting of trees may seem of little importance. Yet, as the
founder of the Green Belt Movement, Maathai has taught us that tree
planting is a critical step toward helping to protect the environment
and fight poverty.

A Kenyan, Maathai has dedicated herself to fighting two of her
country’s starkest problems: poverty and deforestation. With less
than 2 percent forest coverage, Kenya is well below the UN recommended
minimum of 10 percent. Maathai’s movement has held fast against these
daunting challenges, forging an ingenious path forward — one that
simultaneously addresses both crises. It is an approach built upon
education and direct engagement with local communities.

Led by Maathai, the Green Belt Movement organizes poor rural women in
Kenya to plant trees. Each new tree yields multiple benefits in their
lives — reversing the tide of deforestation, restoring Kenyan’s main
source of cooking fuel, and strengthening the community.

The Green Belt Movement has incorporated education on women’s rights
into its environmental programs, empowering disenfranchised Kenyans
to fight for a sustainable and viable economic future. All these
actions make clear what Mathaai means by comparing the planting of
trees with the planting of ideas.

And she is not alone in that view. All around the world, NGOs and
other concerned parties are taking comparable steps to protect the
environment and combat poverty. In Armenia today, estimated forest
cover is less than 8 percent; a dramatic decrease from a healthy 25
percent at the turn of the last century. Moreover, its environment,
one of the world’s most ecologically diverse with seven different
climate zones, is in grave jeopardy.

Currently, due to lack of alternative energy sources, the 40 percent
of Armenians living below the poverty line are overreliant on wood
for fuel. If the trend of poverty-driven deforestation continues,
much of Armenia will become a desert in just 20 years. Like Kenya,
deforestation threatens to rob Armenia of its natural beauty and
resources.

That’s why, similar to the Green Belt Movement’s efforts, an
organization called the Armenia Tree Project offers public education
programs. We recently developed a new interactive environmental
curriculum, "Plant an Idea, Plant a Tree," which offers instruction on
how the health of Armenia’s ecosystem is closely tied to its economic
future. We have introduced this curriculum in all 1,400 of Armenia’s
public schools. In rural villages, our staff trains and works with
subsistence farmers on planting and forestation techniques. At our
large-scale nursery and environmental educational center, we instruct
college students and professionals on environmental stewardship. In
our 12 years, Armenia Tree Project has made enormous strides, planting
and restoring more than 1,250,000 trees and creating hundreds of jobs
in our backyard nursery micro-enterprises for Armenia’s rural poor.

In the 30 years of the Green Belt Movement’s existence, an astonishing
30 million trees have been planted and 30,000 Kenyan women trained
in forestry, food processing, bee keeping, and other trades. Their
example inspires our work.

Such accomplishments suggest that in a world overwhelmed by seemingly
large and unsolvable issues, the long-term solutions may well lie in
simple but practical actions, taken on the local level.

Carolyn Mugar is the founder and Jeff Masarjian the executive director
of Armenia Tree Project.
From: Baghdasarian

ANKARA: TOBB Delegation Leaves For France

TOBB DELEGATION LEAVES FOR FRANCE

Turkish Press
Oct 24 2006

ANKARA – Turkish Union of Chambers and Commodity Exchanges (TOBB)
delegation left for Paris, France on Tuesday.

Holding a news conference at Esenboga Airport in Ankara, TOBB
Chairman Rifat Hisarciklioglu said that if a draft law which aims to
criminalize denial of so-called Armenian genocide is approved in the
French parliament, France would suffer much.

"Turkey opened its archives regarding so-called Armenian genocide.

France should also open its archives. Historians shall decide whether
there is a genocide or not," Hisarciklioglu noted.

"We will convey Turkey’s views on the matter to French business
executives during our visit to France," he added.
From: Baghdasarian

Daniel Fried: The US Wants Fair Dialogue Of Armenia And Turkey

DANIEL FRIED: THE US WANTS FAIR DIALOGUE OF ARMENIA AND TURKEY

Public Radio, Armenia
Oct 23 2006

The topic of the Armenian Genocide is very complex and demands a
complete and all-embracing answer, US Assistant Secretary of State
on Europe and Eurasia Daniel Fried said in a press conference in
Brussels, commenting on the adoption of the bill penalizing negation
of the Armenian Genocide denial by the French Parliament.

The Assistant Secretary of State noted that despite the fact that
the US has never characterized the events in the Ottoman Empire as
"genocide," it does not mean that the US underestimates the seriousness
of the above-mentioned events or denies the mass killing of Armenians
in 1915. Daniel Fried noted that it is senseless to dispute over the
issue. In his words, Washington wants Armenians and Turks to have
fair approach to the question and according to him, some Turks are
already urging their government to behave this way.

"I’m not sure that resolutions like the bill adopted in the French
Parliament will endorse the process," US Assistant Secretary of
State noted.
From: Baghdasarian

Turkish troops join Beirut peacekeepers

Turkish troops join Beirut peacekeepers
By ZEINA KARAM
Associated Press

Associated Press
Oct 19 2006

BEIRUT, Lebanon – Turkish soldiers arrived Friday in Beirut to join
the U.N. peacekeeping force in south Lebanon, making Turkey the
first Muslim country to contribute ground troops since the mission
was expanded after last summer’s war.

Two military ships docked at 9 a.m. in Beirut’s harbor. Turkish
officials said they carried some 95 soldiers and civilian engineers,
as well as 46 trucks, four armored personnel carriers and several
bulldozers and other machinery.

More soldiers were scheduled to arrive later in the day, bringing the
number of Turkish soldiers and civilian engineers in Lebanon to 261.

The troops were expected to deploy near the southern port city of Tyre
to help rebuild bridges and roads damaged in the summer’s 34-day war
between Hezbollah and Israel.

The conflict ended Aug. 14 after a U.N.-brokered cease-fire resolution
that calls for an expanded international peacekeeping force to create
a weapons-free zone in the south.

A Turkish government spokesman said earlier this month that the total
number of Turkish personnel in Lebanon would ultimately reach 681,
including sailors and engineers. A vanguard of seven Turkish military
officers arrived in Beirut earlier this week, and a Turkish frigate
is already helping patrol Lebanese waters.

Turkey is NATO’s only predominantly Muslim member, and the country
has close ties to both Israel and Arab states. Its contribution to the
peacekeeping force was met with opposition in the Turkish parliament,
where some lawmakers feared Turkish troops would be drawn into fighting
against fellow Muslims to protect Israel.

Armenians in Lebanon also protested Turkish participation in the
peacekeeping force, known as UNIFIL, because they blame Turkey’s
Ottoman rulers for the mass killing of Armenians in the early 20th
century.

Many of Lebanon’s Armenian residents fled Turkey.

Turkish peacekeeping troops have served in Bosnia and Kosovo and have
led operations in Somalia and Afghanistan.
From: Baghdasarian

Two giants from the past: A lesson for the present

[Comment] Two giants from the past: A lesson for the present
20.10.2006 – 09:25 CET | By Peter Sain ley Berry

EUObserver, Belgium
Oct 20 2006

EUOBSERVER / COMMENT – A very long time ago, in circumstances now
lost in the mists of time, I acquired a few first edition volumes of
Voltaire’s collected works, printed in 1756. I have before me now the
thirteenth volume – part of his general history – and it is entitled,
appropriately enough, ‘State of Europe.’

What is remarkable is how little the fundamental characteristics and
spirit of the nations he writes about have changed in the intervening
two and a half centuries. If ever you want a lucid demonstration of
‘plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose,’ then M. Voltaire is
your man.

Take Russia, for instance, which he describes as an emerging nation.

He writes of its power – not yet threatening to Europe – of its
resources, mostly derived from plunder, but above all of the absolutist
nature of its government, the reservation to its authorities of most
trade and commerce and hence the poverty of its citizens.

It strikes me that this is a strikingly topical view of the Russian
state and one that would not be out of place when Russia’s increasingly
authoritarian President Putin sits down with the European Union
politburo of 27 in Finland on 20 October.

The EU would like to change Russia’s stance – on energy in particular –
as well as encouraging it to be nicer to the Georgians. Fat chance!

Putin’s boots are firmly caked with the mud of history. We must deal
with Russia as she is.

It surprises me that we do not do more to honour the great European
thinkers of the past. A European Voltaire day perhaps, when we could
celebrate this best of all possible Continents. Something, anyway,
more than the odd name on a street map where such giants are forced
to rub shoulders with obscure nineteenth century lawyers.

Armenia and Voltaire But one way in which Voltaire is most certainly
not being honoured is in the quite ridiculous law being enacted
by French legislators seeking to outlaw disavowal of the so-called
Armenian genocide of 1915. Voltaire’s dictum ‘though I dislike what
you say, I will defend to the death your right to say it,’ has clearly
been forgotten by the National Assembly.

What makes it even worse, of course, is that this is a cynical
measure. The French have no particular interest in the Armenians – if
they had they might not have waited 90 years before intervening. No,
this law is designed to make it harder on the Turks as they pursue
their rocky and uneven path towards EU accession, to which France is
fundamentally opposed.

Despite their 250 years, the pages of my Voltaire history are still
in quite excellent condition. They turned up in a London attic and
I have always wondered about their provenance. Who brought them to
London and why the attic? Were they the property of some emigré,
short of a bob or two, and sold to pay gambling debts?

In my more fanciful moments I even think they may have belonged to
Talleyrand, the grandfather of modern diplomacy, who escaped the
‘Terror’ of the French Revolution by the skin of his teeth, removing
to London on a commission to research – of all unlikely things –
weights and measures. In London he sold his library to pay his way.

Almost certainly it would have included a collected edition of
Voltaire.

Talleyrand is not held in high esteem by the French, nor for some
unaccountable reason by the Belgians, though he did as much to
bring Belgium into existence as anyone. The French hold him to be
irredeemably evil and corrupt, even by French standards.

This is a great pity for modern diplomacy – surely not currently the
western world’s strongest suit – could learn from his techniques. For
evidence of his genius you need look no further than the borders
of France themselves, which were considerable extended by the
revolutionary wars, and then, at his instigation and despite France’s
utter defeat, legitimised by treaty.

Imagine if, in 1945, German negotiators had not only retained
Pomerania, Silesia and East Prussia, but the Sudetenland as well,
and you have a measure of his diplomatic achievement. Or maybe, had
he been working for Argentina in 1982, he might have negotiated the
retention of South Georgia as a gesture of good will.

Seeing through the Hallucinations But to revert to the
present, Mr Barroso, President of the Commission, gave a
most excellent and statesmanlike speech in London this week
outlining why Britain should use the EU as a lever to pursue her
own strategic interests. Intellectually it was well-founded and
unassailable. Accurately, if somewhat cheekily, he called it ‘Seeing
through the Hallucinations.’

By coincidence I had listened to a very similar discourse, just three
days previously, from Lord Howe who, as Sir Geoffrey Howe, was Mrs
Thatcher’s foreign secretary from 1983 to 1989. His title was more
prosaic: ‘Re-creating Britain’s Foreign Policy.’

The British view of Europe and the European view of Britain came
to identical conclusions, indeed were couched almost in the same
language. What then is the problem between Britain and the rest of
the European Union?

It is this: while a third of Britons follow this unassailable logic,
another third refuse to be so beguiled and for reasons of history
the refuseniks carry the undecideds with them.

I fear it was ever thus; may always be thus. Britain, like Russia,
remains in spirit detached and enigmatic, suspicious of dancing to
any Continental tune.

Wordsworth – the English poet – might write about the French Revolution
‘Bliss was it in that very dawn to be alive.’ But the popular reality
– as Talleyrand found on his first diplomatic visit to London –
was that the Revolution was equated with contagion.

People turned their backs and went away muttering.

They are still muttering. It is that hallucination, that fear of
contagion, that is at the root of the problem that Britain has with
Europe today. It cuts through the intellectual case for closeness like
a hot knife through butter. It prompted the British Foreign Secretary
this week to dismiss the European constitution – and presumably the
ideas that lie behind it – as a ‘grandiose failed project.’

It is interesting to speculate how Talleyrand might have approached
the British problem – or the Russian problem for that matter. Maybe
he would advise that we should start by treating those nations as we
find them, as history has left them, and not as we might fondly want
them to be or fondly imagine they may become.

This has consequences for policy. Talleyrand had read his Voltaire
even if his editions were not perhaps mine.

The author is editor of EuropaWorld

–Boundary_(ID_hxU/9obqa+mhXnGCN0KzeA )–
From: Baghdasarian

Spirit & Impact

Screen Weekly, India
Oct 20 2006

Spirit & Impact

Rwita Dutta
Posted online: Friday, October 20, 2006 at 0000 hours IST

Indian Documentaries were much-talked about at the recently held
International 1001 Documentary Film Festival in Turkey…

Istanbul is history reincarnated. With the Asian part on one side
and Europe on the other, the city represents universality. Especially
the nine days of The "International 1001 Documentary Film Festival"
(September 29 to October 5, 2006) has accentuated the universality of
the seventh art form called ‘cinema’. The Association of Documentary
Filmmakers’ of Turkey may not have a mega budget to provide its
guests with sumptuous cocktail parties every night, but shows utmost
dedication in terms of choosing the right kind of documentaries coming
from all over the world. The festival provided a warm atmosphere for
the documentary filmmakers and spectators from all over the globe to
meet and get to know each other through cinema.

Nurdan Arca, the Director of this otherwise humble looking, low profile
festival declared the mission of the Association Of Documentary Film
Makers’ of Turkey who hosted this festival. They hold the eternal
belief that it is possible to live in a world without wars. Quite
formidable and indeed pertinent!

The festival has so far hosted more than 100 documentary makers with
754 films from 44 countries since 1977. They have till date 50,000
audience and more. This year, itself, they have a wide spectrum of
124 films from 29 countries. The documentaries exhibit varieties of
subjects. From human portraits to encounters in daily life as well as
social issues are hindered upon. This 9th edition of Documentary Film
Festival had twelve sections screened in four most significant venues
in the city: the Italian Cultural Center, the French Cultural Center,
Kamal Ataturk Cultural Center and Nazim Hikmet Cultural Center.

The focus country was Finland. It beautifully projects films, which
tell us the stories of a country perceived to be cold and distant.

Among the seven films travelling from the northern tip of the globe,
Arto Halonen was the famous one. On the closing day, the audience
was bemused by the retrospective of Arto’s six films. From Tankman
of Cuba, he has come a long way in the amazing Pavlov’s Dogs – his
latest on Russia.

Created in cooperation with the Polish TV, the four documentary films
from Poland looked at history by using footages from archives. There
were also few selected Armenian films from their one and only
International Film Festival "Golden Apricot".

Jan Vrijman Foundation is an offshoot of the founder of the biggest
documentary film festival, IDFA in Holland, Amsterdam. This foundation
is a boon for the talented, upcoming, independent filmmakers from
across the continents as it funds and supports various projects every
year. The ninth 1001 Documentary Film Festival presents a collection
of films supported by the foundation.

The Kultur and Culture is the joint venture of the documentary makers
of USA and Turkey. One of their latest productions Time Piece is an
ensemble of collective documentaries based on different time slots
in a single day. This film had its world premiere in this festival.

Celebrated documentary makers from USA such as Albert Maysels and
Sam Pollard ere also present with their works.

In the segment named "Cultures-Colors", eight documentaries were
screened. All of these tell us the stories of colors, cultures
and languages that are dying. For instance, Elizabeta Koneska, an
ethnologist from Macedonia traced back the existence of a Turkish
ethnic, nomadic group in Macedonia whereas a film from China highlights
the triumphs and traumas of acrobatic industry there.

Everybody Has A Story made a thoughtful insight into the everyday
lives of people, their stories and the hidden heroes among them.

Stories of forced migration and immigrants who struggle to establish
roots in their new countries seem to bear a universal theme. In
Far from Home, they share their stories of rootlessness. There were
elaborate Q/A sessions after most of the films and the audience enjoyed
the opportunity to meet with the filmmakers. Several panels were
organized amongst which were "Reproduction of violence in the media
and in documentary films", "Growing influences of documentaries". There
was also a master class of editing named "Editing Films: Editing Life".

The package of Bengal was extraordinary. Tales from both East and
West Bengal were truly represented in documentaries coming from
Bangladesh as well as Kolkata. Lots of questions were asked about
Indian documentaries, which were probably been satisfactorily answered
by the Indian Film Critics present there.

Documentaries are questioning life and presenting the ethereal. They
broaden our horizons open up new windows for us to discover what
lies behind the visible. The festival in the ‘City of two Continents’
was successful in bringing out the crux of the power of documentaries!
From: Baghdasarian

US bureaucrat calls pressurizing Armenia

US bureaucrat calls pressurizing Armenia

Regnum, Russia
Oct 19 2006

US Permanent Representative to the OSCE Julie Finley deems
very important inviting OSCE observers to monitor the process of
parliamentary elections 2007 in Armenia. The US functionary expressed
her urge to journalists Oct 19 in Yerevan following an OSCE conference
on trafficking.

Finley said at an informal meeting that pressure should be exerted
upon Armenian government so that it invited the OSCE observers,
for they could not perform monitoring without an invitation. She
says that talking with Armenian officials, she has heard that the
Armenian side intents to hold democratic elections in 2007, and she
so far has no reason not to believe them.

The US Ambassador to OSCE says she regrets that the President of
Armenia, for the reason that his schedule had been too tight, had
not admitted her. She says she wanted to discuss with the president
the future of Armenia.

According to REGNUM information, the US representative to the OSCE did
not appeal in advance to schedule the meeting with the President of
Armenia. Besides, according to the official protocol, an ambassador
of a foreign state to an organization does not belong to the circle
of officials who can be admitted by a head of state.
From: Baghdasarian

Does Armenia’s Liberal Progressive Party assume NK can be returned t

Does Armenia’s Liberal Progressive Party assume Karabakh can be returned to Azerbaijan?

Regnum, Russia
Oct 19 2006

"In 2006, there is a chance of moving forward in the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict settlement," leader of Armenia’s Liberal Progressive Party
Hovhannes Hovhannissyan has announced at a news conference on October
19. As a REGNUM correspondent reports, according to the party leader,
Yerevan and Baku have almost agreed on all principal questions, and
only the issue of Kelbajar is not settled yet. "According to the data
I have, the Armenian and Azerbaijani side have already agreed on this
issue too, and it will be fully settled at the upcoming meeting of
Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers," Hovhannes Hovhannissyan
noted adding that both the USA and French President Jacques Chirac
are interested in solving the issue.

The party leader noted also that several months ago the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict was considered to be a part of the Iranian dossier,
and up to now the settlement is seen as a separate process. At the
same time, Hovhannes Hovhannissyan mentioned that in the coming years
terms of Armenian and Nagorno Karabakh presidents will expire, and
they will be trying to maintain the status quo until their terms are
over. "The soonest settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict is in
Armenia’s interests," the politician believes.

Speaking on the address of the Abkhaz parliament to the Russian
president and parliament, the Armenian party leader labeled it as
"absurd." According to him, "Russia will never recognize Abkhazia’s
independence, because otherwise world community will recognize
independence of Chechnya." "Abkhazia lost its chance to become a
sovereign state, and such decision was possibly made under dictation of
Russia aimed at further deterioration of the Georgian-Abkhaz relations,
as well as establishment of a reason for the Abkhaz side to force out
Georgian Armed Forces from Kodori Gorge," the Liberal Progressive Party
leader notes adding that international community will never allow that
"a part of one sovereign state joins another sovereign state."

Commenting to a REGNUM correspondent on the statement of the
Armenian politician, expert on South Caucasus Viktor Yakubyan noted:
"It is difficult to say, for what reasons Hovhannissyan deprives
the Abkhaz people of the right for sovereignty. As far as I know,
the Armenian diplomacy is stubbornly trying to prove that the right
of a nation for self-determination (especially, won in a war) is no
less important than the principle of territorial integrity of this
or that sovereign state. Why, following the logic of the politician,
is Abkhazia’s joining Russia (although Abkhazia did not ask for it,
they claim for independence and associate relations with Russia)
impossible, and Nagorno Karabakh’s joining Armenia possible? Well,
maybe Mr. Hovhannissyan meant a different outcome speaking on prospects
of Karabakh settlement? Say, Karabakh people yield to the will of
Azerbaijan? In this case, logic ca the Liberal Progressive Party
leader is clear. Otherwise, it is nothing but application of double
standards, in which it is difficult to suspect him, although he is
a staunch supporter of Atlantism."
From: Baghdasarian

NKR: Teacher training college of Shushi is 85

TEACHER TRAINING COLLEGE OF SHUSHI IS 85
Svetlana Khachatrian 20-10-2006

Azat Artsakh, Reublic of Nagorno Karabakh
Oct 20 2006

The teacher training college of Shushi is 85, which is a notable event
in the life of Artsakh. The college is a long-lived and traditional
institution, which had a special role in the life of Artsakh, for
at one time all the teachers of Artsakh were trained there. The
college was set up in a period of difficult political and economic
situation in Artsakh. In 1920 a group of Armenians in Tbilisi made
a statement (which was published in the Taraz Magazine) calling to
establish a school in Shushi which would carry on the traditions of
great Armenian universities of Gladzor and Tatev, Lazarian School
in Moscow, Nersissian School, the Real School of Shushi. In response
to this call a group of alumni of the Real School working in Tbilisi
set up the college, which has had 13 thousand alumni over these years.
From: Baghdasarian