Training Film On Voting Procedures Presented In Yerevan

TRAINING FILM ON VOTING PROCEDURES PRESENTED IN YEREVAN

armradio.am
24.01.2008 14:51

An OSCE-sponsored training film for precinct electoral commission
members was presented in Yerevan today.

The film explains election procedures in line with the Electoral Code
and Central Electoral Commission (CEC) decisions. It was produced under
a project of the OSCE Office in Yerevan together with the Armenian
Public Relations Association (APRA) and with the help of the CEC.

"The film aims at improving the culture of holding elections," CEC
Chairman Garegin Azarian stated.

Expert Hrayr Tovmasian, who presented the film, informed that it
thoroughly describes the whole process of holding elections. "The
experience shows that many mistakes during the previous elections
were the result of lack of knowledge," he noted.

The Head of the OSCE Yerevan Office Sergey Kapinos stated, the plan
and the methodology of the film are fully based on the Electoral Code
of Armenia.

According to him, the film is a source of information for both the
members of electoral commissions and the electors.

ANKARA: A Portrait Of A Nationalist Lawyer: Kemal Kerincsiz

A PORTRAIT OF A NATIONALIST LAWYER: KEMAL KERINCSIZ
Nilufer Zengin

BIA
Jan 24 2008
Turkey

Kemal Kerincsiz, the nationalist lawyer taken into custody in relation
to a secret weapons arsenal found in Umraniye, Istanbul in June
2005. Kerincsiz is a brand name among nationalists.

Kemal Kerincsiz is a lawyer and founder and administrative board
member of the "Lawyers’ Union."

Stopped Armenian conference He first came to public attention when he
filed a complaint to stop a conference entitled "The Ottoman Armenians
in the Period of the Declining Empire" scheduled for May 2005. The
conference finally took place on 23 September, but only because the
organisers were able to circumvent the ban by hosting the conference
at a venue not mentioned in the ban.

Nationalists from the Great Union Party (BBP) and the Workers’ Party
then stood in front of the conference venue to throw eggs and tomatoes
at the participants.

Demanded more severe punishment for Hrant Dink When Agos
editor-in-chief Hrant Dink was sentenced to a suspended sentence
of six months imprisonment for "denigrating Turkishness" in 2005,
Kerincsiz appealed against the decision, demanding a more severe
punishment. In his letter of appeal, Kerincsiz argued that "the
defendant has a tendency to commit crimes" and that "his actions have
created a wave of anger in Turkish society."

Filed complaint against Orhan Pamuk In the same year, Kerincsiz filed
a criminal complaint against writer Orhan Pamuk for "denigrating the
army." He also appeared on television, arguing that the controversial
Article 301 was a "necessity."

Intimidation in court When Hrant Dink, Agos journalist Aydin Engin,
section editor Arat Dink and responsible manager Serkis Seropyan were
taken to court as defendants in a case of "attempting to influence
the judiciary" on 16 May 2006, they were verbally and physically
attacked at the court hearing. Kerincsiz and his associates applied
to become joint plaintiffs in the case. Coins and pens were thrown
at the defendants and their lawyers. Kerincsiz called for the judge
to be withdrawn, accusing him of bias. The prosecution refused both
the application for joint plaintiff status and a change of judges.

Assault at TESEV book launch On 6 July 2006, the Turkish Economic and
Social Studies Foundation (TESEV) launched its book "Facing Forced
Migration: The Construction of Citizenship after Displacement in
Turkey". Kerincsiz and seventeen others verbally abused some people
and some people were physically attacked.

Speaking to bianet after the attack, which he himself only watched,
Kerincsiz said: "We do not approve of violence. Do not connect us
to violence. This is not the inquisition trial that you can judge
without trial here. The things TESEV said at this meeting were the
same as the statements of the PKK. Naturally, the citizen’s reactions
are justified reactions."

Armenian Pair To Leave The Field

ARMENIAN PAIR TO LEAVE THE FIELD

A1+
23 January, 2008

The 2008 European Figure Skating Championships opened Tuesday in
Zagreb, Croatia, with the Compulsory Dance and the Pairs Short
Programme.

Armenian ice dancing pair Anastasiya Grebenkina-Vazgen Azroyan scored
25.41 points because of a glaring mistake during the first dance. They
even stopped for a moment but finally ended up the performance. The
pair took the 17th place among the 26 participants.

Unfortunately, the Armenian skaters have to quit the championship
because of Grebenkina’s serious injury.

The fixture list is led by Isabelle Delobel/Olivier Schoenfelder
(France) followed by Oksana Domnina/Maxim Shabalin (Russia). Defending
European Champions Isabelle Delobel/Olivier Schoenfelder took
the lead ahead of Russia’s Oksana Domnina/Maxim Shabalin and Jana
Khokhlova/Sergei Novitski with 41, 25 points.

Armen Melikyan To Apply To Constitutional Court

ARMAN MELIKYAN TO APPLY TO CONSTITUTIONAL COURT

Panorama.am
15:01 22/01/2008

"Before getting registered I had no right to apply to the
Constitutional Court and now I have that right. In the coming one week,
I will send my application to the consideration of the Constitutional
Court," presidential candidate Arman Melikyan told a news conference
today. He believes the rights of our citizens are violated with the
decision to hold the elections only on the territory of Armenia. "The
people who feed most of the population of Armenia have the right to
take part in the formation of the political future of the country. I
have a serious electorate in the foreign countries that are deprived
to vote for me. I believe my rights are violated," Melikyan said.

History, Memory, Voice, Song

HISTORY, MEMORY, VOICE, SONG
By Mariam Matossian

World Pulse
0801/feature2.html
Jan 22 2008
OR

I want to inspire people with my music, my storytelling. I love
sharing my family’s story and the history of my culture. I love to
communicate that idea of hope. Both my grandmother and my grandfather
survived the Armenian genocide, and somehow she still sang… I want
to share that with as many people as possible.

I was brought up in a household filled with music. The seeds were
planted at a very young age, but music didn’t become a part of my
professional life until I visited Armenia for the second time. I had
previously been there in 1998-the first in my family to step foot in
the homeland since my grandparents were forcibly deported in 1915. In
2002 I returned to Yerevan to spend three months working with very
poor and orphaned children. When I returned from that second trip,
I was overwhelmed with a need to raise awareness of the beauty of
the Armenian culture and the pain that exists there.

I distinctly remember when I realized the impact music can have on
the world. I was working at a center for at-risk youth in Armenia,
and we were having a party with the children. I took my demo CD of
old Armenian folk songs with me and we were all dancing and singing.

The children had these beautiful, innocent, spontaneous reactions to
the music. That moment was so beautiful. I remember thinking, "Lord,
I need to do something more with this." After I returned to Vancouver,
I found a producer and began to seriously pursue my music.

These children taught me some of the songs on my first album, Far
>From Home. It was such a fantastic experience. Face to face with
these beautiful, innocent children who have nothing but are filled
with joy, I was struck with how much we take for granted. I wanted
to tell their stories but I also wanted to somehow link it to my own
family, to my grandmother’s story.

It came full circle for me. I knew I could use my music to share
my grandmother’s story and link it to these children’s stories. My
grandmother, also named Mariam, passed away long before I was born.

Still, she has been a huge influence on my life and my music. She
was among the many who were deported during the 1915 Armenian Genocide.

After my great-grandfather died in the death march, my
great-grandmother made the painstaking decision to place her two
youngest children, my grandmother among them, in an orphanage to be
educated while she worked. In Armenia, spending time with children
who had been surrendered by their parents in much the same way,
it came full circle for me. I knew I could use my music to share my
grandmother’s story and link it to these children’s stories.

"Narineh": Tradition Meets Action It is important to me to connect my
music to my history-many of the songs I sing are those my grandmother
taught to my mother, who then taught them to me. Now my mother and I
have a partnership when it comes to choosing which songs to include
on the albums.

Much of Armenian folk music celebrates the beauty of the
country. Far >>From Home is about missing the homeland-about our
personal definitions of home. But for In the Light, I chose some of
the Armenian love songs my grandmother sang. I recorded that album
in the months leading up to my wedding, and I just loved the special
connection I felt with my grandmother when I sang the songs that she
sang, the songs I know she loved.

"The children who inspired me, who taught me so much…"Now, as I am
getting ready to be a mother, I find that expecting my first child
has added so much to my music, to the words I’m singing. There’s
this new dimension, a new generation: my grandmother, my mother, me,
and now, this new little baby. It’s been so exciting and emotional;
it definitely heightens in me the desire to spread awareness of our
cultural history.

There’s this new dimension, a new generation: my grandmother, my
mother, me, and now, this new little baby. I want to preserve the
folk songs, to reintroduce this beautiful, traditional music to the
world. But I also know that music is more than tradition. It is also
a vehicle that I can use to raise awareness about violence happening
all over the world.

I wrote the song called "Narineh" about a young Armenian girl who went
missing in Iraq-the niece of a dear family friend. I want people to
know Narineh’s story-I don’t want her to be forgotten. In the song,
a mother calls out to her daughter, longing for her to be found. I
repeat Narineh’s name as a way to remember her. I want audience
members to know that children are still being victimized today. I
want everyone to know in hopes that even one person listening will
be compelled to act in some way.

Visit Mission Armenia to learn how you can help women and children
in Mariam’s homeland.

In the Light is available in Canadian stores now. You may also
purchase it online at CDBaby.com. You’ll find Mariam’s first album,
Far From Home, available there too.

http://www.worldpulsemagazine.com/voyages/20

First President Announced The Start Of A New Stage

FIRST PRESIDENT ANNOUNCED THE START OF A NEW STAGE

Lragir
Jan 22 2008
Armenia

The first president of Armenia Levon Ter-Petrosyan who is running
in the presidential election stated during the rally at the Square
of Freedom to launch a new round in the movement he leads. Levon
Ter-Petrosyan even revealed the slogan of the new stage. "The slogan
was formulated by the renowned historiographer of the 13th century
Stepanos Orbelyan "when words end, and acts reign". In other words,
we have reached a turning point when words end and acts reign. What
should have been said about the essence of the regime of Armenia, the
disastrous prospect of its reproduction and the necessity to avoid it
has already been said," Levon Ter-Petrosyan said, noting that he has
described the regime the moral values of which are strange to people.

Levon Ter-Petrosyan said the impression that it is impossible to
prevent the machine of election fraud is false. The first president
thinks it is possible, and for that every citizen must display will
and determination. Levon Ter-Petrosyan stated on behalf of tens of
thousands of his supporters they are ready to serve a determined
society, the nation liberation movement. "We are ready to strain our
muscles, contribute our efforts, undergo any hardship and make any
sacrifice for a better future of Armenia, inspired with the divine
poetry of the 23-year-old great poet," said the first president
Levon Ter-Petrosyan and recited a poem by Yeghisheh Charents which
the great poet wrote in 1920. Afterwards the first president stated
that if every citizen were inspired with the spirit of Charents,
the regime of Kocharyan and Sargsyan would immediately appear in the
"dump of history".

According to Levon Ter-Petrosyan, the election of February 19 is
symbolic. "They give you a chance not only to shape your future with
your own hands but also to comfort the insult you felt in 1998 when
they seized Karen Demirchyan’s victory from you, the deep insult you
felt in 2003 when they seized Stepan Demirchyan’s victory from you.

Therefore, February 19 will be not only your victory but also Karen
Demirchyan’s, Stepan Demirchyan’s and Vazgen Sargsyan’s victory. Long
live the Armenian people who stood up to regain their dignity! Long
live our fair and holy struggle! God be with us!" Levon Ter-Petrosyan
concluded. The rally ended with a march the tens of thousands of
participants of which led by Levon Ter-Petrosyan walked along the
streets of Yerevan chanting Levon and Victory. The march returned to
the Square of Freedom where it had started.

Presidential Candidate Armen Melikyan Intends To Apply To Constituti

PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE ARMEN MELIKYAN INTENDS TO APPLY TO CONSTITUTIONAL COURT REGARDING VOTING FROM ABROAD

arminfo
2008-01-22 13:48:00

ArmInfo. Presidential candidate of Armenia Armen Melikyan intends to
apply to the Constitutional Court of Armenia regarding the voting from
abroad, the candidate said at a press conference, Tuesday. To recall,
after the amendments to the Election Code, polling stations will be
opened only in the territory of Armenia.

A. Melikyan said he will apply to the Court within the week. He
believes the restriction infringes the rights of the citizens. ‘I think
that those who actually feed the greatest part of the population from
aboard have a right to participate in the political life of their
country and in its future.

Moreover, I think that I have rather serious electorate in abroad that
is now deprived of the right to support me. Thus, I think, my rights
of the presidential candidate are infringed as well. In addition,
this restriction threatens the voting on the whole’, he said.

BAKU: Armenian Parliamentarian: "Armenian Delegation In PACE Will Di

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENTARIAN: "ARMENIAN DELEGATION IN PACE WILL DISCUSS POSSIBLE VISIT OF THE HEAD OF THE TEMPORARY COMMISSION ON GARABAGH TO THE REGION"

Today
ics/42509.html
Jan 21 2008
Azerbaijan

An Armenian delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council
of Europe will discuss possible visit of the head of the temporary
commission on Garabagh Lord Russell Johnston to the region.

The due statement was made by the head of the Armenian delegation,
chairman of the permanent commission on state and legal issues David
Arutyunan.

"The issue, connected with the visit of the PACE temporary commission
on the Garabagh issue to Azerbaijan, Armenia and Nagorno Garabagh,
is on the agenda", David Arutyunan said.

He announced that the possible terms of the visit will be discussed
with the chairman of the commission lord Russel Johnston.

David Arutyunan also touched upon the issue of the visit of the PACE
rapporteur on the cultural heritage Edward O-hara.

"This visit has been postponed for several times. Issue of creation
of artificial obstacles by Azerbaijan has already been raised before
the Secretary General of the Council of Europe and PACE chairman",
D.Arutyunan said and added that the issue of the possibility of the
visit is being discussed in the PACE subcommittee on cultural heritage.

http://www.today.az/news/polit

Hrant Dink Commemorated In Tbilisi

HRANT DINK COMMEMORATED IN TBILISI

arminfo
2008-01-21 09:50:00

ArmInfo. An event named "Journalists – Victims of the Freedom of
Speech" was held on January 19 in the Georgian ombudsman’s office
in memory of Editor of the "Agos" Armenian newspaper Hrant Dink,
killed in Istanbul, as well as in memory of Giorgy Sanaiya, Anna
Politkovskaya and many other journalists, who have become victims of
their professional activity.

As the editorial office of the "Yerkramas" newspaper of the Armenians
of Russia told ArmInfo, the event was organized and initiated by the
"Armenian Center of Cooperation of Georgia" jointly with the Council
of the national minorities under ombudsman’s administration. People’s
advocate of Georgia Sozar Subara and President of the Armenian Center
of Cooperation of Georgia Karen Elchyan presented papers on the subject
"Tendencies and Problems of Development of the Modern Journalism in
the Region"; "Hrant Dink – Victim of the Article 301. Response of
International Organizations to His Murder".

The event started with a minute of silence in memory of Hrant Dink.

Representatives of Mass Media, the Armenian community of Tbilisi and
other public organizations were present at the event.

Total of 111 journalists died within 2007 during performance of their
professional duties, and this number exceeds the tragic statistics
of the previous years. Hrant Dink is one of the first victims of
2007. The journalist’s murder was condemned by Heads of the European
structures and many international organizations.

Paris Pays Homage To Hrant Dink’s Memory

PARIS PAYS HOMAGE TO HRANT DINK’S MEMORY

armradio.am
21.01.2008 15:41

Like many countries in the world, th French of Armenian origin
paid homage to the Turkish Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, 53,
assassinated on January 19, 2007 in front the entry of the Agos’
offices, independent correspondent Jean Eckian reported from Paris.

In Paris, in the presence of several personalities of the community
including Edward Nalbandian, Armenia’s Ambassador to France, and
Alexis Govciyan, President of the Coordination Council of Armenian
Organizations in France (CCAF), several wreaths were deposited at
the Gomitas statue.

In his homily the Archbishop of Paris, Norvan Zakarian, evoked the
drama of Istanbul with a metaphor pointing out the history of Cain
and Abel.

Thus, in certain spirits, to kill or deny is much easier than the
duty to amend themselves and change rather than to face the truth.