Armenian and Cypriot issues not related to Turkey’s EU process

Armenian and Cypriot issues not related to Turkey’s EU process
05.01.2010 16:37 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The current rapprochement process between Yerevan
and Ankara and the South Cyprus issue have nothing to do with Turkey’s
EU process, Turkish President Abdullah Gul said. According to him, the
country experiences pressures by certain European forces which believe
that the processes above hamper Turkey’s efforts towards acceding to
EU.

As noted by the country’s top leader, Turkey would strive for
normalizing ties with Armenia notwithstanding the EU process.

`The Caucasus should not be a wall between the East and West. Frozen
regional conflicts should be resolved,’ BBC news quoted Gul as saying.

For many Los Angeles-area Armenians, it’s two days till Christmas

Los Angeles Times, CA
Jan 4 2010

For many Los Angeles-area Armenians, it’s two days till Christmas

The traditional date of Jan. 6 is still observed by many Southern
California Armenians, who find it more meaningful and spiritual — and
less commercial — than the Dec. 25 celebration.

By Esmeralda Bermudez
January 4, 2010

Never mind the stripped Christmas trees cast out along the driveways
or the holiday house lights that stopped shimmering over the weekend.
According to Richard Dekmejian’s Armenian calendar, Christmas is now
two days away.

The choir director at St. Peter Armenian Church in Glendale must tune
his singers’ voices one last time. His wife must prepare a feast for
the family. And when Jan. 6 arrives, he will proclaim to those he
knows:

"Kristos dzunav yev haydnetsav!" "Christ is born and revealed among us!"

On a date that comes later (or, some might argue, much earlier), than
traditional Western Christmas, Armenians across Southern California
will gather Wednesday to celebrate the birth of Jesus Christ and his
baptism in the Jordan River. Many will flock to Orthodox Christian
churches to participate in a solemn, centuries-old service in which
people drink holy water believed to contain some of the same oil used
to baptize Jesus. Then they will gather, generally without gifts, to
dine and rejoice in their homes.

The celebration, known to some as Theophany or simply Armenian
Christmas, follows the original Julian calendar as opposed to the
standard Western or Gregorian calendar. When Christians began to
celebrate Christmas on Dec. 25 as dictated by the Romans, Armenians
held to the original Jan. 6 date.

It is not to be confused with El Dia de los Reyes or Three Kings Day,
which is celebrated by many Spanish-speaking Catholics on Jan. 6 and
marks the adoration of the Christ child by the kings, or Magi.

For Armenians living in America, the dual holidays add more cheer to
an already-packed season.

"We double-dip," Dekmejian said. "It’s an extended Christmas period
from the 24th until the sixth."

For those who emigrated from formerly Soviet-ruled Armenia, where
religious events were banned, Christmas may be a relatively new
concept. For many, the holidays typically revolved around New Year’s,
when gifts were exchanged and relatives filled the streets visiting
one another’s homes.

In America, some families have adapted to new customs, gathering for
dinner on Dec. 25 or, in some cases, adding the all-American staple,
turkey, to a traditional Armenian menu of fish and rice with raisins
and nuts.

"Some in the new generation, they want more American Christmas now,"
said Robert, an Armenian father of two from Glendale who declined to
give his last name. "Armenian Christmas, it doesn’t mean so much."

But for many who observe their native country’s Christmas, the Jan. 6
date carries a deeper meaning. Without gifts, malls or Santa Claus,
Suzie Shatarevyan, 30, of Van Nuys said, her family is able to focus
more meaningfully on family and church.

"It’s a real Christmas," she said, "none of that commercial stuff."

At Armenian churches across Glendale and the San Fernando Valley, the
tradition was alive and well in recent days as priests prepared
parishes for hundreds of visitors, each seeking a few ounces of holy
water to carry home. In Montebello, where Armenians once lived in
great numbers, Father Ashod Kambourian readied his church to host a
community dinner for about 600 guests.

"In old days, the priests would visit the homes and bless them," he
said. "It’s good news. It’s happy days."

At St. Peter Armenian Church, Father Vazken Movsesian said he hoped to
take all the extended good cheer and put it toward charity. The
church’s volunteers doubled their year-round outreach efforts in
December, delivering toys to local children and sweaters to nearby
hospitals.

Jan. 6 "is nothing more than a date," he said. "We want people to let
love be born in their heart every day."

e-beliefs4-2010jan04,0,7407808.story

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-m

Andy Serkis: From Gollum to Ian Dury

Andy Serkis: From Gollum to Ian Dury
He’s very good at playing bad guys, so how will he handle a punk poet
turned posthumous national treasure?

Simon Hattenstone
The Guardian,
Saturday 2 January 2010

Andy Serkis on Ian Dury: ‘He was obnoxious, just an arse, you know.’
<br></br&a mp;amp;gt;Photograph: Spencer Murphy

Lefties among us might recognise Andy Serkis. Of course he was
bug-eyed hobbit Gollum in the Lord Of The Rings trilogy. Sure, he gave
us a supremely tender King Kong. Yes, he was terrifyingly eloquent as
serial killer Ian Brady in the television drama Longford, horribly
creepy as French prisoner Rigaud in Little Dorrit and simply monstrous
as the interrogator in Extraordinary Rendition. But there’s something
else. Wasn’t he the fella who sold the Socialist Worker on the streets
of London back in the early 90s?

Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll Production year: 2010 Country: UK Directors:
Mat Whitecross Cast: Andy Serkis, Mackenzie Crook, Naomie Harris,
Olivia Williams, Ray Winstone More on this film Serkis says it was his
days in the SWP, and his subsequent rejection of the party line, that
made him the actor he is today. As a young socialist he was angry
about so much: Thatcher, unemployment, racism, you name it. Actually,
his anger went back further. As a little boy he was so angry, throwing
such tantrums, that his three older sisters had to hold him down while
he kicked, punched and raged. He’s not sure what he was angry about
then, but thinks it might be something to do with his absent father,
an Iraqi gynaecologist of Armenian descent who stayed in Baghdad,
opened a hospital, and was briefly imprisoned by the Saddam Hussein
regime, while his English wife brought up the Serkis clan in Ruislip,
Middlesex.

After A-levels, Serkis went to university to study visual art (he
still paints) and set the world to rights. The politicised Serkis
believed the world was black and white, and when he joined the SWP he
thought he’d found his true home – here was a party founded on
absolute certainties. But at the same time Serkis was developing as an
actor, and found his political ideology coming into conflict with his
professional evolution. As an actor, he discovered moral ambiguity was
all. Yes, he was attracted to bad men, but he wanted to humanise his
killers and blackmailers and all-round no-gooders. He even wanted to
try to make us understand what motivates a paedophile serial killer
such as Ian Brady. He felt he had to make a choice between the SWP and
acting.

We’ve arranged to meet at a north London pub. As I cross the road, I
see him walk off, so I follow at a distance, like a private eye. Has
he done a runner before we’ve even met? He’s wearing a black leather
jacket, black trousers, his hair is dyed black, his eyes are Jesus
blue. He strides purposefully and looks a little menacing, as he so
often does in films or on stage. Eventually, he stops for the traffic
lights to change. I tap him on the shoulder, tell him I’m supposed to
be interviewing him.

He gives me a confused look, then smiles. It’s the same warm,
childlike smile he uses to disarm us when he’s playing nasty bastards.
"Ah, it’s just the pub wasn’t open yet. I was looking for another
one." We head off up the street and he leads me to an alternative –
small, scruffy, with a handful of people gathered round the racing on
TV. Serkis has got an amazing face. When he smiles, he’s charming,
sexy, handsome. When he snarls, he’s world-class ugly. Few actors have
such elastic features – somehow he can stretch his nose, repoint his
chin, flesh out his lips to order.

Now he is playing Ian Dury, the rock’n’roll wordsmith with a polio
gait, in the film Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll. It’s a classic Serkis
part, wonderfully played – the beautiful grotesque who championed
disabled people while raging against his misfortune, the drug-addled
philanderer and loving father, the twisted cynic who can’t hide his
romantic optimism. As so often, Serkis inhabits the character (he even
sings Dury’s songs) rather than plays him. So much so that it’s a
surprise when I see he’s not limping today.

Watch the trailer for Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll Link to this video
We’re sat down on battered chairs, a pint of bitter each, and he still
seems to be talking the Ian Dury talk – ‘eavy, gruff, nice’n’sleazy,
‘alf cockney geezer. That’s the thing about his kind of acting – you
can’t simply pick up characters and drop them at will. Before playing
King Kong, he studied gorillas in captivity at London Zoo, then went
to Rwanda to observe them in the wild. When he played a City spiv in
Mike Leigh’s Career Girls, he spent months working with dealers, cut
off contact from his friends and had to learn to play the violin (his
contribution was eventully cut down to one scene, which didn’t include
the violin). "I was actually trading, and in the end they offered me a
job. They said you’ll be on £80,000 a year, plus bonuses." How much
was he earning then as an actor? "Ooh, er, like, nothing."

When he and his wife to be, fellow actor Lorraine Ashbourne, were
playing lovers in Your Home In The West in 1991 at Manchester’s Royal
Exchange, they decided to research their roles by meeting up for real
in character and imagining their first time out together. They got off
with each other, in character, and have been together ever since. As
Gollum, it wasn’t enough to play a troubled hobbit with a weird voice;
he had to know where his pain came from. "His voice was based on our
cat coughing up fur balls," Serkis says.

For the Dury film, he spent months walking with a heavy 70s-style
calliper attached to his leg and working out only on the right side of
his body." He’s been left with back pain, and a "massive weird muscle"
has developed in his groin. "I’m still recovering from it all."

As a young man, Serkis adored Dury – he was so witty, original and had
overcome so much. Then he met him. "He was obnoxious. We were in a
Chinese restaurant and he slagged eveybody off and was just an arse,
you know. And that same night, Mickey Gallagher, who was one of
[Dury’s band] the Blockheads but was caring for him, just went, ‘Fuck
this, I’m not doing it any more’, and he left Ian on the pavement
outside the hotel."

But that’s what Serkis loved about Dury – he was anything but a
sanitised victim, and the film would never suggest he was. "I knew we
weren’t going to be painting a glorified picture of a stoic underdog,
it was going to be warts and all. And when we started showing early
drafts to Sophie and Baxter [Dury’s second wife and oldest son], they
were like, ‘He’s so much darker, so much more of a cunt than this.
You’ve got to get down and dirty with this.’ So we thought, great, if
they’re prepared to take off the boxing gloves, so will we."

Whenever he takes on a character, he looks for what they have in
common, and Serkis, 45, says the two men share a near obsessive drive
to fulfil themselves creatively. "Ian knows there’s only a certain
amount of time we have on this planet, and if you’ve got a family,
there are going to be casualties. There isn’t a moral to the story,
but it’s like, be magnificent in the short amount of time you’ve got.
And I think I live my life by that code, but we also have real life to
deal with. Where the Venn diagram crosses over between me and Ian is
wanting to do the very best you can in the short space of time you’ve
got, but give everything you can equally to the people you love and
who are your life. That’s a really difficult thing."

It seems to be a conflict very much at the heart of Serkis’s life. He
and Lorraine have three children; he loves chasing them round the
house, playing monsters, and is desperately aware that he is not there
for them as often as he would like to be. (He spent nearly two years
in New Zealand shooting Lord Of The Rings, and is soon off again to
shoot The Hobbit.) And sometimes, he says, even when he is there, he
isn’t really because he’s lost in a character. "You’re watching your
kids playing football and you’re not present. It’s like the worst…
it’s horrible. I despise myself for it." He says it with a quiet,
shocking intensity, stands up and gets the next round in. "I think
it’s a particularly male thing. Being present and in the moment with
your kids is something a lot of men struggle with."

We’re talking politics and compromise. He’s no longer in the SWP, but
still thinks of himself as being on the left. At the 2003 Oscars, he
brought along for company a "No War For Oil" banner. He and Lorraine
recently argued about education – he believes in state education, she
favours private. Lorraine won.

As he worried that his mind was not open enough in his SWP days, he
now worries that his mind is too open. He tells me how he tried to get
into the head of Moors murderer Ian Brady. "When I played him, I
thought, what’s the most beautiful thing that’s happened in my life?
Well, it was witnessing my three children being born at home in a
birthing pool in my living room, and I thought, well, for Ian Brady,
the most beautiful thing must have been taking life away from a
child."

A chill runs through my veins. That’s horrible, I say. Serkis nods. "I
know, it’s a really scary thought, but if you take the role on, you
have to go down that route."

Does he find at times he’s unsure what he actually believes because
he’s borrowing a character’s moral code? He smiles. "I do listen to
myself sometimes and think, is my moral compass so easily swayed by
the characters I play, or is it me growing as a human being?"

He loves acting, he says, and does not intend to give it up, but he is
turning more towards directing. He made a great little short film
called Snake about a prostitute (played by his wife), tattoos, a
mysterious bag of money and an unwanted kidney transplant. Filmed in
black and white, it is creepy and cool and disturbingly funny.

Why is he focusing more on directing? Well, he says, it goes back to
what we’ve been talking about. He would like to approach things more
objectively, from a distance. He talks about the times he worked with
Mike Leigh and couldn’t tell his family what he was doing because
those were the rules, and found himself leading a secret double life.
And if you’re attracted to difficult, often unpleasant characters, of
course it’s going to mess with your head. "The whole chameleon thing
about acting. That’s why I’m moving towards directing – it’s a much
more healthy occupation."

– Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll opens on January 8.

ANKARA: France sticks to "privileged partnership" in Turkey 2009 tie

, Turkey
Jan 1 2010

France sticks to "privileged partnership" in Turkey 2009 ties

Few but positive developments occurred regarding EU membership has
been an important handicap in improvement of Turkey-France relations.

Friday, 01 January 2010 14:57

"Season of Turkey" activities that started in France in July have made
an important mark on bilateral relations in 2009.

Turkey has been promoted by over 400 artistic and cultural activities
in more than 70 cities in France.

The "Season of Turkey" activities, which will continue till March
2010, aim to contribute to promotion of Turkey’s dynamics, creative
differences, culture and heritage to the French society.

With the activities, Turkish literature, music, movie, performing arts
as well as visual arts have been introduced to French people.

Also conferences and panel discussions have been organized in economy
aiming to boost trade volume.

The Eiffel Tower, which has become a global icon of France, was lit up
with colors of Turkish flag (red and white) from October 6 to October
11 under the ongoing "Season of Turkey" activities in France.

"Season of Turkey" activities began with a performance of the Turkish
dance group "Anatolian Fire" and a concert by Mercan Dede in front of
the Eiffel tower in July.

Concerts by Turkish singers and particularly cultural and artistic
activities at "Turkish Coffee House" were among the most popular
organizations of the "Season of Turkey".

Turkish President Abdullah Gul and his French counterpart Nicolas
Sarkozy inaugurated "The Ottoman Caftans" exhibition at the Louvre
Museum and "Istanbul for Centuries" exhibition at the Grand Palais.

Also, Paris Mayor Bertrand Delanoe presented the key of Paris to
Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk, director Nuri Bilge Ceylan and
photographer Ara Guler.

"EU curb"

Few but positive developments occurred regarding EU membership has
been an important handicap in improvement of Turkey-France relations.

Following formal visit of President Gul to Paris in October, French
executives gave up reiterating their statements that Turkey should be
granted "privileged partnership".

Although the French executives said there was no change in their
stance pertaining to Turkey’s EU membership, they were careful in not
using "privileged partnership" expression which caused an uneasiness
in Turkish public.

Despite their opposition to Ankara’s full membership, French
executives, during the visits of Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet
Davutoglu and State Minister & Chief Negotiator for EU talks Egemen
Bagis, gave assurances that full membership negotiations would
continue.

Although France did not hinder the negotiations, it did not extend
support to opening of new chapter headings with Turkey and did not
remove the veto it had imposed on opening of five chapter headings.

No progress could be recorded on chapter headings; "monetary
provisions", "regional policies", "agriculture", "budgetary
provisions", and "institutions".

Political observers said initiatives of Turkey for mediation in the
Caucasus and the Middle East once again revealed Turkey’s regional
power.

AA

www.worldbulletin.net

Modernized Medical Center Opens In Razdan

MODERNIZED MEDICAL CENTER OPENS IN RAZDAN

Aysor
Dec 29 2009
Armenia

Today, Armenia’s President Serge Sargsyan attended the opening ceremony
of the modernized Medical Center in Razdan of the Kotayk region of
Armenia, a spokesperson for the Cabinet reported. The construction
works on modernization were implemented in the framework of the Health
System Modernization Project by the World Bank.

The Razdan Medical Center includes a hospital, a polyclinic, and
a maternity hospital. Besides, it’s expected to include the Razdan
Medical College.

Young scientists: to stay or to leave

Aysor, Armenia
Dec 26 2009

Young scientists: to stay or to leave

Young scientists have received a wide range of opportunities to study
or to work abroad over past decade. However, only a part of Armenia’s
academics thinks the overseas experience is useful while others voice
concerns whether these students and scientists would come back to the
country. In their opinion, all the necessary conditions for studying
and working must be provided here in Armenia.

`I would accept an invitation to work some years abroad, but I would
certainly return back to Armenia. I like the living conditions here,
but I can’t speak on behalf of all scientists,’ said the Yerevan State
University’s post graduate student Aram Zeytounian.

`Nowadays one can easily go for earning somewhere. I’ve been
practicing experimental physics, and I’d like to have some minimum
working conditions. The available equipment is outdated, and doesn’t
go with modern challenges. I wouldn’t certainly leave the country
forever, but for some years ` why not,’ said a post graduate student
asking do not name him.

The YSU Physics Faculty’s student Diana Antonosian said she doesn’t
think there are any agreeable conditions for those scientists who
practice the experimental physics. Students for years cannot
experiment, she stated. `If I had an opportunity to work abroad, I’d
accept it. I’ve got some friends there, and they do not want to
return. There are, sure, granting systems here, but these is not a
solving of a problem. I work part-time, and have 15 thousand AMD in
salary, this is so little,’ she said.

Mottaki: Turkey could be a venue for Tehran to exchange nuclear mat.

Mottaki: Turkey could be a venue for Tehran to exchange nuclear
material with the West
26.12.2009 13:37 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Iran’s foreign minister says Turkey could be a venue
for Tehran to exchange nuclear material with the West. The statement
is another of several offers Tehran has recently made without formally
responding to a U.N.-drafted proposal that would reduce Iran’s
stockpile of enriched uranium and ease Western concerns over Tehran’s
nuclear intentions.

Foreign Minister Manouchehr Mottaki told state TV late Thursday that
Iran "does not have a problem with Turkish soil" as the location for
an exchange of enriched uranium for nuclear fuel.

Iran has earlier said it would only accept the exchange on its own
territory. The U.N. plan requires Tehran to ship enriched uranium
abroad in return for nuclear fuel for a Tehran research reactor, AP
reported.

Political Consultations Between Foreign Ministries Of RA And China H

POLITICAL CONSULTATIONS BETWEEN FOREIGN MINISTRIES OF RA AND CHINA HELD

Noyan Tapan
Dec 24, 2009

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 24, NOYAN TAPAN. Political consultations between
the Foreign Ministries of RA and China were held on December 22
at the RA Foreign Ministry. Areg Hovhannisian, the Head of the
Foreign Ministry Department of Asia, Oceania and Africa headed the
delegation from the Armenian side, Deputy Director of the Chinese
Foreign Ministry Department for Europe and Central Asia Chan Siaoy
from the Chinese side.

Issues regarding regional, bilateral relations, cooperation at
international organizations, holding a regular meeting of the
Armenian-Chinese Intergovernmental Commission, organization and
holding of the Shanghai Expo 2010 international exhibition, economic
cooperation, as well as cultural, educational and other spheres were
discussed at the meeting. They also touched upon issues related
to completion of construction and starting of the Shansi-Nairit
Armenian-Chinese joint venture.

According to the RA Foreign Ministry Press and Information Department,
RA Deputy Foreign Minister Karine Ghazinian received the delegation
arriving from China.

Armenia-Turkey Dialogue Retarded Karabakh Process

ARMENIA-TURKEY DIALOGUE RETARDED KARABAKH PROCESS

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.12.2009 14:55 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian-Turkish dialogue retarded Karabakh
conflict settlement process, according to Alexander Iskandaryan,
Director of Caucasus Institute.

"It’s not feasible to burden the process of normalization of
Armenian-Turkish relations with a knotty problem like Karabakh," he
said, adding that no specific changes are expected in Karabakh talks.

"Turkey has entered into dialogue with Armenia, underestimating
Azerbaijan’s counteraction. Nevertheless, Baku won’t be able to hamper
the Armenian-Turkish rapprochement process," he concluded.

Yerevan Press Club Weekly Newsletter – 12/24/2009

YEREVAN PRESS CLUB WEEKLY NEWSLETTER

DECEMBER 18-24, 2009

HIGHLIGHTS:

"PRESS CLUB" CYCLE: THE YEAR’S POLITICAL EVENTS AND THEIR INFLUENCE ON
DEMOCRATIC REFORMS

SEMINAR PARTICIPANTS DISCUSSED THE ISSUES OF BROADCAST SPHERE

SUIT VERSUS GAGIK SHAMSHIAN REVOKED

JUA "GOLDEN PEN"-2009 AWARDEES ANNOUNCED

"PRESS CLUB" CYCLE: THE YEAR’S POLITICAL EVENTS AND THEIR INFLUENCE ON
DEMOCRATIC REFORMS

On December 22, the last "Press Club" show of the year went on the air of
"Yerkir Media" TV company. The cycle is produced under Yerevan Press Club
project, supported by the Open Society Institute. The guests of the program
host, YPC President Boris Navasardian were Stepan Grigorian, Head of
Analytical Center for Globalization and Regional Cooperation, Ara Galoyan,
Program Director of "Shoghakat" TV company, and Elina Chilingarian,
correspondent of youth program "MaxLiberty" of Radio Free Europe/Radio
Liberty Armenian Service. The discussion centered on the main political
events of the year and their influence on democratic reforms in Armenia.

"Press Club" cycle will be renewed on "Yerkir Media" in January 2010.

SEMINAR PARTICIPANTS DISCUSSED THE ISSUES OF BROADCAST SPHERE

On December 16-18 in Aghveran a seminar "The Broadcast Policy and the
Armenian Legislation" was held. The event was organized by Yerevan Press
Club with the assistance of Friedrich Ebert Foundation. The seminar was
attended by heads of TV and radio companies, members of National Commission
on Television and Radio, representatives of journalistic associations.

The report of Yerevan Press Club President Boris Navasardian dealt with the
problems of refinement of the broadcast regulating legislation. President of
Audio-Visual Reporters Association Arzuman Harutiunian raised the issues of
optimization the advertising legislation. Expert of Yerevan Press Club
Heriknaz Harutiunian presented the results of monitoring the implementation
of broadcast and advertising legislation by Armenian TV companies,
administered by YPC in 2009. In the panel discussions on the fulfillment of
broadcast legislation also took part Grigor Amalian, Chairman of National
Commission on Television and Radio, and Aleksan Arakelian, Head of Financial
Department of Public Television of Armenia. Movses Hakobian, lawyer of
Center for Information Law and Policy, told about the legal basis of
switching to digital broadcasting. Ashot Simonian, Director of "Television
Network of Armenia" SCSJ spoke about the technical problems of
digitalization.

SUIT VERSUS GAGIK SHAMSHIAN REVOKED

On December 18 court of general jurisdiction of Arabkir and Kanaker-Zeytun
communities of Yerevan started the hearings on the suit of Criminal
Executive Department of RA Ministry of Justice versus free lance journalist
Gagik Shamshian. As it has been reported, on April 17, 2009 court of general
jurisdiction of Kentron and Nork-Marash communities of Yerevan sentenced
Gagik Shamshian to a fine of 350,000 AMD (about $ 950) for disrespect to
court. On July 15, 2009 RA Criminal Court of Appeal pardoned the journalist.
Gagik Shamshian considered the decision to be illegal and addressed to the
RA Procuracy and to RA Court of Cassation. The Procuracy confirmed that the
journalist should not have been pardoned on the abovementioned case, as an
amnesty had already been applied on him by another case. On September 16,
2009 the Court of Cassation cancelled the decision on amnesty (see YPC
Weekly Newsletter, September 11-17, 2009).

With regard to the delay in payment of fine the Criminal Executive
Department of Ministry of Justice filed a suit demanding to replace the fine
penalty applied towards Gagik Shamshian by public works.

At the session of December 18 court of primary jurisdiction revoked the
suit, on the ground that Gagik Shamshian had already paid off the fine
before the hearings started.

JUA "GOLDEN PEN"-2009 AWARDEES ANNOUNCED

On December 22 the ceremony of "Gold Pen" Award of the Journalists Union of
Armenia was held. The Award is conferred every three years for best
publicist stories.

The winners of "Golden Pen"-2009 are: Hakob Avedikian, Chief Editor of
"Azg’" daily, and Rober Haddeler, Chief Editor of "Marmara" Armenian
newspaper, issued in Istanbul.

N.B. Dear readers, please note that the YPC Weekly Newsletter will next be
issued in January 2010. Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

When reprinting or using the information above, reference to the Yerevan
Press Club is required.

You are welcome to send any comment and feedback about the Newsletter to:
[email protected]

Subscription for the Newsletter is free. To subscribe or unsubscribe from
this mailing list, please send a message to: [email protected]

Editor of YPC Newsletter – Elina POGHOSBEKIAN
_____________________________________ _______
Yerevan Press Club
9B, Ghazar Parpetsi str.
0002, Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (+ 374 10) 53 00 67; 53 35 41; 53 76 62
Fax: (+374 10) 53 56 61
E-mail: [email protected]
Web Site:

www.ypc.am