Tumo Creative Technologies Center To Start Operating In Yerevan By E

TUMO CREATIVE TECHNOLOGIES CENTER TO START OPERATING IN YEREVAN BY END OF YEAR

Noyan Tapan

Ju ne 16, 2008

YEREVAN, JUNE 16, NOYAN TAPAN. Tumo Center for Creative Technologies is
envisaged to operate by the end of 2008 in Yerevan in the newly built
center of the Epigy Labs Armenia company. Noyan Tapan correspondent
was informed about it by Armen Ohanian, the Coordinator of the Public
Relations Department of Tumo.

According to him, Tumo will be an absolutely new educational center,
which will occupy an area of 6 thousand sq.m., will function for
12-18-year-old children. They will have a possibility of working out
computer animation, figure video and audio multimedia, computer games,
projecting of websites.

The center will be able to serve over 1000 children a day.

According to A. Ohanian, the process of employment of center’s
personnel consisting of 70 people has already started, an interesting
educational program to be implemented in Tumo has already made up,
with the help of which children will gain knowledge in the above
mentioned sphere or will meet their lack, which will give them a
possibility to be specialized in these spheres.

Tumo will occupy the 1-3rd floors of the Epigy Labs Armenia center,
the rest 3 floors will be given to other information technologies
sphere enterprises.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=114544

Adonts: Fulfilment of PACE Requirement Worthless w/o Normalization

ACCORDING TO AVET ADONTS, FULFILMENT OF PACE RESOLUTION REQUIREMENTS
IS WORTHLESS WITHOUT NORMALIZATION OF COUNTRY’S DOMESTIC SITUATION

06

YEREVAN, JUNE 13, NOYAN TAPAN. Fulfilment of the requirements presented
to Armenia in PACE Resolution N 1609 is worthless unless country’s
domestic situation is normalized. Avet Adonts, a member of the Armenian
delegation in PACE and of the Bargavach Hayastan (Prosperous Armenia)
faction, expressed such an opinion at the June 13 press briefing. In
his words, if the goal were only to fulfil Resolution’s requirements,
imitating it would be very easy. "We agree to all points mentioned in
the resolution," the deputy said adding that the proposals included in
the resolution had been already made by presidential candidate Serge
Sargsian in the period of elections.

According to Naira Zohrabian, a member of the same faction, the project
of creating an ad hoc parliamentary commission on investigation of the
March 1 events is unprecedented, as extra-parliamentary forces,
including opposition leader Levon Ter-Petrosian, will be proposed
taking part in the commission’s work. According to the deputy, the
opposition will have an exclusive possibility to present a special
opinion attached to the main report. The opinion will be publicized
from the NA tribune. "I think it is a wonderful possibility for
presenting their viewpoints, and if they refuse I have a right to think
that their goal is not to solve problems in a constructive field, but
certain political interests," N. Zohrabian stated.

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=1145

Armenian Children among Winners of the UNEP Competition

UN Department of Public Information
Contact: Information Officer Armine Halajyan
Yerevan Office (Armenia)
Tel.: (374 10) 560 212
Fax/Tel.: (374 10) 561 406
Mobile: (374 91) 20 37 25
E-mail: [email protected]

htt p://

Armenian Children among Winners of the UNEP International Children’s
Painting Competition

Yerevan/Wellington, 11 June 2008. – Gloria IP Tung, a fourteen-year old girl
from Hong Kong, is the winner of the United Nations Environment Programme’s
2008 International Children’s Painting Competition. Gloria received her
award on World Environment Day, 5 June 2008, from UNEP Executive Director
Achim Steiner and New Zealand Prime Minister Helen Clark at a ceremony in
Wellington (New Zealand), along with the two global runners-up and five of
the regional winners.

An unprecedented 15,550 entries from 90 countries around the world were
submitted for the International Children’s Painting Competition on the
Environment. Over 67 children from Armenia participated in this competition.
Armenia’s participation was organized locally by the UN Department of Public
Information Yerevan Office and Armenian UN Association (a partner NGO of UN
Armenia Office), with financial support for postal services from UNICEF
Armenia Office.

Regional Selection was done by the relevant UNEP Regional Offices and its
partners. Regional winners were announced on 22 April 2008. Maria Kassabian
a 10-year-old Armenian girl from Nigeria won the first prize from Africa
region. Among 120 European regional winners were 12-year-olds Shant Hakobyan
and Zhenya Rubenyan from Armenia.

The final results of the regional and global selections are available at:
t=3Dcompetitions&comp=3Dint_comp&int_comp= 3D17th
;com=3Dmodule &module=3Dstatic&id=3D437

Five category winners were announced: one 1st prize, two 2nd prizes, five
3rd prizes, nine 4th prizes and forty 5th prizes. In addition to these –
6
regional winners were announced still in April. The selection of these 63
paintings (Shant Hakobyan’s painting included) are being shown at
Wellington’s (New Zealand) Te Papa museum before touring other venues around
the world.

The International Children’s Painting Competition on the Environment is
organized annually by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the
Japan-based Foundation for Global Peace and Environment (FGPE), Bayer and
Nikon Corporation. It has been held since 1991 and has received over 190,000
entries from children in over 100 countries.

This year’s competition theme was Climate Change: Actions you can take now.
Children aged 6 to 14 were invited to express through painting actions they
can take to reduce the impact of climate change such as using renewable
energy, introducing energy saving light bulbs at home, sharing vehicles and
using public transport, planting trees etc. The competition ran from 24
September to 15 January 2008. The organizers invited children from all over
the world to submit their paintings to the UNEP office in their regions.

The International Children’s Painting Competition on the Environment is part
of UNEP’s TUNZA strategy for children and youth. TUNZA is a word in
Kiswahili that means to "treat with care". The programme aims to provide
young people with information and tools on how to "treat Mother Earth with
care" and how to act for a better world.

* * *

http://www.undpi.am
http://www.unep.org/tunza/children/inner.asp?c
http://www.un.am/?laid=3D1&amp
www.un.am

‘Democracy Gone Wild’: Hate Speech Infests Online Versions Of Local

‘DEMOCRACY GONE WILD’ HATE SPEECH INFESTS ONLINE VERSIONS OF LOCAL DAILY NEWSPAPERS

Pasadena Weekly, CA
June 12 2008

For the person behind the moniker "Viking Knight," the Internet is
a virtual playground for hate.

"Mexican’ts are a b…stard race and will come to nothing in the
end. WHITE POWER FOREVER," Viking Knight wrote in response to the
fatal shooting of a 17-year-old boy. "Somebody saved the LAPD the
trouble of icing this ‘vato.’ … He is one less Mexie on the planet,
not that it counts for much."

On the beating of an Orthodox Jew by skinheads in North Hollywood: "We
should offer a reward to the guy who off’d this Christ-killer. … Jew$
are a disease."

On the death of an Armenian girl who was denied a liver transplant by
her health insurance company: "God got rid of one the Turks missed. Too
bad He doesn’t get rid of all of them."

A person might expect to find these and other vile comments by Viking
Knight — including slurs against gays and Asians — posted on a
white supremacist or neo-Nazi Web site.

But the banner on the top of the page belongs to the Daily News of
Los Angeles, and in other cases to its MediaNews Group sister paper,
the Pasadena Star-News.

Like dozens of other people who post comments through these and other
newspaper Web sites, Viking Knight can remain as anonymous as he or
she wishes to be. And due to the anonymity and instant access to an
audience that poorly monitored newspaper and social networking sites
provide, Internet hate speech is a growing national phenomenon.

"It’s democracy gone wild," said Deborah Lauter, director of the
national civil rights division of the Anti-Defamation League. She’s
hoping the Daily News and the Star-News will remove racist diatribes
from the Web and be more vigilant about hate speech in the future.

"Unfortunately, we believe now that many more papers are offering
this kind of [comment] service we are going to see an increase in
that kind of hate rhetoric. While it is protected speech, we believe
it is incumbent on a newspaper or a social networking site to step up
and be a responsible corporation, and be more active in moderating
[its Web site] and taking down what is clearly hate speech," said
Lauter. "Once they decide to create that forum, then they have to
act responsibly and monitor it."

The Daily News and Star-News Web sites allow any reader to post his
or her views through a service called Topix, which allows discussion
forums to be built around news articles and other subjects.

"It is impossible for any paper our size to read all the comments
every day, so this is an issue often discussed [among the 57 MediaNews
Group daily newspapers, many of which use Topix]," said Ryan Garfat,
online editor of the Daily News.

Garfat said the paper typically relies on Web users to flag hate
speech and other abusive posts through Topix, which forwards those
complaints to editors. He said Tuesday that he plans to remove hate
speech identified by this newspaper, but is already dealing with dozens
of reader complaints about other posts — some of which aren’t hate
speech at all.

Garfat also said that there were no plans to change how the Web site
is monitored.

"The unfortunate effects of having an open forum are that these things
are going to happen, and we feel they reflect poorly on the identity
of the newspaper. But if we take the alternate route of eliminating
comments, then I think we are not fulfilling our goal of allowing
legitimate discussion within our community and would be disserving
our community by doing that."

The Star-News has had far fewer problems with online hate speech than
the Daily News — the source of the three comments quoted above —
and removed posts that contained hate speech following conversations
with the Pasadena Weekly.

"Our policy for the comments is that we do not moderate or edit the
comments before they’re posted online. However, we will remove comments
that are deemed to be offensive or inappropriate," said San Gabriel
Valley Newspaper Group Senior Editor Frank Pine, who supervises the
Star-News, Whittier Daily News and San Gabriel Valley Tribune.

Pine said he was not aware of Viking Knight’s hateful posts until
hearing from this newspaper, and that the only complaints about
comments made over the Internet had been from sources in news stories
who felt they were being characterized unfairly.

Although Topix terms of service prohibit content that is "hateful,
or racially, ethnically or otherwise objectionable," it also warns
that users "may be exposed to content that is offensive, indecent
or objectionable."

Topix is a Palo Alto-based limited liability corporation owned
largely by publishing giants the Gannett Co., The McClatchy Co. and
the Tribune Co., according to its Web site. The Web site for the Los
Angeles Times does not use Topix, and reader comments appear to be
monitored to exclude hate speech.

At the Star-News site, Viking Knight makes it clear in one
anti-affirmative action rant that he’s no fan of presumptive Democratic
presidential nominee Barack Obama, and in a separate post appears to
advocate that Obama be assassinated.

"Robert Kennedy sold our courageous men in uniform out when he became
a peacenik. He sold White people out when he started kissing up to the
likes of Chavez, Dr. King, the mestizo farmworkers, etc. Sirhan may not
be a prize, but he was just what America needed, just when we needed
him," wrote Viking Knight in response to a column by Star-News Public
Editor Larry Wilson about Kennedy’s Pasadena-bred assassin. "As we
approach the November elections, we could use a man like Sirhan again."

"That post is clearly over the line," Pine said Monday. On Tuesday
it had been removed from the site, along with other posts disparaging
Latino youth.

"As shocking as these kinds of things are, they are increasingly
common on perfectly mainstream Web sites. Usually the paper will
step in and scrub their sites of this kind of material, because if
they didn’t they would become absolute nesting grounds for white
supremacists. These guys are looking for a place to safely transmit
their ideology and bring more people into the movement," said Mark
Potok, editor of Intelligence Report, a magazine that monitors hate
groups and is produced by the Southern Poverty Law Center.

Potok said that he’s been forced to keep a close eye on his magazine’s
blog () to prevent hateful comments from being
posted. People have even tried to post racially motivated threats
to assassinate Obama, which he has reported to the Department of
Homeland Security.

In the United States, constitutional free speech protections typically
prevent legal action on hate speech unless someone is threatening or
urging others to physically harm a person or racial group, said Potok,
who recently testified before the Helsinki Commission (also known as
the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe) about threats
posed by Internet hate speech.

Potok was testifying not only as an expert, but also as a victim:
A neo-Nazi group once identified him on a Web site as an enemy of
their cause and posted his home address. But because the group did
not specifically order its readers to do Potok harm, they didn’t
break the law.

In Europe and most other Western nations, hate speech — in Germany,
denying or trivializing the Holocaust — can be prosecuted as a
crime. As a result, said Potok, the majority of foreign-language
white supremacist Web sites are hosted through computer servers in
the United States.

Viking Knight also took aim through the Star-News at the social
services organization El Centro de Acción Social, which he or she
wrote on May 31 "is nothing but a Reconquista terrorist organization
dedicated to the destruction of America."

The next day, in response to another reader’s concern about the
achievement levels of some students receiving scholarships from the
organization, Viking Knight wrote: "They’re Mexican’ts, What did you
expect? Their grades suck because in most high schools, you can’t
major in Lowriding 101."

El Centro Executive Director Randy Jurado Ertll said he thinks
the Star-News should prevent racist comments like these — which
were pulled from the site after Pine spoke with the Weekly — from
reaching readers.

"Responsibility comes with freedom of expression," said Ertll. "I
was just disgusted by this. We need to be vigilant of people who use
hate language. Just as we denounce hate crimes, we have to denounce
hate language. Words impact people’s actions and influence others to
promote more hate."

But it doesn’t end there. One conversation chain from the Daily
News involving Viking Knight and others was so rife with prejudice
against a Latino teen shot to death at a party — "like all the rest
of the scum too hell he went too face satan," wrote catwomomen4u69 —
that someone claiming to be the victim’s ex-girlfriend was actually
pleading with people to stop.

"Certainly we could do a better job of moderating comments," said
Garfat, who acknowledged that recent staffing cuts have affected the
paper’s ability to monitor the Web site. "But, I still maintain the
need to allow people to have conversations supersedes the vile comments
that sometimes permeate our boards. We work with what we’ve got."

In another conversation that devolved into slurs against "Mexicans
and blacks," someone wrote: "It’s time for a good old fashion clan
meeting … come on my arean [sic] brothers … lets get out our
rebel flags and let the lynching begin."

Such vitriol targeting Latinos in general or people perceived to be
illegal aliens is, sadly, "very much par for the course," in terms
of hate speech to be found on mainstream Web sites, said Potok.

"We’re in a whole new age," said the ADL’s Lauter. "The anonymity of
the Internet provides a forum so the people who wouldn’t have the
proclivity to say it in public can hide behind screens. We used to
say the Klan hid behind their white hoods; these [people] hide behind
their screens."

And in many ways, newspapers are behind the times in figuring out
how to respond.

"There’s a larger issue in this story," said Pine, "that is,
to what degree should newspaper Web sites allow people to comment
anonymously. It’s something that warrants further scrutiny. Certainly
it’s a conversation we’ve been having in the newsroom and will continue
to have."

Pine and Garfat said they are reluctant to restrict comments until
they are screened or increase registration requirements, as that would
hinder access to the service. "We want to facilitate the free exchange
of ideas and have people feeling comfortable speaking their minds,
but on the other hand you don’t want people to hide behind anonymity
and use it to promote hatred and say things that have no place in
civilized public discourse," he said.

That such vicious comments sat for more than a week on the Web sites
of local daily newspapers angers Nat Nehdar, a friend of the Pasadena
Human Relations Commission and its former chair, who dedicates much
of his time to activities combating prejudice, hate and violence.

"I feel strongly that newspapers should more carefully monitor their
Web sites and eliminate such trash, which in some ways can reflect
on the newspaper itself. If you allow it you are not condemning it,
so it seems like you are condoning this type of hate speech," he said.

ail/democracy_gone_wild/6057/

–Boundary_(ID_YdZ3 k1a0fHagsT58E7HJwA)–

http://www.pasadenaweekly.com/cms/story/det
www.splcenter.org/blog

RA Defense Minister To Attend North Atlantic Council Meeting

RA DEFENSE MINISTER TO ATTEND NORTH ATLANTIC COUNCIL MEETING

PanARMENIAN.Net
10.06.2008 16:46 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ On June 11, the Armenian delegation led by Defense
Minister Seyran Ohanyan will depart for Brussels to attend the
North Atlantic Council meeting which will bring together the states
participating in peacekeeping operations in Kosovo.

As Defense Minister’s Spokesman, Colonel Seyran Shahsuvaryan told
PanARMENIAN.Net, the meeting will be held in NATO headquarters on
June 12.

The Armenian delegation is scheduled to meet with NATO leaders and
counterparts from other states.

Announcements: Armenian Genocide Monument In Larnaca

ANNOUNCEMENTS: ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MONUMENT IN LARNACA

05-06 -2008

The Committee of the Kalaydjian Foundation with a bilingual
announcement (Greek, English) thank the President of the Republic
for his tireless efforts in implementing the Monument project, They
also thank both the Mayor of Larnaca Mr. Andreas Moyseos and the
Larnaca Municipal Council for their decision to allow, on exception,
the erection of the monument on Larnaca’s seafront.

And finally they thank the Ambassador of the Republic of
Armenia Mr. Vahram Kazhoyan, as well as the monument’s architects
Messrs. Angelos Demetriou and Michael Thrassou, the renowned sculptor
Mr. Georgios Kalakallas, and everyone involved in the implementation
of the project.

Read the whole announcements in Greek (pdf) or in English (pdf)

Meanwhile the Armenian representative of the Cyprus Parliament,
Mr. Vartkes Mahdessian, with a press release dated 28 May 2008 thanks
the Cyprus government and the Larnaca municipality for the Larnaca
marina Armenian Genocide Monument.

With another Armenian press release dated 29 of May 2008 he mentions
that his only involvement with this project was at a meeting on 13
July 2007 after an invitation by the Larnaca municipitality.

At the meeting when he asked about the cost, he was informed that the
cost of the monument, which will be covered by the Cyprus Government,
had risen to CY£102,000 (plus Taxes), while the initial estimate
was CY£70,000.

He was also informed that the monument would be sculptured by a
Greek sculpture from Greece, while the inscription would be in four
languages (Armenian, Greek, Turkish and English) and prepared in
Armenia. The content of the inscriptions were presented on paper to
the participants.

During this meeting he expressed strongly his dissatisfaction that
the community was not involved with the project, especially the absent
of the Church. Which were recorded as such in the meetings minutes.

Although the cost of the project, the presence of Mr. Dikran Kalaydjian
and the fact that the sculpturer was not an Armenian were points
that he did not agree, in respect towards his predecessors and the
people who had taken this decisions in the past, he did not mention
his concers.

In the press release, Mr. Mahdessian mentions his utter dislike to
the fact that some people had tried to "personalize" such a "Holy &
historical" monument, such as the direct request of the "Kayadjian
Foundation" to name the surrounding area of the monument "Armenia
square" without following the official protocol for such requests and
the willingness to cover a gap of 16,000 euros with the provision of
adding inscriptions to the monument without the Communities consent.

The whole Greek Press release and the Armenian Press release.

–Boundary_(ID_DDOwARld8/leont+s5TK0w)–

http://www.hayem.org/index.htm?p=58

Georges Der Parthogh Has Passed Away

GEORGES DER PARTHOGH HAS PASSED AWAY

04-06-20 08

Georges der Parthogh, veteran journalist, international news
photographer and a leading member of the Armenian community, died in
Nicosia on Monday.

He was 84.

Born in Harar, Ethiopia on December 18, 1923, Georges came to Cyprus
with his family in 1935. He attended the English School in Nicosia
after which he served with the Air Ministry. He later joined the
Times of Cyprus where he worked from 1955 to 1959 and where he met
Lana Matoff, whom he married in 1960.

Georges’ career as an international correspondent saw him working
for Reuters (1959-1963) and United Press International (1963-1979)
covering wars and civil commotion in Cyprus, Malta, Middle East,
Iran and East Africa.

In 1979 he co-founded The Cyprus Weekly with fellow journalists
Andreas Hadjipapas and Alex Efthyvoulou. Also, since 1989 he was a
special correspondent for Azg newspaper in Yerevan and the Armenian
Mirror-Spectator in Boston.

During the catastrophic earthquake in Armenia and the war of liberation
of Nagorno Karabakh, Georges led several humanitarian aid delegations,
for which he was awarded the Nagorno Karabakh Gold Medal. He was
granted an honorary citizenship of the Republic of Armenia and
received the Golden Pen Award of the Union of Armenian Journalists
for his 50-year career as a journalist, as well as the Intercollege
Media Institute Award as a prominent journalist and photoreporter. He
actively supported photography at home and abroad, encouraged young
photographers and received several awards as a member of the Cyprus
Photographic Society and continued judging competitions until recently.

He served his community as spokesman to two Armenian Representatives,
a member of the Board of Governors of the Melkonian Educational
Institute and as Past President of the Lions Club Nicosia Cosmopolitan.

He had two sons and two granddaughters.

The funeral will take place at the Sourp Asdvadzadzin Armenian Church,
Armenia Str., Nicosia on Friday, June 6, 2008 at 4pm.

Lana der Parthogh Yervant der Parthogh Masis and Louise der Parthogh
Tatiana and Natalia der Parthogh Noubar John and Gwynneth der Parthog

http://www.hayem.org/index.htm?p=58

Zohrab Mnatsakanian Appointed Ra Permanent Representative In Council

ZOHRAB MNATSAKANIAN APPOINTED RA PERMANENT REPRESENTATIVE IN COUNCIL OF EUROPE

Noyan Tapan

Ju ne 9, 2008

YEREVAN, JUNE 9, NOYAN TAPAN. Serge Sargsian, the President of
the Republic of Armenia, signed decrees on June 9 on releasing
Christian Ter-Stepanian from the responsibilities of the Permanent
Representative of the Republic of Armenia in the Council of Europe,
Jivan Tabibian from the responsibilities of the Head of the Mission
of the Republic of Armenia in the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe, Zohrab Mnatsakanian from the responsibilities
of the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of
Armenia to the Confederation of Switzerland, as well as the Permanent
Representative of the Republic of Armenia in the UN Office of Jeneva
and other international organizations.

According to the information provided to Noyan Tapan by the RA
President’s Press Office, by another decree of the same day Zohrab
Mnatsakanian has been appointed Permanent Representative of the
Republic of Armenia in the Council of Europe (residence in Strasburg).

Ashot Hovakimian, the Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of
the Republic of Armenia to the Republic of Austria has pluralistically
been appointed Head of the Mission of the Republic of Armenia in
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (residence
in Vienna).

http://www.nt.am/news.php?shownews=114242

BAKU: Bryza: Liberated Occupied territories will be demilitarized

Today.Az, Azerbaijan
June 6 2008

Matthew Bryza: "As soon as occupied territories of Azerbaijan are
liberated, they will be demilitarized"

06 June 2008 [15:15] – Today.Az

"As soon as occupied territories of Azerbaijan are liberated, they
will be demilitarized and international peacekeeping forces will be
deployed there", said deputy assistant US Secretary of State Matthew
Bryza.

It should be noted that the views, I express, are fully supported by
the Russian leadership, at least by my colleague Yuri Merzlyakov, who
helped to understand the main point of this conflict, as well as our
French colleague Bernard Fassier.

"As soon as occupied territories of Azerbaijan are liberated, they
will be demilitarized and international peacekeeping forces will be
deployed there, Armenian armed forces will be withdrawn, they will not
be in the tense state, they are now, when Armenian and Azerbaijani
troops look at each other through mine fields in some cases at a
distance of a hundred meters", said Matthew Bryza.

According to Bryza, this is undoubtedly a very dangerous
situation. Each month people die of sniper shootings and mines. Thus,
I do hope that our fields in Armenia will feel safer as soon as these
territories are returned to Azerbaijan. I hope this will positively
influence on the political system of Armenia".

/Regnum/

URL:

http://www.today.az/news/politics/45501.html

Aznavour’s Trip Was Cancelled

AZNAVOUR’S TRIP WAS CANCELLED

KarabakhOpen
04-06-2008 18:01:22

Charles Aznavour, the renowned Armenian singer, who is visiting
Armenia with his family, was to leave for Nagorno-Karabakh on June
4 but the trip was cancelled. In Stepanakert they explained it with
bad weather. Aznavour was going to fly to Karabakh by helicopter.