Armenia Accused Of ‘Police Abuses’

ARMENIA ACCUSED OF ‘POLICE ABUSES’

Aljazeera.net
t/news/europe/2009/02/2009225133622142762.html
Feb 25 2009
Qatar

Two police officers and eight civilians were killed in the clashes
[AFP]

A human rights group has called on Armenia to investigate the use
of "excessive force" by police during clashes with anti-government
protesters a year ago that left 10 people dead.

New York-based Human Rights Watch said it had also documented cases of
police abuse of those detained during the clashes, including beatings,
threats and refusals to provide legal representation.

The group urged Armenian authorities to prosecute both individual
police officers and those who allegedly ordered the use of excessive
force.

In a statement, the group said: "While the Armenian authorities have
investigated, prosecuted and convicted dozens of opposition members,
sometimes in flawed and politically motivated trials … they have
not prosecuted a single representative of the law enforcement agencies
for excessive use of force."

Gunshot wounds

Thousands of supporters of Levon Ter-Petrosian, Armenia’s former
president, rallied for 11 days to denounce the victory of Serzh
Sarkisian in last February’s presidential election, before street
battles broke out with riot police.

Ter-Petrosian finished second in the vote and authorities accused
the opposition of trying to overthrow the government.

Two police officers and eight civilians were killed in the clashes
and dozens more were injured, many from gunshot wounds.

Western election monitors said the vote was broadly in line with the
country’s international commitments, but that further improvements
were necessary.

More than 50 people received jail sentences over the unrest.

A number have since been pardoned by Sarkisian, going some way to
placating European human rights bodies.

Impartial investigation

Human Rights Watch said Armenia’s public prosecutor should step
up efforts to conduct an independent, impartial investigation into
the events.

It urged the country to address shortcomings in the electoral process
and pervasive public distrust that have left Armenia "stuck in a
cycle of uneven contests, fraud, and disputes that more often than
not spill onto the streets".

"To the extent that it exists, real political competition is volatile
with a permanent risk of violence," the report said.

Armenia has seen repeated political violence and post-election protests
since gaining independence with the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991.

http://english.aljazeera.ne

Zharangutiun Faction Members’ Renouncing Their Mandates Not Expedien

ZHARANGUTIUN FACTION MEMBERS’ RENOUNCING THEIR MANDATES NOT EXPEDIENT AT CURRENT POLITICAL STAGE

Noyan Tapan

F eb 23, 2009

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 23, NOYAN TAPAN. To consider Zharangutiun (Heritage)
faction members’ renouncing their mandates not expedient at the
current political stage and to call faction deputies for carrying
out more diligent activity." Zharangutiun party’s Board made such a
decision at the February 21 sitting discussing the issue of expediency
of Zharangutiun parliamentary faction’s further participation in the
RA National Assembly’s work.

Meanwhile the Board reserved for itself the right to return to that
issue if "renouncing mandates is the last opportunity to achieve
establishment of legality and implementation of real reforms in the
Republic of Armenia."

As NT was informed by the Zharangutiun party Press Service, by party
Board’s another decision of the same day, the decision on expediency
of Zharangutiun’s participation in the May 31 election of councillor
members in Yerevan, its format and preelection roll will be made
as a result of negotiations with opposition forces, as well as wide
circles of public figures.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=1012398

Vaster than empires

Vaster than empires
By Peter Aspden

FT
February 7 2009 02:00

When Neil MacGregor, director of the British Museum, arrived in Iran
some weeks ago to finalise the loan of various priceless artefacts for
the museum’s forthcoming exhibition on that country’s fabled emperor
Shah Abbas I, he was confronted by a sight that he found "astonishing":
on the table of the office in which the contract signing took place, in
full view of the television cameras that had been summoned to record
the event, the two flags of Britain and Iran standing side by side.

MacGregor’s surprise was swiftly followed by a warm sense of
solidarity, which was to prove short-lived. As the officials made their
speeches, he kept hearing a word that he recognised: jang , the Farsi
word for "war". "Oh my God, I thought, they are going to ask me on
television what happens if our two countries go to war," he recounts a
few days later in his elegant office in a wing of the museum in central
London.

MacGregor’s mind raced and he would surely have been forgiven if his
deep-lying belief that the careful scrutiny of the history of objects
and the free exchange of ideas could knock politically recalcitrant
heads together had finally reached its hubristic day of reckoning.

But, as the translator finished, he could breathe a sigh of relief. He
was merely being asked to join his Iranian counterparts in expressing
concern to Unesco for the damage done to the Gaza Museum of Archaeology
in the preceding days. "I said, ‘Of course,’ " MacGregor recalls. The
Iranian delegation included a representative from the office of
president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and I ask if he said very much. "No,"
says MacGregor. "He just smiled rather delphically."

MacGregor has been putting benignexpressions on improbable faces since
taking over as director of the British Museum in 2002. He has used the
post to remind a world audience of the ideals and principles behind the
museum’s foundation, and of its role and importance in the modern world.

As expressed on a host of occasions with elegance and humour, his
argument can be reduced to a few simple tenets: that objects tell
stories; that many of those stories have been distorted over time; and
that a museum can act as a philosophical space to scrutinise competing
claims and arrive at a more rational understanding of current events.

On the night before our meeting, MacGregor gave a typically
wide-ranging lecture to commemorate the museum’s 250th birthday. The
museum, he said, was "the private collection of every citizen in the
world"; a space where we "could watch other cultures watching us".

Part of that mutual regard lies in exchanges with other countries.
Exchanges of ideas, certainly, but also of things. The civic power of
things, objects "that speak of inter-connectedness": these are
MacGregor’s favourite themes and he has gone about bringing those
philosophically subtle ideals to physical fruition with an exhibition
programme that has rejuvenated the British Museum in spectacular
fashion.

In the year 2007-2008, a record 6m visitors came through its doors,
including 35,000 on one day alone to celebrate Chinese new year. It
was, the 62-year-old MacGregor noted drily, the first time the museum
had to shut its main gates in Great Russell Street since the Chartist
riots of 1848.

He dislikes the phrase "cultural diplomacy" for the work that he has
been doing, fearing it risks compromising the museum’s independence
from government, which he holds to be absolute and vital. (What happens
when a cultural institution is not considered independent of the
government has been strikingly demonstrated by the recent rupture in
relations between the British Council and Tehran.) But it is as good a
description as any for the part he has played in forming relationships
with countries – Iraq, China, Iran – that have presented all manner of
political awkwardness to the British government.

The exhibition on Shah Abbas that opens this month is the third in a
series on great world empires (coming after the hugely popular show
featuring the terracotta army of Chinese emperor Qin Shihuangdi, and
one on Roman emperor Hadrian, and before an exhibition on the Aztec
ruler Moctezuma II. MacGregor’s overall concept for the series is to
study the "instruments of cohesion" that held those empires together
and ask what the consequences of their dominance have been in the long
term.

The fifth ruler of the Safavid dynasty, Shah Abbas, who came to the
throne in 1587, is a perfect subject for MacGregor’s imperial project.
A key figure in the development of modern Iran, a master of trade,
patronage and diplomacy who managed to foster good relations with
Europe, he was responsible for a golden period in the arts.

It was Abbas who established Isfahan as the new capital of Iran in
1598, commencing a building programme that made the city centre one of
the most beautiful architectural corners of the planet. "Isfahan is
half the world," runs an oft-quoted popular rhyme in Iran, and to sit
in Imam Square and observe the changing light at dusk on its blue-domed
mosques is to bear witness to the shah’s grandiloquent conception.

On one such golden afternoon, I visited the square with MacGregor and,
as we stood in the main reception room of Abbas’s Ali Qapu palace, a
glorious six-storey building decorated with intricate wooden carving
and frescos, he urged close examination of the paintings around the
room: one was in the style of the Italian Renaissance, another looked
Indian, yet another Chinese.

"All visitors feel they have been acknowledged in the decoration of the
space," MacGregor explains. It is art made metaphor for diplomacy, a
theme that cannot help but inspire the museum director who has
seemingly limitless belief in the power of things – not just artistic
things but all things – to bring people closer together.

A similar artistic eclecticism can be seen in Isfahan’s Armenian
cathedral, where Islamic tiling coexists with Flemish-style religious
paintings. Christian liturgical objects from the cathedral are among
the highlights of the museum’s exhibition. "They speak more clearly
than anything can of a tolerance that would have been unthinkable in
Europe," says MacGregor.

Tolerance, then, is the first lesson to be learnt from the reign of
Shah Abbas. Real-life empires are not Disney empires; Shah Abbas’s
forbearance towards other religions was no dreamy ideal but largely
born of economic expediency.

The second supremely important legacy for the modern world is the
shah’s conception of the relationship between church and state. The
most notable absence from the British Museum exhibition will be that of
any images of Abbas himself. "There are no great public images of him,
because of Islamic convention, quite unlike the case of Elizabeth I,
who is a key parallel," says MacGregor. "Everybody knew what Elizabeth
looked like." But Abbas had another way of projecting his power:
through the gifts he made to the country’s great shrines.

The burial site of Imam Reza in Mashhad, the most sacred place in the
country, attracts some 20m visitors a year, 3m arriving on Iranian new
year’s day (24 flights from Tehran alone). It was Abbas who established
the practice of making extravagant donations from his private wealth to
the shrine and thus, by extension, into the public domain.

It was a political masterstroke as well as an act of great devotion by
a ruler who once walked 600 miles in pilgrimage to Mashhad from
Isfahan. Not only did it raise Abbas’s profile among his public but it
established an alliance between state and religion that provided an
instant, coherent legal system, and put on show new textiles and
materials that fast became objects of desire among the elites of
western Europe.

"It was a way of demonstrating, ‘This is the economy, stupid,’ " says
MacGregor with gleeful anachronism. "It was rather like the Great
Exhibition [at Crystal Palace in 1851], a way of showing off all the
great things that were being manufactured."

This interplay between political, religious and economic power was the
crux of Abbas’s reign. "The pilgrimage and the gifts to Mashhad are a
way of saying, ‘We are our own political centre of gravity,’ " says
MacGregor. "And there are, of course, very interesting analogies with
Elizabeth and her relations with Rome. It is all about insisting that
you are your own country, you are your own realm, and you are different
from those around you.

"In a strange way," he says with a touch of scholarly mischief, "we are
the only other modern state to have such a close formal link between
the state structure and the state church.’"

Today there is a second Elizabeth on the throne and Iran has become a
much more forbidding place than it was as the lively trading partner of
17th-century Europe.

This is the sub-text that hangs heavy in the mounting of the British
Museum show. If MacGregor is right in thinking that the scrutiny of
historical artefacts can illuminate the present, how will a visit to
Shah Abbas: The Remaking of Iran take us beyond the dull platitudes
uttered by those stoking belligerence between the two countries?

One of MacGregor’s hopes is that the show will lead us to a better
knowledge of the complex relationship between church and state in Iran.
"Iran is not a theocracy," he says carefully. "The constitution of Iran
gives power that comes from the vote, not power that comes from God. It
is secular power working with religion.

"Just to make it easier for people to start thinking about that
complexity would be valuable." He skates over the potential oxymoron as
if he hasn’t noticed it. There are worse T-shirt slogans festooning
museum shops than "Making complexity easy".

He also believes we should look more closely at ourselves. "Many people
in Britain have forgotten but, between 1820 and 1950, Britain dominated
Iranian political life, and a great deal of what has happened in
Iranian politics since then has been because of that British
intervention. Iranians know it, at the simplest level, but most British
people have lost that memory. It is very asymmetrical."

I ask him how the museum’s previous collaboration with Iran’s museums
for a ground-breaking show on ancient Persia four years ago had been
perceived. "The Iranians are a very polite, courteous people. You have
to take account of that. But what they say is that they feel Iran has
been in general poorly represented in the western media and that they
felt [in the exhibition] that their civilisation had been treated
honourably, and presented to the public as a great civilisation, and
they were pleased with that."

He pauses and measures a cutting slice of understatement: "Most of what
is said about Iran at the moment is only partially true and rarely
respectful." I ask how co-operative the Iranian authorities have been
this time round, during what has been a fraught time for UK-Iranian
relations, and MacGregor says he has been "moved" by their generosity.

MacGregor says he had no idea when he took the job of museum director
that his role would evolve in the way that it has. He identifies the
Iraq war, and the attendant destruction and looting of treasures from
the National Museum in Baghdad, as a turning point.

"That made clear to me how valuable a collection of things is, in
trying to understand the Middle East. More and more of the politics of
the Middle East are couched in terms that are explicable only if you
understand its long history, and how different participants read that
long history.

"I hadn’t understood that before. That to have a chance of
understanding how they see the issue, you have to go through that long
history. And a lot of the evidence is right here."

Book: Call Me Aram Released

CALL ME ARAM RELEASED
Eamonn Maher

The Georgetown Independent and Free Press
icle/65344
Feb 20 2009
Canada

Marsha Forchuk Skrypuch, author of a series of books based on the
true story of a group of Armenian orphans called The Georgetown Boys,
held a book signing recently at the Freckled Lion bookstore for her
latest release, Call Me Aram. One of the first visitors to have his
book signed was local resident Philippe Mesly, a Grade 10 student
who played the lead role of Aram in a play that played to sold-out
performances in Georgetown. Call Me Aram tells the story of how the
orphans came to Canada in the 1920s and were raised at facilities in
Cedarvale Park, at one point revolting against their adult guardians
for having given them English names.

http://www.independentfreepress.com/news/art

BAKU: Turkey’s Embassy In Azerbaijan: "Azerbaijani And Turkish Offic

TURKEY’S EMBASSY IN AZERBAIJAN: "AZERBAIJANI AND TURKISH OFFICIALS ARE REGULARLY DISCUSSING THE TURKISH-ARMENIAN TALKS"

APA
Feb 19 2009
Azerbaijan

Baku-APA. "Everybody knows how important is the Azerbaijan’s
territorial integrity for Turkey and our policy is unchangeable.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Deputy Prime Minister Cemil
Cicek and Chairman of the Turkish-Azerbaijani friendship group
at the Turkey’s Parliament Mustafa Kabakci clearly underlined the
Turkey’s position on Nagorno Karabakh conflict", Turkey’s embassy to
Azerbaijan said, APA reports. One of the Turkish foreign policy’s basic
targets is to resolve all problems with the neighbor countries. "The
Turkish-Armenian talks for normalization of the relations are going
on within this framework. On the other hand, there is a dialogue
between Armenia and Azerbaijan over the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. We
can expect that progress achieved in one of these processes will have
positive impact on another one. Azerbaijani and Turkish officials are
regularly discussing the Turkish-Armenian talks. In terms of successful
results of both processes, it will be not correct to express opinion
based on the media reports".

Police Prevent Protest Action In Front Of CEC Building

POLICE PREVENT PROTEST ACTION IN FRONT OF CEC BUILDING

ArmInfo
2009-02-19 18:37:00

ArmInfo. The police have prevented a protest action in front of
the building of the Central Electoral Commission. The action was
planned by Special Regiment youth organization on the occasion of
the anniversary of the presidential election.

Among the other organizers of the action were the youth wing of the
Armenian National Congress, "Now" organization and the youth wing
of the Armenian National Movement party. The police prevented them
from approaching the building of the CEC. In fact, they dispersed
the protesters and even took away their posters.

When asked by ArmInfo’s correspondent what was going on, one of the
policemen said: "we are shooting a film. The title is "Lost."" He
must have just watched the popular American TV show.

ANKARA: Poland Hails Turkish-Armenian Ties

POLAND HAILS TURKISH-ARMENIAN TIES

Hurriyet
Feb 19 2009
Turkey

ISTANBUL – Poland’s President Lech Kaczynski hailed steps taken
by Yerevan for reconciliation between Turkey and Armenia, during a
meeting with Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian, who is on
a formal visit to Warsaw, Web site PanArmenian.net reported yesterday.

Nalbandian also briefed Kaczynski on the current stage of the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict settlement process, a territorial problem
between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

ANKARA: ‘Turkish And Armenian Businessmen Await Normalization Of Rel

‘TURKISH AND ARMENIAN BUSINESSMEN AWAIT NORMALIZATION OF RELATIONS’

Today’s Zaman
o?load=detay&link=167060&bolum=8
Feb 16 2009
Turkey

Interviews

Kaan Soyak, co-founder and co-chairman of the Turkish-Armenian Business
Development Council (TABDC), has said Turkish and Armenian business
people are waiting for relations between their two countries to see
normalization so they can go ahead with new projects that will benefit
both sides.

One of these projects is the establishment of a qualified industrial
zone between Turkey and Armenia for cooperation in the textile sector.

Noting that Armenia is active in the textiles business abroad,
Soyak said they also have an effective marketing network in the
United States.

"We can use this to the advantage of both sides. … In Turkey, we
have machines and fabrics, and there is a labor force in Armenia. It
is possible to produce cost-effective textiles and sell them in the
United States without taxes and customs tariffs."

With that aim, the TABDC has been working with US congressmen for
years to map out the details of the project.

"But we are waiting on the improvement of Turkey-Armenia relations,"
Soyak added. Fortunately, increased and open diplomatic traffic between
Turkey and Armenia has signaled that there are more efforts under
way to normalize relations between the two countries. Turkey closed
its border with Armenia and severed diplomatic links with Yerevan
in a show of solidarity with Azerbaijan over Armenia’s occupation of
Nagorno-Karabakh in southwestern Azerbaijan in the early 1990s.

Speaking with Monday Talk, Soyak elaborated on these issues and more.

There seems to be increasing dialogue between Turkey and Armenia,
although there have not yet been any concrete steps for normalizing
relations. Do you expect a breakthrough soon?

President Abdullah Gul’s visit to Yerevan in September last
year marked a new era in Turkey’s relations with Armenia. But no
immediate further steps were taken in October or November to normalize
relations. However, serious contacts started by the end of January and
they are continuing. Foreign ministers from both sides are talking
frequently. The Turkish side wants to set up a joint historical
commission to review past events, but the Armenian side wants to see
the normalization of relations and the establishment of diplomatic
relations first. Meanwhile, some minority nationalists in the Armenian
diaspora believe this slow progress is to their advantage. Some claim
that the Armenian side is using delays as a tactic and waiting for
the genocide resolution to be passed in the US Congress first. Claims
regarding the Turkish side are about delaying normalizing relations
with Armenia to first see whether the US administration recognizes
the genocide on April 24. If there are such tactics on the both sides,
they will not bring any positive developments. Now is the right time
for both sides to sit down, settle all existing problems and not
leave any burdens for future generations.

You mentioned that only a minority of the Armenian diaspora thinks of
benefiting from slow progress in improving relations between Turkey
and Armenia. But most Turkish people would think that the Armenian
diaspora is united on its negative stance. Who is correct?

Indeed, a majority of the Armenian diaspora supports the normalization
of relations between Armenia and Turkey and the opening of border
gates, as well; however, this group will remain silent if there are
no concrete steps taken for normalizing relations between Turkey and
Armenia. And the hard-line, nationalistic part of the diaspora will
be heard much more because they speak so loudly.

You mostly deal with the business development side of the border
issue. What opportunities would opening the border bring, given
personal relations between Turks and Armenians?

Armenia is a small country, but they have a large diaspora. There are
two effective diasporas in the world: One is the Jewish diaspora and
the other is the Armenian diaspora. And the Armenians are much closer
to the values of Anatolia. We can see almost all Anatolian traditions
in the lives of Armenians even today, even if they are born in the
United States or Europe. Who would think that Armenians would serve
irmik helvası during their funerals like Turks do? Armenians are very
respectful of Islamic traditions, as well as religious holidays. The
very first phone calls always come from my Armenian friends when there
are Islamic religious holidays or holy nights. Armenians are also very
sensitive to Middle Eastern problems and deeply empathize with the
problems of the Palestinians. They are also extensively engaged in the
business world of the Arab countries — an additional value to Turkish
business circles that are willing to do business in the Middle East.

What would change in the lives of the Armenians if the border were
opened?

Armenia would benefit quite a lot financially from the opening of
the border, since they currently have to purchase materials through
Georgia, further increasing their costs. Armenia is a land-locked
country. It is an economically poor country. And there are a lot of
people who left Armenia. The population has decreased to 1.5 million
from 3 million. When they are poor, the public is easily manipulated by
nationalist sentiments. But the public is so fed up with their economic
difficulties that they are ready for the opening of the border. The
Armenian public will feel more relaxed and they will be free to
visit Anatolian cities once the borders are opened. For example, they
would start spending their weekends in Anatolian cities such as Kars,
Gaziantep, KahramanmaraÅ~_ and Malatya. Diaspora Armenians would be
very happy to regularly visit their ancestral cities.

What is the current trade volume between Turkey and Armenia and what
is the expected rise after the border gates are opened?

The trade volume is currently about $100 million a year and it is
expected to increase to $300 million. This may not be considered a high
volume for businessmen in İstanbul, but this amount is important for
businesses in the southeastern and eastern provinces of Turkey. Take
the tourism sector, for example; it is one of the areas in which Turkey
may make significant gains, especially in the area of religious and
cultural tourism. The records show that 400,000 European and American
Armenian tourists visited Armenia last year. These are people who can
afford expensive visits, people in the Armenian diaspora. If they
spend $100 a day, it would add up to $40 million. And if they stay
for three days, then you have $120 million in a year. This may not
be a noteworthy amount for the businessmen in İstanbul, but it is
important for businessmen in Batman or other southeastern provinces
in Turkey. It is important for those regions even if the amount is
an extra $5 million a year.

What do you think are the most lucrative sectors for Turkish and
Armenian businessmen?

One sector is textiles. Armenia was the production center of textiles
in the former Soviet Union. Armenia is still active in the textiles
business abroad. They have a very effective marketing network in the
United States. We can use this to the advantage of both sides. One
idea is to develop a qualified industrial zone or free zone in
both Turkey and Armenia. In Turkey, we have machines and fabrics,
and there is a labor force in Armenia. It is possible to produce
cost-effective textiles and sell them to the United States without
taxes or customs tariffs.

Isn’t there a need to pass legislation in the US Congress to do that?

Yes, there is. We have had initiatives in that regard. We had meetings
with both US Rep. Robert Wexler, co-chairman of the US-Turkish Caucus
in the US Congress and Frank Pallone, co-chairman of the US-Armenian
Caucus in the US Congress.

When did you have those meetings?

Since 2001, we have explained to them about our project to establish
a qualified industrial zone between Turkey and Armenia. Turkish and
Armenian textiles associations would need to pay a visit to the US
Congress to map out the details of the project, but we are waiting
on the improvement of Turkey-Armenia relations.

Isn’t this a hard task considering that the Congressional Caucus
on Armenian Issues supports the bill on the recognition of the
"genocide"? Do you think the group would be willing to back such
a development? The Armenians in Armenia say that the diaspora does
not really care about the improvement of relations between Turkey
and Armenia.

We believe the US-Armenian Caucus in the US Congress can also work
for the economic benefit of the Republic of Armenia aside from their
traditional political agenda. The people of Armenia are in need of
economic openings more than other openings today and this has to
be understood well by the members of the US-Armenian Caucus in the
US Congress.

When you try to put public pressure on Turkish or Armenian diplomats
regarding normalization of relations, what is the most difficult
situation you face?

We have been involved in Armenian-Turkish relations for about 12 years
and our experience has shown us that there are no bilateral relations
between Armenia and Turkey, but there has always been third-party
involvement. There were times that all the existing problems were
about to be solved but there were hands involved that influenced the
processes negatively in the past. Turkish and Armenian businessmen are
anxiously waiting for positive developments on the diplomatic front so
we can go forward with our projects. There is a need for the people of
these countries to determine their own future. Once the border opens,
many problems between the two countries can be discussed and solved
in the commissions that will be established.

Do you think the online petition circulated by Turkish intellectuals
offering an apology for the "great catastrophe" of 1915, to which
several thousand Turkish citizens added their names in support, has
had any effect, positive or negative, on the process of normalizing
relations?

I agree with President Gul’s remarks in this regard. Every person can
define his or her thoughts freely. On the other hand, all kinds of
statements in favor or not in favor of the petition have an influence
on the process. I cannot say negative or positive but it certainly has
an effect. Negotiations between Armenia and Turkey have progressed
very far as of today, so I personally think both governments would
welcome all public diplomacy efforts.

16 February 2009, Monday YONCA POYRAZ DOÄ~^AN İSTANBUL

Photo: ‘Nabucco may well pass through Armenia’

And what about the Nabucco project? Is Armenia a likely participant
in the project if its relations with Turkey are being normalized?

As we all know, due to political problems between Armenia and Turkey
and Armenia and Azerbaijan the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline project
bypassed Armenia and passed through Georgia at an extra 20 percent
cost. The inclusion of Armenia in the Nabucco project is definitely
on the table. I assume parties are waiting for the normalization of
relations between Armenia and Turkey to advance in this regard.

Photo: PROFILE

Kaan Soyak Working tirelessly for normalization of Turkish-Armenian
relations

He co-founded the Turkish-Armenian Business Development Council
(TABDC) in 1997 and he is co-chairman of the organization, together
with Arsen Ghazarian, who is based in Yerevan. Soyak is also the
co-chairman and co-founder of the US-Turkish-Armenian Business Council
and the Turkish-Armenian Business Council in the European Union in
Brussels. Also co-founder and CEO of Trusa Consulting Services in
the United States, he represents several US-based security firms
on biometrics, pipeline security, tracking, secure data transfer
and secure surveillance systems in the Middle East, Turkey and the
Caucasus. In addition to his efforts to facilitate relations between
Armenia and Turkey, he is currently working on interfaith dialogue
between different religious institutions and promoting US-Turkish-Iraqi
Kurdish economic relations.

http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/detaylar.d

Armenian President: "Karabakh Is Our Land And It Is Invaluable"

ARMENIAN PRESIDENT: "KARABAKH IS OUR LAND AND IT IS INVALUABLE"

Today.Az
s/politics/50646.html
Feb 12 2009
Azerbaijan

President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan has ruled possibility of any
trade around Nagorno Karabakh.

"Those, who consider that the talks involve trades on Karabakh are
deeply mistaken. Karabakh is our land, and it is invaluable, so it
is incorrect to trade on this issue", said the President during the
session of the Flourishing Armenia.

He said Armenia’s position on Karabakh is clear.

"Karabakh people have a right for self-determination and they have
executed this right. Karabakh can not be a part of Azerbaijan, there
are no legal or historical backgrounds for this and the most important
is the will of the Karabakh people", said the head of the state.

The Armenian President noted that the peaceful resolution of the
Karabakh conflict has no alternative and it will lead to recognition
of the Karabakh people for self-determination.

The head of the state noted that the integral right for
self-determination is the only way and it is necessary to struggle
for this right and continuation of talks.

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Everything You Ever Wanted To Know – And Less – About Syrian Underwe

EVERYTHING YOU EVER WANTED TO KNOW – AND LESS – ABOUT SYRIAN UNDERWEAR
By Anna Sussman

Daily Star
d=1&categ_id=4&article_id=99231
Feb 11 2009
Lebanon

‘The Secret Life of Syrian Lingerie’ explores a known but nebulous
subculture

BEIRUT: Visitors to the Middle East are often drawn by Orientalist
fantasies of colorful, fragrant souks, veiled women navigating spice
bazaars and narrow alleyways. I was, at least, when I signed up to
study abroad in Morocco, seven years ago. What I had expected – mounds
of dates and embroidered leather slippers – was there in abundance,
and in abundance I shopped. There was also something unexpected:
stall after stall of the sleaziest underwear I’d ever seen.

For years after, the thought of doing a story about smarmy lingerie
ricocheted around in my head, but I never managed to deepen my analysis
past "veiled outside, sexy inside," a simplistic reduction that said
more about my ignorance than about the dynamic I would be attempting
to describe.

So I was intrigued when I heard of "The Secret Life of Syrian
Lingerie," the recent book by Malu Halasa and Rana Salam. The subject
of a whole book, I wondered? What all is there to say?

As Halasa writes in her opening essay "Competing Thongs: The Lingerie
Culture of Syria," this lingerie "embodies both fantasy and frustration
… reveal[ing] much about the changing sexual mores of the modern
Middle East."

Halasa and Salam should be commended, first of all, for seeking to
go beyond the simple conservative/trashy dichotomy that immediately
presents itself, although it is a recurrent theme. They do this by
treating the book as a "curated space," as Halasa put it, filling it
with a number of contributions from artists and writers: photo essays,
interviews, first-person texts, poetry and reportage. As in any group
show, some pieces are decidedly better than others, although it must
be said that they have found an impressive array of perspectives on
what could be considered a niche topic.

The esoteric theme was originally intended to be the subject of an
essay by Salam in "Transit Beirut," a 2004 collection of essays and
fiction writing edited by Halasa and Roseanne Khalaf, but Halasa
had bigger plans. They approached the head of the Prince Claus Fund
Library, inviting her to a "very swishy, colonial hotel" where Halasa
whipped out a giant bag of Syrian underwear. Laying the pieces out
on the table, no doubt to the horror of the hotel’s patrons, they
got the funding.

Salam, a celebrated graphic designer who grew up in Beirut but
went to Central St. Martin’s in London for college, was always
attracted to the underwear, which she used to pick up as gag gifts
for friends. She realized she was onto something by her friends’
reactions: "They would go crazy over them," she said. For her, this
book was a way of "capturing what is disregarded, giving it value,
glamorizing it." In this sense, it is an extension of her larger body
of work, which takes everyday items such as colorful Chiclets boxes,
and gives them the quasi-Warhol treatment.

Halasa’s essay begins by providing a magnificent overview on the
topic. She takes the reader from the souk stalls, where vendors keep
their "catalogues," cheap photo albums filled with pictures of Eastern
European women modeling the various available styles, to the factory
floors, and into the home of one of the photographers who snaps
the rather artless shots for the catalogues. She touches on gender
relations, the role of lingerie in keeping husbands faithful ("As long
as you get everything at home, you don’t get sidetracked and go to
prostitutes," one such husband tells them), and the politics of pretty
panties (after the October War in 1973, Gulf countries began investing
in Syria, stimulating the circulation of luxury items like lingerie.)

In focusing on the politics and economics of lingerie production,
Halasa winds up with a refreshingly original approach to the
topic. She reads Syrian history into bra fashions, recounting how
"border closures, corruption, and scarcity of modern materials and
machinery" meant that bras were not manufactured in Syria until the
1970s. Thong underwear with chirping birds and screeching cellphones
symbolize globalization and entrepreneurship to her; the inventive
use of Chinese audio chips to bring some aural flair into the bedroom.

But as Halasa herself admits, focusing on production left her entirely
in the hands of men. The lingerie is sold by men, almost always
designed by men, and photographed by men, often to the detriment of
the women who wear it (although it is a female designer who at one
point proffers a new style made of burlap, a questionable fabric
choice for intimate wear.) She realized as she left Syria in 2005,
after spending a month there researching the book, that she had very
few women’s perspectives on the topic, something that Chronicle,
her publisher, later asked her to correct.

Some insight into women’s lives and thoughts is provided by Noura
Kevorkian, an Aleppo-born filmmaker who set out to make a documentary
about "Syrian lingerie and the women who wear it."

Kevorkian, who grew up in Lebanon, Syria, and Canada, kept a diary
during her filming, and like a lot of diaries, this one features
some pretty bad writing. For example: "I grew up Christian in the
Middle East. These women [presumably she is referring to Muslims]
were my neighbors. Yet a number of contradictions about their lives
perplex me, and I am determined to find out their meaning."

Despite her us-them positioning, she does manage to befriend a family,
going often to the house of Umm Fathi, a fully covered mother of
nine. Umm Fathi’s sister Muna has internalized the prevailing wisdom
on marital relations, telling Kevorkian "If you were married, you
would know that if you don’t keep your husband happy in the bedroom,
he would go out – whores, mistresses, and worst of all, he could
marry a second wife."

Her essay is given a lift by the photography of Issa Touma, an
Armenian artist based in Aleppo who also runs its most controversial
gallery. The black-and-white images of Aleppan street scenes and women,
taken by someone deeply rooted in the city, counter her strongly
"outsider" perspective.

Kevorkian’s essay is followed by an interview with the dissident
author and democracy activist Ammar Abdulhamid, whose first novel,
"Menstruation," deals with a young Islamist who can smell women’s
menstrual blood. It is one of the highlights of the book, with Halasa
asking thoughtful, pointed questions that provoke equally thoughtful
replies, which add up to a comprehensive briefing on gender relations
in Syria. He and his wife now live in the US, where he is a fellow
at the Brookings Institution. To no one’s surprise, he dismisses
Victoria’s Secret, one of his wife’s favorites, as "lame." Back in
Syria, he says, there "is simply much, much more."

The book closes with several photo essays. The first, "Up Close:
Intimate Still Lifes" by Gilbert Hage, is accompanied by women’s
insights excerpted from interviews done by the photographer and
activist Eugenie Dolberg. While brief and often superficial, they
represent a range of views on the topic, and the mix of different
voices with endless shots of these intimate absurdities shunts the
reader back and forth between sexual fantasyland and the actual
thoughts and ideas of Syrian women. The photographs are simply
terrific: Hage sets each piece or set on a plain, brightly colored
background, letting them speak for themselves.

By contrast, "Modeling Lingerie: Product Photography from Lingerie
Manufacturers" puts the underwear back onto the female form. These
product shots almost always feature Eastern European models, who
find the work and pay more pleasant than their usual jobs, often
as bar hostesses. Between the banal backdrops and the models’ dour
expressions, it is clear that, as Halasa points out, "These photos
are not designed to titillate." Instead, they are designed to show
the product, fluorescent lighting and cellulite be damned.

The variety of ways in which Halasa and Salam have explored the topic
of Syrian underwear is an achievement in itself. At times, however,
it feels like a weakness, as though some elements, like the last
essay "Coda: A Room of One’s Own," were thrown in just because they
vaguely related to the theme. "Coda," described as "self-portraiture
and poetry" by Iman Ibrahim, looks like a series of stills from some
kind of ImanCam, that she keeps trained on her bed all the time as
she writhes around in her sheets and plays with lightbulbs. I found
the poetry that captioned the photos far more thought-provoking
and open-ended.

Halasa, who also recently completed two other books with the help of
Prince Claus Fund, "Transit Tehran" and another book on the Iranian
photographer Kaveh Golestan, wants to take a bit of a break. Are there
any other similar topics that Salam has in mind for a book? The secret
life of Egyptian socks, for example?

No, she said. "Nothing beats this topic."

http://www.dailystar.com.lb/article.asp?edition_i