22 Parties And 1 Bloc To Take Part In NA Elections By Proportional S

22 PARTIES AND 1 BLOC TO TAKE PART IN NA ELECTIONS BY PROPORTIONAL SYSTEM

Noyan Tapan
May 02 2007

YEREVAN, MAY 2, NOYAN TAPAN. 22 parties and one bloc will take part
in the parliamentary elections by the proportional system. As Noyan
Tapan correspondent was informed by CEC Secretary Hamlet Abrahamian,
in the term established for withdrawing candidatures by political
forces and candidates for deputacy, May 2, 18:00, the Armenian
National Movement and Progressive Party of Armenia officially left
the political struggle. CEC will sum up the data on candidates having
withdrawn their candidatures by majoritarian system and will publicize
them in the evening the same day as it receives information from 41
district electoral commissions.

Baroness Caroline Cox visit schedule

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian General Benevolent Union Inc.
Rita Kuyumjian MD
Chairperson
805, Manoogian street
Ville St-Laurent, QC H4N 1Z5
Tel: 514-748-2428
Fax: 514-748-6307
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

Baroness Caroline Cox Visit Schedule

Montreal, April 22, 2007 – The AGBU (NJRP) Nor Jraberd Project Team has
announced that the former Deputy Speaker of the British House of Lords
(1986-2005), the Baroness Caroline Cox will be the main guest of honor
during a series of events scheduled for May 18-21, 2007 in Montreal and
Ottawa.

Baroness Cox is an ardent human rights’ activist in the defense of various
threatened minorities; her advocacy work spans the globe including Bosnia,
Kosovo, Burma, East Timor, Indonesia, Poland, Armenia, Nigeria, North Korea,
Sudan and Uganda.  She has personally secured the liberation of thousands of
enslaved Africans.

Baroness Cox is also an outspoken supporter of the pursuit of
self-determination of the population of Nagorno Karabagh (Artsakh in
Armenian).  She has participated in many efforts organized by various human
rights’ groups in support of similar goals.

The following is the schedule of public events that the Baroness will
participate in.

Friday, May 18th, 2007 –  9:00 to 14:30 Visit of three Montreal Armenian Day
schools, then from 19:00 to 22:00 Visit of the Armenian Diocese at the
Cathedral of St. Gregory the Illuminator, 615 Stuart Ave. in Outremont,
Montreal. A special celebration with members of Armenian, Canadian and
Quebec scouting movements and presenting of special honors.  Reception to
follow in Mary Manoogian Hall of the Cathedral.

Saturday, May 19th, 2007 – 11:00 to 16:00, Brunch, followed with `Up Close
and Personal with Baroness Cox’, A special public interview with the
Baroness, conducted by the award-winning Canadian journalist Mr. Levon
Sevunts, of RCI. Located at the Tekeyan Cultural Association, 825 Manoogian
Street. Light brunch is served. Announcement of special writing competition
winners in Montreal Armenian schools and a silent auction of artwork of
Canadian Armenian artists.

Sunday, May 20th, 2007 – 10:00 to 11:45 attending of mass of St. Gregory the
Illuminator Cathedral, 615 Stuart Ave. in Outremont, Montreal, then from
12:00 to 15:00, Visit of Armenian Community Center and Sourp Hagop Church,
3401 Olivar Asselin, Montreal. Presentation of books by and about Baroness
Cox, book signing and sale.

Sunday, May 20th, 2007 – 18:00 to 23:00, Ceremonial fundraising banquet of
the NJRP, in J.& E. Dervishian Hall at the AGBU Center in Montreal, 805
Manoogian Street, St. Laurent. Keynote Speaker, Baroness Caroline Cox.

Monday, May 21st, 2007 – 11:00  to 16:00, Special reception honoring the
Baroness and in Celebration of May 28th, Independence Day of the First
Armenian Republic, in the Embassy of the Republic of Armenia. A tour of
Ottawa to follow.

Information about the Baroness Caroline Cox and related material can be
found at the following websites:

ox,_Baroness_Cox

x.php?title=Caroline_Cox

aragha.htm#Baroness%20Cox

/baroness_cox.htm

roline-cox-baroness-cox

For media and press interviews, please contact Viken L. Attarian @
[email protected]. For information ont he NJRP initiative, please
contact the email address [email protected]. Information can also be found
at the NKR Nor Jraberd website .

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caroline_C
http://www.armeniapedia.org/inde
http://www.cilicia.com/M
http://www.cusa.uci.edu
http://www.answers.com/topic/ca
http://www.norjraberd.org/
www.agbumontreal.org

Karabakh Leader, Armenian Defence Minister Discuss Cease-Fire

KARABAKH LEADER, ARMENIAN DEFENCE MINISTER DISCUSS CEASE-FIRE

Mediamax news agency
30 Apr 07

Yerevan, 30 April: The president of the Nagornyy Karabakh republic,
Arkadi Ghukasyan, received Armenian Defence Minister Mikayel
Harutyunyan in Stepanakert on 29 April.

Arkadi Ghukasyan congratulated Mikayel Harutyunyan on his appointment
to the post of Armenia’s defence minister, the presidential press
service told Mediamax today.

Lt-Gen Seyran Oganyan, defence minister of Nagornyy Karabakh, also
attended the meeting. The sides discussed cooperation between the
armed forces of the two Armenian republics and issues related to
maintaining the cease-fire regime.

Armenia Agreed To Compromise In Exposition About Genocide

ARMENIA AGREED TO COMPROMISE IN EXPOSITION ABOUT GENOCIDE

Arminfo Agency
2007-05-01 21:02:00

An exhibition, dedicated to the Rwanda Genocide, has opened in the UN
after three-week delay that was provoked by Turkey, which insisted
on the change of part of the exposition, dedicated to the Armenian
Genocide, "Gazeta.ru" reports. According to the representative of the
Aegis British organization, part of the exhibition, dedicated to the
Armenian Genocide, was initially opened with words "After the First
World War, during which a million of Armenians were killed in Turkey, a
Polish attorney Rafael Lemkin called the League of Nations to recognize
the barbarous crimes the international crimes". The new text reads:
"In 1993, a Polish Jew, attorney Rafael Lemkin, called the League
of Nations to recognize the massacres on grounds of belonging to any
specific group the international crime. He indicated the massacre of
Armenians in the Ottoman Empire during the First World War and other
massacres in history. No one listed to him".

The Ambassador of Armenia to the UN said that the compromise
formulation is not good enough for his country, however, it is better
than the endless delay of the exhibition opening. The opinion of the
Turkish diplomats remained unknown, since they were not present at
the exposition opening. Assisted by Great Britain, USA and Russia,
official Ankara intends to take specific steps to persuade Armenia
to accept Turkey’s proposal concerning the creation of a joint
commission for the Armenian Genocide study. As the Turkish "Zaman"
reported earlier, this decision of Turkey is dictated, first of all,
by apprehensions of adoption of the Armenian Genocide Resolution by
the US Congress that, in the opinion of Turkish diplomats, will affect
the American-Turkish relations. The article author recalls that in
2005, the Prime Minister of Turkey Recep Erdogan expressed readiness
for opening all the Turkish archives for the Armenian historians,
that would help to understand "if it is possible to consider the
murders of Armenians during the First World War as Genocide". However,
Armenia offers to form an intergovernmental commission to study the
whole spectrum of bilateral relations.

Jewish World Watch Features "Voices From the Lake" in Commemoration

Armenian National Committee of America-Western Region
104 North Belmont
Street, Suite 200
Glendale, California 91206
Phone: 818.500.1918
Fax: 818.246.7353
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE

For Immediate Release: April 26, 2007

Contact: Haig Hovsepian

Tel: (818) 500-1918

Jewish World Watch Features "Voices From the Lake" in Commemoration
of the Armenian Genocide

Encino, CA – On Monday, April 23, 2007, Jewish World Watch (JWW)
presented Dr. J. Michael Hagopian’s "Voices from the Lake" before
an audience of over 600 at Valley Beth Shalom Synagogue in Encino,
California. The Armenian National Committee of American – Western
Region (ANCA-WR) welcomed the news that over 200 Armenian Americans
from the West San Fernando Valley attended the screening.

Jewish World Watch is a coalition of over 50 synagogues in southern
California. The organization’s mission is to educate and activate
the Jewish community to help build the political will necessary to
empower leaders to take all reasonable and necessary steps to protect
innocent victims around the world from genocide and egregious human
rights violations.

With twenty-five years in research and production, "Voices From the
Lake" focuses on the day-to-day tragedy unfolding in Kharpert-Mezreh,
one of 4,000 towns and villages targeted for ethnic cleansing by
the Ottoman Empire during the 1915 Genocide. The cataclysmic events
are relived through the eyewitness accounts of American and European
officials, missionaries, educators and survivors. After the film was
viewed, Dr. J. Michael Hagopian was warmly welcomed by the entire
congregation with a standing ovation. A discussion was held with Rabbi
Harold M. Schulweis and Dr. Hagopian sharing with the crowd the common
genocidal experience of both the Armenian and Jewish peoples.

Rabbi Schulweis expressed that the Jewish people support the need for
acknowledgment of the Armenian Genocide. After the film concluded,
Dr. Hagopian was again showered with a standing ovation.

Attending this event was a wide cross section of leaders from
the San Fernando Valley’s vibrant Armenian American community.
San Fernando Valley ANC member Chris Keosian, former ANCA-WR
Chairman Armand Keosian, Ara Papazian and dozens of members of
the Holy Martyrs Armenian Church in Encino attended the screening.
They were joined by members of the Valley Beth Shalom Synagogue,
members of Jewish World Watch and scores of interested individuals
from the San Fernando Valley.

"Humanity is subject to genocide and amnesia is dangerous," said
Rabbi Harold M. Schulweis, Founder of Jewish World Watch. "If you
forget or deny the first genocide of the 20th Century, you waste the
experience of the past. To die is tragic, but to be told that you have
not lived is an insult to civilization. Denial is the strangulation
of conscience. Our experience with the Jewish Holocaust makes it a
matter of conscience for the Jewish people to respond and recognize
the grief and anguish of others. It is incumbent upon us to stand up
and recognize the Armenian genocide of 1915. The Armenian and Jewish
communities are kinsmen in suffering and consolation," he added.

In a February 8, 2007 letter addressed to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi,
Jewish World Watch urged the Speaker to support passage of H. Res.

106, a resolution affirming the United States record on the Armenian
Genocide. The letter noted the importance of recognizing this tragedy
and encouraged the Speaker’s leadership on the issue.

"The ANCA-WR is pleased to be collaborating with Jewish World Watch,"
stated Andrew Kzirian, Executive Director of the ANCA-WR.

The advancement of human rights and the prevention of genocide
everywhere are goals that both or of our organizations believe in
dearly. The ANCA-WR looks forward to continuing to work in concert
with Rabbi Schulweis and his team to bring an end to the global cycle
of genocide," he added.

Jewish World Watch, along with Facing History and Ourselves hosted
a Lecture & Book-signing event on Thursday, April 26th with John
Prendergast and Don Cheadle who discussed the ongoing genocide in
Darfur and offered their insights into stopping genocide around the
world. On Friday, April 27 JWW is set to host an Armenian Genocide
Commemorative Shabbat Dinner (6:00 pm) and Service (8:00 pm) at Valley
Beth Shalom. Finally, on May 15, JWW will present the "First Annual
Jewish World Watch iWitness Awards" honoring Dr. J. Michael Hagopian
and Dr. Richard Hovannisian for their outstanding work and activism
related to the Armenian Genocide. Please visit
for more information.

The Armenian National Committee of America is the largest and most
influential Armenian American grassroots political organization.

Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and
supporters throughout the United States and affiliated organizations
around the world, the ANCA actively advances the concerns of the
Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.

###

Photo Caption: Jewish World Watch.

www.anca.org
www.jewishworldwatch.org

Armenian National Movement Declines To Participate In Parliamentary

ARMENIAN NATIONAL MOVEMENT DECLINES TO PARTICIPATE IN PARLIAMENTARY
ELECTIONS BY PROPORTIONAL ELECTORAL SYSTEM

YEREVAN, APRIL 28, NOYAN TAPAN. The "Armenian National Movement"
(ANM) party, which was registered for participation in the May 12
parliamentary elections by the proportional electoral system, on
April 28 submitted to the RA Central Election Commission (CEC) the
party board’s decision to give up further electoral struggle. NT was
informed about it from the CEC secretary Hamlet Abrahamian. According
to him, based on the submitted decision, the RA CEC will recognize
the registration of ANM election list as invalid at the upcoming
sitting of the CEC.

British Council Trusts Armenia

BRITISH COUNCIL TRUSTS ARMENIA

A1+
[09:44 pm] 26 April, 2007

Armenia is the first country in South Caucasus, where British Council
office director was appointed the citizen of the very country.

Today, the newly-appointed director Arevik Saribekyan was officially
presented in Saryan house-museum. This will be implemented in three
South Caucasian states. The above mentioned experiment particularly
with Armenia is due to the office work quality and readiness.

Andy Williams, regional director of British Council in South Caucasus
arrived in Armenia to participate in the ceremony. Today she also
talked over the preferences of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, which will be
directed to regional programs of British Council. They are the follows:

To support productive management system

To support economy development and formation of intercultural
relations.

"Intercultural dialogue creates a sufficient ground to solve various
problems, as well as antagonisms," Arevik Saribekyan, newly appointed
British Council director assures.

at present, British Council Armenia is going to realize three
regional programs, as well as English teaching and educational
programs. British Council programs are realized in three countries
of South Caucasus. Before implementation of the projects, surveys
are carried out. Arevik Saribekyan states, "In Southern Caucasus we
work as one organization and we must coordinate each step. In this
respect no country can be stayed behind, as we will be deemed not as
just Armenia, Georgia or Azerbaijan, but as a whole unity."

The Future Is Now

THE FUTURE IS NOW
By Greg Cook, Globe Correspondent

Boston Globe, MA
April 26 2007

Something old, something new intersect at the Boston Cyberarts Festival

For the past four months, Brian Knep has been studying frogs in his
windowless, closet-sized lab at Harvard Medical School in Boston,
where he has been an artist in residence since 2005. Dozens of times
each day, the 38-year-old Bostonian plucks tiny tadpoles and frogs
from an aquarium, plunks them into cups of water under bright lights,
and photographs them.

Knep runs this raw material, some 3,000 photos, through software he
has written to compile the images into a digital animation of real
swimming tadpoles losing their tails and sprouting legs as they become
frogs. And then reverses it, making them young again. He calls the
project "Aging," and a first draft debuts at Judi Rotenberg Gallery
Saturday as part of the fifth Boston Cyberarts Festival.

Cyberart, tech-art, and new-media art are synonymous terms for the
growing body of art made with new technologies – computers, iPods,
cellphones, digital cameras, and video. It’s the most distinctive
sector of Boston-area art these days, and this year’s Cyberarts
Festival, from April 20 to May 6, is the big biennial gathering
of artists from all over the world. It’s when all art is electric,
when interactive is the watchword, when the future is now.

"Now we have more technology than any time in history, and artists
are always the first people to get their hands on technology after
the engineers and scientists," festival director George Fifield
says. "[Artists] show how we live with it, how to stop it from hitting
us over the head. New technology and new media radically alter the
way we see and think about the world. And artists explain it to us."

Many who follow new media attribute its growing prominence in
Boston-area art to the region’s colleges, which attract students and
provide jobs to artists and scientists. The programs at MIT’s Media
Lab and Center for Advanced Visual Studies and MassArt’s Studio for
Interrelated Media stand out. And there’s also the region’s vaunted
tech industry.

More and more venues are featuring new media, too. Through May 6,
Axiom Gallery in Jamaica Plain presents videos and LED animations
by four artists featured in Aspect, the Boston-based journal of
new-media art. Here we have a gallery devoted exclusively to new media,
a rare thing, teaming up with an equally rare example of a publication
devoted solely to the genre.

Elsewhere, tech-art represents more than half the programming at
Art Interactive in Cambridge, which this month presents interactive
installations by San Francisco’s Camille Utterback, in which cameras
turn visitors’ shuffling through the gallery into abstract doodles
projected on the walls. Other frequent new-media venues are Second
Gallery in South Boston and MIT’s List Visual Art Center in Cambridge.

New-media art, says video artist Denise Marika, is "Boston’s chance to
put itself on the map of the art world." At her Brookline home, she’s
finishing up video projections for "The Puzzle Master," a "multimedia
opera" recounting the myth of Daedalus and Icarus. Five singers will
perform Vermont poet F.D. Reeve’s libretto set to computer-manipulated
music by Eric Chasalow of Newtonville at Brandeis University May 5-6.

For Marika, the tale of the ancient inventor Daedalus speaks of
"the threat and question of technology itself and our sense that
we control it or somebody controls it. And how that intersects with
people’s power struggles throughout the world. And how that affects
the individual – Icarus." Chasalow says that Daedalus is "unwilling
to admit he doesn’t have as much control as he thinks he has."

In a cinder-block garage in Allston one recent afternoon, members of
Kinodance rehearsed their new show, "Denizen." Inspired by "Seasons,"
Armenian director Artavazd Peleshian’s 1975 film documentary about
Armenian shepherds, some of the Boston-area dancers visited Armenia
last year to film sights – like a herd of sheep – and their own
performances at locations Peleshian used in his film.

A projector shone the footage onto the dancers and the wall behind
them. Their shadows magically, poetically mixed with video of
silhouetted women dancing between the stone arches of an abandoned
monastery. Later, flames of a video camp fire engulfed a live dancer’s
body as she curled in on herself, opened out and closed up again,
then stumbled about on her toes.

This human-technological interaction is also the foundation of Chicago
composer Olivia Block’s "Rime and Glaze," which she’ll perform with
Berklee College of Music students at the school on April 29. Out
of a furtive arrangement of goosey honks, plucked violin strings,
sung "ha, ha, has", electronic clicking, and tones and static, we
notice the traditional instruments mimicking the electronic sounds,
and vice versa.

Boston’s new media scene is simmering and scruffy, both thrilling and
frustrating at this stage of development when few major artists have
emerged. One of the most exciting artists in town is Brian Knep. He
takes advantage of the knack of computers for producing special
effects, for producing endless variations within set parameters,
to create distinctly digital art.

"What I’m trying to do is make technological art that’s more soulful,"
Knep says.

JUK Leader Says Arthur Baghdasaryan Betrays His Nation

JUK LEADER SAYS ARTHUR BAGHDASARYAN BETRAYS HIS NATION

Panorama.am
15:19 26/04/2007

"I assess the behavior of Arthur Baghdasaryan as betrayal to his
nation because one should not look for a dad outside and bow in
front of foreign country representatives. I would not like to have
authorities which "bring a guy" against Armenia. Although, the present
authorities are not better in this sense," Manuk Gasparyan, leader
of Democratic Way Party (JUK), said commenting on an article in the
press which said that Arthur Baghdasaryan, leader of Orinats Yerkir
Party, met with deputy ambassador of Great Britain, Richard Haidy,
and arranged to release negative assessments on the upcoming elections.

Anniversary Of Armenian Genocide Commemorated In Frankfurt

ANNIVERSARY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATED IN FRANKFURT

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Apr 25 2007

FRANKFURT, APRIL 25, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The central event
of commemoration of the 92nd anniversary of the Armenian Genocide took
place with joint efforts of the Armenian Diocese of Germany and the
Board of Germany’s Armenians at the Paulskirsche Hall of Frankfurt
on April 22.

Chairman of the Board of Germany’s Armenians Shavarsh Hovasapian opened
the event. Welcoming those present on behalf of the event organizers,
he noted with satisfaction the interest in recognition of the Armenian
Genocide shown by German state and political circles in recent years
and their steps in this direction. "The history of the Armenian
Genocide has become a history of denial for Turkey. This policy of
denial has caused the death of Hrant Dink," S. Hovasapian said.

Then the Armenian ambassador to Germany Karine Ghazinian, and leader of
the Green party’s parliamentary faction Fritz Kuhn made speeches. Two
years ago F. Kuhn played an important role in adoption of the decision
condemning the extermination of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire, which
was passed by the Bundestag. "I was ashamed to discover that German
school textbooks say nothing about the Armenian Genocide," he said,
expressing a hope that German responsible bodies will correct this
mistake in the near future.

German historian Yorn Riuze made a scientific report on the Armenian
Genocide. In particular, he said that the Genocide’s recognition is
necessary not only for Armenians but also for Turks as the current
Turkish generation is a captive of the bitter historical past. "A
murder chases like a shadow those avoiding responsibility. Mass
killings are killings of one’s own humanity and it is impossible to
avoid responsibility by denial or rejection," he noted.

The head of the German diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church
Archbishop Garegin Bekjian delivered the final speech. The event
ended with prayers for peace of the souls of the numerous victims of
the Armenian Genocide.