OSCE MG: Nagorno Karabakh Must Participate In Talks

OSCE MG: NAGORNO KARABAKH MUST PARTICIPATE IN TALKS

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.05.2007 13:50 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Whatever the Azeri side says, war cannot be
a solution to the Nagorno Karabakh problem, it is an axiom, OSCE
Minsk Group French Co-Chair Bernard Fassier stated to journalists in
Yerevan. He said Co-Chairs’ stance in this issue is unchangeable.

At the same time Fassier again reminded the mediators are not
magicians, the main thing for settlement is the political will of
both presidents. "We think the solution will be fair, balanced and
compromised. If the meeting between Armenian and Azeri Presidents in
Saint Petersburg is successful, the circle of issues under discussion
will significantly narrow. It is quite possible that a spurt awaits
all of us till the end of the year. But if unfortunately the basic
principles are not approved, the negotiations will be just frozen for
an indefinite period of time. If you remember, talks were stopped in
2004 and began only at the end of 2005. We should not forget that
presidential elections are scheduled in 2008 in both countries,"
Bernard Fassier said.

At the same time the French mediator underlined the OSCE MG thinks
that participation of Nagorno Karabakh in the negotiation process
is necessary.

ARC co-sponsors Armenian Genocide & Holocaust Commemoration at UM-D

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Research Center
The University of Michigan-Dearborn
Contact: Ara Sanjian and/or Gerald E. Ottenbreit, Jr.
Tel: 313-593-5181
Email: <[email protected]> and/or <[email protected]>
Web:

ARMENIAN RESEARCH CENTER CO-SPONSORS THE ANNUAL ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AND
HOLOCAUST COMMEMORATION AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN-DEARBORN

On April 20, 2007, the sixth annual Holocaust and Armenian Genocide
Commemoration was held at the Fairlane South Building on the campus of
the University of Michigan-Dearborn. The commemoration was co-sponsored
by the Armenian Research Center, the Voice/Vision Holocaust Survivor
Oral History Archive, and the Mardigian Library of the University of
Michigan-Dearborn, as well as the Armenian Studies Program of the
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and the Cohn-Haddow Center for Judaic
Studies at Wayne State University.

The two primary speakers for the event were Tamir Sorek, Assistant
Professor at the Center for Jewish Studies and the Department of
Sociology at the University of Florida, and Prof. Gerard J. Libaridian,
holder of the Alex Manoogian Chair in Modern Armenian History at the
University of Michigan. Both speakers did not shy away from expressing
their own strong personal convictions as regards the respective topics
that they covered.

Sorek spoke on "The Holocaust and Public Culture in Israel." He first
noted that the lessons of the Holocaust come in three types: (1) Jewish
lessons, (2) Zionist lessons, and (3) universal lessons. Jewish lessons
concern two points: (a) Jewish solidarity, and reliance on Jews alone,
is essential; and (b) anti-semitism must be detected and combated.
Zionist lessons, on the other hand, can be summarized in four points:
(a) there is no security for Jews in the Diaspora, (b) there is a need
for a sovereign state of Israel, (c) Israel is the safest place for
Jews, and (d) all Jews should immigrate to Israel. Finally, the
universal lessons of the Holocaust relate to two points: (a)
anti-democratic phenomena and racism must be fought, and (b) minority
rights must be protected throughout the world.

Sorek argued that in times of insecurity, Israelis and the Israeli
government were less likely to assimilate the universal lessons of the
Holocaust and thus recognize the Armenian Genocide. Reversely, the
likelihood of Israel’s acceptance of the universal lessons and
recognition of the Armenian Genocide would grow in times of relative
security. To prove this point, Sorek referred to the very recent history
of Israel, which he divided into three periods: the first Palestinian
uprising (1987-1993), the Oslo peace process (1993-2000), and the second
Palestinian uprising (2000-2004). Only during the years of the peace
process did Israeli government officials attend April 24 commemorations
organized by the local Armenian community. It was also in 1994 that, on
the Knesset floor, the then Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Yossi Beilin
unambiguously described the killings of Armenians as "certainly massacre
and genocide, something the world must remember." Sorek explained the
wavering official Israeli attitude by the fact that, during periods of
insecurity, the friendship of Turkey as a Muslim and Middle Eastern
power friendly to Israel is more valued. Turkish pressure on Israel not
to recognize the Armenian Genocide has largely been successful in the
years of peril, but less so in the years of relative security.

An even more important reason for the non-recognition of the Armenian
Genocide by Israel has, according to Sorek, to do with the "victim
status" that Jews have because of the Holocaust. He pointed out that
such a status offers Jews a certain type of political capital which can
be used. To recognize the "victim status" of other groups would dilute
Jews’ own status, while the overuse of "victim status" would eventually
debase it. Sorek ended his presentation by expressing hope that Jewish
Israelis would feel secure in the future so as to say once more "Never
again!" rather than "Never again to us!"

Libaridian’s talk was entitled "A Challenge for the Present: How to
Think of the Past When Planning the Future." He analyzed how remembrance
of the Armenian Genocide does (and should) influence Armenia’s official
policy, both domestic and foreign.

Libaridian first noted that non-recognition of the Armenian Genocide by
Turkey compels Armenians to try to prove it, and they hence usually
neglect the necessity to analyze the genocide. He also cautioned that
Armenians often confuse the process of explaining (analyzing) the causes
of the genocide with justification of mass murder.

After underlining these caveats, Libaridian noted that until the
mid-1960s, the main division in the Diaspora Armenian communities was
over the legitimacy of Soviet Armenia. In the 1970s, however, the issue
of recognition of the Armenian Genocide by Turkey and the rest of the
world replaced the Soviet Armenian dilemma as the major issue and united
the Armenian Diaspora. The newer generations of Armenians, both in
Armenia and the Diaspora, have almost no direct contact with Turks. For
most of them, the Turk has become just an abstraction that is easy to hate.

Libaridian, who was a high-ranking member in the administration of
Armenia’s first post-Soviet president, asserted that the issue of the
Armenian Genocide recognition was not a major objective of the Karabakh
movement, which emerged in Armenia in 1988. This movement first demanded
the annexation of Mountainous Karabakh to Armenia, but then achieved
independence from the USSR. According to Libaridian, this de-emphasis as
regards genocide recognition was certainly not about denial; the leaders
of the Karabakh movement simply did not want to use the Armenian
Genocide issue to devalue the idea of independence.

Libaridian said that, during Armenia’s transition to independence, two
contrasting visions of the country’s future were extensively discussed.
The first vision depicted Armenia as a small, perpetually victimized
country, reliant on the USSR/Russia. It argued that a Turkey that does
not recognize the Armenian Genocide is a Turkey more likely to invade
Armenia. According to the second vision, however, Armenia should become
a normal country, with normal relations with its neighbors. The
followers of this line of thought believed that, through establishing
normal relations with Turkey, they can later resolve other issues as
well, including that of genocide recognition. Because of the dominance
of this second vision in the early 1990s, Armenia’s first post-Soviet
constitution did not make the issue of Armenian Genocide recognition a
basis of its foreign policy. On the other hand, when Armenia entered
into negotiations with Turkey over normalization of relations in 1991,
the Turkish government, as a precondition to the talks, originally
wanted Armenia to drop the genocide recognition issue. Libaridian
recounted that the Turks later dropped this precondition after they
realized that Armenia did not link it to normalization of relations. It
was only Armenia’s support for the secessionists in Karabakh and the
latter’s territorial gains against Azerbaijan which ended the
negotiations between Armenia and Turkey.

Libaridian stated that, at that time, Armenia’s current president,
Robert Kocharyan, who was still in a position of authority in Karabakh,
wanted to link Armenia’s dropping the genocide precondition to Turkey’s
dropping the Karabakh precondition. According to Libaridian, Kocharyan’s
position emanated from his belief that Karabakh would be in a stronger
diplomatic position if Turkey and Armenia had normal diplomatic
relations. Libaridian then contrasted this past attitude by Kocharyan to
his current position as president of Armenia. Libaridian argued that
Kocharyan now sees genocide recognition as a matter of Armenia’s
national security. This new attitude, according to Libaridian, is closer
to the view of Armenia as a perpetually victimized nation. Libaridian
also reminded the audience that Vazgen Sargsyan, the founder of
Armenia’s army, did not like Armenians talking about themselves as
victims. Especially after the successes against the Azerbaijanis on the
battlefield, Sargsyan used to ask rhetorically: "why should genocide
define our character and nation, since we are the victors now?"

Libaridian himself believes that victimization can be embedded into the
Armenian character when the genocide is taught to students at a very
young age. By focusing solely on the tragic aspects of the Armenian
Genocide, options for Armenia are being closed.

A short question-and-answer period followed, during which Libaridian
expressed pessimism that the US House of Representatives would approve
the draft resolution that has recently been tabled regarding Armenian
Genocide recognition.

Thereafter, the audience, including students from the AGBU Alex and
Marie Manoogian High School in Southfield, MI, enjoyed a catered lunch
and had the opportunity for additional discourse with the speakers.

http://www.umd.umich.edu/dept/armenian

Ilham Aliev Tries To Blackmail World Community

ILHAM ALIEV TRIES TO BLACKMAIL WORLD COMMUNITY

PanARMENIAN.Net
22.05.2007 15:25 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The visit of OSCE MG Co-Chairs on the Nagorno
Karabakh conflict settlement to the region and the possible meeting
between Armenian and Azeri presidents will not give anything new for
the solution of the conflict, political scientist Director of Caucasian
Media Institute Alexander Iskandaryan stated to a press conference
in Yerevan. He said opinions that after the parliamentarian election
in Armenia the negotiation process will activate, are baseless.

"Elections and conflict are quite different formats and it is
inappropriate to draw parallels between them. And this time too the
mediators will say that almost all issues are agreed, only one is
left, which may be solved in case if there existing a political will,
so forth and so on," the Director of the Caucasian Media Institute
underscored.

As to Ilham Aliev’s periodical "saber-rattling", the Armenian political
scientist says that I. Aliev’s statements are for domestic use. "There
also exists an attempt of blackmailing the mediators and the world
community. Suppose, some people occur who will accept his words
seriously," Iskandaryan said.

New Projects To Be Discussed At Sitting Of German-Armenian Fund

NEW PROJECTS TO BE DISCUSSED AT SITTING OF GERMAN-ARMENIAN FUND

Noyan Tapan
Mya 21 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 21, NOYAN TAPAN. The chairman of the Central Bank of
Armenia (CBA) Tigran Sargsian went on a working visit to Frankfurt
in order to participate in the regular sitting of German-Armenian
Fund’s Observer Council. NT was informed from the CBA press service
that new projects to be implemented by the fund will be discussed at
the sitting. The deputy chairman of the CBA Artur Javadian also left
for Frankfurt together with T. Sargsian – he will participate in the
sitting of the Fund’s Observer Council until May 25.

According To Rumours, Armed Incident Takes Place In Gyumri Between M

ACCORDING TO RUMOURS, ARMED INCIDENT TAKES PLACE IN GYUMRI BETWEEN MAYOR’S AND BARGAVACH HAYASTAN TERRITORIAL OFFICE HEAD’S SONS

Noyan Tapan
May 21 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 21, NOYAN TAPAN. According to preliminary data, an armed
incident took place at 18:30 of May 20 in the street of Terian,
Gyumri, between sons of Gyumri Mayor Vardan Ghukasian and former
Chief of the Governor’s Office Urban Development Department, head
of the Bargavach Hayastan (Prosperous Armenia) party territorial
office Artashes Sargsian. In the consequence of the conflict, one
was injured who was on the same day operated on in the Gulbenkian
Surgical Hospital of Gyumri. Radiolur states about it.

According to the same source, there are rumours that accidental
by-passers died in the consequence of the incident, but there is no
official information about it.

Cinema: A Story Of People In War And Peace

A STORY OF PEOPLE IN WAR AND PEACE
(Documentary — Armenia)
By Ronnie Scheiba BBC presentation, of a Bars Media production.

Variety Magazine
May 21 2007

Produced by Vardan Hovhannisyan. Executive producer, Peter Symes.
Directed by Vardan Hovhannisyan.

Nowadays, there is no dearth of documentaries recording the horrors of
war. What distinguishes Vardan Hovhannisyan’s film about the 1989-1994
conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan is his own participation in the
hostilities as a soldier and his followup study of survivors, including
himself. Neither personalized video diary nor objective reportage,
"A Story of People in War and Peace" unfolds with a remarkably
matter-of-fact, almost serene contemplation on the profound changes
wrought in individuals both by war and by the subsequent peace. Well
received at fests — snagging Tribeca’s new documentary filmmaker
prize — pic is skedded for broadcast throughout Europe.

Helmer Hovhannisyan, as he informs the viewer in his voice-over English
narration, traveled worldwide as a respected frontline journalist
and cameraman before ethnic warfare broke out in his backyard.

Instead of covering the struggle for international news agencies,
he traded in his camera for a rifle and fought for his country, only
filming his fellow soldiers during a five-day stretch of murderously
intense fighting in 1994. This footage later haunted him, and a
question from his son caused him to revisit the images he hadn’t
looked at for more than a decade.

Hovhannisyan embarks on a pilgrimage to discover what happened to the
gaunt, sunken-eyed men he videotaped 12 years previously, bringing
with him photos captured from that tape as well as the computer-loaded
video itself. While what he finds is perhaps predictable, the outcomes
seldom correspond to the original personalities or aspirations of
the long-ago soldiers he interviewed in foxholes or recorded as they
lugged dead brothers through enemy fire.

Thus the peace-loving family guy who tenderly spoke to his beloved
children via Hovhannisyan’s camera has become an embittered career
soldier on a sniper-infested border, his wife and kids having left
him. The teenage war hero, formerly an unhesitating, intrepid leader
of men and killer of 100 enemy troops, no longer knows how to accept
his past or proceed with his future.

Hovhannisyan follows his subjects in their present-day circumstances,
through quaint little burgs or sweeping pastoral vistas, interspersing
these tranquil scenes with the jumpy, hand-held chaos of the old
service tapes. But rather than imposing some particular dramatic rhythm
on the juxtaposition, the filmmaker tries to figure out exactly which
soldier, say, is now the village mailman.

Hovhannisyan brings the viewer into the process with the same casual
ease with which he includes his rediscovered comrades in the creation
of their shared "story."

Tech credits are inconspicuously fine, Vahagn Ter-Hakopian’s
post-bellum lensing as impressive in its serenity as is Hovhannisyan’s
in its wartime immediacy.

Camera (color, DV), Vahagn Ter-Hakopian (peacetime footage),
Hovhannisyan (wartime footage); editor, Tigran Baghinyan; sound,
Karen Tsaturyan. Reviewed at Tribeca Film Festival (competing), May 3,
2007. Running time: 69 MIN.

(Armenian, English dialogue)

702.html?categoryid=31&cs=1

http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117933

Cannes Film Festival, 16/05/2007

CANNES FILM FESTIVAL, 16/05/2007
Tim Walker

The Independent – United Kingdom
Published: May 17, 2007

The Front Page

The media turned out in force for yesterday’s photo call to mark the
opening of the 60th Cannes Film Festival. The most glamorous date
in the cinematic calendar boasts some of the film world’s brightest
talents on its jury. They will have to decide between them which of the
21 films in this year’s 60th festival receives its highest accolade,
the Palme d’Or.

The China Syndrome

Juror Maggie Cheung has over 80 films to her name and has worked with
an assortment of China’s most celebrated directors, including Jackie
Chan and Wong Kar-Wai. One of the stars of Wong’s Palme d’Or-nominated
"In The Mood For Love" (2000), she won Cannes’ Best Actress award
for her 2004 performance as a recovering addict in "Clean".

Frears and Loathing

Jury president, director Stephen Frears, has spent the past
quarter-century chronicling some of the most pressing issues in British
life, from the racial and sexual politics of the Thatcher years in "My
Beautiful Laundrette" (1985), to the underworld of illegal immigration
in "Dirty Pretty Things" (2002), to the role of the monarchy in last
year’s "The Queen".

Wizard of Oz

Since she first came to public attention as ugly duckling Muriel in
"Muriel’s Wedding" (1994), Australian Toni Collette – more swan than
duckling – has cornered the kind of character roles that every actress
in Hollywood craves, and left a f lurry of awards and nominations in
her wake. She missed out on a Best Actress Bafta for last year’s hit,
"Little Miss Sunshine".

The Italian Job

Italian director and actor Marco Bellocchio has long been an active
player on the French political scene, supporting socialist Lionel
Jospin’s 2002 campaign for a term in the Elysee Palace. He also holds
the dubious honour of having garnered five Palme d’Or nominations
for his films, without ever having taken home the top gong.

The French Connection

Michel Piccoli is a darling of the French political left, and was
also a vocal supporter of socialist Lionel Jospin. A Cannes festival
veteran, he gave his breakthrough performance in "Le Mepris" in 1963,
courtesy of director Jean-Luc Godard, and won Best Actor award at
Cannes in 1980 for his turn in "Salto nel Vuoto", directed by fellow
juror Marco Bellocchio.

Along Came Polley

In 1999 child star Sarah Pol-ley turned down a role in "Almost Famous"
to star in Canadian indie-f lick "The Law Of Enclosures"(1999). She
has impressed audiences in "The Sweet Hereafter" (1997) and "My Life
Without Me" (2003).

Last year, she coaxed Julie Christie out of semi-retirement to star
in her directorial debut, "Away From Her".

Maria Full of Grace

She may be most familiar to British and American audiences as Butch’s
girlfriend Fabienne in "Pulp Fiction", but in her native Portugal Maria
de Medeiros is known as an actress, director and scion of a family
of accomplished musicians, thesps and movie players. Among her other
roles was a hairdresser in Canadian film "My Life Without Me" (2003).

Out of Africa

Abderrahmane Sissako is the Mauritanian-born, Malian-bred,
Moscow-trained maker of "Bamako", a movie set in the Malian
capital. Sissako’s f ilm balanced its depiction of everyday life in
a West African city with the kind of political content that Cannes
audiences lap up – a debate over who to blame for the continent’s
problems.

Talking Turkey

Bit of a cushy number for Orhan Pamuk, this Cannes lark. The Nobel
Prize-winning Turkish author of "Snow" and "My Name Is Red" spent 2005
with the threat of a prison sentence hanging over him, after commenting
on the massacre of the Armenians. The Croisette certainly makes for
more comfortable surroundings than the inside of a Turkish jail cell.

CSIS Knew Of Threat: Witnesses

CSIS KNEW OF THREAT: WITNESSES

Hamilton Spectator, Canada
The Canadian Press
May 18 2007

Lawyer Michael Anne MacDonald, above, was reduced to tears yesterday as
she recalled hearing about the 1985 Air India bombing only days after
learning that Canada’s spy agency had advance knowledge of the threat.

Then a lawyer with Ontario’s Ministry of the Attorney General, she
said she had little confidence in the Canadian Security Intelligence
Service (CSIS) based on her dealings with the agency.

"I was extremely distressed," she said yesterday in testimony to an
inquiry into the bombing. "My immediate reaction was: Even when they
know something is going to happen they can’t stop it."

She was one of two witnesses who recalled being told a week before
the bombing that CSIS was worried about Sikh extremists in Vancouver.

Graham Pinos, right, a former Justice Department lawyer, said
the warning came from Mel Deschenes, then director general of
counter-terrorism for the CSIS.

All three were in California for court proceedings related to the
shooting of a Turkish diplomat three years earlier by Armenian
terrorists in Ottawa. Canadian and U.S. authorities had been
collaborating in tracking Armenian extremists.

Pinos said Deschenes told him that Armenians were far from the worst
worry for the spy service.

"The real problem is something else," Pinos quoted the CSIS man as
saying over drinks beside a hotel swimming pool in Los Angeles.

Pinos said Deschenes went on to describe the more serious threat as
"an element of Sikhs" operating in Canada. "He perceived them as
being dangerous, and that likely they would bring a plane down."

"I have an absolutely clear recollection of the event and the
circumstances," Pinos said of the discussion that took place June 19,
1985. "It was something that shocked me."

Four days later, Air India Flight 182, en route to New Delhi and Bombay
from Toronto and Montreal, was downed off the coast of Ireland by a
terrorist bomb with the loss of 329 lives.

Deschenes, for his part, made a written statement in 1988 in which
he adamantly denied he had any advance tips about an imminent attack.

Now elderly and facing health and memory difficulties, he is not
expected to testify at the inquiry.

Starting From 2010, Import Of Ozone Layer Destroying Substanced Into

STARTING FROM 2010, IMPORT OF OZONE LAYER DESTROYING SUBSTANCED INTO ARMENIA TO BE BANNED

Noyan Tapan
May 17 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 17, NOYAN TAPAN. At the May 17 sitting, the Armenian
government approved the general amounts of imported substances that
destroy the ozone layer. The RA Deputy Minister of Environmental
Protection Simon Papian told reporters following the meeting that the
aim of the decision is to gradually withdraw ozone layer destroying
substances from use. For example, freon used in refrigerating equipment
and air-conditioners is a substance that destroys the ozone layer.

S. Papian said that in accordance with the governmental decision,
in 2007-2010, 29.5 tons of ozone layer destroying substances may
be imported into Armenia annually, while starting from 2010, their
import will be banned. It was noted that in 2004, 110 tons of such
subsatnces was imported, in 2005 – 50 tons.

Cannes Indian Films Make It To The Official Selection?

CANNES INDIAN FILMS MAKE IT TO THE OFFICIAL SELECTION?
By Indiantelevision.com Team

Indiantelevision.com, India
May 17 2007

CANNES : The vote is out: yes it can. At least that’s the view of a
cross section of film makers in Cannes. But a few things will have
to be put in place for that to happen.

One, according to Tous les Cinemas du Monde head Serge Sobczynski,
Indian film makers will have to work on doing co-productions with
European companies. "In that way," says Serge. "There’s a lot of
excitement around the film in Europe and there are many people talking
about it, making it imperative for the festival authorties to take
a closer look at it."

Serge said some of the films which are being featured in the Tous
les Cinemas du Monde India section could actually have made it to
the official selection had they not been premiered earlier.

Reliance Entertainment chief Amit Khanna said "The film maker has to
be willing to premier the film at Cannes. He has to plan in advance,
have his film ready for the festival."

He reasoned that a new breed of film makers is emerging who are
willing to make movies for the world, rather than just for India.

Both Bobby Bedi and Khanna said that Indian cinema was already
doing well at film festivals world over. "Some 400 Indian films
were screened at 70 to 80 film festivals world wide last year,"
said Khanna. "Armenia and Korea have taken to Indian cinema since
screenings took place there."

Serge pointed out that India needs a world class festival which
will help position it better globally. "You have the "International
Film Festival in Goa. But it is too nascent, very young. It has to
stabilise," he said. "It is a bit like Cannes was in 1949."

Khanna believes that the old theory that if you make a movie for the
film festivals it will not find any takers on the distribution front
and at the box office is no longer relevant. "My company is more than
willing to back anyone who comes out with a film that can make it at
the festivals," he said.

Young film makers, now you know where to go!