Armenia And France To Present Joint Project – Tigranyan’s "Anoush" O

ARMENIA AND FRANCE TO PRESENT JOINT PROJECT – TIGRANYAN’S “ANOUSH” OPERA

ARMINFO
Tuesday, March 26, 13:35

Armen Tigranyan’s “Anoush” opera’s opening night will take place on
26 April in Yerevan. The opera performance is a joint Armenian-French
project implemented with the assistance of Culture Ministries of
both states.

Serzh Avetikyan made the staging and adapted the libretto, and young
composer Anahit Simonyan – the orchestration.

Serzh Avetikyan said at today’s press-conference that “Anoush”
will be presented to audience in a new way. The number of musicians
and performers in the opera will be reduced, he said and added that
there will be only 5 soloists, 4 dancers, 12 members of the known
“Hover” choir and 15 musicians on the stage. Armenian national musical
instruments will be used in the opera for the first time, he said.

He said that the staging of “Anoush” opera have not been changed since
1935, but thanks to the new staging, They managed to fully disclose
the depth of the opera. The opera will be performed in Yerevan
on 26-27 April and 3-4 May in the National Academic Theatre after
Sundukyan. Then on 22,23,25 and 26 May the opera will be performed
in France.

VivaCell-MTS is general sponsor of the project.

From: Baghdasarian

Wrestling: Armenia touches gold, Russia leads medal table at

Xinhua General News Service, China
March 23, 2013 Saturday 9:25 PM EST

Armenia touches gold, Russia leads medal table at wrestling Europeans

TBILISI March 23

Armenia, Belarus, Bulgaria and Turkey on Saturday each won a gold
medal from the Greco-Roman competition at the 2013 European Wrestling
Championships.

Artur Aleksanyan of Armenia won the 96-kilogram Greco-Roman style gold
medal by beating Vladislav Emilov Metodiev of Bulgaria.

Elbek Tazhyiev of Belarus defeated Elchin Aliyev from Azerbailan to
win the 55-kilogram Greco-Roman style finals.

Ivo Serafimov Angelov from Bulgaria put a brake to the Russians on
their gold winning track in Tbilisi by defeating Ivan Kuylakov in the
60-kilogram Greco-Roman style gold medal bout.

In the 120-kilogram Greco-Roman style finals, Turkey’s Riza Kayaalp
got the better of Ukraine’s Yevhenii Orlov for the gold medal.

Though the Russians got just one silver and one bronze on Saturday,
they still lead the overall medal tally with four gold, two silver and
six bronze.

Ukraine ranks second with two gold, two silver and seven bronze,
followed by Turkey, Belarus, Armenia and hosts Georgia each with two
gold medals.

Turkey surged to overall third position with one gold and two bronze
from Saturday

Some 500 men and women wrestlers from 47 European countries and
regions are competing in the ongoing European Championships which have
21 gold medals at stake. Competition concludes on Sunday.

From: Baghdasarian

Boxing: Stieglitz wins WBO super middle belt from Abraham

Associated Press Worldstream
March 23, 2013 Saturday 11:36 PM GMT

Stieglitz wins WBO super middle belt from Abraham

MAGDEBURG Germany

Robert Stieglitz reclaimed his WBO super middleweight title from
fellow German Arthur Abraham on a technical knockout after three
rounds on Saturday.

“It was a fairly short process,” Stieglitz said. “I thought he’d last
longer. I worked hard on my right and it paid off.”

Roared on by the crowd in his adopted hometown of Magdeburg, the
Russian-born Stieglitz took the fight to the defending champion,
opening a cut above Abraham’s left eye in the second round and leaving
it swollen shut by the end of the third.

Referee Mike Ortega stepped in to end the bout before the fourth after
consulting with the ring doctor.

Stieglitz improved to 44-3 with 25 knockouts after claiming back the
belt he lost to Abraham by unanimous decision in Berlin in August.

“My eye is closed. I can’t see anything with my eye. I wanted to let
him punch a bit and then start punching myself from the fourth, fifth
rounds,” said Abraham, who was born in Armenia but fights out of
Berlin.

“If he won, he won. Now the third fight is the decisive fight,” added
Abraham, who dropped to 36-4 (28 KOs).

Stieglitz also indicated the likelihood of another bout between the two.

“I’m always happy to fight Arthur Abraham,” Stieglitz said. “I hope
the managers reach agreement. I’m ready.”

From: Baghdasarian

Opp candidate may recognise Sargsyan’s victory on some conditions

ITAR-TASS, Russia
March 23, 2013 Saturday 06:30 PM GMT+4

Opposition candidate may recognise Sargsyan’s victory on some conditions

YEREVAN March 23

– Former presidential candidate and opposition politician Raffi
Ovanesyan is ready to recognise President Serzh Sargsyan’s victory in
the election but on certain conditions.

He said so in a letter to the president. Ovanesyan, who has been on a
hunger strike since March 10, made the announcement at a rally on
Friday evening, March 22.

A former citizen of the United States, Ovanesyan, who was Armenian
interior minister in 1991-1992, demands that the National Assembly be
dissolved this year and new parliamentary elections be called. Before
that, he believes it would be necessary to revise the Electoral Code
so that MPs were elected not by a mixed system as now but only by the
proportional one.

During the transitional period, Ovanesyan, who is the leader of the
Heritage party, says his associates should get key positions in the
government, including the posts of foreign minister, education and
science minister, prosecutor general, director of the National
Security Service, chairman of the Committee on State Revenues, head of
the Audit Chamber, heads of the Council of Justice and of the
Antitrust Commission.

He also called for dismissing the governors of at least five of ten
regions and replacing them his own people. Ovanesyan demands that
mayors of cities and rural chairmen who allowed violations during the
presidential election be also dismissed. He insists that Armenian
citizens living abroad should be allowed to vote, which they can’t do
now.

Presidential spokesperson Armen Arzumanyan said, “All letters
addressed to the head of state are duly reviewed and answered.”

Ovanesyan, 54, received 36.74 percent of votes in the presidential
election on February 18 and came in second, but says he won the
election, not Sargsyan who, in his opinion, should “give up power.”

Having considered the opposition’s lawsuits, the Constitutional Court
on Thursday, March 21, upheld the Central Election Commission’s
decision that gave the victory to Serzh Sargsyan.

From: Baghdasarian

25-year-old girl’s suicide attempt prevented

25-year-old girl’s suicide attempt prevented

2013-03-24 20:21:00

Today, on March 24, at 12:43 the Armenian Ministry of Emergency
Situations received a signal that in the 7th district of
administrative district of Nork a citizen wants to commit suicide,
throwing himself from fifth floors of 32 house, and rescuers’ help is
needed.

A rapid response team of the Center for Crisis Management of Emergency
Situations of Armenia and one live account reached the scene.

Prior to the arrival of rescuers law enforcement officials managed to
prevent a suicide attempt of the resident of N10 apartment of the same
house, Lusine Kankanyan, born in 1987.

From: Baghdasarian

http://lurer.com/?p=87272&l=en

L’appel d’Öcalan marque un tournant pour les Kurdes au Proche-Orient

TURQUIE
L’appel d’Öcalan marque un tournant pour les Kurdes au Proche-Orient

L’appel du chef kurde Abdullah Öcalan à abandonner la violence
pourrait marquer un tournant dans l’histoire tourmentée des Kurdes,
dont certains ont pris les armes pour faire valoir leur revendication
indépendantiste.

Dans un message lu jeudi par un député du Parti pour la paix et la
démocratie (BDP), Öcalan, emprisonné, invite les militants armés du
Parti des travailleurs du Kurdistan (PKK) à déposer les armes et à
quitter la Turquie.

Pour la première fois en trois décennies d’un conflit qui a coûté la
vie à 45.000 personnes, un espoir durable de paix semble s’esquisser.

Mais la question reste très épineuse de par la répartition
géographique du peuple kurde, établi en Iran, en Irak, en Syrie et en
Turquie.

L’appel d’Öcalan `va totalement changer la donne pour tous les
mouvements kurdes de la région`, estime Jane Kinninmont, chercheuse au
centre de réflexion Chatham House basé à Londres.

Mais, note-t-elle, `il y a un conflit entre l’idéal qu’incarnent les
rêves (d’un Etat kurde) et le réalisme propre aux dirigeants du
Proche-Orient, à la tête d’Etats-nation où cohabitent plusieurs
groupes de population et plusieurs religions, et qui vivent dans la
peur constante d’une implosion de leur pays`.

D’origine indo-européenne, les Kurdes, entre 25 et 35 millions de
personnes, sont majoritairement sunnites. Ni arabes, ni turcs, ni
perses, les Kurdes portent une histoire semée de harcèlement, de
discrimination et parfois de persécution.

Jusqu’en 2002, la Turquie prohibait l’utilisation de la langue kurde à
l’intérieur de ses frontières. Et le mot `kurde` ne pouvait pas être
prononcé en public, sous peine de poursuites.

Le président irakien déchu Saddam Hussein s’est, lui, lancé, dans une
véritable campagne d’éradication des Kurdes, dont l’épisode le plus
tragique est l’attaque au gaz de la ville de Halabja en 1988.

Alors que la guerre contre l’Iran tirait à sa fin, les peshmergas, les
combattants kurdes, s’emparent de Halabja dans les montagnes du
Kurdistan. Le 16 mars, des avions de combat irakiens commencent à
survoler la zone et, pendant cinq heures, y lchent un mélange de gaz
moutarde et des neurotoxiques Tabun, Sarin et VX, tuant 5.000
personnes, la pire attaque au gaz jamais perpétrée contre une
population civile.

`J’ai grandi en Irak (…) mais tout au long de ma jeunesse, ma haine
contre ce pays n’a cessé de se renforcer`, raconte à l’AFP Chwan
Zulal, un analyste politique spécialisé dans le Kurdistan, qui vit
désormais à Londres.

Une anecdote illustre très bien, selon lui, les raisons de sa
rancoeur. Lorsqu’il était plus jeune, à Souleimaniyeh, il se rappelle
avoir payé pour récupérer la dépouille de son oncle qui avait été
exécuté.

`Comment peut-on ressentir de l’empathie envers un Etat qui vous fait
subir ce genre de choses ? Ce sont des cicatrices indélébiles`,
assène-t-il.

Depuis le massacre de Halabja, les Kurdes d’Irak sont parvenus à
renforcer leur autonomie et à atteindre une certaine indépendance
économique dans le sillage de l’invasion américaine de l’Irak en 2003.

En Syrie, le conflit qui fait rage depuis plus de deux ans a fait
naître l’espoir d’un Kurdistan syrien autonome, calqué sur le
Kurdistan irakien et débarrassé de la violence qui ronge le reste du
pays.

La situation est bien différente en Iran, où la province du Kurdistan
(nord-ouest) est depuis quelques années le thétre d’affrontements
entre forces de sécurité iraniennes et le PJAK (Parti pour une vie
libre au Kurdistan), principal mouvement kurde de lutte contre le
régime de Téhéran, proche du PKK.

`Il est encore trop tôt pour juger, mais des progrès et des pas dans
la bonne direction ont été accomplis`, se félicite Falah Moustapha,
responsable des relations extérieures au sein du gouvernement de la
région autonome du Kurdistan irakien. `Je suis optimiste`.

dimanche 24 mars 2013,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

From: Baghdasarian

Interview: Raffi Hovannisian and the Barevolution

ianyan magazine
March 22 2013

Interview: Raffi Hovannisian and the Barevolution

Posted by Christian Garbis

It is just after 9 am on day six of Raffi Hovannisian’s hunger strike
on symbolic Liberty Square, in protest of the elections the opposition
believes were stolen from the Armenian people, who he insists are
indeed the victors. Only a few of the thousands of visitors he will
receive throughout the day linger nearby, in support of his protest
and the movement known as the Barevolution, sponsored by his Heritage
Party, the ARF-Dashnaktsutyun and various dynamic political figures
including the presidential candidate Andreas Ghukasian and Nikol
Pashinian, who is affiliated with the Armenian National Congress. The
metal park bench on which he sits is draped with a crocheted red, blue
and orange quilt sporting the same colors of the Armenian flag. At
arms length a crackly radio plays Armenian popular and folk music
while he thumbs through a newspaper and is briefed by one of his sons
sitting beside him.

Hovannisian is clothed in his now trademark revolutionary uniform-a
navy blue wool turtleneck sweater and matching scarf with narrow
orange and red stripes running its length. His bronzy face is tanned
from prolonged exposure to the sun as there is virtually no shade in
the spot where he sits most of the day, not that he is complaining.
For him, it’s all about being there for the people, and his
nourishment is the unwavering support they give him around the clock.
The authorities led by incumbent Serzh Sargsyan continue their refusal
to compromise with Hovannisian-and thus the people-to hold a second
round of presidential elections and snap parliamentary elections after
switching to a fully proportional system of representation, and to
bring election violators, namely public servants at various levels,
before the law.

I sat down with him to probe the mind of a man that is emphatically
dedicated in the pursuit of Armenian citizens’ rights to a lawful,
free democratic society.

Q. The constitutional court has rejected the opposition’s appeals, and
now you plan to hold public forums at Liberty Square for five days
straight starting on March 17 where views can be exchanged about
Armenia’s future. But that still leaves us with your `over my dead
body’ quote in reference to Sargsyan taking the oath for a second term
on April 9. You have also said that you were ready to die for this
movement. This suggests a forewarning that there could potentially be
an outbreak of violence. Do you think it will come to that?

A. No, it won’t. We will continue very steadily and constitutionally
toward the end of a de jure presidency, regardless of the
constitutional court’s decision.
This movement, the Barevolution, belongs to the Armenian people, which
is so intangible and unpredictable for so many people who two months
ago did not at all believe in themselves or each other, that they
could emerge from their fatalism and hopelessness and take their
destiny and constitution into their own hands. I am very proud of this
movement and proud to be a part of it. I’m ready not only to die, but
to live for it. I plan to serve the people for a long time but as I’ve
said, this is not a fast or a hunger strike, this is the last stage in
returning Armenia to the people and taking the victory of February 18
to a final summit on April 9, when together we will realize the
inauguration of a new Armenia.

Q. Nevertheless, there is a segment of society that believes the only
way to get through to certain members of parliament and government
with reputations for being heavy handed is through violent means.

A. I rule that out. Whereas five years ago the call `until the end’
meant blood or revolution, today based on the people’s candidacy that
same slogan means a peaceful, constitutional quest for a de jure
presidency. There shall not be blood, and I will not allow it. My
initiative is not an ultimatum to anyone. It is a self-cleansing
process for myself, and the entry to the final decisive stage in the
struggle toward registering the victory of the Armenian people
delivered on February 18.

Q. Wilfried Martens, the President of the European People’s Party-of
which both the Heritage Party and Republican Party of Armenia are
member organizations-warmly congratulated Sargsyan and praised the
conduct of the elections while shrugging off claims of gross
violations, insisting that he won fair and square. Similar glowing
statements were made by leaders of the Council of Europe and the
Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly (PACE), the Armenian
delegation to which includes Heritage Party MPs. In your opinion, why
are relations between those entities and the authorities so cordial to
the extent that they would not take a more objective, diplomatic
stance on the election outcome?

A. What concerns me more is that we-the Armenian people who have
brought democracy, the rule of law and faith in the homeland-are the
masters of our own destiny. Although they [world leaders who have
congratulated Sargsyan] stand against the people of Armenia and the
democratic movement for their own geopolitical concerns and interests
and support the candidacy of a gentleman whose official results as
registered by the Central Election Commission were actually delivered
by fraud, falsification, intimidation, multiple voting, taking
soldiers to the polls, threatening teachers, using hospitals, schools,
town halls and village cultural centers to post campaign materials of
the incumbent president, there clearly is no basis to recognize the
illegitimate official winner of the election. But as someone born in
the U.S. who has been educated on the values of democracy, civil
rights and constitutional law, I can say that these statements from
world leaders fly in the face of their own principles. Armenia is one
of the earliest sources of Western civilization. Let no one sermonize
the Armenian people on democracy because they have delivered on their
own constitution.

Q. Some believe that for this movement to have a broader support the
Armenian National Congress has to come on board. What is impeding that
from happening?

A. The Heritage Party and I have always been in favor of consolidation
in all the elections in which we have participated. Right now I am
open to discussing matters with anyone. Levon Ter-Petrosyan has
acknowledged that I indeed won the election, but the Congress hasn’t
sought to deepen that relationship.

But what’s important is that on February 18 the political model of
Armenia changed. Citizens faced with a boycott of the elections by
many political and civic groups said `no.’ I believed in them, they
believed in me, and together we brought victory. At this point it
would be a sign of strength for political parties or civic movements,
whether they participated in the elections or not, to announce that
they are part of this movement. As I’ve said from the podium, the
Heritage flag has been lowered because the people recognize that after
a long period of labor we are about to deliver the new Armenia, in
which political parties have to play a secondary role. They must know
that no political party can be the pivot for Armenia’s future.
Citizens and political parties have to reassess their roles to serve
society. So I don’t think it is key that any two organizations come
together. People should understand the gravity of the moment and come
together. The people have spoken and we have to respect that choice.

Q. While you continue to protest the presidential election outcome
discussions were held about forming a unified opposition bloc for the
Yerevan municipal elections. Yet the same violations that the
opposition cited will undoubtedly repeat. Why have the municipal
elections become so important while the presidential vote is still
being contested?

A. I wouldn’t say they’re so important, but I am in favor of
participatory democracy. You can’t curse the darkness, you have to
light a candle, and the experience of the last two months demonstrated
very well that by sitting on the sidelines you cannot bring about
change. You have to participate and mobilize. I think the Yerevan
elections are an opportunity not to replace this movement but be an
offshoot of it. We will put together a broad-based list, which I
anticipate will include members from civil organizations and other
political parties, and the mayor and the majority of the city council
will be appointed from that list. We’re going to every city and
village that has an election, and we’re going to return public service
to the people.

Q. What message can you give now to both your staunch critics-those
who believe you have no plan, that your current action is a sign of
desperation and the movement will not get anywhere-and your loyal
supporters based abroad who are genuinely concerned about the
direction in which the movement is headed?

A. I believe in free speech and I respect their opinions. I sometimes
learn a lot from criticism when it’s founded and honest, but when it’s
based on partisanship and hatred, that is not acceptable to me.
Everything is going according to plan, and the plan belongs to the
Armenian people. What differentiates today from five years ago and
beyond is that this movement is no longer an individual-based quest
for liberty and the presidency. This movement takes on the legacy of
the past, the struggle of the Armenian people over the last 21 years
to have a state that is democratic, rightful and sovereign in pursuit
of its national interests. While I am the elected guide for the
movement, it is not a one-man show and it’s greater than Liberty
Square. If you were to travel with me to the villages and cities of
Armenia, to the concerts, theaters, weddings and university squares on
bus rides all around the country, you would see that there is a great
sense of empowerment.

Before he died the poet Yeghishe Charents wrote in his acrostic, `Oh
Armenian people, your salvation is in your collective strength,’ and
on election day the people put his message into action by saying `yes’
to Armenia’s future. That future is based on a brand new plan that is
not 100 pages long, but in terms of its implementation let it be clear
that I know exactly where I am going. I also know that the Armenian
people will guide me to that final summit.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.ianyanmag.com/2013/03/22/interview-raffi-hovannisian-and-the-barevolution/

Yeghiazaryan wins European wrestling championship bronze

Yeghiazaryan wins European wrestling championship bronze

March 23, 2013 – 19:53 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Armenian Greco-Roman wrester Vachik Yeghiazaryan
(120 kg) won bronze at Tbilisi-hosted European championships.
Yeghiazarya faced off against Bulgaria’s Lyubomir Dimotrov in the
struggle for bronze medal. However, the latter refused to continue the
fight due to the injury he earlier received. As a result, the Armenian
athlete for the first time in his career won European championships
bronze.
Meanwhile, Artur Aleksanyan (96 kg) beat Vladislav Metodiev to win
European wrestling championships.

From: Baghdasarian

Secretary of Security Council: Armenia does not hurry to close ANPP

Secretary of Security Council: Armenia does not hurry to close down
Metsamor nuclear power plant

ARMINFO
Saturday, March 23, 15:26

Armenia does not hurry to close down the Metsamor NPP, Secretary of
the National Security Council of Armenia Artur Baghdasaryan told
media, Saturday. He said that Yerevan is negotiating with the EU and
Russia in the issue of a new power unit’s construction and sooner
closing down of the plant is not in question so far, though the EU
keeps on insisting on it.

“Armenia cannot close down the Metsamor NPP until the issue of
alternative energy sources of Armenia is settled. The safety of the
NPP is being constantly upgraded and it is at a satisfactory level by
assessments of the IAEA. When the new power unit is ready, we will
study conservation of the operating power unit. In the European Union
they understand this position of Armenia,” Baghdasaryan said.

Recently, Head of EU European Union Delegation to Armenia, Ambassador
Traian Hristea has said that the European Union goes on insisting on
closing of Armenian Nuclear Power Plant (ANPP). He said that Medzamor
nuclear power plant still remains in the focus of attention of the EU
policy and at present the EU shows financial assistance for ensuring
safe exploiting of the plant.

Earlier, Ashot Martirosyan, Head of the State Committee for Regulation
of the Nuclear Security of Armenia, told ArmInfo that the results of a
regular stress-test will be ready in Feb-Mar 2013 and will be
submitted to the EU till May.

Armenian NPP is located in Metsamor, some 30 kilometers south of
Yerevan. It was commissioned in 1980, but was closed following a
devastating earthquake in 1988. One of its two VVER 440 reactors was
reactivated in 1995 due to acute power crisis in Armenia.

Today only the second reactor with capacity of 407.5megawatt is in
operation. It provides from 40% to 50% of the overall energy
production in Armenia. According to experts, the NPP can operate till
2016. Armenian government approved extension of second power unit
operations on April 9, 2012.

Armenian Minister for Energy and Natural Resources Armen Movsisyan
noted that the license for the energy block expires on September 1,
2016, but it has been prolonged by 4 years. The new 1000MW power unit
will be built in the area of the Armenian NPP. By data of the
Ministry, the project will cost approximately 5 billion dollars. To
raise foreign capital for the project, the Parliament of Armenia
cancel the state monopoly on the nuclear power units in 2006.

From: Baghdasarian

Chinese President considered relation with Russia to be guarantee of

Chinese President considered relation with Russia to be guarantee of
strategic balance

14:34, 23 March, 2013

YEREVAN, MARCH 23, ARMENPRESS: Firm relations between Russia and China
are an important and reliable guarantee for the international balance
and peace, Chinese President Xi Jinping said when speaking at the
Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO) on Saturday.

As reports Armenpress, referring to Interfax, he said it was great
pleasure for him to visit MGIMO. The university with its high
scientific achievements and noted teachers is known all over the
world. Many prominent people came out from the university, he added.

“Russia is a good neighbor of China,” he said. The president noted
Russia was the first country he visited on his international trip
after he took office as president.

Xi said he had productive talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin
on Friday and attended the “Year of Chinese Tourism in Russia” opening
ceremony. Their meetings lasted seven hours, he noted.

Spring comes in March, and nature is renewed. It is time for sowing.
People say spring is crucial time of the year, he noted. “Let us work
to consolidate our bilateral relations for the sake of peace in the
entire world, to gather a rich harvest in the autumn,” the president
said.

From: Baghdasarian